Luisa Torres played and sang in the school’s mariachi band. Photo provided by Torres.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\r\nLuisa Torres, an 鶹ý sophomore who plans to enter the nursing program this fall, is one of this year’s Lydia Patterson scholars. Her major of choice was inspired by her mother, a nurse in Juarez.\r\n<\/p>\r\n
Torres describes her childhood as normal, but in a dangerous city with cartel violence often spilling into the city streets. Her father and brother are journalistic photographers. \r\n<\/p>\r\n
“They don’t even print their names with their photos because they don’t want the gangs to know who they are,” she said.\r\n<\/p>\r\n
She says her hometown is safer than it used to be, but the cartels have left many areas of poverty in their wake. She plans to return to Mexico to do mission work after she gets her nursing degree.\r\n<\/p>\r\n
Torres has embodied 鶹ý’s nickname—Over-Committed University—since high school.\r\n<\/p>\r\n
“I was very involved in school. I helped organize chapel service and played in the mariachi band. I was there every day from 7 a.m. to 6 at night,” she said.\r\n<\/p>\r\n
All scholarship students at Lydia Patterson are required to make some kind of labor contribution to help the school. With duties like sweeping, mopping, and serving in the cafeteria, Torres said the requirement helped keep the school clean and well maintained.\r\n<\/p>\r\n
“It made the school like a family. Everyone is responsible for taking care of it,” she said.\r\n<\/p>\r\n
Adding those extra few hours at the border crossing had Torres up early every day and late getting home, but she says it was all worth it. Especially on the day she learned she was accepted to 鶹ý.\r\n<\/p>\r\n
“One day during my senior year, the president called me to the office,” she said. “I was so scared, but I couldn’t think of anything I did wrong. What a relief when the president said I had been accepted.”\r\n<\/p>\r\n
Torres had spent the summer before that year in an internship at St. Luke’s, during which she was able to explore the city and campus.\r\n<\/p>\r\n
“Every time I wake up, I’m thinking how grateful I am to be here.”\r\n<\/p>\r\n
Emiliano Tarin, also an 鶹ý sophomore nursing hopeful from Lydia Patterson, remembers his first time on campus.\r\n<\/p>\r\n
“The first moment I saw this place, I fell in love,” Tarin said. “Just seeing these old historic buildings and landscape, it felt like the place I wanted to be.”\r\n<\/p>\r\n
Tarin described the extra steps and paperwork it took to enroll in both high school and college in the U.S. as a Mexican citizen—made easier with the support and encouragement of family, friends, and school staffs on both sides of the border.\r\n<\/p>\r\n
“The hardest challenge and test for us now is to have the strength to be so far away from home,” he said.\r\n<\/p>\r\n
Both students have found activities to help them get over any lingering homesickness.\r\n<\/p>\r\n
A musician herself, Torres volunteers at El Sistema 鶹ý, a music school for underserved children with partnership support from 鶹ý, St. Luke’s United Methodist Church, and Delaware Resource Group. Several of the children need help with English, which allows Torres to utilize her skills and personal experience.\r\n<\/p>"]