Magazine exec comes out as undocumented with a message to kids suffering Trump trauma
NEW YORK—Sylvia Banderas Coffinet has been thinking about going public with her story for several weeks. Today she’s a high-power magazine executive in a big New York office with a million-dollar view, but her journey to success was fraught with uncertainty.
Banderas entered the United States illegally as a child and was undocumented here until she was 18. She grew up in Southern California in the early 1990s under Governor Pete Wilson, during the nasty days of Proposition 187, the infamous anti-immigrant ballot measure that would have denied health care, education and other social services to undocumented immigrants. Nearly 59% of Californians voted to approve the measure that would have forced teachers to report undocumented students to immigration officials. It was eventually overturned in the courts.
Banderas lived through the anxiety of one of the country’s uglier episodes of anti-immigration sentiments, and she understands the fear that undocumented children and mixed-status families are experiencing with Donald Trump’s campaign right now.
“I’m sharing my story now because I want the children watching this who grew up like me to not give up hope” — Sylvia Banderas
That’s what inspired her to come forward now as a formerly undocumented women with a message of encouragement for the young people of today.