Sunday, October 13, 2019

Make Your Home Among Strangers


Class on Monday began with a brief quiz over the assigned book, Make Your Home Among Strangers.  Following the quiz, an article was passed out called, “Against All Odds: GSU professor recounts journey to America”.  The article tells of a man named Gaspar Leiva who left Cuba in 1993 with his two sons in order to live a more prosperous life in America.  Leiva spent a year building a boat that could transport them to the U.S. They successfully made it out of Cuba, and they began a life in America. As the title states, Leiva became a professor at Georgia Southern University.


We then watched an ABC News episode about a child named Elian Gonzalez.  He was brought from Cuba with his mother, who died on the journey. This reminds me of Ariel Hernandez from Make Your Home Among Strangers who was a character based off Elian.  After watching the documentary Elian, I learned more about the life and controversy of Elian Gonzalez.  He was on a boat on the way to American, and the boat was wrecked. He lived in Miami with his mom’s side cousins, but his father in Cuba demanded for him to be returned because his mom, who stole her son to go to the U.S., died.  Fidel Castro got involved which caused media to be involved. The Cubans in Miami at the time were against Cuba because of the communist policies. The families in the U.S. had a taste of the freedom America offered, and they wished for their families back in Cuba to have the luxury of freedom.

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This whole week was centered around immigration and race.  I typed the above paragraphs before the infamous incidents that occurred on Wednesday, October 9.  My original plan for this blog was to discuss Make Your Home Among Strangers and Cuban immigration; however, the night of October 9th changed my plan.  On this evening, the author of Make Your Home Among Strangers, Jennine Capo Crucet spoke to FYE classes in the GSU Performing Arts Center.  I, myself, was not in the main auditorium where she spoke but instead was in the screening room.  I am so thankful I was not in the same room as she was. Instead of talking about her book, which is what I, and the majority of students, was expecting, she spoke on race and growing up a Latina woman in the United States.  Many students were outraged as she made comments on white privilege, too. The student body of GSU is predominately white, and the comments made were personally attacking white people. Since her visit, controversy has surrounded the event and made national news.  Following the event, students at one of the freshman dorms, Eagle Village, burned copies of Make Your Home Among Strangers.


Link to article on Georgia Southern students burning copies of MYHAS: https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/education/2019/10/10/race-latinx-author-georgia-southern-university-burning-book/3933292002/

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The events of this past week have saddened me.  As an individual who appreciates a variety of cultures, I feel both Crucet and the GSU students who attacked her on Twitter and committed the book burning are at fault.  Crucet should have stuck to expectations and talked about her book process. I am glad she spoke on white privilege, as I believe it is a legit issue, but the way she conveyed her ideals were unnecessarily aggressive.  Similarly, students should not have abused their 1st Amendment rights. Book burning is a serious offense that was not appropriate for the situation. With her authority, I wish she had tried to bring together the ethnicities that surround college campuses. It is embarrassing to be a student who was not involved in any of the events, yet I am being stereotyped for being a white individual that attends Georgia Southern. The media has caught the news from GSU and it makes me as a student look horrible.

1 comment:

  1. I totally agree that both Crucet and those students were at fault, and that her tone was unnecessarily aggressive. It was really interesting to learn about Gaspar Leiva's story and Eliàn González's story in class.

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