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WHEN THE READING LIGHT WENT ON

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Maria Elena Durazo, 46, president of Hotel and Restaurant Employees Local 11 and commissioner, city of Los Angeles Board of Recreation and Parks:

When I really began reading much more on my own, in a more consistent way, was when I went to college at St. Mary’s in Moraga.

College stands out for me because I had some teachers I identified as being active and concerned about social justice who said, “Here are some great books.” They made a connection between what I liked and books.

A lot of the readings that I started picking up at that time were not necessarily a particular author, as much as they related to contemporary social justice issues or labor issues. Those are the sorts of subjects that turned me on to reading.

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My parents spoke Spanish and very, very little English. We were migrant farm workers so we would go to a minimum of one different school every year. Sometimes it was a couple of schools a year. We didn’t have the consistency in any one school to develop the relationships with the teachers. I don’t remember a teacher having really challenged me to do a whole lot, to find an interest in reading.

Up until high school, I didn’t read a lot, and I think that now it’s sort of come back. I have learned that if I had done a whole lot more reading when I was younger and growing up, I would not have had the problems with writing when I went away to college. I just wouldn’t have been so afraid of it.

I’m hoping that the more I can get my kids to like reading . . . it’ll make it easier for them not to be afraid to write.

With my son [who is 8], I’m able to teach values through reading that I think are important without sitting there and preaching and sermonizing.

I found a children’s version of Bible stories and--though I don’t consider myself actively religious--I find that there are really good stories from this book that talk about sharing and caring and how you treat people who are less well-off than you are.

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