Angel Onofre was 14 years old when he returned to Minnesota from Mexico. He spoke no English. Worse, he felt abandoned by his parents, who had been deported to Mexico.
Onofre didn't see much use for high school. His life was already filled with cultural, financial and emotional struggles. He was ready to drop out and take his chances on a life without a diploma.
But an administrator at El Colegio charter school wouldn't let him. Leaders at the south Minneapolis school know how bleak the future can look to Hispanics and Latinos new to Minnesota. But administrators saw in Onofre the glimmer of a student who didn't really want to give up, so they wouldn't let him.
"If I can do this, I can do more," said Onofre, 19, who graduated on Friday. "I'm just trying to do something more with myself."
Onofre, a soft-spoken teen who sports a dice earring, was born in Minnesota. At that time, his parents and older siblings were living in south Minneapolis. But his dad got arrested when Onofre was just a toddler. Onofre and his mother returned to Morelos, in south-central Mexico.
When he was 12, Onofre's parents decided it was time for him to return to the United States. He said his parents feared he would lose the right to return because he had not been in the country since he was a toddler.
They traveled to Santa Ana, Calif., for a vacation, and then left him to live with an older sister he had never met.
Soon, he started hanging out with gang members who lived across the street. His sister and her family worked most of the day and did not have time to make sure he made it to school. "I went for two days," he said.