Interview with Cecia Turcios
- Title
- Interview with Cecia Turcios
- Description
- This interview between Abigail Carbajal and Cecia Turcios explores Turcios’ experiences as an immigrant to the United States of America from El Salvador. Her father had moved to the United States ten years before and was working to get them to move here. Eventually, he was able to obtain green cards for Turcios and her mother and moved them over here to start a better life. Turcios’s interview touches on her struggles with her educational dreams after moving and to find motivation to pursue her dreams in such a big country without knowing English. Until this day Turcios emphasizes the importance of having a person to teach you that education is important and how she continues to do this for her own kids.
***This interview is restricted to the University of Maryland College Park's campus. For more information, contact the Center for Global Migration Studies (globalmigration@umd.edu).***
This interview was conducted as part of an undergraduate final project for the University of Maryland, College Park course HIST465 (Spring 2024). This course was led by Professor Anne Rush of the Department of History, College of Arts and Humanities, and was sponsored by the Center for Global Migration Studies. - Creator
- Abigail I. Carbajal
- Publisher
- Center for Global Migration Studies
- Date
- March 9, 2024
- Contributor
- Marjorie Antonio
- Rights
- The full rights of this oral history interview were given by the interviewee to the University of Maryland, College Park. This interview may be quoted from, published, or broadcast in any medium that the University of Maryland, College Park shall deem appropriate.
- Language
- English
- Type
- Oral History
Dublin Core
- Interviewer
- Abigail I. Carbajal
- Interviewee
- Cecia A. Turcios
- Location
- Lanham, Prince George’s County, Maryland
Oral History Item Type Metadata
Collection
Citation
Abigail I. Carbajal, “Interview with Cecia Turcios,” The Archive of Immigrant Voices, accessed May 12, 2026, https://archiveofimmigrantvoices.omeka.net/items/show/128.