“I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of
America and to the republic for which it s
tands ... ”
After the morning bell rings these are the words recited in
unison by schoolchildren throughout the United States. The
Pledge of Allegiance can, for many, be routine and
monotonous.
But for one Alta resident, saying the simple oath is not a
matter of birthright, but of choice.
“I cried the first time I said the Pledge of Allegiance as
an American citizen,” said Nora Bradley, who became an
American citizen nine years ago during ceremonies at
Sacramento’s State Capitol building.
“I still get teary eyed when I hear it and the American
anthem. It is so awesome to have the privilege to live here
and to call this country my home,” she said.
Bradley, who shares her home with husband Lowell and two
daughters, was born in the small town of Jalisco near
Mexico City.
“My dad was the first in our family to immigrate to the
United States,” she said.
During the Korean War, farmers would recruit workers from
Mexico to help harvest their crops. Bradley’s father jumped
at the opportunity to come to the states.
“It had always been his dream,” she continued. “My father
was a farmer by trade as well as a horse trainer. He sent
money to help support us in Mexico and every year he came
to visit. “
In 1976 Bradley’s mother died after giving birth to a sixth
child. Two weeks later Donaciano Uribe made the trip across
the border to get his children.
“When he came for us, it was really odd. I knew he was my
Dad, but it wasn’t like we really knew him. By that time he
had established permanent residency, a business and had
recently married an American.”
Getting across the border was not as easy as the family had
hoped.
“We were not brought in legally. My Dad paid the coyote, a
guy who meets you at border, to bring us across. That night
there was a raid. I got caught with my brother,” recounted
Bradley, who was 11 years old at the time. “We were
handcuffed, fingerprinted and placed in a holding cell for
24 hours. The experience was terrifying!”
One week later, she recalled, her stepmother suggested to
her father that they drive across the border and pick up
the children.
“We didn’t speak any English. It was like a whole different
world. Shortly after we arrived in L.A, I had a birthday
party. I had never had a cake or a present, I got my first
Barbie,” said Bradley with a laugh. “I thought, Whoa! This
is what happens in America. You get here and they throw you
a party! I didn’t even know it was my birthday.”
Shortly afterwards, Bradley spent a week with her
grandparents who lived at Lake Tahoe and got a crash course
in the English language.
With their stepmother’s help, Bradley and her siblings
applied for permanent residency.
After graduation from high school, Bradley married her high
school sweetheart, Lowell. He had enlisted in the Army and
was stationed in Germany.
“I bought my own ticket, but was traveling on a Mexican
passport,” Bradley said. “I didn’t have the freedom to
travel like an American because I knew if I got detained I
would not be protected by the United States. When we got
back (to the U.S.) I filed for citizenship.”
The citizenship process took three years to complete.
In 2000 Nora Bradley joined others who had passed the exam
and requirements set by the immigration department and
recited the words of her homeland, “one nation, under God,
indivisible, with liberty and justice for all.”