
Maritza Santana Oropeza
Mapping Migraciones: A celebration of Latinidad, migration, and the stories that connect us across the globe.

My Ama and Apa lived the life of migrant workers following the harvest season and living where the work took them, like many immigrants before and after them. After many years of hard work and struggle they finally decided to plant roots in Oceano, California.
Growing up as a third generation Chicana, my family’s story of migration from Mexico through the states has shown me that borders are imaginary lines that we created for unnecessary struggle. One thing I takeaway from their struggle is that my Ama and Apa were the same people they were in Michoacán, Nuevo León, Texas, and Oceano, Ca. Borders may exist to divide, but family ties are indivisible.
Borders are imaginary lines that we created for unnecessary struggle
My family migrated in search of better opportunities for their descendants. Just like birds that migrate and follow their natural instincts.
Whenever I’m out in the nature world, I always take a moment to appreciate the land my ancestors left for us.

Of all the birds, the eagle is the greatest sacred bird among most Native Americans. The meaning of the eagle symbol signifies courage, wisdom, and strength, which is very similar to what my family envisioned when they crossed the border into the United States.