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Texas Prof Wins John Lewis Award for Work Recovering History of Anti-Mexican Border Violence

A professor of history whose research led him to discover that his own family had been victims of racial violence in Texas is the recipient of a national award.

Trinidad Gonzales, a professor of history and Mexican American studies at South Texas College, has been honored with the 2022 John Lewis Award for History and Social Justice.

The award, established in 2021, is named after Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga., the renowned civil rights leader who served in Congress from 1987 until his death in 2020. The annual award recognizes a historian for leadership and professional historical contribution to public culture and social justice.

"I didn't even know I was nominated — it just came out of nowhere," Gonzales said Friday in an interview. "Those are some very big shoes to try to fill, so I'm humbled by whoever nominated me, thinking I was worthy."

Gonzales is a co-founder of Refusing to Forget, an award-winning educational nonprofit founded by a team of professors that spotlights the history of state-sanctioned killings of Mexicans and Mexican Americans on the Mexico-Texas border from 1910 to 1920.

When Gonzales was doing research for his dissertation, he had a “chilling moment,” he told South Texas College in 2020. As he was reading an account from 1929 denouncing a sheriff for his involvement in a massacre, it included a list of people who had been killed — and he found the names of his great-grandfather and great-great-grandfather.

Growing up, he said in the interview, he had heard from his parents about the killings but did not know the term "La Matanza," or the massacre, which specifically refers to a period in 1915 when several hundred Mexicans and Mexicans Americans were killed in the Lower Rio Grande Valley.

....

Gonzales said he worries that the politics around K-12 education, particularly around critical race theory, could have a negative impact on what history is taught in the state's schools.

"We're fearful that they're going to try to eliminate Mexican American studies, African American Studies, Indigenous Studies and Asian American studies," Gonzales said in the interview. "We'll see where it goes with the new State Board of Education in Texas."

Read entire article at NBC News