Two Latina students just told the world they were undocumented—with very different results
Correction: This story has been updated to reflect an interview Mayte Lara Ibarra gave to KVUE on Wednesday night. In the interview, Ibarra said that her initial tweet about being undocumented was untrue, and that, in the words of the ABC affiliate, she “never wanted to make a mockery of undocumented students.”
For Larissa Martinez, giving the valedictory speech at her high school graduation was more than just an opportunity to wish her classmates well and send them off into the great unknown of semi-adulthood. Instead, as the 2016 class of McKinney Boyd High School sat decked out in caps and gowns last week, Martinez shared something she’d told only a handful of people in her entire life.
After dispensing with the requisite thank-yous, and peppering her remarks with references to Beyoncé and Mean Girls, Martinez shifted gears. She opened up about her experience moving from Mexico City to Texas as a young girl. Looking out at her classmates, she continued:
“I am one of the 11 million undocumented immigrants living in the shadows of the United States. I decided to stand before you today and reveal these unexpected realities because this might be my only chance to covey the truth to all of you: that undocumented immigrants are people too.”
The auditorium burst into applause.
As undocumented immigrants like Martinez become an increasingly powerful political force, more of them are making the same choice she did — to reveal their immigration status to the world, regardless of the consequences. Martinez is one of a growing movement of students who are using their academic platforms to speak up. Sometimes, as in her case, the response is mostly positive. Sometimes, these young people receive hostile and bigoted responses.
Martinez’s speech also contained digs at Donald Trump—immigrants, she said, are people who yearn to “help make America great again without the construction of a wall built on hatred and prejudice—and a ringing call to fix the “broken” immigration system which had left her in legal limbo for so many years.
You can watch the speech below, starting at 21:50.
For Martinez, speaking up wasn’t simply an act of personal truth-telling. Her graduation speech served to put a face, a name, and a story behind the narrative of “undocumented immigrants”—a narrative that is often met with nasty rhetoric, dehumanizing stereotyping, and overt racism. As she explained to Houston’s KHOU.com, “A part of me feels like I was meant to do this.”But while her speech was received largely with cheers and enthusiastic support, another Texas graduate was experiencing something much more discomforting.