Immigrant Children Can Turn Into Heroes – September 2025 Newsletter

Written by on September 15, 2025

Greetings from San Diego.

I was lucky enough this month to be interviewed for two podcasts and to contribute to another author’s blog. But something else exciting is coming up. I and three other authors are trying something I’ve never done before. We’re doing an event at the Lightning Brewery. See more about it below.

But the key and most inspiring bit of this newsletter is my interview of Mehalet Shibre. It all started with Nonprofit Radio

Podcast interview with Nonprofit Radio

Storytelling is one of the key skills people in nonprofits must have. I’d never talked about technique in anything but book and writer venues. So it was great fun to talk with Tony Martignetti and his listeners in the nonprofit industry. Whether you’re a fiction writer or telling about the wonderful work your organization does, you must be compelling and reach the listener’s heart. See the interview on his podcast with the link below:

My Interview with Tony Matignetti

Afterward I told Tony that I had a newsletter. In each issue I related a story of a financial scam. I suggested that the next one describe a scam that had happened with a nonprofit.

“Please don’t do that,” he said. “Please.”

“Okay,” I said.

“Put something uplifting about a nonprofit in your newsletter.”

So, in this issue that’s what I’m doing.

I did a good deal of work with the Cesar Chavez Service Clubs and contacted Linda Legerrette, one of the two founders. I asked if she knew of someone I could write about whom the Club had influenced to do great work. She had just the person—Mehalet Shibre, a young woman who had just graduated from college. I had the pleasure of talking with Mehalet at Linda’s house. Here is her amazing story.

Mehalet Shibre: Immigrant Children Can Turn Into Heroes

Mehalet moved to San Francisco from Ethiopia when she was four years old. She thought everyone in her new home would speak Amharic and couldn’t understand why they didn’t. She was used to the grains and stews of Ethiopia and hated American food. When she went to kindergarten she had to spend all her time on the computer learning English and couldn’t play with the other kids. No wonder she thought that this country was not built for her.

Her family moved to the City Heights part of San Diego in 2006. By that time she spoke English as if she’d been born here but was still in a class of immigrant kids. There were hardly any Black kids in the school. One of the teachers was Black and went to bat for her. Mehalet was transferred to a class that would more fully nourish her capabilities. Advocacy became a key principle that Mehalet believes in.

Her parents worked so Mehalet always was involved with an after-school activity. In fourth grade she and her friends checked out the Cesar Chavez Service Club. The Club ended up being an activity that changed her life. The leader was Natalie LeGerrette. Natalie was Black like she was and seemed to understand her.

The Club was so different than what she expected. For the first time the group asked her opinion and reflected on it. She learned how to examine the many sides of an issue to try to get to the real truth. Mehalet was so happy with the Club that she wrote a letter praising how it had helped her. The letter was very thoughtful and Linda LeGerrette, one of the Club founders, forwarded it to the board and the superintendent of schools. Already the Club was helping Mehalet see her potential.

In middle school the students had darker, more critical opinions. The way they highlighted student differences made Mehalet feel alienated. But she could relax at the Chavez Club, where she was accepted for what she was. No negative energy. She found her view of the world expanding and her curiosity taking off. She even tried robotics and loved it. The club sponsored a trip to Washington DC and, for the first time, she traveled in the U.S. outside of California. Mehalet fell in love with the city and what it stood for. Rather than giving her a cynical view of politics, DC inspired her.

In high school Mehalet continued being part of the Cesar Chavez Service Club. It was a time when she and her friends explored who they were and what they wanted to be. They delved into what skills they needed in order to achieve those ambitions. These were life topics that school classes didn’t teach. The Club also sponsored cleaning up canyons, putting on food drives, and erasing graffiti. She learned the dangers of climate change and wrote a paper that was passed on to the entire community about avoiding plastic straws. She now had the confidence to express her opinions and to incite change.

College at UC Davis was a whole other challenge. Here she was part of a Black community that had its own needs. Mehalet joined student government. Because of all the things she’d done as a teenager, she was put in charge of Ethnicity and Cultural Affairs for the student body. The Chavez Clubs had taught her to listen to all sides of problems, so she organized events to gather opinions. A key problem was that students couldn’t use food stamps to buy food. The university administration and the vendors told her it wasn’t possible, so she mobilized. She knew that most problems could be solved with the right advocacy. She wrote a resolution, got it passed by student government, and disbursed it throughout the university. Soon students could use food stamps to purchase food. To help the Black community, she recruited Black students to serve in student government, won government grants for Black initiatives, and organized events for Black pre-law students.

I think it’s amazing how much a young person can accomplish when they seize the tools that a nonprofit like the Cesar Chavez Service Clubs can give them. Especially when they start at an early age. So what is twenty-three-year-old Mehalet doing now that she’s graduated? She knew Richard Barrera from his work with the Cesar Chavez Clubs and in the City Heights Community. He asked her to help as his deputy campaign manager in running to be the Superintendent of California Schools. Then it’s on to law school.

I asked her what big lesson she has learned since she was that four-year-old child who didn’t speak English. She says she thinks what helps economically disadvantaged communities prosper is advocacy. A diverse community like City Heights has different ideologies, languages, and insecurities. People living there don’t realize that the government can help them. That’s where an advocate comes in. The motto she likes best from Cesar Chavez is: “Knowledge is power. Share it.”

When I see this, I wonder how in the world this country could stop welcoming immigrants. What they need is opportunity and someone to speak up for them and their children. What happens then? A child who thought her country was not built for her learns to help build her country.

Here is a picture of Mehalet and Carlos LeGerrette. Carlos and his wife Linda founded the Cesar Chavez Service Clubs.

BookBase

I had a great time with a new book-sharing group called BookBase. BookBase was founded by three Cal State Long Beach MBA students as a startup almost a year ago. Their idea was so good that they won the Sunstone Innovation Challenge pitch contest and received funding. The mission of the organization is to virtually engage readers. With a subscription, readers can tune into book clubs, interviews with authors (like me), and book chats. All on their phones. I’ll let you know when the interview is posted. In the meantime, check them out at:

BookBase

Lightning Brewery

This is going to be fun. On September 25, Matt Coyle, Marjorie McCown, Deborah Holt Larkin, and myself will be at the Lightning Brewery at 13200 Poway Road in Poway. The event starts at 5:00 and we will speak at around 6:00. Come and have a free bratwurst, some beer, and chat with us.

Guest Blog

I was honored to contribute to Debra Goldstein’s blog. I wrote: “Writing What You Know, Or Writing What You Want to Know.”

Find it on this link:

Guest Blog

A Free Primer on How to Tell a Story

Would you like a free training manual on how to tell a story? Picking the right story and telling it well are keys to making a sale or inspiring a donation. The primer in the link below divides elements of storytelling into 28 short sections. As a subscriber you can get it for free to download from this link:

Check out the Free Primer

Saving Myles

We’re still hanging on to the end of summer. How about a good read to end the season?

End Summer the Right Way!

All the Best,
Carl


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