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Todos Iguales / All Equal

Un corrido de Lemon Grove / A Ballad of Lemon Grove

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

This bilingual audiobook shares the empowering true story of the 1931 Lemon Grove Incident, in which Mexican families in southern California won the first school desegregation case in United States history.

Starred review, Booklist

Starred review, School Library Journal

Starred review, Publishers Weekly

Best Books for Children 2019, New York Public Library

Best of the Best Books 2019, Chicago Public Library

2020 Orbis Pictus Recommended Title, National Council of Teachers of English

Ten-year-old Roberto Álvarez loved school. He, his siblings, and neighbors attended the Lemon Grove School along with the white children from nearby homes. The children studied and played together as equals.

In the summer of 1930, the Lemon Grove School Board decided to segregate the Mexican American students. The board claimed the children had a "language handicap" and needed to be "Americanized." When the Mexican families learned of this plan, they refused to let their children enter the new, inferior school that had been erected. They formed a neighborhood committee and sought legal help. Roberto, a bright boy who spoke English well, became the plaintiff in a suit filed by the Mexican families. On March 12, 1931, the case of Roberto Álvarez v. the Board of Trustees of the Lemon Grove School District was decided. The judge ruled in favor of the children's right to equal education, ordering that Roberto and all the other Mexican American students be immediately reinstated in the Lemon Grove School.

This nonfiction bilingual audiobook, written in both English and Spanish, tells the empowering story of The Lemon Grove Incident—a major victory in the battle against school segregation, and a testament to the tenacity of an immigrant community and its fight for equal rights.

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  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from September 23, 2019
      In the summer of 1930, the school board of Lemon Grove, Calif., made a radical decision: to build a separate school for the community’s Mexican-American students. The “two-room, barnlike building,” filled with “castoff school supplies,” galvanized Lemon Grove’s Mexican American community. Their organizing resulted in 12-year-old Roberto Álvarez becoming the plaintiff in the “first successful school desegregation case in United States history.” Opening with a corrido, a traditional Mexican story-song, the bilingual text in Spanish and English presents a lesser-known chapter of U.S. civil rights history in clear, compelling prose, centering the story in immigrant community action. Vivid illustrations, created with gouache and relief-printing inks, combine crisp edges and soft textures, conjuring the feeling of looking back into time. Concluding spreads delve further into the history and impact of the case, the major players involved in the action, and the structure of corridos. Essential and enlightening. Ages 8–12.

Formats

  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

Languages

  • Spanish; Castilian

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