My Beloved World

by

Sonia Sotomayor

My Beloved World: Chapter 17 Summary & Analysis

Summary
Analysis
Sonia soon becomes friends with Margarita Rosa, who’s a few years older and a role model. They often study together, and Margarita encourages Sonia to join Acción Puertorriqueña, the Latino student group. Sonia says that it’s important to have a place where a person feels like they belong and doesn’t feel like a stranger. She finds that with Acción Puertorriqueña. The Daily Princetonian publishes letters often that insist students admitted due to affirmative action don’t belong, so the pressure for Sonia and her minority peers to succeed is immense.
Acción Puertorriqueña is as much a way to bring students together to make the university a better place as it is a tool to connect minority students to each other. They’re under so much pressure because there are people at the school who don’t think they belong there, so it’s essential that they find this group who are there to support and encourage each other.
Themes
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Puerto Rican Identity and Culture Theme Icon
Morality, Justice, and Giving Back Theme Icon
Sonia, Margarita, and Ken all feel a bit like they were admitted on accident. Because they all feel so uneasy, the group focuses on freshman admissions. It’s the early days of affirmative action, especially in the Ivy Leagues, so no minority freshmen have alumni or wealthy parents. Instead, most minority freshmen look to their immediate predecessors, as Sonia looked to Ken and to the Latinx students who showed her around Yale. The group also protests, but Sonia focuses her efforts on increasing hiring of Hispanics at Princeton. Sonia asserts that the administration genuinely wants to be more diverse, but they don’t know how to reach out to Puerto Ricans or Chicanx students. The administration finally listens when Acción Puertorriqueña files a complaint. A month later, the school hires a Hispanic dean of student affairs.
Sonia makes the case here that one of the most effective ways to counter the racism that minority students encounter is by trying to make their group as welcoming as possible—and by doing everything in their power to bring in more minority students. By focusing on hiring a Hispanic administrator, Sonia and her friends also seek to make Princeton look and feel as though people who look like them and who come from similar backgrounds can be successful. With a Hispanic dean of student affairs, Hispanic students can see that they can hold powerful places in college administrations if they want to.
Themes
Optimism, Determination, and Adversity Theme Icon
Education and Learning Theme Icon
Puerto Rican Identity and Culture Theme Icon
Morality, Justice, and Giving Back Theme Icon
Quotes
The Mexican Americans have their own group, but often they join up with Acción Puertorriqueña on issues or for parties. Eventually, Acción Puertorriqueña adds “y Amigos” to the end of its name to draw in other minority groups. The minority groups form their own governance board and Sonia sits on the board for a while. However, she doesn’t want to simply concern herself with minority issues and self-segregate. To branch out, she serves on the student-faculty Discipline Committee.
Though Sonia definitely feels connected to the Puerto Rican student group and the other, broader minority student groups, she also doesn’t believe it’s helpful to focus only on minority groups. This is because she recognizes that people everywhere share similar concerns—and she can help address those in mainstream organizations too.
Themes
Puerto Rican Identity and Culture Theme Icon
Sonia begins to find herself and where she fits into the wider world when she works with Professor Winn to run a course on Puerto Rican history. She learns about Puerto Rican’s tragic colonial history and the betrayal that Puerto Ricans felt once Spain ceded it to the U.S. Most important, Sonia reads an anthropological study of a family that goes from San Juan to New York. Most Puerto Ricans find the book offensive, but Sonia also sees her family reflected in it. She recognizes, though, that the book fails to appreciate Puerto Rican culture and the people’s resilience. In class, students fight about whether Puerto Rico should be independent, a commonwealth, or a state.
For Sonia, getting to learn about Puerto Rico in the classroom is eye opening, and not just because this is the first time she’s done so. Finally, she can place her own experiences and her own family history in the context of something much larger—the history of a distinct island and its experiences with colonial rule. Learning about Puerto Rico also helps her see that she doesn’t have to hide that she’s Puerto Rican and cares about Puerto Rico at school. She can celebrate her roots, and she can study them.
Themes
Education and Learning Theme Icon
Puerto Rican Identity and Culture Theme Icon
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Mami and Sonia take a trip to Puerto Rico. This is the first time that Sonia sees the island as an adult and after her history class, what she sees makes more sense. She can see that there’s poverty, but there’s also old money. It’s an election year, and Sonia is awed that so many people are politically involved. It contrasts wildly with home, where Puerto Ricans feel like their votes don’t count. On the island, Puerto Ricans don’t feel like a minority—they feel entirely American. Sonia realizes that if the community in New York wants to escape poverty, they must look to the island and its pride.
Sonia’s education gives her a new lens through which to view the island. Learning more about Puerto Rico’s political process gives her a foundation for understanding the election itself and the engagement of the people—and importantly, she sees how important that engagement is. With this, she learns that if she wants to help her Puerto Rican community at home, she’ll need to figure out how to make them feel like their votes count.
Themes
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Puerto Rican Identity and Culture Theme Icon
Morality, Justice, and Giving Back Theme Icon
For a final project, Professor Winn suggests a family oral history. Sonia enthusiastically works on it and records as many conversations and stories with family as she can. Mami opens up about her childhood and her time in the army. Hearing her family’s stories, the history of the island comes to life—reading about what women who sewed handkerchiefs made, Sonia thinks of Titi Aurora and Mami. Abuelita’s first husband fought in World War I and then rolled tobacco. Sonia learns that her family may be descended from Puerto Rican pioneers. Her family prospers and struggles as the island’s economy changes. She insists that even as her family made their lives in New York, they remained Puerto Rican.
Again, because Sonia grew up immersed in Puerto Rican culture, learning about Puerto Rican history isn’t just a boring history class for her. Rather, she’s learning about her family and the broader political, social, and economic contexts that shaped her family’s journey to the Bronx. At this point, Sonia also begins to connect with Mami and learn about how awful Mami’s childhood was, which helps Sonia begin to develop a sense of empathy for her.
Themes
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Quotes
One way they maintained their links to Puerto Rico is through language—though Alfred talks about Spanish being a curse. Miriam agrees; she’s currently working on a degree in bilingual education so she can be the teacher she wishes she had. Sonia suddenly realizes that students who don’t understand what’s going on at school have no way of knowing that they’re intelligent; the language barrier holds them back. Recently, Sonia found these recordings. They’re embarrassing now—she takes offense at her family’s prejudices and sounds like a know-it-all. Sonia writes her senior thesis on the island’s first elected governor and his modernization efforts. She feels she needs to know that Puerto Rico can birth leaders.
It’s telling that one of the things that marks Sonia and her family as being proudly, undeniably Puerto Rican is also what makes it difficult for them to succeed in New York. However, Sonia and Miriam are also of the mind that speaking Spanish shouldn’t be a curse. It shouldn’t hold kids back, because Spanish-speaking kids aren’t unintelligent. Rather, they just need different tools than their English-speaking peers. This is one thing that people can do in schools to make the world a fairer place.
Themes
Optimism, Determination, and Adversity Theme Icon
Education and Learning Theme Icon
Puerto Rican Identity and Culture Theme Icon
Morality, Justice, and Giving Back Theme Icon
Quotes
One day, Sonia reads in the paper that a Hispanic man who speaks no English ended up on a flight that was diverted to Newark. No one could explain in Spanish what happened, so they took the angry man to Trenton Psychiatric Hospital until a family member showed up. Sonia is incensed. She calls the hospital and learns that there are many patients there who don’t speak English and don’t have access to translators. She finds this cruel, so she organizes a volunteer program to install volunteers there to translate. They also throw parties. She finds the work surprisingly satisfying. While Dolores plays guitar and sings at a party, Sonia watches a nonverbal woman tap her foot.
Talking with her family about how to improve education and working with Acción Puertorriqueña to improve Princeton is one thing, but Sonia wants to give back to the wider community. Working with the psychiatric hospital to provide translating services is a tangible way to give Spanish-speaking patients dignity and some control over their lives. Through this, she learns the importance of helping others who don’t have a voice.
Themes
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