UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA: Against the odds, chemistry grad finds a path out of poverty
By the time he was 6,
Rene Amel Peralta was already working full time in construction and odds jobs
in Mexico, just trying to survive. By 13, he and his sister had been abandoned
by their only parent and had made the treacherous journey across the border.
But without
immigration papers or an education, poverty followed.
On Saturday (June 13),
Peralta and his sister both will defy the long odds that were stacked against
them, and be awarded college diplomas.
Their goal now: Help
others from similar circumstances.
Peralta will receive a
bachelor’s of science in chemistry from UC Irvine, graduating with high marks,
while his sister will be awarded a degree from Cal Poly Pomona.
“We were two kids,
born into poverty, born into a broken home. We were born to fail. But we risked
everything to change our lives,” he said. “I know there are other kids
who were like me, and are waiting for someone to help them.”
Amel Peralta becomes
emotional as he thinks about reaching a milestone that attests to a future so
much brighter than his past.
“Uncertainty is part
of the undocumented experience,” he said. “But my sister and I have come this
far. I know, wherever we want to be, we can get there."
In search of a better
life
Born in Chicoloapan de
Juarez, near Mexico City, Peralta and his sister Gabriela, who is two years his
senior, began working at the age they should have been starting elementary
school. As a child, Amel Peralta’s single ambition was simply to escape the
poverty and violence he faced on an almost daily basis.
When the siblings fled
Mexico, traveling across the border as unaccompanied minors, their aim was to
unite with distant family in New York and figure things out from there.
“If you had asked me
that day I was crossing the border when I was 13, could I see myself graduating
from college, I would have said: never,” Amel Peralta said. “Not in my wildest
dreams.”
After enduring the
arduous journey north, however, he and his sister arrived to circumstances that
bore little difference to the life of hardship they’d left behind.
Without papers,
schooling or the ability to speak English, they worked full time at whatever
jobs they could find in the underground economy — dry cleaning, construction,
food service, domestic help — working for below minimum wage and often in poor
conditions.
As undocumented
immigrants and underage workers, they felt they had little legal recourse.
“It felt like there
was no hope for us,” Peralta said.
At 17, Amel Peralta
made a last ditch effort to improve his situation, contacting an acquaintance
in California who had offered to help. “It was a big risk,” he said. “But we
said to ourselves: This is enough. We have to do something to change our
lives.”
This time, the risk
paid off. Their California connection — a friend of the family named
Brian Roge Fonteyn — took them in, contributing money so they could attend
classes at Mt. San Antonio community college in Walnut.
For Amel Peralta, the
classes were his first experience with formal schooling, and he enrolled in the
most remedial courses he could find. He poured his energy and determination
into his schoolwork and, within six years, had excellent grades and two
associate’s degrees in math and science.
It took two more years
for Peralta to complete the transfer process and be accepted to several UC
campuses. But there was an additional hurdle: Because he had not gone to high
school, Peralta did not qualify for the assistance available to undocumented
students through AB 540, a law which extends in-state tuition and eligibility
for state financial aid to students who have completed three years of, and
graduated from, a California high school, regardless of immigration status.
Finding a home at UC
Irvine
UC Irvine
undergraduate dean Sharon Salinger took up Peralta’s cause, waiving his fees
until he was able to qualify for AB 540 status under an exception.
As a low-income
student, Amel Peralta’s tuition was fully covered under UC’s Blue and Gold
Opportunity Plan. Scholarships helped cover books and other expenses. To save
money, Amel Peralta lived at home, commuting as much as two to three hours to
get to class. He worked as a private tutor, helping other undergrads with math
and science.
The chemistry major
had been attracted to UC Irvine because of the opportunity to do research. As
part of his undergraduate work, he participated in an NSF-funded summer
research fellowship, looking at the effects of prairie restoration at a
microbial level.
He works as a peer
mentor at the campus student outreach and retention center, and co-chairs
DREAMS UCI, an organization to support undocumented students.
“Here at UCI, I’ve
grown so much,” said Peralta, now 28. “It has been just an incredible
experience for me.”
A double celebration
Amel Peralta’s
celebration this weekend is made doubly joyful by the fact that his sister will
receive her undergraduate degree on the very same day.
From their lives as
orphans in Mexico to their journey to the U.S. and their experience as
undocumented workers and students, the siblings have stuck together. It is
part, he said, of what got him through. Now the two hope to work together to
start a nonprofit to serve immigrant women and children.
Amel Peralta, who
qualifies for temporary relief from deportation under the Deferred Action for
Childhood Arrivals, has other ambitions. He plans to apply to medical school,
with hopes of becoming a doctor and doing humanitarian work in the U.S. or
abroad.
“My sister and I made
it,” he said. “We see it as our duty to make sure others make it.”
Source - universityofcalifornia.edu