This important yet little-known civil rights story focuses on Roberto
Alvarez, a student whose 1931 court battle against racism and school
segregation in Lemon Grove, California, is considered the first time an
immigrant community used the courts to successfully fight injustice. A
must-read for young activists, or for anyone interested in standing up
for what's right.
Roberto Alvarez's world changed the day he could no longer attend Lemon
Grove Grammar School in the small, rural community where he lived near
San Diego, California. He and the other Mexican American students were
told they had to go to a new, separate school--one where they would not
hold back the other students. But Roberto and the other students and
their families believed the new school's real purpose was to segregate,
to separate. They didn't think that was right, or just, or legal.
Based on true events, this picture book by Sibert award-winning author
Larry Dane Brimner and Pura Belpré honor award-winning illustrator Maya
Gonzalez follows Roberto and the other immigrant families on their
journey.