Nearing the end of any collegiate journey is typically a joyous time for most students. After years of juggling classes, working on projects and studying for exams, the end goal β a degree and chance at a better future β is within sight.
However in 2016, when clinical psychology major Jennifer Martinez de Pinillos was planning to graduate from Arturo Michelena University of Venezuelaβs Carabobo State, she instead had to prepare to uproot her entire life and family to a foreign country.
βWhen you grow up in a country, you never expect to leave. Because of [circumstances] you have to leave everything, even your dreams.β
de Pinillos, along with her parents and younger brother and sister, are a just a few of the 3 million emigrants from Venezuela who have fled their native country due to worsening economic, social and political conditions. During the past two years, hyperinflation in the nation, which is now estimated to be more than 1 million percent, has made it difficult for citizens to get food, medicine and other essential items. A cup of coffee there now costs 2.5 million bolivars.
βWhen you grow up in a country, you never expect to leave. Because of [circumstances] you have to leave everything, even your dreams. I was about to graduate there and I had my plan for life,β de Pinillos says.
Finding New Purpose
That plan was to pursue a masterβs degree in her countryβs capital of Caracas and to work for the U.S. embassy in Venezuela. But just like de Pinnilosβ life, her dream has changed entirely. Soon to graduate with her bachelorβs in clinical psychology from ΒιΆΉΣ³»΄«Γ½, she now plans to return to the university to pursue her masterβs in nonprofit management. de Pinillos says she hopes to one day own her own nonprofit shelter and help provide essentials for those in need.
βI want to be able to give all those things to people so they can dream again.β
βI know from the Venezuelan and American perspectives if you donβt have the basics you cannot dream. You canβt expect to go to college if you donβt have food, if you donβt have anything to wear. I want to be able to give all those things to people so they can dream again,β de Pinillos says.
Since coming to Florida, she has already put this focus to use by helping those back in Venezuela. de Pinillos and her family periodically send boxes of clothing, medical supplies and other necessities to the church they attended, along with nearby orphanages. In the two years theyβve been here, theyβve sent 20 boxes of donated items from friends, community members and themselves to those in need.
βMy desire to help came from [living in] Venezuela. By helping Venezuelans from here, I discovered there are communities in the U.S. that are helping [elsewhere,]β she says.
Life in Venezuela
Although her mom, Aury Garanton, says her daughter was always looking for ways to help others, remembering conditions in Venezuela helps de Pinillos keep her focus on her home country. Her family lived in Valencia, an industrial city that is considered an economic hub. Her mother was a medical translator who would often travel to the United States for work, and her dad was a real estate agent. Although her family was better off in some ways than many other families, it was the violence surrounding university protests in the nation that caused them to move.
βIn 2015 there were more protests so my mom and dad started to say we couldnβt stay anymore,β de Pinillos says.
βThere were times we couldnβt go out of our house for a week. It was stressful because … you donβt really know whatβs going on.β
In the year before that, Geraldine Moreno, a fellow classmate, was assassinated by National Guardsmen outside her home for protesting. The school that de Pinillosβ brother attended was at the center of the university movement opposing the government.
βThere were times we couldnβt go out of our house for a week,β she says. βIt was stressful because the government doesnβt allow for transmissions of the protests on television, so you donβt really know whatβs going on.β
During these times, de Pinillos and her family, along with other Venezuelans, would experience guarimbas, or blockades. Citizens would use trees, tires and whatever other items they could find to block the roads to prevent colectivos, armed pro-government groups that attack protestors, from raiding homes and harassing people.
βItβs very hard leaving your family, friends and everything youβve built for years. But life is about what is ahead. You can build anywhere you can go,β her mother says.
Building a Future
During that building process, itβs been challenging for de Pinillos to adapt to the culture of her new home, she says. But by watching the TV show Ήσ°ωΎ±±π²Τ»ε²υΜύto get familiar with the American sense of humor and making friends in her classes, sheβs overcome this.
When she first came to ΒιΆΉΣ³»΄«Γ½ in Fall 2017, she struggled with adjusting to the education system in the United States. In Venezuela, bachelorβs degree programs typically take five years to complete. Universities there determine every course students must take in that time, with no general education classes or choices for electives like in the United States.
βMy journey at ΒιΆΉΣ³»΄«Γ½ has allowed me to encounter myself and know who I really am, what I really want and what I am capable of doing,β
Karen Cox, director of ΒιΆΉΣ³»΄«Γ½βs , met de Pinillos at orientation and has stayed connected with her since to ensure her success. Cox says her departmentβs willingness to work with transfer students allowed her to substitute many of de Pinillosβ previous courses to fulfill ΒιΆΉΣ³»΄«Γ½βs graduation requirements.
βIt was just the look on her face at orientation that told me this student had some special needs, and I needed to find out what they were so I could help. She is a great communicator and shared her history and her future goals with me quickly,β Cox says. βHer focused ambition allowed me to guide her to the ΒιΆΉΣ³»΄«Γ½ resources she needed, without any time wasted.β
de Pinillos plans to carry that ambition forward into her graduate studies and pursuits after graduation to help better the world, but she credits her experience at ΒιΆΉΣ³»΄«Γ½ for providing the foundation on which sheβs been able to build her new dream.
βWhen I came [to Florida] my concern was, βWhat am I going to do?β, [but] my journey at ΒιΆΉΣ³»΄«Γ½ has allowed me to encounter myself and know who I really am, what I really want and what I am capable of doing,β de Pinillos says.