How Mexicoâs World Cup Run Brought a Small Oregon Town to Life
In this story, Roberto JosĂ© Andrade Franco visits Woodburn, Oregon: a small town between Portland and Salem where Latinos, many descended from World War II-era farmworkers, make up 61.4% of the population and own 95% of the businesses downtown. Franco paints a multi-layered portrait: the food truck El Pariente Mariscos y Mas; a beloved coffee shop, CafĂ© La Onda, shuttered for good; a community still shaken from last fallâs ICE raids. As Mexicoâs first World Cup match approaches, the mood in Woodburn is optimistic but fragileâjoy shadowed by fear, uncertainty over whether itâs safe enough to show up and celebrate. Franco, who grew up on the US-Mexico border in El Paso, unexpectedly finds familiarity and connection in the âcold and gray of western Oregonââin the hard work, the resilience, and the pride of a community that claims both its Latino roots and this American home.
âA Chicanoâs a person that has a clear conscience about having two cultures,â Hernandez says. Like the butterflies he paints, Chicanos are from both here and there. Thatâs everywhere in Woodburn. From bilingual signs on stores to how soccer players and coaches communicate on the pitch, which some opponents donât understand.
There are butterflies flying all around Woodburn. More of them during the spring when tulips bloom, in the same fields where, as a little girl, union leader Reyna Lopez stood with her father. âIâm bringing you out here so you can see what itâs like,â he told her, wanting Reyna to see the hard work it took to pick every berry they ate.
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