Jennifer Sanchez Family Analysis

Decent Essays
Your Honour,
I Jennifer Sanchez provide this reference in full knowledge of my uncle J Cruz Sanchez-Duarte charge of Deportation. I have known J Cruz Sanchez-Duarte(my uncle) for eighteen years, my entire life. Additionally,I know him as a father,husband, and uncle. His life consisted of caring for his four daughters and wife, this was possible with the devotion he had in his fellow job in Executive Construction and Mp Mechanics. Where he has been working the past ten years in construction/plumbing. J Cruz Sanchez-Duarte(my uncle) dedicated about ninety one hours weekly to his labor, regularly working from Monday to Sundays. The average worker works about sixty hours a week. Not to mention the average full time worker works about eight hours. On the other hand,he would work about thirteen
…show more content…
They were unjustifiably assassinated by unknown criminals in Mexico. Therefore for that reason, he fears to return to Mexico. He can to the U.S. in hope of a better future for his family and him. To Escape the immense violence in Mexico and for his family to not encounter any of these crime threats or be victims of them. Furthermore, from my perspective J Cruz Sanchez( my uncle) is a humane and loving person, who only strives to offer the best to his family. If he were to be deported his daughters would be immensely tormented, due to the fact that their father plays a huge role in their lives. Their father is the only one who economically supports them and primarily every child needs their father’s love. They are already affected by these events because they can not see their father on a daily basis. They’re emotionally hurt and all because their Dad just wanted to give them a better living. What every parent wants to offer their children. His wife also barely gave birth to a newborn and she needs him now more than ever, if he is deported his daughter won’t be able to grow up with a father figure. Not because her father passed away, or decided to leave her similarly

Related Documents

  • Improved Essays

    This is not uncommon for children who go seeking out their missing parents, most are robbed from, beaten, raped, and in worse cases, killed by fellow immigrants or police. Issues of immigration happen every day, most are not written out and published into a book like Enrique’s story. These events happen every day without our knowledge. In the article,…

    • 1056 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    3.07 Family Analysis

    • 613 Words
    • 3 Pages

    The three targeted areas are urgently needed by the family system from the assessment are a stable home, an interaction between siblings, and addressing the major ongoing problem within the family. For a stable home, in the movie scene, it appears how unstable the Grapes family home is, the house is damaged, and they did not have enough money to rebuild it or fix the parts that were falling apart. The second target area is the interaction between siblings, they did not express their feelings towards each other or shared feelings among each other and instead kept it to themselves and left it hanging. It kind of goes with my third point which is addressing the major ongoing problem within the family. No one ever talked about the struggles the family was facing.…

    • 613 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Decent Essays

    I Ramona Euceda

    • 213 Words
    • 1 Pages

    I Ramona Lorena Euceda, mother of Kevin Adalberto Euceda, ask and beg you Judge to consider letting my son stay in the Country. Kevin is a good teenager and has been raised at church since he was a child. He left my house 4 years ago and moved to Austin so he could study because he was accepted at the University of Texas where he has always dreamed of attending. The University accepted him because he was a good student, always had a great record, and excellent grades.…

    • 213 Words
    • 1 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Looking back to recent years one sees, “In 2012, Colorlines reported that about 90,000 undocumented parents of American citizen children were deported each year” (Vasquez). The family is given with no pick or choice American citizen children are set out for this life with no consideration and the number of innocent lives being drastically impacted is a number that only continues to grow. About 4.5 million children are born into undocumented families (Vasquez). Families like those are known as “mixed status” referring to compromised families with different citizenships (Vasquez). These families, besides being targeted for deportation, are also labeled as some sort of outsider…

    • 1397 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The number of Latino immigrants deported have bloom up since the mid- 90s. In 1996, the U.S. law changed expanding the number of deportation offenses and eliminating the ability of judges to exercise any possible option to avoid majority cases. In combination with a congressionally imposed quota, which states that U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and the interior enforcement agency of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) detains an average of 34,000 individuals daily. In his most recent book, Reform without Justice: Latino Migrant Politics and the Homeland Security States, Alfonso Gonzales opens with the story of a veteran, who he met at a protest against U.S. immigration policy in Mexico City in November 2010. Bernardo told…

    • 1681 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Culture is a unique way that family forms itself in terms of rules roles habit activities and beliefs. Every family is different in its own way as seen in the Angelino family factor such as the: Tradition. As we are told the Angelino family grand parents emigrated from Italy in 1904,the family was famous of its own Italian sausage which can be seen as part of their tradition, they had larger family of five expecting the sixth one showing a tradition of many children, there grandparent mama who is old is taken care of and visted,this same point is seen in Mc Neil family in that they are from prestigious educated family, less is forced to them by their parents as they are left to decided their issue. SPECIAL…

    • 844 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Family in latin america is very high priority, but why would a mother leave their children all the sudden. Well in the children's eyes they think their mother doesn’t love them anymore. Well there are many reasons why they leave. For example in guatemala, a low income household earns about 2 pesos a week, on that income how can one person live, but a whole family they would barely survive, another reason would be to move all of them to america and live a better life. Supporting a family takes a lot of work, especially for a single mother, moving to america would open up tons of money making opportunities, which means that a single migrant worker can make more money to support her family.…

    • 422 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Decent Essays

    At 8-9.30am he worked in the fields or the library. At 10am he went to the High mass. From 11am-2pm he worked again. At 2pm…

    • 259 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Great Essays

    Working long hours, not only drains the worker physically but mentally as well, due to the inadequate funds to support their family. Low-income worker and their…

    • 1376 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Carlos and his brother are two of 14,000 other children who’ve been exiled from Cuba without their parents. Children are admitted quickly into the United States because they aren’t required to have security clearances, unlike their parents who wait months and sometimes years for welcomed entry. From the time that Eire and his brother enter the United States, three and a half years go by until they are reunited with their mother in America. Eire’s father never reaches them.…

    • 1128 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The United States stands to be the number one most frequently immigrated country in the world. The idea that draws so many people to this country every year is the American dream of opportunity. Much of the world population is struggling to survive each and everyday, living on nothing and fighting a continuous fight against drugs and violence. The idea that draws so many Latin American’s attention is the idea that an individual can cross the border and suddenly be capable of providing a prosperous life for themselves or their family. This is an opportunity that to some, is not one that can be easily passed over.…

    • 777 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Julia Alvarez, the author of “Before We Were Free”, has personally experienced what the characters in her book have encountered. Alvarez, having had to grow up in the Dominican Republic, was closely involved in the underground works to relinquish the dictator, Trujillo. The story is a reputable representation of the Hispanic culture. Because Alvarez has firsthand knowledge of the conflict in the Dominican Republic, she has merit to compose a book that brings life to the culture. In order to fully understand the culture she describes, you need to know and appreciate the author’s background.…

    • 1502 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    A mother’s love is one that will always be there with no questions asked. Love is the foundation for a prosperous and thriving family Pat Mora was born in El Paso, Texas in 1942, to a Spanish speaking family. Mora “takes pride in being a Hispanic writer, she sees her work for both children and adults as bound up with the effort to promote literacy, a wider knowledge and appreciation of Hispanic culture and heritage, and cross cultural understanding” (971). Mora shows the concept of a Mother’s love through her poems “Elena” and “Mothers and Daughters.” She also gives us a glimpse of what life is like as a Mexican American, she explains their hardships, strengths, and trials that make them who they are.…

    • 964 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    My families’ migration story dates back to three generations. My great-grandfather came to the United States for the first time through the Bracero Program; a program that “brought millions of Mexican guest workers to the United States [which] grew out of a series of bilateral agreements between Mexico and the United States short-term, from 1942 to 1964.” Unfortunately, my great-grandfather passed away a while back when I was very young, therefore, for this assignment, I decided to acknowledge my parents’ migration story, a story that relies on a series of events that tore our family apart but simultaneously brought us closer together. I interviewed my mother and my father regarding, their own individual migration stories while also focusing…

    • 1107 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    According to You May Ask Yourself (Conley, 2013, p. 457), extended family is the “kin networks that extend outside or beyond the nuclear family”. In the case of Hidden America: Children of the Mountains (2009), extended family is a type of family in where relatives (aunts, uncles, grandparents, and cousins) as well as parents and their children live in the same house. Most of the families seen in the film were extended families in which the head of the house was the mother of the family. In these cases, a father figure is usually absent. Most families in the poorer regions of Appalachia were either in ruins, or extremely dysfunctional.…

    • 717 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays