In 1947, Sylvia and other Mexican American students were finally allowed to attend 17th Street Elementary. But her first time on the playground was nothing like what she had dreamed of.
“We all go out to play, and this white boy comes up and says, ‘Ew, Mexicans don’t belong here,’” Sylvia recalls.
After school, she went home crying and told her mother she didn’t want to go back.
“She said, ‘Sylvia, don’t you realize what we were fighting for?’” Sylvia remembers. “‘We all deserve equality.’”
It wasn’t until then that Sylvia understood why her parents had gone to court. She returned to school the next day and eventually made many new friends.
Sylvia has never forgotten her mother’s words. Today, at age 84, she continues to share her story so others can see how harmful prejudice can be.
“We all deserve to have an equal education,” Sylvia says.