Saturday, November 22, 2025

TO MY GENERATION KENNEDY'S ASSASSINATION 62 YEARS AGO SEEMS LIKE ONLY YESTERDAY

 

 By Juan Montoya

As a student at Garden Park Elementary School in November 22, 1963, our third-grade class went on a field trip to Harlingen to see how bread (Holsum Bakery) and ice cream (at Hygeia) were made.

At Holsum we got some sweet rolls and a pencil and at Hygeia an ice cream bar and a walk-through on how they were experimenting with sea water to enhance their product.

We got loaded back on the bus and returned to school in Brownsville when the bus driver stopped at the school gate and one of our teachers stood at the front of the bus and told us that President John F. Kennedy was dead from an assassin's bullet in Dallas.

In the silence that followed, we saw our teachers – in those days our respected role models – break into tears.

We shuffled out the bus in silence – stunned by the news of John F. Kennedy's death but more by watching our teachers burst into tears with grief – and one student asked: "Does that mean we don't have a president?"

It's difficult to realize that it's been 62 years ago. To our generation, it was one of those index points in our existence, akin to the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor to the generation before us. Today it's 911. And to our kids, it will be pandemic of 2020-2021. 

Since he burst upon the scene preaching a message of cultural inclusion, Kennedy was revered by Mexican-Americans in the United States. His Alliance for Progress announced in 1961 to Latin America was a sea change from previous U.S. initiatives for the region. And he appointed Brownsville native Reynaldo Garza as the first Mexican-American federal judge.

And Kennedy was the first to announce the idea for an organization to send college students to help people around the world. He pushed for it during the 1960 presidential campaign, at a late-night speech at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, October 14, 1960, on the steps of the Michigan Union.

He later dubbed the proposed organization the "Peace Corps." A brass marker commemorates the place where Kennedy stood. In the weeks after the 1960 election, the study group at Colorado State University released their feasibility study a few days before Kennedy's Presidential Inauguration in January 1961. When I attended the U of M in the Fall of 1975, it was one of the first places I saw.

Much later, Kennedy would show his resoluteness in the face of Russian adventurism in Cuba by standing up to the Soviets and making them remove the nuclear missiles from that island. He would be gunned down – as would be Robert, his brother – by assassins.

The grief in the streets of Las Prietas was tangible. Many homes already had embroidered tapestries of Kennedy and his wife Jackie in the living rooms of the humble homes in that west-end barrio. His death – we would later find out – would herald a generational index point in our lives.
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Many years later we would find out that our hero, like all human beings, had a few warts we had not discerned.

We found out that he had pushed along the plan to overthrown the Fidel Castro regime to the point of approving CIA-sponsored assassination attempts against its leaders; that he was carried along by the inertia of militarism against the Vietnamese people's battle against its French occupiers that erupted into the Vietnam War, and that he even cheated on the princess of Camelot Jacqueline with bombshell actress Marilyn Monroe.

But in that sunny November 22, 1963 day after our field day trip to Harlingen, we only knew that something strange and awful had befallen our neighborhood and our country, and were stunned at the news. The street where I lived just happened to be named Kennedy.

19 comments:

Hal ApeƱo said...

Tough night for RGV high schools, Juan. All playing in Round 2 took the field, got whipped by northern teams and rode the cruel and lonely bus ride home one more time.

Losers:

PSJA, lost to Boerne Champion High
Harlingen, beaten to a pulp
Weslaco, Slaughtered by Cibolo Steele
Mission Veterans, beaten down
La Villa, clubbed to death
Mercedes, pummeled mercilessly

Playing tonight:

Los Fresnos Falcons.

Bang the drum slowly. . .



Anonymous said...

And it was democrats that killed Kennedy.

Anonymous said...

Valley kids are incapable of competing against any teams past the Border Patrol Checkpoint.

Jack Ruby said...

Juan, and done, you post this same shit every year. How about a rewrite every now and then, like at least once a decade.

Anonymous said...

JFK liked pussy. And he got it.

Anonymous said...

Today - Saturday:

San Marcos High Rattlers 33
Edinburg High Bobcats 3

RGV team manhandled. . .


Flying Monkey said...

People feel the same way about Charlie Kirk. It's like shit posting racist memes, peddling TPUSSAYS conspiracy theories, and denying science is why people looked up to Charlie. Boy whata piece of shit, he'll be missed.

Ben said...

At Canales elementary in Mrs Skipper's first grade class when we all listened to the radio and heard the news. Bad Day indeed. The following day I woke up to my mother and grandmother weeping watching the coverage of JFK's death on TV. Made a mark in my life and remember it like yesterday.

Anonymous said...

We don't give a shit, Montoya. Kennedy wouldn't be welcome in today's Democratic party.

Rancho Viejo Platinum F-250 said...


Los Fresnos went down to Laredo United.

All RGV high school teams out of state playoffs. See you next year for the same Loser's Dance.

Anonymous said...

Funny how time moves.

FRANK GARCIA said...

What a dumbass fuckup you must be.

Always been, likely. . . .

Anonymous said...

Sir Rancho Viejo, stop posting under this user name The original owner of the name is threating to destroy this blog if you do not desist. He has friends in high places. what will we do without El Rrun Rrun blog?

Charlie Harper said...

Those who can, do

Frank Garcia II said...

FUCK YOU

Anonymous said...

All men like pussy. JFK got it because he was powerful, young, and good looking.

Anonymous said...

I totally agree that it was democrats. The same party who tried to assassinate our current president. I guess the democratic party has always been the communist party in disguise.

Anonymous said...

Re: Kennedy Assassination...I was a Junior at BHS in Mrs. Wilkins Biology class when the announcement came over the intercom. Many of us were shocked. I was in total disbelief. We all went home and were stuck watcing TV for hours on end. What a sad day indeed. The end of Camelot as was said then.

Chelsea Cline said...

Pobre Vato Pendejo at 2:48 am. I pity your dumb ass Francisco

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