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For This Young Latino, Spending More Time With Family Is An Upside To The Pandemic

Izcan Ordaz and his parents standing in their yard in Fort Worth.
Keren Carrión
/
KERA News
Izcan Ordaz (center) has been spending more time with his parents Simon Ordaz (left) and Xochitl Ortiz during the pandemic.

The "Every 30 Seconds" project is following first-time voter Izcan Ordaz. He just started college virtually, and spending more time at home has given him time to learn more about his father's immigration journey.

The start to Izcan Ordaz’s freshman year of college at The University of Texas at Austin isn’t what he originally envisioned. The 18-year-old thought he would be on campus. Instead, he’s taking classes virtually from home.

Staying home also means spending more time with parents — and for him, that has been a silver lining of the coronavirus pandemic. Ordaz has been helping his father tend to the family’s garden in the backyard of their Fort Worth, Texas, home. His dad has taught him how to use a shovel and pickax. The younger Ordaz has also helped his dad carry bags of soil and build raised garden beds.

A young Latino in the U.S. turns voting age about every 30 seconds. KERA is part of The World’s “Every 30 Seconds” project, reporting on young Latino voters, produced with support from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.
“If I’m this age coming to a new country [and] I don’t know English — I’m like, ‘How could I do that?’ It was just always so hard for me to imagine that for myself. But I always did that. It would get me up in the morning.”
Izcan Ordaz

These moments have been an opportunity for father and son to bond. Ordaz has been learning more of his father’s story immigrating from Mexico to the US in the early 1990s. His father, Simon Ordaz, faced many challenges, such as not knowing English when he arrived in the US. He was 16 years old then, even younger than his son is now.

“If I’m this age coming to a new country [and] I don’t know English — I’m like, ‘How could I do that?’” Izcan Ordaz said of his father. “It was just always so hard for me to imagine that for myself. But I always did that. It would get me up in the morning.”

Izcan Ordaz is part of a new generation of Latino voters who were born in the US, but whose parents or grandparents came from other countries. Their elder relatives’ immigration stories and experiences are passed down and can help shape their political views.

He pays attention to how President Donald Trump talks about immigrants and his policies on immigration. Still, he considers himself more conservative than his parents. Before the Texas primary election, he considered voting for former Democratic presidential candidate and former New York City Mayor Mike Bloomberg.

Now, he plans to vote for former Vice President Joe Biden. But he said he still has concerns about how Biden would handle the economy.

Izcan sitting in a room at home attending a virtual class on a lap top.
Keren Carrión
/
KERA News
Izcan Ordaz, 18, on his virtual first day of classes at the freshman year of college at the University of Texas at Austin, Aug. 26, 2020.

The family garden is especially important for Simon Ordaz, who grew up in a rural town in Mexico where everyone knew how to work the fields.

“I think it was at age 9, you know, all my classmates, they would finish school and then they went to work in the field helping out,” he said. “So, everyone knew how to use a shovel and how to do all this physical work.”

Over the past few months of the pandemic, he’s planted more than two dozen vegetables, herbs and flowers. That includes Mexican zinnias — “they’re just a flower machine ... producing flowers the entire season,” he said — along with carrots, lemongrass and rosemary.

For Simon Ordaz and his wife, Xochitl Ortiz, the garden is not only a way to eat healthier, but it’s also a reminder of their cultural roots and visits to Mexico. Ortiz was born and raised in Chicago, but her parents are from Mexico.

Xochitl Ortiz holds a leaf to her nose as she stands the family yard surrounded by a high wooden fence with plants growing against it.
Keren Carrión
/
KERA News
Xochitl Ortiz smells a leaf from a tree in the family backyard in Fort Worth, Texas.

Ortiz points to a couple of fruit trees.

“Both of my grandmas had a lime tree,” she said. “None of them had the pomegranate tree, but those are two things that ... I have that connection, that memory.”

Izcan Ordaz said hearing his parents’ stories is humbling — especially when he considers how far his father has come.

“It was always something to keep me in check, to get me back to the books if I saw myself slipping up or going on my phone,” Izcan Ordaz said. “And it was something that would motivate me. [If] I don’t want to get up. I’m like, ‘Hey, it doesn’t matter. Look at what he did.’”

“I saw my dad coming from humble beginnings. He was a very smart person, but he wasn’t able to find a lot of opportunities because he did not have an education.”
Izcan Ordaz

While growing up in Mexico, the elder Ordaz says his biggest dream was to study and become a working professional. But he couldn't afford to pay for college, so he decided to move to the U.S.

“I saw my dad coming from humble beginnings,” Izcan Ordaz said. “He was a very smart person, but he wasn’t able to find a lot of opportunities because he did not have an education.”

Simon Ordaz worked as a busboy in restaurants and bars in the Chicago area. He’d finish his shift at 1 a.m. or 2 a.m., then wake up at 6 a.m. to catch a bus to go to high school.

“My shifts were, you know, 14 to 16 hours a day,” he said. “It was hard.”

Izcan & his parents stand near a stone patio with table set and grill against the back of their brick house in their fenced yard with their white dog in the background.
Keren Carrión
/
KERA News
Izcan Ordaz (left) and his parents in the backyard of their home in Fort Worth, Texas.

In his first apartment, he lived with more than a dozen other men, all of whom were single and also from Mexico. Eventually, he made it to college and now works as an electrical engineer.

Izcan Ordaz heard these stories growing up. Sitting across the kitchen table one recent Saturday morning, he told his dad what that has meant to him.

“There’s a picture that I remember seeing when I was little. We had it out in the old house. It was right at the top of the stairs. You took me to the zoo and your eyes were all red,” the son said. “I didn’t realize it when I was young until I got older. Um ... that’s when I realized that you ... that you did it all for us.”

The younger Ordaz said he’s holding on to these life lessons — especially now, as he navigates college life during a pandemic with so much uncertainty ahead.

This story is part of The World's "Every 30 Seconds" project, a collaborative public media reporting project tracing the young Latino electorate leading up to the 2020 presidential election and beyond.

Got a tip? Email Stella M. Chávez at schavez@kera.org. You can follow Stella on Twitter @stellamchavez.

KERA News is made possible through the generosity of our members. If you find this reporting valuable, consider making a tax-deductible gifttoday. Thank you.

Stella M. Chávez is KERA’s immigration/demographics reporter/blogger. Her journalism roots run deep: She spent a decade and a half in newspapers – including seven years at The Dallas Morning News, where she covered education and won the Livingston Award for National Reporting, which is given annually to the best journalists across the country under age 35.