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{{short description|was an American writer who championed the rights of Mexican Americans}} {{Short description|American journalist, teacher, and activist (1885–1946)}}
{{family name hatnote|Idar|Vivero|lang=Spanish}}
{{use mdy|date=August 2020}} {{Use mdy dates|date=August 2020}}
{{Infobox artist {{Infobox person
| name = Jovita Idár |name = Jovita Idar
| image = Jovita Idár portrait, c. 1905.jpg |image = Jovita Idár portrait, c. 1905.jpg
| imagesize =
| caption = Jovita Idár {{c.}} 1905 |caption = Idar {{circa|1905}}
| birth_name = |birth_name = Jovita Idar Vivero
| birth_date = {{birth date|1885|9|7|mf=y}} |birth_date = {{birth date|1885|09|07|mf=y}}
| birth_place = ], ] |birth_place = ], U.S.
| death_date = {{death date and age|1946|6|15|1885|9|7|mf=y}} |death_date = {{death date and age|1946|06|15|1885|09|07|mf=y}}
| death_place = ], U.S. |death_place = ], U.S.
|occupation = ], ]
| nationality = American
|father = Peace N. Idar<ref>April 10, 1910 ''Laredo Weekly Times'' Laredo, Texas. Page 4</ref>
| field = ], ]
|organization = {{ubl|Orden Caballeros de Honor|Liga Femenil Mexicanista|Primer Congreso Mexicanista}}
| training =
| movement = Orden Caballeros de Honor; The First Mexican Congress,<br>La Liga Femenil (League of Mexican Women)
| works =
| patrons =
| influenced by =
| influenced =
| awards =
}} }}


'''Jovita Idár''' (September 7, 1885 &ndash; June 15, 1946) was a Mexican-American journalist, political activist and civil rights worker who championed the cause of Mexican-Americans and Mexican immigrants.<ref name="NYT_Medina_20200807"/><ref name="PBS_20200804">{{Cite AV media| title = Jovita Idar: Mexican American Activist and Journalist| series=American Masters | work=PBS| access-date = August 8, 2020| date = August 4, 2020| url = https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2NK-Y-WVsT4}} </ref> Against the backdrop of the ], which lasted a decade from 1910 through 1920, she worked for a series of newspapers, using her writing to work towards making a meaningful and effective change. She began her career in journalism at ''La Crónica'', her father's newspaper in Laredo, Texas, her hometown.<ref name="humanitiestexas_TXorig">{{cite web |series=Texas Originals |title=Jovita Idár |work= Humanities Texas |url=http://www.humanitiestexas.org/programs/tx-originals/list/jovita-idar |access-date=April 2, 2018}}</ref> While working as a journalist, she became the president of the newly-established League of Mexican Women—''La Liga Femenil Mexicanista''—in October 1911, an organization with a focus on the education of Mexican children, in Laredo to offer free education to Mexican children.<ref name="Villegas_Rebel_1994"/> She was also active in the First Mexican Congress—the ''Primer Congreso Mexicanista''—an organization that brought Mexican-Americans together to discuss issues such as their lack of access to adequate education and economic resources.<ref name="NWHM_Alexander_2019"/> '''Jovita Idar Vivero''' (September 7, 1885&nbsp; June 15, 1946) was an American journalist, teacher, political activist, and civil rights worker who championed the cause of ] and Mexican immigrants.<ref name="NYT_Medina_20200807"/><ref name="PBS_20200804">{{Cite AV media| title = Jovita Idar: Mexican American Activist and Journalist| series=American Masters | work=PBS| access-date = August 8, 2020| date = August 4, 2020| url = https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2NK-Y-WVsT4}}</ref> Against the backdrop of the ], which lasted a decade from 1910 through 1920, she worked for a series of newspapers, using her writing to work towards making a meaningful and effective change. She began her career in journalism at ''La Crónica'', her father's newspaper in ], her hometown.<ref name="humanitiestexas_TXorig">{{cite web |series=Texas Originals |title=Jovita Idár |work= Humanities Texas |url=http://www.humanitiestexas.org/programs/tx-originals/list/jovita-idar |access-date=April 2, 2018}}</ref>
While working as a journalist, she became the president of the newly established League of Mexican Women—''La Liga Femenil Mexicanista''—in October&nbsp;1911, an organization with a focus on offering free education to Mexican children in Laredo.<ref name="Villegas_Rebel_1994"/> She was also active in the '']'', an organization that brought Mexican-Americans together to discuss issues such as their lack of access to adequate education and economic resources.<ref name="NWHM_Alexander_2019"/>

Idar was honored on an ] in 2023.


== Early life== == Early life==
Jovita Idár was born in ] in 1885.<ref name="TSHA_Baker"/> She was one of eight children of Jovita and Nicasio Idár<ref name="TSHA_Baker">{{cite web|series=Handbook of Texas Online|last1=Jones|first1=Nancy Baker|title=Idar Jovita|url=https://tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/fid03|publisher=Texas State Historical Association (TSHA)|access-date=April 4, 2018}}</ref> who strove to advance the civil rights of Mexican-Americans. The Idár family were part of the ''gente decente'', which had better access to good education and opportunities than many ''méxico-tejano'' families had.<ref name="González_Raza_2018"/>{{rp|16}} All eight Idar children grew up in an atmosphere where rights and responsibilities and the underprivileged circumstances of the ] community were consistently discussed. In the book ''Marching to a Different Drummer,'' Robin Kadison Berson explains "Growing up Jovita was an imaginative, spirited girl; eager student, she won prizes for her poetry and enjoyed reciting before an audience."<ref name="Berson_1994">{{cite book |last=Berson |first=Robin Kadison |title=Marching to a Different Drummer: Unrecognized Heroes of American History|publisher=Greenwood Publishing Group |date=1994}}</ref> Jovita Idar was born in ], in 1885.<ref name="TSHA_Baker"/> She was one of eight children of Jovita Vivero Gómez and Nicasio Idar<ref name="TSHA_Baker">{{cite web|series=Handbook of Texas Online|last1=Jones|first1=Nancy Baker|title=Idar Jovita|url=https://tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/fid03|publisher=Texas State Historical Association (TSHA)|access-date=April 4, 2018}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Jovita Vivero, b.1866 d.1950 - Ancestry |url=https://www.ancestry.com/genealogy/records/jovita-vivero-24-25clcyn |website=Ancestry |access-date=22 March 2024 |ref=mother}}</ref> who strove to advance the civil rights of Mexican-Americans. The Idar family were part of the ''gente decente'', who had better access to good education and opportunities than many ''méxico-tejano'' families had.<ref name="González_Raza_2018"/>{{rp|16}} All eight Idar children grew up in an atmosphere where rights and responsibilities and the underprivileged circumstances of the ] community were consistently discussed. In the book ''Marching to a Different Drummer,'' Robin Kadison Berson explains that "Growing up, Jovita was an imaginative, spirited girl; eager student, she won prizes for her poetry and enjoyed reciting before an audience."<ref name="Berson_1994">{{cite book |last=Berson |first=Robin Kadison |title=Marching to a Different Drummer: Unrecognized Heroes of American History|publisher=Greenwood Publishing Group |date=1994}}{{ISBN?}}{{page needed|date=September 2020}}</ref>


==Education and teaching== ==Education and teaching==
Idár earned her teaching certificate in 1903 from the Holding Institute in Laredo.<ref name="Pouwels_2006"/> She taught in a school in ], located approximately 40 miles east of Laredo.<ref name="TSHA_Baker"/> The reality of her first years teaching was frustrating, "There were never enough textbooks for her pupils or enough paper, pens or pencils; if all her students came to class, there were not enough chairs or desks for them."<ref name="Berson_1994"/> The schooling for Chicano students, much like African American students in the south at that time, was inadequate. ] paid taxes to support decent schooling for their children yet they were denied entry to schools. Idar realized that her teaching efforts were making little impact on student lives due to the ill-equipped segregated schools. Idar earned her teaching certificate in 1903 from the ] in Laredo.<ref name="Pouwels_2006"/> She taught in a school in ], located approximately 40 miles east of Laredo.<ref name="TSHA_Baker"/> The reality of her first years teaching was frustrating, "There were never enough textbooks for her pupils or enough paper, pens or pencils; if all her students came to class, there were not enough chairs or desks for them."<ref name="Berson_1994"/> The schooling for Chicano students was inadequate. Chicanos paid taxes to support decent schooling for their children yet they were denied entry to schools. Idar realized that her teaching efforts were making little impact on student lives due to the ill-equipped ].


==Advocacy for social issues== ==Advocacy for social issues==


Against the backdrop of the ], which lasted a decade from 1910 through 1920, Idár turned from teaching to journalism as a means of working towards making a meaningful and effective change. She returned to Laredo, Texas, where she began to work alongside two of her brothers, Eduardo and Bobby Brown, for her father's newspaper, ''La Crónica'' . Their father, Nicasio Idár was a strong and proud man, who advocated for civil rights and social justice for ]s, edited and published ''La Crónica'', which became a major voice for Mexican and ] rights. Jovita wrote articles under a pseudonym, exposing the poor living conditions of Mexican-American workers and supported the Revolution.<ref name="Pouwels_2006">{{cite book |last=Pouwels |first=Joel Bollinger |title=Political Journalism by Mexican Women During the Age of Revolution 1876-1940 |publisher=Edwin Mellon Press|date=2006}}</ref>{{rp|58}}<ref name="Gutierrez-Witt_1996">{{cite book |last=Gutierrez-Witt |first=Laura |chapter=Cultural Continuity in the Face of Change: Hispanic Printers in Texas |title=Recovering the U.S. Hispanic Literary Heritage|volume=II |editor1=] |editor2=Chuck Tatum |publisher=Arte Publico Press |date=1996}}</ref> Against the backdrop of the ], which lasted a decade from 1910 through 1920, Idar turned from teaching to journalism as a means of working towards making a meaningful and effective change. She returned to Laredo, Texas, where she began to work alongside two of her brothers, Eduardo and Clemente Idar, for her father's newspaper, ''La Crónica'' ("The Chronicle"). Their father, Nicasio Idar, was a strong and proud man, who advocated for civil rights and social justice for ]s. He edited and published ''La Crónica'', which became a major voice for Mexican and ] rights. Jovita wrote articles under a pseudonym, exposing the poor living-conditions of Mexican-American workers and supported the Revolution.<ref name="Pouwels_2006">{{cite book |last=Pouwels |first=Joel Bollinger |title=Political Journalism by Mexican Women During the Age of Revolution 1876–1940 |publisher=Edwin Mellon Press|date=2006}}{{ISBN?}}</ref>{{rp|58}}<ref name="Gutierrez-Witt_1996">{{cite book |last=Gutierrez-Witt |first=Laura |chapter=Cultural Continuity in the Face of Change: Hispanic Printers in Texas |title=Recovering the U.S. Hispanic Literary Heritage|volume=II |editor1=Erlinda Gonzales-Berry |editor-link=Erlinda Gonzales-Berry |editor2=Chuck Tatum |publisher=Arte Publico Press |date=1996}}{{ISBN?}}</ref>


In 1910 ''La Cronica'' included articles on news, current events, biographical and historical essays that concerned Mexican Americans, literary essays and poetry, and commentary. It focused attention on the serious social and economic inequities experienced by Mexican Americans in Texas in particular, and in the U.S. in general.<ref name="Gutierrez-Witt_1996"/> It featured "stories on educational and social discrimination against Mexican Americans, poor economic conditions, decreasing use of the Spanish language, the loss of Mexican culture and lynching of Hispanics."<ref name="TSHA_Baker"/> In 1910 ''La Crónica'' included articles on news, current events, biographical and historical essays that concerned Mexican Americans, literary essays and poetry, and commentary. It focused attention on the serious social and economic inequities experienced by Mexican Americans in Texas, in particular, and in the U.S., in general.<ref name="Gutierrez-Witt_1996"/> It featured "stories on educational and social discrimination against Mexican Americans, poor economic conditions, decreasing use of the Spanish language, the loss of Mexican culture and the lynching of Hispanics."<ref name="TSHA_Baker"/>


In 1911, ''La Cronica'' established a "fraternal order", the Orden Caballeros de Honor to "discuss the troubling social issues at the time".<ref name="Meier_2000">{{cite encyclopedia |last1=Meier |first1=Matt S. |first2=Margo |last2=Gutierrez |title=Encyclopedia of the Mexican American Civil Rights Movement |publisher=Greenwood Press |date=2000}}</ref>{{rp|113}} and held the First Mexican Congress—the ''Primer Congreso Mexicanista''—dedicated to fighting inequality and racism,<ref name="OUP_Pardo_2005">{{cite encyclopedia |last=Pardo |first=Mary S. |title=Latina Labor and Community Organizers |encyclopedia=The Oxford Encyclopedia of Latinos and Latinas in the United States |editor-first1=Suzanne |editor-last1=Oboler |editor-first2=Deena J. |editor-last2=González |publisher=Oxford University Press |date=2005}}</ref> and to unite Mexicans on issues that affected them, including lack of access to adequate education and economic resources.<ref name="NWHM_Alexander_2019"/> 'While working at ''La Cronica'', Idár also served as the first president of ''La Liga Femenil Mexicanista'' , the League of Mexican Women, an "offshoot" of the Congress that was founded in October 1911 in Laredo to offer free education to Mexican children.<ref name="González_Raza_2018"/> In her 2018 book based on her PhD dissertation, ''Redeeming La Raza: Transborder Modernity, Race, Respectability, and Rights'', Gabriela González wrote that these organizations were established in response to the poverty and racism experienced by transborder Mexican communities.<ref name="González_Raza_2018"/> In 1911, ''La Crónica'' established a "fraternal order", the Orden Caballeros de Honor to "discuss the troubling social issues at the time".<ref name="Meier_2000">{{cite encyclopedia |last1=Meier |first1=Matt S. |first2=Margo |last2=Gutierrez |title=Encyclopedia of the Mexican American Civil Rights Movement |publisher=Greenwood Press |date=2000}}</ref>{{rp|113}} and held the First Mexican Congress—the ''Primer Congreso Mexicano''—dedicated to fighting inequality and racism,<ref name="OUP_Pardo_2005">{{cite encyclopedia |last=Pardo |first=Mary S. |title=Latina Labor and Community Organizers |encyclopedia=The Oxford Encyclopedia of Latinos and Latinas in the United States |editor-first1=Suzanne |editor-last1=Oboler |editor-first2=Deena J. |editor-last2=González |publisher=Oxford University Press |date=2005}}{{page needed|date=September 2020}}</ref> and to unite Mexicans on issues that affected them, including lack of access to adequate education and economic resources.<ref name="NWHM_Alexander_2019"/> While working at ''La Crónica'', Idar also served as the first president of ''La Liga Femenil Mexicanista'', the League of Mexican Women, an "offshoot" of the Congress that was founded in October 1911 in Laredo to offer free education to Mexican children.<ref name="González_Raza_2018"/> In her 2018 book based on her PhD dissertation, ''Redeeming La Raza: Transborder Modernity, Race, Respectability, and Rights'', Gabriela González wrote that these organizations were established in response to the poverty and racism experienced by transborder Mexican communities.<ref name="González_Raza_2018"/>


While working at ''La Cronica'', Idár also served as the first president of the League of Mexican Women (La Liga Femenil Mexicanista), an organization founded in October 1911 in Laredo to offer free education to Mexican children.<ref name="Villegas_Rebel_1994">{{Cite book|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/656724075|title=The Rebel|last1=Villegas de Magnón |first1=Leonor|date=1994|publisher=Arte Público Press|last2=Lomas |first2=Clara|isbn=9781611920499|location=Houston, Texas|oclc=656724075}}</ref> Additional goals of the organization were to "unify the Mexican intellectuals of Texas around the issues of protection of civil rights, bilingual education, the lynching of Mexicans, labor organizing and women's concerns."<ref>{{cite encyclopedia |last=Lomas |first=Clara |title=Historical Newspapers|encyclopedia=The Oxford Encyclopedia of Latinos and Latinas in the United States |editor-first1=Suzanne |editor-last1=Oboler |editor-first2=Deena J. |editor-last2=González |publisher=Oxford University Press |date=2005}}</ref> The women within this league worked to transform these injustices into a plan of action and focused on relieving social problems through actively making changes within their communities. Women who participated in this organization were highly influential. "Some league members were trained educators and professionals, and the education of youth remained the organization's primary focus."<ref>{{cite book |last1=Ramos |first1=Raĺul A. |first2=Monica |last2=Perales |series=Recovering the U.S Hispanic Literary Heritage Series |title=Recovering the Hispanic History of Texas |publisher=Arte Publico Press |date=2010}}</ref> It developed into a social, political and charitable organization for women that, in part, provided food and clothes to those in need.<ref name="TSHA_Baker"/><ref>{{cite web |series=Handbook of Texas Online |title=Liga Femenil Mexicanista |url=http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/vql01 |access-date=July 23, 2009}}</ref> While working at ''La Crónica'', Idar also served as the first president of the League of Mexican Women (La Liga Femenil Mexicanista), an organization founded in October 1911 in Laredo to offer free education to Mexican children.<ref name="Villegas_Rebel_1994">{{Cite book|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/656724075|title=The Rebel|last1=Villegas de Magnón |first1=Leonor|date=1994|publisher=Arte Público Press|last2=Lomas |first2=Clara|isbn=978-1611920499|location=Houston, Texas|oclc=656724075}}</ref> Additional goals of the organization were to "unify the Mexican intellectuals of Texas around the issues of protection of civil rights, bilingual education, the lynching of Mexicans, labor organizing and women's concerns."<ref>{{cite encyclopedia |last=Lomas |first=Clara |title=Historical Newspapers|encyclopedia=The Oxford Encyclopedia of Latinos and Latinas in the United States |editor-first1=Suzanne |editor-last1=Oboler |editor-first2=Deena J. |editor-last2=González |publisher=Oxford University Press |date=2005}}{{page needed|date=September 2020}}</ref> The women within this league worked to transform these injustices into a plan of action and focused on relieving social problems through actively making changes within their communities. Women who participated in this organization were highly influential. "Some league members were trained educators and professionals, and the education of youth remained the organization's primary focus."<ref>{{cite book |last1=Ramos |first1=Raĺul A. |first2=Monica |last2=Perales |series=Recovering the U.S Hispanic Literary Heritage Series |title=Recovering the Hispanic History of Texas |publisher=Arte Publico Press |date=2010}}{{page needed|date=September 2020}}</ref> It developed into a social, political and charitable organization for women that, in part, provided food and clothes to those in need.<ref name="TSHA_Baker"/><ref>{{cite web |series=Handbook of Texas Online |title=Liga Femenil Mexicanista |url=http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/vql01 |access-date=July 23, 2009}}</ref>


Both the League of Mexican Women and the First Mexican Congress actively worked for the advancement of their members, "by holding studying and learning sessions, sessions where culture is acquired and talent is developed."<ref name="Turner_Cole_2015">{{cite book|chapter=Jovita Idar: The Ideological Origins of a Transnational Advocate for ''La Raza''|last=González|first=Gabriela|title=Texas Women: Their Histories, Their Lives|year=2015|location=Athens, GA|publisher=University of Georgia Press|editor-last1=Turner |editor-first1=Elizabeth Hayes|editor-last2=Cole |editor-first2=Stephanie|editor-last3=Sharpless |editor-first3=Rebecca}}</ref>{{rp|225–248}} Both the League of Mexican Women and the First Mexican Congress actively worked for the advancement of their members, "by holding studying and learning sessions, sessions where culture is acquired and talent is developed."<ref name="Turner_Cole_2015">{{cite book|chapter=Jovita Idar: The Ideological Origins of a Transnational Advocate for ''La Raza''|last=González|first=Gabriela|title=Texas Women: Their Histories, Their Lives|year=2015|location=Athens, GA|publisher=University of Georgia Press|editor-last1=Turner |editor-first1=Elizabeth Hayes|editor-last2=Cole |editor-first2=Stephanie|editor-last3=Sharpless |editor-first3=Rebecca}}</ref>{{rp|225–248}}


In March 1913, when ]—on the Mexican side of the border—was attacked, Idár and other Laredo women crossed the ] to volunteer to help with the wounded. While at the border, Idár later joined the '']'' —the White Cross, an organization that provided relief similar to the Red Cross, that had been created and financed by ], who was also from Laredo.<ref name="González_Raza_2018">{{Cite book| publisher = Oxford University Press| isbn = 978-0-19-934553-3| last = González| first = Gabriela| title = Redeeming La Raza: Transborder Modernity, Race, Respectability, and Rights| access-date = August 8, 2020|date=2018| url = https://oxford.universitypressscholarship.com/view/10.1093/oso/9780199914142.001.0001/oso-9780199914142}}</ref><ref name="Villegas_2004">{{Cite book|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/54103741|title=La rebelde|last1=Villegas de Magnón |first1=Leonor|date=2004|publisher=Conaculta, Inah|last2=Lomas |first2=Clara|isbn=1558854150|location=Mexico|oclc=54103741}}</ref><ref name="Villegas_Rebel_1994"/><ref name="TSHA_Baker"/> In March 1913, when ] — on the Mexican side of the border — was attacked, Idar and other Laredo women crossed the ] to volunteer to help with the wounded. While at the border, Idar later joined the '']'' — the White Cross, an organization that provided relief similar to the Red Cross, that had been created and financed by ], who was also from Laredo.<ref name="González_Raza_2018">{{Cite book| publisher = Oxford University Press| isbn = 978-0-19-934553-3| last = González| first = Gabriela| title = Redeeming La Raza: Transborder Modernity, Race, Respectability, and Rights| access-date = August 8, 2020|date=2018| doi = 10.1093/oso/9780199914142.001.0001| url = https://oxford.universitypressscholarship.com/view/10.1093/oso/9780199914142.001.0001/oso-9780199914142}}</ref><ref name="Villegas_2004">{{Cite book|title=La rebelde|last1=Villegas de Magnón |first1=Leonor|date=2004|publisher=Conaculta, Inah|last2=Lomas |first2=Clara|isbn=1558854150|location=Mexico|oclc=54103741}}</ref><ref name="Villegas_Rebel_1994"/><ref name="TSHA_Baker"/>


In 1914, when she returned from her volunteer nursing work at the border, she began writing for ''El Progreso''. An editorial published in ''El Progreso'' criticised President ]'s order to dispatch U.S military troops to the ],<ref name="NYT_Medina_20200807"/> had offended the U.S Army and ]. The Rangers attempted to close ''El Progreso'', but Idár blocked the entrance to the newspaper office.<ref name="NYT_Medina_20200807"/> When she was not at the newspaper office one day, the Rangers returned to ransack it and to destroy the printing presses, effectively shutting down the newspaper.<ref name="NYT_Medina_20200807"/><ref name="TSHA_Baker"/> In 1914, when she returned from her volunteer nursing work at the border, she began writing for ''El Progreso''. An editorial published in ''El Progreso'' criticizing President ]'s order to dispatch U.S. military troops to the ]<ref name="NYT_Medina_20200807"/> had offended the U.S. Army and ]. The Rangers attempted to close ''El Progreso'', but Idar blocked the entrance to the newspaper's office.<ref name="NYT_Medina_20200807"/> When she was not at the newspaper's office one day, the Rangers returned to ransack it and to destroy the printing-presses, effectively shutting down the newspaper.<ref name="NYT_Medina_20200807"/><ref name="TSHA_Baker"/>


After her father's death in 1914, she became the editor and writer at ''La Crónica'',<ref name="WTH">{{cite web|last1=Jones|first1=Nancy Baker|title=Jovita Idar|url=https://www.womenintexashistory.org/audio/idar/|website=Women in Texas History - Liga Femenil Mexicanista|publisher=Venue Communications, Inc|access-date=April 4, 2018}}</ref> where she continued to expose the conditions that Mexican-Americans and Mexican immigrants were living under at the time.<ref name="TSHA_Baker"/> After her father's death in 1914, she became the editor and writer at ''La Crónica'',<ref name="WTH">{{cite web|last1=Jones|first1=Nancy Baker|title=Jovita Idar|url=https://www.womenintexashistory.org/audio/idar/|website=Women in Texas History Liga Femenil Mexicanista|publisher=Venue Communications, Inc|access-date=April 4, 2018|archive-date=March 27, 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180327175210/http://www.womenintexashistory.org/audio/idar/|url-status=dead}}</ref> where she continued to expose the conditions that Mexican-Americans and Mexican immigrants were living under at the time.<ref name="TSHA_Baker"/>


In November 1916, Idár founded the weekly paper ''Evolución'' which remained in operation until 1920.{{citation needed|date=February 2018}} In November 1916, Idar founded the weekly paper ''Evolución'' which remained in operation until 1920.{{citation needed|date=February 2018}}


Idár moved to ] in 1921 where she founded a free kindergarten and also volunteered in a hospital as an interpreter.<ref>{{cite web|title=Great Texas Women |url=https://texaswomen.housing.utexas.edu/pdfs/GTWContent.pdf |publisher=UTSA 's Institute of Texas Cultures |access-date=April 4, 2018}}</ref> Idar moved to ] in 1921 where she founded a free kindergarten and also volunteered in a hospital as an interpreter.<ref>{{cite web|title=Great Texas Women |url=https://texaswomen.housing.utexas.edu/pdfs/GTWContent.pdf |publisher=UTSA 's Institute of Texas Cultures |access-date=April 4, 2018}}</ref>


In 1940 she co-edited the journal ''El Heraldo Cristiano''.<ref name="Villegas_Rebel_1994"/> In 1940 she co-edited the journal ''El Heraldo Cristiano''.<ref name="Villegas_Rebel_1994"/>


== Personal life == == Personal life ==
In May 1917 Idár married Bartolo Juárez, who worked as a plumber and ].<ref>{{cite news |newspaper=Laredo Times |date=May 27, 1917 |title=No title}}</ref>{{rp|7}} They lived in ] until her death June 15, 1946, said to be caused by a ]. She had been suffering from advanced ].<ref>{{cite news|last1=Danini|first1=Carmina|title=1900s journalist and educator Jovita Idar championed rights of Mexican Americans|url=https://www.expressnews.com/sa300/article/1900s-journalist-and-educator-Jovita-Idar-12454358.php|accessdate=2018-04-04|agency=Express-News|publisher=San Antonio Express News}}</ref><ref name="humanitiestexas_TXorig"/> In May 1917, Idar married Bartolo Juárez, who worked as a plumber and ].<ref>{{cite news |newspaper=Laredo Times |date=May 27, 1917 |title=No title}}</ref>{{rp|7}} They lived together in ] until her death, on June 15, 1946, which was reported to have been caused by a ]. She had been suffering from advanced ].<ref>{{cite news|last1=Danini|first1=Carmina|title=1900s journalist and educator Jovita Idar championed rights of Mexican Americans|url=https://www.expressnews.com/sa300/article/1900s-journalist-and-educator-Jovita-Idar-12454358.php|access-date=2018-04-04|agency=Express-News|publisher=San Antonio Express News}}</ref><ref name="humanitiestexas_TXorig"/>


==Legacy==
==Idár's contributions documented by others==
] series]]
In 2018, Gabriela González published her book ''Redeeming La Raza: Transborder Modernity, Race, Respectability, and Rights'', which was based on her PhD dissertation in which she provided the historical, political, and socio-economic dimensions of la raza during Jovita Idar's lifetime, including an in-depth description of the role Idar's family played over several generations.<ref name="González_Raza_2018"/>


Profiles of Idar have been included in the ],<ref name="NWHM_Alexander_2019">{{Cite web| title = Jovita Idár| work = National Women's History Museum| access-date = August 8, 2020 |last=Alexander |first=Kerri Lee |date=2019| url = https://www.womenshistory.org/education-resources/biographies/jovita-idar}}</ref> the ''Women in Texas History'' series,<ref name="WTH"/> the 2005 edition of ''The Oxford Encyclopedia of Latinos and Latinas in the United States'',<ref name="OUP_Pardo_2005"/> and in the series ''Texas Originals''.<ref name="humanitiestexas_TXorig"/> Her story was included in Laura Gutierrez-Witt's chapter "Cultural Continuity in the Face of Change: Hispanic Printers in Texas" in the 1996 publication ''Recovering the U.S. Hispanic Literary Heritage''.<ref name="Pouwels_2006"/>{{rp|58}}<ref name="Gutierrez-Witt_1996"/>
In 2018, Gabriela González published her book ''Redeeming La Raza: Transborder Modernity, Race, Respectability, and Rights'', which was based on her PhD dissertation in which she provided the historical, political, and socio-economic dimensions of la raza during Jovita Idár's lifetime, including an in-depth description of the role Idár's family played over several generations.<ref name="González_Raza_2018"/>


In the chapter entitled "Jovita Idar: The Ideological Origins of a Transnational Advocate" for ''La Raza'' in the 2015 publication ''Texas Women: Their Histories, Their Lives'', the authors wrote that Idar promoted the values of the "gente decente," self-identified decent, honest and respectable people, as the solution to the social problems faced by marginalized communities, "Idar promoted the idea that education elevated women and by extension men."<ref name="Turner_Cole_2015"/>{{rp|225–248}} She reflected an ideal of ] that was not completely against Victorian concepts, but she did challenge ideas and break boundaries of the patriarchal society of her time.<ref name="Turner_Cole_2015"/>{{rp|225–248}} '']'' included Idar in a series of obituaries called ''Overlooked'', about people whose accomplishments in their lifetime deserved to be acknowledged in the media when they died but were not. In their August 2020 installment, the focus was on the centennial of the ], which was adopted in 1920.<ref name="NYT_Medina_20200807">{{Cite news| issn = 0362-4331| last = Medina| first = Jennifer| title = Overlooked No More: Jovita Idár, Who Promoted Rights of Mexican-Americans and Women| work = The New York Times| access-date = August 7, 2020| date = August 7, 2020| url = https://www.nytimes.com/2020/08/07/obituaries/jovita-idar-overlooked.html}}</ref> The 19th Amendment prohibits any American citizen from being denied the right to vote on the basis of sex.
Profiles of Idár have been included in the National Women's History Museum,<ref name="NWHM_Alexander_2019">{{Cite web| title = Jovita Idár| work = National Women's History Museum| access-date = August 8, 2020 |last=Alexander |first=Kerri Lee |date=2019| url = https://www.womenshistory.org/education-resources/biographies/jovita-idar}}</ref> the ''Women in Texas History'' series,<ref name="WTH"/> the 2005 edition of ''The Oxford Encyclopedia of Latinos and Latinas in the United States'',<ref name="OUP_Pardo_2005"/> and in the series ''Texas Originals''.<ref name="humanitiestexas_TXorig"/> Her story was included in Laura Gutierrez-Witt's chapter, "Cultural Continuity in the Face of Change: Hispanic Printers in Texas", in the 1996 publication, ''Recovering the U.S. Hispanic Literary Heritage''.<ref name="Pouwels_2006"/>{{rp|58}}<ref name="Gutierrez-Witt_1996"/>


As part of ], the ] on September 21, 2020, paid homage to Idar by depicting her famous blockade of the offices of ''El Progreso'' against the Texas Rangers and commemorating via ] her 135th birthday<ref name="Google Doodle">{{cite web|url=https://doodles.google/doodle/celebrating-jovita-idar/ |title=Celebrating Jovita Idár |date=September 21, 2020 |access-date=September 21, 2020}}</ref> (two weeks after her actual birthday<ref name="NYT_Medina_20200807"/>).
In the chapter entitled "Jovita Idar: The Ideological Origins of a Transnational Advocate for ''La Raza'' in the 2015 publication, ''Texas Women: Their Histories, Their Lives'', the authors wrote that Idar promoted the values of the "gente decente," self-identified decent, honest and respectable people, as the solution to the social problems faced by marginalized communities, "Idar promoted the idea that education elevated women and by extension men."<ref name="Turner_Cole_2015"/>{{rp|225–248}} She reflected an ideal of feminism that was not completely against Victorian concepts, but she did challenge ideas and break boundaries of the patriarchal society of her time.<ref name="Turner_Cole_2015"/>{{rp|225–248}} '']'' included Idár in a series of obituaries called ''Overlooked'', about people whose accomplishments in their lifetime deserved to be acknowledged in the media when they died but were not. In their August 2020 installment, the focus was on the centennial of the ], which was adopted in 1920.<ref name="NYT_Medina_20200807">{{Cite news| issn = 0362-4331| last = Medina| first = Jennifer| title = Overlooked No More: Jovita Idár, Who Promoted Rights of Mexican-Americans and Women| work = The New York Times| access-date = August 7, 2020| date = August 7, 2020| url = https://www.nytimes.com/2020/08/07/obituaries/jovita-idar-overlooked.html}}</ref> The 19th amendment prohibits any American citizen from being denied the right to vote on the basis of sex.


Idar was honored on an ] in 2023.<ref>{{Cite web |title=2023 American Women Quarters™ Program Honorees Announced |url=https://www.usmint.gov/news/press-releases/united-states-mint-announces-2023-american-women-quarters-program-honorees?cm_mmc=ExactTarget-_-Campaign-_-20220330NewsRelease2023AWQHonorees-_-NewsReleaseTitle&cm_mmca1=NewsLetter&cm_mmca2=NewsRelease&cm_mmca3=&cc= |access-date=2022-03-31 |publisher=U.S. Mint}}</ref>
==Google Doodle==
As part of ], the ] on September 21, 2020 paid homage to Miss Idár by depicting her famous blockade of the offices of ''El Progreso'' against the Texas Rangers.


== References == == References ==
{{reflist|30em}} {{Reflist|30em}}

== External Links ==


== Further reading ==
* , from Texas Archival Resources Online.
* {{cite book|last = González|first = G.|date = 2015|chapter = Jovita Idar|title = Texas Women: Their Histories, Their Lives|location = Athens|publisher = ]|pages = 225–248|isbn = 978-0820337449}}


== External links ==
==Further reading==
{{Wikiquote}}
* {{cite book|chapter=Jovita Idar: The Ideological Origins of a Transnational Advocate for ''La Raza''|last=González|first=Gabriela|title=Texas Women: Their Histories, Their Lives|year=2015|location=Athens, GA|publisher=University of Georgia Press|editor-last1=Turner |editor-first1=Elizabeth Hayes|editor-last2=Cole |editor-first2=Stephanie|editor-last3=Sharpless |editor-first3=Rebecca}}{{rp|225–248}}
* , from Texas Archival Resources Online.


{{Mexican Americans by location|state=collapsed}}
{{authority control}} {{Authority control}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Idar, Jovita}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Idar, Jovita}}
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Latest revision as of 13:58, 10 December 2024

American journalist, teacher, and activist (1885–1946) In this Spanish name, the first or paternal surname is Idar and the second or maternal family name is Vivero.

Jovita Idar
Idar c. 1905
BornJovita Idar Vivero
(1885-09-07)September 7, 1885
Laredo, Texas, U.S.
DiedJune 15, 1946(1946-06-15) (aged 60)
San Antonio, Texas, U.S.
Occupation(s)Civil rights activist, journalist
Organizations
  • Orden Caballeros de Honor
  • Liga Femenil Mexicanista
  • Primer Congreso Mexicanista
FatherPeace N. Idar

Jovita Idar Vivero (September 7, 1885 – June 15, 1946) was an American journalist, teacher, political activist, and civil rights worker who championed the cause of Mexican Americans and Mexican immigrants. Against the backdrop of the Mexican Revolution, which lasted a decade from 1910 through 1920, she worked for a series of newspapers, using her writing to work towards making a meaningful and effective change. She began her career in journalism at La Crónica, her father's newspaper in Laredo, Texas, her hometown.

While working as a journalist, she became the president of the newly established League of Mexican Women—La Liga Femenil Mexicanista—in October 1911, an organization with a focus on offering free education to Mexican children in Laredo. She was also active in the Primer Congreso Mexicanista, an organization that brought Mexican-Americans together to discuss issues such as their lack of access to adequate education and economic resources.

Idar was honored on an American Women quarter in 2023.

Early life

Jovita Idar was born in Laredo, Texas, in 1885. She was one of eight children of Jovita Vivero Gómez and Nicasio Idar who strove to advance the civil rights of Mexican-Americans. The Idar family were part of the gente decente, who had better access to good education and opportunities than many méxico-tejano families had. All eight Idar children grew up in an atmosphere where rights and responsibilities and the underprivileged circumstances of the Chicano community were consistently discussed. In the book Marching to a Different Drummer, Robin Kadison Berson explains that "Growing up, Jovita was an imaginative, spirited girl; eager student, she won prizes for her poetry and enjoyed reciting before an audience."

Education and teaching

Idar earned her teaching certificate in 1903 from the Holding Institute in Laredo. She taught in a school in Los Ojuelos, located approximately 40 miles east of Laredo. The reality of her first years teaching was frustrating, "There were never enough textbooks for her pupils or enough paper, pens or pencils; if all her students came to class, there were not enough chairs or desks for them." The schooling for Chicano students was inadequate. Chicanos paid taxes to support decent schooling for their children yet they were denied entry to schools. Idar realized that her teaching efforts were making little impact on student lives due to the ill-equipped segregated schools.

Advocacy for social issues

Against the backdrop of the Mexican Revolution, which lasted a decade from 1910 through 1920, Idar turned from teaching to journalism as a means of working towards making a meaningful and effective change. She returned to Laredo, Texas, where she began to work alongside two of her brothers, Eduardo and Clemente Idar, for her father's newspaper, La Crónica ("The Chronicle"). Their father, Nicasio Idar, was a strong and proud man, who advocated for civil rights and social justice for Mexican-Americans. He edited and published La Crónica, which became a major voice for Mexican and Tejano rights. Jovita wrote articles under a pseudonym, exposing the poor living-conditions of Mexican-American workers and supported the Revolution.

In 1910 La Crónica included articles on news, current events, biographical and historical essays that concerned Mexican Americans, literary essays and poetry, and commentary. It focused attention on the serious social and economic inequities experienced by Mexican Americans in Texas, in particular, and in the U.S., in general. It featured "stories on educational and social discrimination against Mexican Americans, poor economic conditions, decreasing use of the Spanish language, the loss of Mexican culture and the lynching of Hispanics."

In 1911, La Crónica established a "fraternal order", the Orden Caballeros de Honor to "discuss the troubling social issues at the time". and held the First Mexican Congress—the Primer Congreso Mexicano—dedicated to fighting inequality and racism, and to unite Mexicans on issues that affected them, including lack of access to adequate education and economic resources. While working at La Crónica, Idar also served as the first president of La Liga Femenil Mexicanista, the League of Mexican Women, an "offshoot" of the Congress that was founded in October 1911 in Laredo to offer free education to Mexican children. In her 2018 book based on her PhD dissertation, Redeeming La Raza: Transborder Modernity, Race, Respectability, and Rights, Gabriela González wrote that these organizations were established in response to the poverty and racism experienced by transborder Mexican communities.

While working at La Crónica, Idar also served as the first president of the League of Mexican Women (La Liga Femenil Mexicanista), an organization founded in October 1911 in Laredo to offer free education to Mexican children. Additional goals of the organization were to "unify the Mexican intellectuals of Texas around the issues of protection of civil rights, bilingual education, the lynching of Mexicans, labor organizing and women's concerns." The women within this league worked to transform these injustices into a plan of action and focused on relieving social problems through actively making changes within their communities. Women who participated in this organization were highly influential. "Some league members were trained educators and professionals, and the education of youth remained the organization's primary focus." It developed into a social, political and charitable organization for women that, in part, provided food and clothes to those in need.

Both the League of Mexican Women and the First Mexican Congress actively worked for the advancement of their members, "by holding studying and learning sessions, sessions where culture is acquired and talent is developed."

In March 1913, when Nuevo Laredo — on the Mexican side of the border — was attacked, Idar and other Laredo women crossed the Rio Grande River to volunteer to help with the wounded. While at the border, Idar later joined the La Cruz Blanca — the White Cross, an organization that provided relief similar to the Red Cross, that had been created and financed by Leonor Villegas de Magnón, who was also from Laredo.

In 1914, when she returned from her volunteer nursing work at the border, she began writing for El Progreso. An editorial published in El Progreso criticizing President Woodrow Wilson's order to dispatch U.S. military troops to the Mexico–United States border had offended the U.S. Army and Texas Rangers. The Rangers attempted to close El Progreso, but Idar blocked the entrance to the newspaper's office. When she was not at the newspaper's office one day, the Rangers returned to ransack it and to destroy the printing-presses, effectively shutting down the newspaper.

After her father's death in 1914, she became the editor and writer at La Crónica, where she continued to expose the conditions that Mexican-Americans and Mexican immigrants were living under at the time.

In November 1916, Idar founded the weekly paper Evolución which remained in operation until 1920.

Idar moved to San Antonio in 1921 where she founded a free kindergarten and also volunteered in a hospital as an interpreter.

In 1940 she co-edited the journal El Heraldo Cristiano.

Personal life

In May 1917, Idar married Bartolo Juárez, who worked as a plumber and tinsmith. They lived together in San Antonio until her death, on June 15, 1946, which was reported to have been caused by a pulmonary hemorrhage. She had been suffering from advanced tuberculosis.

Legacy

In 2023 Idar was included in the American Women quarters series

In 2018, Gabriela González published her book Redeeming La Raza: Transborder Modernity, Race, Respectability, and Rights, which was based on her PhD dissertation in which she provided the historical, political, and socio-economic dimensions of la raza during Jovita Idar's lifetime, including an in-depth description of the role Idar's family played over several generations.

Profiles of Idar have been included in the National Women's History Museum, the Women in Texas History series, the 2005 edition of The Oxford Encyclopedia of Latinos and Latinas in the United States, and in the series Texas Originals. Her story was included in Laura Gutierrez-Witt's chapter "Cultural Continuity in the Face of Change: Hispanic Printers in Texas" in the 1996 publication Recovering the U.S. Hispanic Literary Heritage.

In the chapter entitled "Jovita Idar: The Ideological Origins of a Transnational Advocate" for La Raza in the 2015 publication Texas Women: Their Histories, Their Lives, the authors wrote that Idar promoted the values of the "gente decente," self-identified decent, honest and respectable people, as the solution to the social problems faced by marginalized communities, "Idar promoted the idea that education elevated women and by extension men." She reflected an ideal of feminism that was not completely against Victorian concepts, but she did challenge ideas and break boundaries of the patriarchal society of her time. The New York Times included Idar in a series of obituaries called Overlooked, about people whose accomplishments in their lifetime deserved to be acknowledged in the media when they died but were not. In their August 2020 installment, the focus was on the centennial of the Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, which was adopted in 1920. The 19th Amendment prohibits any American citizen from being denied the right to vote on the basis of sex.

As part of Hispanic Heritage Month, the Google Doodle on September 21, 2020, paid homage to Idar by depicting her famous blockade of the offices of El Progreso against the Texas Rangers and commemorating via hover box her 135th birthday (two weeks after her actual birthday).

Idar was honored on an American Women quarter in 2023.

References

  1. April 10, 1910 Laredo Weekly Times Laredo, Texas. Page 4
  2. ^ Medina, Jennifer (August 7, 2020). "Overlooked No More: Jovita Idár, Who Promoted Rights of Mexican-Americans and Women". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved August 7, 2020.
  3. Jovita Idar: Mexican American Activist and Journalist. PBS. American Masters. August 4, 2020. Retrieved August 8, 2020.
  4. ^ "Jovita Idár". Humanities Texas. Texas Originals. Retrieved April 2, 2018.
  5. ^ Villegas de Magnón, Leonor; Lomas, Clara (1994). The Rebel. Houston, Texas: Arte Público Press. ISBN 978-1611920499. OCLC 656724075.
  6. ^ Alexander, Kerri Lee (2019). "Jovita Idár". National Women's History Museum. Retrieved August 8, 2020.
  7. ^ Jones, Nancy Baker. "Idar Jovita". Handbook of Texas Online. Texas State Historical Association (TSHA). Retrieved April 4, 2018.
  8. "Jovita Vivero, b.1866 d.1950 - Ancestry". Ancestry. Retrieved March 22, 2024.
  9. ^ González, Gabriela (2018). Redeeming La Raza: Transborder Modernity, Race, Respectability, and Rights. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/oso/9780199914142.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-19-934553-3. Retrieved August 8, 2020.
  10. ^ Berson, Robin Kadison (1994). Marching to a Different Drummer: Unrecognized Heroes of American History. Greenwood Publishing Group.
  11. ^ Pouwels, Joel Bollinger (2006). Political Journalism by Mexican Women During the Age of Revolution 1876–1940. Edwin Mellon Press.
  12. ^ Gutierrez-Witt, Laura (1996). "Cultural Continuity in the Face of Change: Hispanic Printers in Texas". In Erlinda Gonzales-Berry; Chuck Tatum (eds.). Recovering the U.S. Hispanic Literary Heritage. Vol. II. Arte Publico Press.
  13. Meier, Matt S.; Gutierrez, Margo (2000). Encyclopedia of the Mexican American Civil Rights Movement. Greenwood Press.
  14. ^ Pardo, Mary S. (2005). "Latina Labor and Community Organizers". In Oboler, Suzanne; González, Deena J. (eds.). The Oxford Encyclopedia of Latinos and Latinas in the United States. Oxford University Press.
  15. Lomas, Clara (2005). "Historical Newspapers". In Oboler, Suzanne; González, Deena J. (eds.). The Oxford Encyclopedia of Latinos and Latinas in the United States. Oxford University Press.
  16. Ramos, Raĺul A.; Perales, Monica (2010). Recovering the Hispanic History of Texas. Recovering the U.S Hispanic Literary Heritage Series. Arte Publico Press.
  17. "Liga Femenil Mexicanista". Handbook of Texas Online. Retrieved July 23, 2009.
  18. ^ González, Gabriela (2015). "Jovita Idar: The Ideological Origins of a Transnational Advocate for La Raza". In Turner, Elizabeth Hayes; Cole, Stephanie; Sharpless, Rebecca (eds.). Texas Women: Their Histories, Their Lives. Athens, GA: University of Georgia Press.
  19. Villegas de Magnón, Leonor; Lomas, Clara (2004). La rebelde. Mexico: Conaculta, Inah. ISBN 1558854150. OCLC 54103741.
  20. ^ Jones, Nancy Baker. "Jovita Idar". Women in Texas History – Liga Femenil Mexicanista. Venue Communications, Inc. Archived from the original on March 27, 2018. Retrieved April 4, 2018.
  21. "Great Texas Women" (PDF). UTSA 's Institute of Texas Cultures. Retrieved April 4, 2018.
  22. "No title". Laredo Times. May 27, 1917.
  23. Danini, Carmina. "1900s journalist and educator Jovita Idar championed rights of Mexican Americans". San Antonio Express News. Express-News. Retrieved April 4, 2018.
  24. "Celebrating Jovita Idár". September 21, 2020. Retrieved September 21, 2020.
  25. "2023 American Women Quarters™ Program Honorees Announced". U.S. Mint. Retrieved March 31, 2022.

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