|
The second keynote speaker, José Feliciano, vocalized the
ethnic pride the best when he emphasized “All Puerto Ricans are
U.S. citizens,” and when he reiterated “soy un Jibaro.”
The audience would reply with beaming faces and a roar of
applause.
As this year’s spotlighted nationality went to the Puerto
Ricans, this year’s Breakfast would pay tribute to the Puerto
Rican culture by chronicling its past, present, and looking
toward its future.
Loud cheers filled the DeLucas Place in the Park hall when
U.S. Senator Sherrod Brown called U.S. Supreme Court Justice
nominee Sonia Sotomayor
humble and highly qualified.
“This could make all of you who are
Puerto Rican proud and could make all us Americans proud:
she has had more experience as a judge than anyone that's been
nominated for the United States Supreme Court in the last 100
years,” Brown said.
The Breakfast had two keynote speakers—Eugenio
“Gene” Rivera, a clinical social worker in Connecticut, and
Feliciano, chairman of the
Hispanic Roundtable. Rivera, of Ponce, spoke about the “genesis”
of the Puerto Rican community in
Lorain. Feliciano, of Yauco,
spoke about the Puerto Ricans’ current significance and future
as a growing community.
Rivera wrote about the first Puerto Ricans to settle in Lorain,
published in the book The Puerto Rican Diaspora: Historical
Perspectives.
He said the first busload of Puerto Ricans arrived in Lorain in
the late 1940s. Roughly 200 lived within the barracks at the
Lorain National Tube and worked the steel mills.
Unable to speak English and having to adapt to a new, colder
climate posed a great challenge for the early Puerto Ricans to
settle in Lorain. But their problems did not end there, Rivera
explained. Housing was scarce, and their social and religious
needs were not being met, Rivera said.
But by 1954, the number of Puerto Ricans in Lorain would quickly
grow to 2,700, and with growing numbers came great housing
expansions.
Without the approval of Lorain City Council, the early Puerto
Ricans began to construct houses extending multiple streets in
an area they called “El Campito.”
The Puerto Rican and city leaders soon resolved their legal
disputes, and the housing district grew, Rivera said. La
Capilla del Sagrado Corazon opened soon after, serving
their religious needs. |