Mario Martinez Velasquez

I Believe I Can Do More

Mario Velasquez (1966)

San Antonio, Texas

March 12, 2012

Mario Alberto Velasquez

Palo Alto College

History 1302 - Spring 2012

 

INTRODUCTION
TRANSCRIPTION
ANALYSIS
TIMELINE
BIBLIOGRAPHY

 

INTRODUCTION

Mario Martinez Velasquez was born February 24, 1947 in
Villa de Fuente Coahuila, Mexico to Leopoldo Velasquez and Constancia Martinez. Mario is the eldest of four siblings, two brothers and one sister. His education was very short and reached only the 7th grade because being from a poor family he had to work to provide. In 1970 he met his wife Rosa Maria Toledo and married her in a small town called Rio Ruidoso, Mexico on October 1, 1970. In the month of September 1969 Mario moved to San Antonio,Texas and one year later brought his wife to start a new life. They have been married for forty-one years. They both have two wonderful children, Mario and Lorena Velasquez along with four grandchildren. They both have been living in San Antonio for forty-one years. San Antonio has been the only place they have lived since their move to the United States. Rosa began working cleaning offices and in 1982 began working in a shoe factory called San Antonio Shoes and has been there since, a total of twenty-nine years. Mario has been working as a small painting contractor since 1993. Most of his life has been dedicated to painting, about forty years. In the year of 1996 their lives were transformed and became memebers of Victory Chapel for seven years and currently are members at Iglesia Bethel since 2003 until now. They both serve as as volunteers in the church every Thursday and Sunday as ushers and greeters. They are the reason why I am alive today, they both have been a blessing in my life and a great influence to me. This interview was conducted in Spanish and translated to English by Mario Alberto Velasquez.

 

 

TRANSCRIPTION

What do you remember about this photo?
It was a picture taken because we used to all live in one room and a new room was added. That one room was old and rain came in from everywhere, it cost $2,000.00 pesos to add.

How did you feel with the extra room?
Well, just look at my smile. I was now going to be able to sleep on a bed. It was a dream come true because as soon as my sister was born I had to sleep on the floor because I was the oldest. Everyone else got to sleep on one bed.

What else do you remember from your youth?
My mom always bought me big clothes so it could last a long time and big shoes too. I used to hate it because the kids in school used to make fun of me and I was embarrassed to be around girls.

Mario smiling with family. His mom Constancia, his brother Leopoldo and Jose and his sister Teresa (1959)

What memory do have just before coming to San Antonio?
All of my father's friends had sons my age and were sent up north to work in the fields and eventually were legal but all of them were sent to Vietnam and my father's fear was that they were going to do the same if he took me along up north.

Did it bother you that he didn't at that time?
Yes, it bothered me so much because the friends my age were residents and legal in the United States and were working making money. They had better clothes and better toys. I was angry at my father because I wanted to work and have better things.

When did you decide to come to the United States and how did you do it?
It was 1969 and a friend who crossed over to Eagle Pass, Tx. kept encouraging to cross over but I was afraid. I did go that year and we went in a bus, there was not too much hassle or hardly any check points at that time.

Was San Antonio what you had expected it to be?
I could see from a distance the tower and that impressed me alot. They had just recently build it. The area I ended living at was horrible, it was by Callaghan and Old Highway 90. The neighborhood was ugly to me and not what I thought it would be like.

Mario and his new house (1979) Mario with his two children and his younger brother Leopoldo(1977)

What was the work environment like?
There was alot of verbal abuse. The Chicanos always called me wetback and always kept me as a helper for ten years. My chances would have been better working with the white people, they still were rough but the Chicanos treated me worse. All Chicanos were verbally abusive during that time. They paid very little and I remember always sanding.

What would you do?
Nothing, because they would threaten to call La Migra. I lived in fear because I did not want to be deported. I did not know about going somewhere else to work with another company.

What were your living conditions at first?
There was a house with many people in it but there was no space inside so I had to sleep outside by a tree on a cardboard for two weeks. It was hot and lots of mosquitos. Finally someone left and I had a chance to move in and sleep inside on the floor.

What was one of your dreams during that time?
I just wanted my own room, back in Mexico we all lived in one room. The bed, icebox, and stove was all in a 10 by 10 room. There was hardly any room, we all slept on one bed, my mom and two brothers and when my sister was born I had to sleep on the floor because I was the oldest.

Mario and Rosa at Hemisphere Plaza New Years Eve (1973) Mario and Rosa with friend's at Randy's Ballroom (1991)

How did you meet your wife?
I met her at the school by La Plaza in Mexico.

How old were you and her when you first met?
I was 22 and she was 13. I liked the way she would walk, she was different and carried herself much different from the other crazy girls.

What's with the beard?
Your mother wanted me to grow it and fussed later on because I never trimmed it, I just let it grow. I wanted to look older and be respected.

Mario and Rosa eating at downtown riverwalk (1993)

What was your reason for this picture with the house behind you?
It was 1979 and I had just gotten off from work. I was happy because it was my house and I owned it. I painted for a living and I felt important being a homeowner. I enjoyed making it look nice.

How did you become an independant contractor?
Where I would work for a company many Americanos asked if I did any side jobs because they complained that the companies were charging them too much.

What did you say?
I told them that I would work but only in the evenings and on saturdays. I thought it was good money charging them half of what the companies would charge.

Was it hard to work long hours for you?
I always enjoyed working. When I came to the United States that's all I wanted to do.I had been working hard for someone else to make all the money so I started doing side jobs until I was making more on the side than the company I was working for so I quit because I was getting busier.

Mario with his two children at San Antonio Zoo (1975)

What did you enjoy most at the zoo?
We used to go often to take the train ride and I always enjoyed getting on. When I was a kid I never had the chance to do things like that.

Had you ever been to a zoo before?
No, that is why I enjoyed taking you guys to the zoo. I like getting on the train and the box cars, it was alot of fun.




 

 

Mario and Rosa Velasquez

ANALYSIS

This oral history project has given me the opportunity to be able to have a written history of my family. It has been a learning experience hearing my father speak of times that were tough for him growing up in Mexico and eventually move to the United States. My father has so much to say and this is just the beginning of having a record of my family's history. Definitely it was not easy for my father in the beginning here but his determination and persistence to live a better life not only for himself but for his family to have a better start was a dream for him. Some of the verbal abuse he went through was something I was not aware and the crazy thing is I know some of the people he was talking about and that amazes me because he has not let any of the discouraging words people would say to him from accomplishing his goals. It has been an eye opener on how some Mexican immigrants were treated especially coming from Mexican Americans. My father in some moments shared frustrations why second and third generation Mexicans born here would treat people from Mexico badly and calling them "wetback". At times his voice was sadden thinking of past experiences of humiliation. My mother was with us during the interview and she was able to be a witness to the hard times my father went through, coming home angry and frustrated because of the unfairness he would go through at work.I believe that one huge benefit of learning from the past through oral process is that one has the great opportunity to hear from the person live but one would have to dig a little more for accuracy because anyone can make things up. I enjoyed this way of learning about the past, it gives the opportunity for one person to tell their story, what they saw and what they lived during a piece of time in history.










 

 

TIMELINE

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY

 

 

Return to Oral History Projects 14:27 1/31/2012