Felícitas y Gonzalo Méndez: Para todos los niños, by Mari Vicente
COMING SOON! Expected early to mid-April 2026
In 1944 in Westminster, California, while white children attended a beautiful school with many resources, Latinex children attended a decrepit school surrounded by an electrical fence next to a cow pasture. Most schools in the western and southwestern United States segregated Latinex children from their white counterparts. When their children were denied enrollment in the good school, Felícitas and Gonzalo Méndez decided to take a stand: They organized their community, hired a civil rights lawyer, and paid for the lion's share of all legal fees.
This is the true story of a family that challenged discrimination. The case Méndez v Westminster produced the famous words "Separate is never equal" for the first time in the USA's legal history, setting the precedent for Brown v Board of Education. It was because of Méndez v Westminster that California became the first state in the USA to desegregate schools. This is an inspiring story about Latinex heroes, the value of fighting for equality, and the power of banding together as a community in order to fight for justice.
Felícitas and Gonzalo Méndez: Para todos los niños is a comprehensible novel written in intermediate level Spanish that provides a full glossary of all vocabulary used. This story is appropriate for many types of readers: Spanish learners in middle and high schools, native Spanish speakers in elementary schools, and students in Spanish immersion programs. It's also appropriate for adults who are non-native speakers to enjoy an interesting, true story, while practicing their Spanish skills. Adult native speakers would learn a chapter about Latinos and civil rights history in the United States.
Level 2-3 and above
isbn 979-8277718988