By Steve Walker
In the late nineties as a
Public Speaking teacher at McCollum
High school I was
afforded the opportunity to host 51 guest speakers for my Speech classes. One
of those speakers was none other than Archbishop Patrick Flores the first
Mexican-American Archbishop in the United States .
He was gracious,
articulate and told a very good story growing up as a migrant worker, attending
10th grade twice because he missed so much school that he was forced
to repeat his sophomore year.
He informed my students
about his dreams of becoming a singer. He shared that it was okay that God
didn’t allow him to be a singer because he realized God had bigger plans for
him as a priest and an Archbishop.
The students received him
well. He was one of their favorite speakers that spoke to them. The faculty was
abuzz as well when he showed up to the campus. He was very humble and drove
himself to the campus. My students walked him out to his car when he left.
Ironically during the
nineties I was still in the Army Reserve and each year flew to Washington D.C.
for my two weeks annual drill at the Pentagon. Last week I shared my encounter
on my way to D.C. with former HUD Secretary & Mayor Henry Cisneros.
On one of my trips back to
San Antonio I had a short layover in Dallas . As I sat in the
airport waiting for my flight, I happened to look up and there was the
Archbishop sitting next to me waiting for the same plane to take us home. I
reintroduced myself and we chit chatted for about 40 minutes waiting to board
our plane and get back to San Antonio .
I profusely thanked him
for taking time out of his busy schedule to visit with my students and
encourage them in their dreams. He said he enjoyed visiting with them talking
about his life and answering some of their questions. He said he was used to
speaking to students attending catholic school and I was one of the few public
school teachers who invited him to speak. That made my day.
Having been raised
Catholic, attending St. Gregory’s Catholic School in Balcones Heights and
scheduled to attend Central Catholic in 1960, I shared with him that I was
crushed that we moved to Massachusetts two weeks before school started and I
missed the opportunity to attend what was and still is a great school in San
Antonio.
He laughed and told me
that it appeared I turned out all right after all. That was good to hear from
the Archbishop of San Antonio during our short respite in the Dallas airport.
As I wrote last week about
my disappointment on moving and not attending Central Catholic
High School and being a
classmate of former Mayor Henry Cisneros, I take heart that the Archbishop was
very encouraging to me.
The archbishop was also
very kind to my students by willingly share part of his life experiences with
us. After that encounter in Dallas I did speak
with him again on occasion over the years in San Antonio .
Anyway, as always, what I
write is “Just a Thought.”
Steve Walker is a Vietnam
Veteran and former Justice of the Peace and Journalist. His column “Ask the
Judge” column ran in La Prensa for the last two years.
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