By Chardonnay Beaver | Reyets Fellow
Born to Mexican and Puerto Rican immigrants, Sylvia Mendez was expected to go to a segregated school for Mexican students as a child. But when Mendez was in the third grade, her parents sued the all-white Westminster School District after they denied entry to Mendez and her siblings. The landmark case, Mendez v. Westminster, was settled in 1947, which successfully desegregated public schools in California. The case was the first ruling in the U.S. to rule in favor of desegregation, setting a precedent for future cases like Brown v. Board of Education (1954). After successfully completing her education, Mendez worked in nursing for 30 years. She's gone on to become a civil rights activist in her own right, speaking publicly on her historic case and advocating for Hispanic student rights in the U.S. In 2011, President Barack Obama awarded her the Presidential Medal of Freedom for her work in civil rights. She is proof that young people are facilitators of change! #schooldesegeration #latinxheritagemonth #thechildrenarethefuture #share #standupforyourreyets