The American Immigration Council is proud to announce the winner of the 21st Annual Celebrate America Fifth Grade Creative Writing Contest. This contest encourages educators to incorporate lessons on U.S. immigration into their classrooms and gives fifth graders the opportunity to explain, in their own words, why they are proud America is a nation of immigrants.
This year’s winning poem “The Blessing of Immigration” was written by Imyra Guerrero from Boston Teachers Union Pilot School in Roslindale, Massachusetts. The poem describes her father’s journey immigrating from Honduras to building a family in the United States. Imyra said she was inspired to write the poem because her father was “so brave to make such a big choice to come to America.”
Read Imyra’s winning entry below:
The Blessing of Immigration
It’s Gone
Everything
Gone
My home
My mom
My family
My childhood
Thinking
No me gusta!
But there’s nothing I can do
I didn’t want this to happen
But it did
I could not change anything
lf I had one wish
I would stay
Left
I left everything
My mom
My friends
My home
Todas
My New Home
America
Boston
English
I was so confused
Overwhelmed
“What do I do now?”
Adiós Honduras
Adiós
I said Adiós
But I want to say it again
So,
Adiós, mamá,
Adiós, amigos,
Adiós, mi vida
Fit In
I didn’t know what they were saying
Mi papá told me that we were in Boston
That they spoke English
I went to school
People didn’t say “Hola.”
lnstead they said “Hi.”
But I didn’t
English
“How do I speak it?”
¿Cómo se dice?
“Yo no sé,” Papá says,
“We will learn soon.”
I didn’t fit in
Maple Street
I saw this female
She taught me
She taught me how to speak English!
Estaba tan feliz
Nikki
ls from Boston
She’s different
Smart
Sassy
Funny
Mi novia, mi amor
My New Family
Friends
Family all happy
Because of my new hija,
Imyra
I will never forget
The best day of my life,
Moving to America
I didn’t know it yet,
But soon I did
Now
Ahora, este país es mi casa,
I live here,
I have family and friends here,
America!
Author’s Note: This is my papa’s story. His life changed as soon as he left Honduras. He was only 14, but knew what was happening. He left because it wasn’t safe. There were gangs, and people being kidnapped. He had to leave his mom which was really hard. But when he met my mom he had help instantly. Now, even though my papa got deported, he is still a blessed immigrant.
FILED UNDER: Celebrate America, featured