Essay sample library > My Life in Public Housing

My Life in Public Housing

2023-01-29 08:01:57

I grew up in a rough housing project. I think that there was no TV at that time. There is nothing other than local pools and organized sports. Children just left school to spend the summer roaming. If you want to play baseball, crush tall weeds in the field behind. When I was twelve, I was bored at the end of summer and I am irritated. I was allowed to walk 4 miles to the nearest public library built during the Civil War. column

I have a suspicious doubt that my good life, the house of my house and the garden of my house, and the "good" public school where my son passes is not quite good. Even when I painted the walls and planted tomatoes and recently participated in the meeting of teachers and parents. That year, I was bothered by the possibility that all of these were built on the cornerstone of evil and that evil could flow into our groundwater. Does evil run through our groundwater? I do not know what "white life" is, or someone should feel "moral debt" of past actions of those who only have universally similar skin pigments, but I I know that. It is spiritually evident. I also know that more and more of the white liberals who think that spreading such works has problems with the reason that they are just the color of the skin.

I grew up in a beautiful house with a white community. There is no discrimination by skin color. There is no obvious physical disability. I spent a lot of time depending on privileges. That being said, I am the product of continuous colonization and internalization of Puerto Rico and the trauma of the United States. I think that Boricua makes me unique. Like small accessories, it is not a valid part of my identity. Except my surname, I feel that there is no special relationship with this part. I know that this is very common now when you think about the difficulties of the Puerto Rican people in America. Culture and identity are often hidden to fit American model

Puerto Rico communities are usually divided into three types. Barrio, Urbanzasion (urbanization) and residential areas (public housing). Urbanizacion is a kind of housing that was developed by private developers and built in detached houses. Recently, non-detached houses such as apartments and townhouses are under construction and are categorized into this category. (In Puerto Rico, the condominium is a residential unit in a high-rise building, regardless of whether the resident owns that unit or lives as a rental house, it is sometimes called "apartamentament.") It is a government-funded housing through the US Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) and the US Department of Agriculture (USDA).