Guadalupe Ybarra (nee Estrada )

Loving, Inspiring, Caring, and Warm Hearted

Guadalupe Ybarra at the missions (1961)

San Antonio, Texas

March 18, 2012

Cynthia Villarreal (nee Rodriguez )

Palo Alto College

History 1302 - Spring 2012

 

INTRODUCTION
TRANSCRIPTION
ANALYSIS
TIMELINE
BIBLIOGRAPHY

 

INTRODUCTION

Guadalupe Ybarra was born on September 15, 1941 in
Sugarland, Texas, to Juanita Cisneros Estrada and Petronilo Estrada. She was the youngest of thirteen children born to her parents. At age four she and her family moved to San Antonio, here she was raised. During the summers Mrs. Ybarra and her family moved to Michigan, Ohio, and Indiana to work on the fields, then move back to San Antonio before the new school year. Mrs. Ybarra attended Lanier High School up till the 10th grade. In 1959 she began to work at Bimbi Shoe Company for four years. During the same year she met Filomeno Duran Ybarra Jr. on a bus. On June 13, 1964 she married Mr. Ybarra at Immaculate Conception Catholic Church. Together they had four children Richard, David, Alex, and my mother Elizabeth. In 1977 she and her family moved to Corpus Christi, Texas for eight years. In 1984 the family moved back to San Antonio and Mrs. Ybarra and her husband started their missionary work at Our Lady of the Angels Catholic Church. She has been a parishioner and member of the Guadalupanas at her church for 34years. On October 4, 2008 Mrs. Ybarra’s husband passed away, it has been a very sad time for her. 2008 marked the last year of her missionary work. She has 8 grandchildren including myself and one great grandchild, my son. In 2012 she has became the only living person out of her 13 brothers and sisters. Mrs. Ybarra is more than a grandmother to me, she helped my mother raise my brother and I. She is a wonderful loving person in our family.

 

 

TRANSCRIPTION

What did your parents do for work?
“My parents went to do field work, because they were very old and couldn’t get a job. They had to go and work on the fields like everybody else.”

What was a typical day like working on the fields?
“It was hot, very hot. It was hard work. We had to do lots of lifting and bending down. Carrying lots of stuff and doing things that were very hard work, like a man’s job, and I was just a little girl, so you can imagine how it was for a young girl to be out in the heat working. Like picking cotton and doing all sorts of things on the fields. It was hard.”

What was your job on the field?
“Well everybody had to do the same job; there was no special job for nobody. We did all everything as a family together."

Guadalupe Ybarra working on the fields in Michigan in 1956 Gudalupe second fromt he left wearing sunglasses with friends in Michigan in 1956

Where did you stay and sleep during your summers?
“They provided little houses like cottages for the people that will go over there and work.”

If you didn’t have to work on the fields what would you have liked to do during your summers?
“I would like to go swimming like everybody else, going on trips, like when people go on vacation. I never had a vacation when I was young. That was my vacation every year. They would take me out of school and take me to work. So I had no summer like everybody else. It wasn’t fun like going swimming or Disney Land. Cause to me we were very poor and a big family that my parents couldn’t afford. We had to go and work hard, that’s what we had to go and do.”

Were you and your family close?
“Very close. We were 13 in our family. I had 7 brothers and 6 sisters and I was the youngest. They really showed me a lot of love and respect.”

How did you meet your husband?
“I met him for the first time on the bus on my way to work. I didn’t really pay much attention to him really until he started working at the shoe factory with me and I recognized him from the bus. After a few months we started talking to each other, we started going out with each other and we got married.”

Gudalupe with a friend infront of Immaculate Conception Catholic church in 1963

What influenced you to do your missionary work of many years?
“Because for many years I didn’t know anything about helping others. I would go to church but I really wasn’t interested in doing charity or any other kind of things to help others until I started going to the prayer groups, getting involved in church work, and we started meeting other people that were Christians and because of them we met sister and brothers in Christ who were going as missionaries. So they invited us and we liked doing our missionary work and ever since then we started in 1984 and didn’t stop till 2008. We really did enjoy helping others and doing missionary work.”

What did you to as a missionary?
“We would go and first of all take them food and clothing and we would take a priest with us. And this priest will Baptist babies and marry people. We are the god parents of most of the babies there. Everybody knew us for many years. I enjoy doing everything with helping others. My husband and I were very happy to be doing the lords work. Every time we would go and do whatever we had to do there we would come back very happy and full of joy , and being able to help others made me very happy.”

Why did you stop your missionary work?
“Well we had plans to move over there for 6 months out of the year and stay here for the other 6months, but my husband got retired and that was our plan, but he got sick with cancer for one year and he passed away and we stopped going. And because I have health problems myself, I can’t do anymore missionary work. So I stopped doing anything else.”

A cave they visited while on her first missionary trip. 1975

What life lessons would you like to pass on to the future generations of your family?
“I would like for them to do the same thing that we used to do. Maybe they can not do missionary work but they can help people in the parish where they live or help serve the Lord in different ways. Even at their jobs, they can help others. There’s a lot of needy people here in San Antonio that need help. They don’t have to go and do what we did but they can start helping their family and friends. Just be there and show the love and respect to those that need it. Especially the hungry and the people that don’t have a place to live.”

 

 

Guadalupe and her husband Filomeno in a restruant in San Diego, California in  2006 before her husband was diagnosed with lung cancer

ANALYSIS

What I learned from this interview with my grandmother Guadalupe was of her hard work and dedication to her missionary work. How loving and caring she was to strangers she didn't know, and she traveled a long way to give them clothing and food. She didn't have to do all this, she chooses to. I also learned that I need to talk to my grandmother more about her missionary work, because there is still little that I know. An important point that came across this interview is to help people in need. You don't have to travel to another country to do this, but you can help your family, friends, neighbors, or just anyone here in our community. During the interview I knew this is the point she was trying to get across. I learned a lot about my grandmother during this interview. I learned about her summer's trips working in the fields picking vegetables and fruits. This is something she had never shared with me. I was shocked that I had never seen the photos she shared with me, because I had never seen them before. My six word memoir for this interview is loving, inspiring, caring, and warm hearted. This project taught me not to wait till the last minute to ask about love ones past, because if they pass away, these are stories that will never be heard or shared. I verified the stories told to me by my mother Elizabeth Rodriguez, she was in the room when I gave the interview. This project is a good way of learning someone's past, it was fun and interesting, and recorded to share with others.

 

 

TIMELINE

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY

 

 

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