Thu. Nov 21st, 2024

Our readers have voted, and their Santa Ana Woman of the Year for 2010, is Sarah Rafael Garcia, creator of Barrio Writers, a creative-writing program that encourages students to grow through exposure to the cultural arts and the written word, according to the O.C. Register.

The runner-up in our voting was the O.C. Register’s Therese Cisneros, who does such an awesome job covering all things Latino here in Orange County.  You can friend her on Facebook by clicking here.

Jackie Cordova, the co-owner of Calacas, in Santa Ana, came in third.  Calacas sells products made in Mexico as well as local artwork.  It is a great place to find gifts and fun t-shirts, and great handcrafted art that celebrated our heritage.  I must say that Cordova is not only one of the friendliest persons you will ever meet, she also pours her heart and soul into improving downtown Santa Ana.  She is very involved in local events and community affairs.  You can friend her on Facebook by clicking here.

Gustavo Arellano wrote a nice post about Garcia over at the OC Weekly.  Here are a few excerpts from that article:

García figured life in Santa Ana—where she grew up during the 1980s—would’ve gotten better for teenagers when she returned in 2008. She had just released her first novel, Las Niñas, a memoir of growing up in one of the most Latino cities in the United States, after trying the corporate life for a good decade and hating every moment of it. (Seewww.sarahrafaelgarcia.com for more info.) But when she took the stage at Willard Intermediate School to read, García realized nothing had changed—in fact, things were worse. “I was filled with pride thinking I would change young lives with my book,” García says. “But the resources for the kids were so limited. The library where I spoke was small and overcrowded. Language was no longer the only issue that kept them down—it was also immigration status. The teachers didn’t seem to care—you could tell the students wanted to learn, but no one was listening to them.”

García wanted to help change that. She remembered what a social worker gave her at 15, when García’s father passed away: a journal, plus some words of advice (“There’s nothing I can say right now that can make you understand what happened to your dad, so I’m giving you a journal to write your feelings in”). The young García filled that notebook fast. “Writing gives youth an opportunity to have a voice without anyone judging them,” she says. So in 2009, García decided to start Barrio Writers, a summer reading-and-writing workshop for Santa Ana teens.

The O.C. Register also wrote about Barrio Writers.  Here are a few excerpts from that article:

Thirty high school and college students signed up for the 10-week program. They met twice a week in Santa Ana to read and reflect on essays written in various styles by a range of authors, including Ray Bradbury, John Steinbeck and Malcolm X.

In the end, 25 students finished the program. Stories by 20 of them made their way into the first edition of “Barrio Writers,” a paperback modeled after the class textbook that touches on topics ranging from death to deportation. Two hundred copies were printed up.

You can buy the Barrio Writers book at Santa Ana’s Calacas.  Click here to visit their website.  And you can sign up for Garcia’s email list by clicking here.

author avatar
Art Pedroza Editor
Our Editor, Art Pedroza, worked at the O.C. Register and the OC Weekly and studied journalism at CSUF and UCI. He has lived in Santa Ana for over 30 years and has served on several city and county commissions. When he is not writing or editing Pedroza specializes in risk control and occupational safety. He also teaches part time at Cerritos College and CSUF. Pedroza has an MBA from Keller University.

By Art Pedroza

Our Editor, Art Pedroza, worked at the O.C. Register and the OC Weekly and studied journalism at CSUF and UCI. He has lived in Santa Ana for over 30 years and has served on several city and county commissions. When he is not writing or editing Pedroza specializes in risk control and occupational safety. He also teaches part time at Cerritos College and CSUF. Pedroza has an MBA from Keller University.

20 thoughts on “The 2010 Santa Ana Woman of the Year is Sarah Rafael Garcia”
  1. OMG: No wonder Santa Ana is full of racism and ethnocentric’s; they are surround and indoctrinated by nut whack jobs, being churned out of liberal holes schools!

    You get a racist liberal! Chicano studies is basically a ridiculous program that teachers nothing but hate and tribalism!

    Can we recall!

  2. @ Michelle Quinn. I’ve been reading your comments, Ms. Quinn. And it certainly appears that you’re the real racist. It seems to me it burns your ass that brown people who are indigenous to this land win recognition who work hard for their community. You are always welcomed, if not begged, to go back to your ancestral homeland. You can fight to keep it white over there all you want cuz it would be in your perfect right. This is not white land. Keeping it indigenous!!!!!!

  3. MIchelle Quinn how many times have you been dumped by a Mexican ? It’s Friday night go out and find a date .

  4. I don’t know why, but Mexican men don’t frequent Irish bars! By your constant reminder that one can get laid, it sounds like you need to go out!

    So Mr. Naui why do you harass old people??? Some sort of fetish?

  5. “@ Michelle Quinn. I’ve been reading your comments, Ms. Quinn. And it certainly appears that you’re the real racist.”

    MQ says:

    For some reason, I am going to say you could be wrong…But of course I am white and therefore you are right!

    “It seems to me it burns your ass that brown people who are indigenous to this land win recognition who work hard for their community.”

    MQ says:

    Why don’t you just bring in the tee pees into Santa Ana and start sharpening that bow and arrow’s! Wise up!

    When you start building a Aztec pyramid in Santa Ana then I guess it could be the indigenous people in Santa Ana. But I tend to think it’s more like a bunch of muts that wish they where the indigenous people, so that they can have something to moan about!

    Brain washing kids happens all over this world: On the falls road its hating the British and on the Shankill Road is learning to hate the Catholics. In Santa Ana is learning to hate the white…A little different but none the less the same thing!

    “You can fight to keep it white over there all you want cuz it would be in your perfect right. This is not white land. Keeping it indigenous!!!!!!”

    MQ says:

    It burns your ass to know that indeed this is a land full of white’s and unlike you we don’t care if our neighbor is brown unless he is a whack job like you!

    I suggest you wear a blind fold for the day, talk with people and realize that brown people and white people can be equal di%^heads!

  6. Oh, look Chicy you are not alone in your brown pride Crap!

    I love this saying: It is not a crime to be brown, it should be if is your stupid!

  7. Ms. Quinn,
    Its obvious you are going on a rant about what you know nothing about. The program is offered to all students of every race and ethnicity. This is the best writing program I have ever witnessed. The students who participate gain a great amount of confidence and outlook on life. Nothing of a tribal nature to what you talk about is taught. If anything Ms. Garcia, makes the students feel as they are part of a whole community that includes yourself, Cambodian, Vietnamese, Anglo and every group represented in Orange County. You don’t always have to be so hateful when a person of color, or Latino gets positive attention in Santa Ana. This is very positive work. The students writing improves dramatically. Many local authors, journalist and grad students help the students in the summer. There is just too much love going on in the community and especially this work for you to attack it with out understanding it. If you ever see a little brown child that is happy, smiling a greets with a confident hello, you might ask if she/he is a Barrio Writer.

    much love,

    Teacher X

  8. Art – Thanks for the kind words! I’m so glad that Sarah won! She is a true inspiration to all of us and plays such an important role in the lives of our youth. They can totally relate to her and trust her because she is a constant advocate for them.

    Let’s stay positive and keep spreading kindness!

  9. Teacher X Said:

    is just too much love going on in the community and especially this work for you to attack it with out understanding it. If you ever see a little brown child that is happy, smiling a greets with a confident hello, you might ask if she/he is a Barrio Writer.

    MQ says:

    So much love that you need your own campus police force in your high schools!
    There is NO love going on in your community; unless it is an 15yr being impregnated!
    Santa Ana does not need another non-profit scam! It needs: better schools, more attentive parents and teachers who can teach the kids the basics!

    Barrio means the neighborhood and if the neighborhood is mostly made up of hispanic’s, then how could it be for everyone?

    “If you ever see a little brown child that is happy, smiling a greets with a confident hello, you might ask if she/he is a Barrio Writer.”

    MQ says:

    They only become confident when the become Barrio writers? Well, maybe that is because they were sent to school’s speaking a foreign language, their parents could not care less about their education and they need to go to some chicano writers deal to learn how to write!

    So what your above statement said: They don’t learn in school!

    You are right, they do not!

  10. Naui,

    Keep looking for your skin heads in the US! Wise up!

    Nuts, radical leftist’s, hate other skin colors and despise religion!

    Sounds like you and Theo! Are you two classics skin head’s?

    Sure you are!

  11. Chicuey-Ollin Cuetlachtecuhtli
    Naui Huitzilopochtli

    Great names …. just keep on maginalizing yourselves, it does lots of good.

    1. So now you hate the natives as well as the gays?

      It’s Sunday, why don’t you go to church and listen to the Good Word?

      As for being marginalized, we now have an all-Latino Council. Isn’t it you that has been marginalized?

  12. To Michelle Quinn, Putting it in the best words possible, from a honors, AP, straight A student from Santa Ana, non pregnant teenage Hispanic female, “SUCK IT!!!!”

    P.S. I happen to be a Barrio Writer and I find it rude and pathetic about how much time and hate you put into analyzing this culture you know nothing about.

  13. To Michelle Quinn, Putting it in the best words possible, from a honors, AP, straight A student from Santa Ana, non pregnant teenage Hispanic female, “SUCK IT!!!!”

    MQ says:

    To be a straight A student who is a writer could you not come up with something else other than, “SUCK IT?”

    How about: You are intoxicated my your own verbal verbosity? Cool ah?

    “P.S. I happen to be a Barrio Writer and I find it rude and pathetic about how much time and hate you put into analyzing this culture you know nothing about.”

    MQ says;

    And I find it pathetic and sad that you cannot write about the fact that thousands of hispanic children are abandoned, abused and neglected everyday in Santa Ana instead of coloring it pretty with your colorful “Barrio writing” Maybe if you took the time to really, really look at your community you could see through your rose colored brain washed glasses!

    And congratulation on breaking through the mold, welcome to my club!

  14. Michelle Quinn. Don’t you think if you took the time to read the book then you would have the rights to judge. We are not “coloring it pretty with what you call colorful barrio writing” a lot of the stories in there show many hardships which young teenagers have faced. Barrio Writers, just as much as teaching us to find our writing voice, it is an inspiration to learn and go beyond the “Barrio”. I’m sure if you would go outside Santa Ana, you would find that hundreds of thousands of white, black, etc children are abandoned, abused and neglected daily. Instead of condemning and judging from the side lines, jump in and try to make a real meaningful impact on your community.

    And yes I said suck it because if I used what you would call “intelligent words” my points would never get across.

  15. “Michelle Quinn. Don’t you think if you took the time to read the book then you would have the rights to judge.”

    MQ says:

    I will read the book!

    I am suspicious though of why your writings are not posted on your barrio writer web site?

    ” I’m sure if you would go outside Santa Ana, you would find that hundreds of thousands of white, black, etc children are abandoned, abused and neglected daily. Instead of condemning and judging from the side lines, jump in and try to make a real meaningful impact on your community.”

    MQ says:

    Lets stay in Santa Ana, that is where most killings, abandoned children, high school drop outs, single mothers, teen mothers and gang members congregate! Lets not worry about Newport Beach or Ladera Ranch. Why, when things are not as rosy as one would hope, does one go looking for problems else where?

    You are the A student, you speak spanish, i am assuming and you know the area well; I suggest you write something in Spanish and send it to a Spanish station that really reflects what is going on in your community. Don’t sugar coat it and don’t use words like vulnerable, needy or underserved, use words like child neglect, not assimilating, bad parenting, lack of educating , welfare recipients, dead beat dads, government dependent..etc….

    You will not be popular when you write it, in fact you will be down right hated, but a least you can hold your head up high and know that words are very powerful and maybe, just maybe you got your POINT across so well that someone listen and their kids lives became a little more important and this country will benefit for that!

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