Humberto corona biography of michaels
Bert Corona, a longtime leader in Latino civil-rights circles, died in early after nearly seventy years of public service.
Bert Corona (born ), a union organizer who worked to provide Mexican Americans with better wages and living conditions.
Following a career as a union organizer, Corona served for many years as executive director of La Hermandad Mexicana Nacional, a Latino organization in the Los Angeles area that fought on behalf of undocumented Mexicans and other Latinos in the United States. He once contributed an autobiographical essay to Memories of Chicano History, edited by Mario Garcia.
According to Progressive, he stated in Memories: "I never planned my life," Corona reflected. I'm proud that I was able at certain times to help organize a plant or a community group and that these organizations helped people struggle to better their lives. Corona was born in El Paso , Texas in Both parents were of a progressive mind: his father Noe had, during the Mexican Revolution , fought on the side of the Partido Liberal Mexicano.
History will also record that.
Corona was the second of their children, but Noe Corona was slain in the early s, and Corona and his sister were raised by their mother and maternal grandmother, who had been a physician in Chihuahua City. He attended public schools in El Paso, but during the s children of Mexican heritage were forbidden to speak their language at school, and transgressions against this rule were punished harshly.
Margarita Corona objected to such tactics as forcing children to wash their mouths out with soap, and for a time Corona was transferred to a boarding school in Albuquerque , New Mexico. Corona was a standout basketball player at El Paso High School, and graduated at the age of sixteen. Ineligible to become a college athlete at that age, he played on El Paso community teams until , when he accepted an athletic scholarship to the University of Southern California USC.
He was surprised at the differences between Los Angeles Latinos in and those back home in El Paso. They ignored him, but followed him at his exit, and told him that in Los Angeles it was wiser to speak English. During his time at USC, while studying commercial law , Corona also worked for a drug company.