Historias: Stories of El Paso - Virtual Exhibition
Historias: Historias de El Paso - Exposición Virtual

Historias: Stories of El Paso - Virtual Exhibition

Historias: Stories of El Paso A virtual exhibition curated by our community Courtesy of: Patricia Brunson Title: Jesus Norman Historia type: Photograph I took this picture around 1979 while hiking around the mountains near UTEP with my nephew, Jesus Rene, when I was about 17. We were overlooking the Rio Grande into Ciudad Juarez. He was visiting us with my brother and his family from Van Horn, TX. Jesus and I talked about the differences in the rocks, about what the trains might be carrying - where they might be going, looked for quick-moving lizards and watched the slow pace of the river flowing below. In that river, we saw The Crossers moving cautiously in the shallow water, sack in hand, heading to “our side” of the world. Like the lizards, they’d quickly vanish out of sight. I tried to tell Jesus what my mother always taught us, say a prayer for Esos pobrecitos, but he was too little as he shut his eyes closed, to do more than move his lips saying nothing as I prayed, “Cuidalos Señor y que encuentran trabajo”. My older brother had given me a Nikon camera. This particular day, Jesus and I went wandering for a photo adventure. This shot is weak in composition and quality, but I chose it because it sums up life here on this dusty border. Here, what seems bleak and impoverished is -- not that. What you might see as dirt, to us, is life! The border is that mystical place between here and there, where the winner of The Quality of Life Award – in my eyes, always ended in a tie. That side was fun, so how did we really have it better here? As a little girl in the ’60s, it was always a thrilling adventure when my dad would take me to that side as his companion, for whatever reasons; to visit his friends who owned gas stations, food stands for groceries, and cantinas for what my dad said were “refrescos”. As a young ‘Dancing Queen’ in the late ’70s, my friends and I would dance the night away “over there”, where life seemed so worldly, clubs so exotic. We’d order Brandy Alexanders, served to us on silver trays by older gentlemen with crisp white towels draped over their serving arm, wearing tuxedo jackets. They’d call us “mijita” like a watchful old uncle making sure no one got overserved or too friendly, yet gave us the freedom to shake our groove thing until we threw caution to the wind and drank a gallon of Juarez water. By day, we’d spend hours outdoors playing sports in the world’s perfect climate. Too hot? Not for us desert rats who ran over Scenic Drive at 3 p.m. in September and drank from the hoses of lush homes on Rim Road. Yet the best part of life was the gatherings with family: siblings, elders, and cousins. We’d have barbeques, baptisms, birthdays, weddings, and celebrations of service men coming home. Being with family was the best life had to offer. The elders would depart, kiss us on the forehead and say, “Dios los bendiga”. Love was everywhere.

Area: Central / Downtown

Source: Patricia Brunson

Uploaded by: El Paso Museum of History

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

Report this entry

Choose the most important reason for this report

Your name

Your email address

Optional detail

Thank you for your report

More from the same community-collection

Downtown Ballpark

Since spring 2014 the ballpark is home of El Paso's Triple A ...

Downtown Ballpark

Since spring 2014 the ballpark is home of El Paso's Triple A ...

El Paso Convention Center

Conventions, concerts, trade shows and other special events take ...

View towards Ciudad Juárez

The image looks towards the South from Downtown El Paso. In the ...

View towards East El Paso

The image captures El Paso's Downtown area and looking farther ...

View towards Juárez

The image shows parts of downtown El Paso and Ciudad Juárez. ...

View towards Juárez

The lower half of the picture shows downtown El Paso. The ...

Al's Shop For Men

Al's Shop was at the corner of San Antonio and Mesa.

Al's Shop For Men

Al's Shop was at the corner of San Antonio and Mesa.

Otis A. Aultman

Otis A. Aultman playing cards with friend.

El Paso's Public Band Stand

El Paso's Public Band Stand had frequent concerts by Military ...

Katherine Stinson

As a girl, Stinson wanted to study music in Europe. To raise the ...

First National Bank

The picture shows the First National Bank building in El Paso.

The State National Bank, second location.

This is the second location for the bank, on the southwest ...

Lightbody & James Clothing Store

Lightbody & James was located on the west side of El Paso St. in ...

Newspaper

The Lone Star was a semi-weekly newspaper published by S.H. ...

Lawmen, Texas Rangers, El Paso, TX, 1896

Texas Rangers on the steps of the El Paso County Courthouse in ...

Alligator Pond

San Jacinto Plaza featured live alligators from the 1890s until ...

Landmark

The O.T. Bassett Tower at 301 Texas Avenue. In the year 2017 - ...

El Paso Street in 1910s

The image shows El Paso street in the 1910s. The street is ...

Women Working In A Cigar Factory

Women working in a cigar factory in downtown El Paso, Texas.

Sheldon Hotel

A view from the facilities of one of the rooms at the Sheldon ...

US Post Office

US Post Office in 219 E Mills Ave El Paso, TX 79901

home.search_collection