Education

Blaze Exclusive: TX High School Students Made to Recite Mexican National Anthem, Pledge of Allegiance

Students in a Texas public high school were made to stand up and recite the Mexican national anthem and Mexican pledge of allegiance as part of a Spanish class assignment, but the school district maintains there was nothing wrong with the lesson.

It happened last month in an intermediate Spanish class at Achieve Early College High School in McAllen, Texas — a city located about 10 miles from the U.S.-Mexico border.

(Related: Listen to Glenn Beck interview the father of the girl who refused to recite the pledge)

Wearing red, white and green, students had to memorize the Mexican anthem and pledge and stand up and recite them in individually in front of the class.

That didn’t go over well with sophomore Brenda Brinsdon. The 15-year-old sat down and refused to participate. She also caught it all on video:

“I just thought it was out of hand, I didn’t think it was right,” she told The Blaze. “Reciting pledges to Mexico and being loyal to it has nothing to do with learning Spanish.”

She said she was particularly offended because the presentations in teacher Reyna Santos’s class took place during “Freedom Week,” the week after the 10th anniversary of the Sept. 11 terror attacks, and on U.S. Constitution Day — the same day as Mexico’s Independence Day.

“Why are we doing their independence when it’s Freedom Week and it’s also Constitution Day?” Brinsdon said.

Brinsdon said she complained to the school principal, Yvette Cavazo, who told her it was part of the curriculum and that she should participate. Her father, William, also got involved, calling the school district superintendent to complain.

When Brenda made clear she would not stand up and recite the pledge, she was given an alternative assignment: an essay on the history of the Mexican revolution.

Meanwhile, other students continued with their presentations, which took place over the course of several days.

When Brinsdon talked to Santos — a first-year teacher at Achieve — about her new assignment, the teacher told her she grew up in Mexico.

“She told me that she loved Mexico,” Brinsdon said.

School district spokesman Mark May defended the presentations, saying it’s a state requirement for upper-level language classes to teach about foreign culture.

According to the state’s Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills standards, students are expected to gain “knowledge and understanding” of other cultures and use the language to demonstrate understanding of different practices and perspectives. There are no specific requirements about learning to recite pledges or anthems.

May said it’s up to the teacher how to interpret and teach the standards.

“It wasn’t required to pledge loyalty and renounce the U.S., they were simply spreading the culture of another country,” May told The Blaze. “In my mind it’s no different from memorizing a poem or memorizing a passage from Shakespeare.”

William Brinsdon took issue with that notion, saying if that’s the case it cheapens the pledge.

“You’re taking their allegiance and their oath from Mexico and cheapening it just as a grade or words don’t mean anything,” he said.

May reiterated that the lesson was all done within the context of meeting the state requirements, and that the school did its duty providing Brenda with an alternative assignment when she objected.

“The students came away with a better understanding of the culture, heritage and customs of a neighboring country where Spanish is the primary language,” he said.

May added that the lesson was “well received” by other students and parents.

“There’s always going to be people that always feel a little bit differently,” May said.

William Brinsdon is still having a hard time fathoming the idea of reciting foreign pledges and anthems in a U.S. public school in the first place.

“Our kids don’t even know the [American] national anthem and here we are…teaching them to memorize and perform the national anthem for Mexico,” he said. “I just think it’s so backwards.”

The Blaze’s Jonathon M. Seidl contributed to this report.

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Comments (1154)

  • Guido D
    Posted on June 24, 2012 at 5:15am

    I found this article by accident but I can’t stop thinking: wow people are so overreacting. There’s no such thing as a Mexican Pledge of Allegiance. We have “El Juramento a la Bandera” which is a different thing, we don’t recite it as often as you do in US, I don’t even know it by heart. We only recite it on the Flag Day and that’s it. It is not like you say it and then you magically are Mexican.
    Anyway, I don’t think that woman was raised in Mexico, we Mexicans don’t use our “Símbolos Patrios” (the flag, the anthem, el juramento a la bandera, the coat of arms, etc) that way. We only use them in oficial ceremonies. And to make bad use of them it is actually a crime.
    BTW. For all the people who claim, Mexican-Americans go back to Mexico!, we just don’t want them back.

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    Guido D  
  • GeneMoser
    Posted on April 11, 2012 at 3:35pm

    Mexico does not have a pledge of allegiance. How can one recite something that does not exist?

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    GeneMoser  
  • da0323
    Posted on January 7, 2012 at 2:52am

    Ok, as a mexican i DO agree that the teacher should not give that kind of assignments to the students. Its not right, and its a little disrespectful, to the other country to have someone “promising” to another country their “love” eventhough the students didnt even feel it. But you people are making such a big deal out of this. First of all, mexicans do not STEAL the jobs from the americans, americans kind of give them the work they do not want to do like harvesting, planting, etc. Mexicans work under horrible conditions, but yeah, they chose that. Second of all, whoever said women had no right over the land is an ignorant cause we do have rights. All my dad’s property are given to my mom and me. I also want to get clear that you might be judging the war against the drug cartels, but you forget that mexico is only the passage of the drugs from COLOMBIA to USA and CANADA. so if you dont live here and do not really know what is going on, dont give your beautiful opinion. And for last, yeah, i kind of understand what you feel cause i am really patriotic to mexico and if a foreign human being came to me claiming that their country is better i would just punch them and hate them forever ☺. People PLEASE, PLEASE, do not make this a racist fight. white, black, brown, asians. We are all people and there is the good and the bad in every race. stop complaining at which color makes you better.

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    da0323  

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