StMU Research Scholars

Featuring Scholarly Research, Writing, and Media at St. Mary’s University

November 1, 2020

Colonias in the Rio Grande Valley: La Monjita en la Bicicleta

After a Tetris game with the luggage, a couple of naps, and a karaoke session our group of students had finally made it to the Rio Grande Valley. Looking out the window of the twelve passenger van, palm trees flooded my view. The green leaves flew in the warm spring breeze while Taylor Swift played on the radio; the week was set for our Spring Break service immersion trip. We planned to stay at the Basilica in San Juan, TX. This holy place, was home to a mini hotel with pebbled flooring and rustic wooden frameworks that created a welcoming feeling of home. While many students who attend St Mary’s University come from Harlingen, McAllen, and Brownsville, the well known towns were not our destinations. Instead we were to embark on a journey into life of the lesser known colonias in the Rio Grande Valley.This trip just a few hours from San Antonio, took us into another dimension, one where our faith and purpose grew stronger.

So we walked into the ARISE Command Center, the rich scent of coffee brewing greeted our nostrils, and the sweet taste of pan dulce from the local panaderia made our mouths water. Every staff member hugged and cared for us as if we were their own children. I felt instantly at home. The day consisted of presentations and home visits with community members. And this is how I learned about Sister Gerrie Naughton, the founder of ARISE Adelante, but to the residents she was La Monjita en la Bicicleta. Sister Gerrie cared and loved the community so deeply that her impact can still be felt everywhere. Although I did not get to meet Sister Gerrie, the women of ARISE embodied her mission and carried it with them as they walked along the same dirt paths that Sister Gerrie rode around on her bike. So I will take you on my journey to discover Sister Gerrie’s vocation and devotion to the colonias.

Sister Gerrie Naughton, one of the Sisters of Mercy came to the Southern most part of the US, along the Texas-Mexico border in the 1980’s. Excited about this region full of life and culture, Sister Gerrie was eager to connect to her new community and to find out how she could help. Having no prior plan in place, Sister Gerrie set out on her bicycle to visit families in the community asking them what they needed most. As she ventured out further on her daily rides, she came across some dirt roads, houses built piecemeal and a sprawling community overflowing with needs. It was obvious this area lacked basic infrastructure such as proper drainage systems, clean running water, or a consistent supply of electricity. There were even days when she could not make it across a single road because it had rained the day before and every road remained flooded. Throughout her time in the Rio Grande Valley, Sister Gerrie visited with many families, many of whom had recently immigrated from Mexico. These families were looking for a way to improve their economic situation and yearning to provide for their family. When asking what they needed most she received responses ranging from English classes, to help filling out government forms, and so much more.

Map of the Rio Grande Valley Texas. The area in which Sister Gerrie started ARISE. | Courtesy of Wikipedia Commons.

In response to these concerns, Sister Gerrie began a non-profit in 1989: ARISE Adelante, in Las Milpas, Texas in the heart of these colonias. They are made of a mostly immigrant population who crossed over to seek more opportunities for better lives. Just two years after she first arrived in the Rio Grande Valley, ARISE came to life with the help of five other women from the community. This non-profit organization has now grown to encompass multiple community centers that continue providing a wide variety of services and classes and other learning opportunities for all. The legacy of Sister Gerrie goes beyond the building and the 501C non-profit status. What ARISE Adelante provided was the resources and structures that the colonias were not afforded. Sister Gerries showed these families that their daily struggles mattered and that she cared to assist them.

According the Texas Attorney General Colonia Prevention Database, a colonia is defined as, “substandard housing developments, often found along the Texas-Mexico border, where residents lack basic services such as drinking water, sewage treatment, and paved roads.”1 Texas Senate Bill 827 classifies colonias into three categories: red, yellow and green based on the risk to public health. 2 The classification system ranges from red colonias lacking access to potable water, unpaved roads, no access to sewage systems, and susceptibility to flooding. Yellow colonias may have some better conditions including potable water service with approved wastewater disposable systems, however they still lack adequate paved roads, proper drainage and solid waste disposal pick up services. Green colonias have access to all of these services and pose the lowest level of risk to human health. Colonias have purposely been written out of city plans for decades with no improvement to the basic necessities despite countless initiatives launched by the State of Texas. The conditions of colonias across the Rio Grande Valley and the entire Texas-Mexico border are unacceptable. These communities have been studied for decades and little progress has been made since. 3 These conditions impact every aspect of life both directly and indirectly. Studies show significant impact on a students’ ability to excel in the classroom, residents’ compromised immune system and increased susceptibility to contagious illnesses, and overall poor mental health.4 The Universal Declaration of Human Rights also states that, “Everyone has the right to a standard of living adequate for the health and well-being of himself and of his family including food, clothing, housing and medical care…” 5 The conditions of colonias clearly violate this standard set by the United Nations in 1948.

Sister Gerrie Naughton with community members in the ARISE center in Las Milpas. | Courtesy of ARISE.

The need for clean water in the colonias has led residents to look for inexpensive alternatives to the water from the tap. Purchasing a water filtration system is a huge expense that not many residents can afford, so they rely on molinitos. Molinitos are small refill stations, usually located at a gas station or a corner store, where one can refill five-gallon jugs.6 These jugs can weigh up to forty-five pounds and become an obstacle for a family who does not have a vehicle, a refill station near by, or simply for youths not strong enough to pick it up.7 The areas in which colonias are located are also prone to flooding, making roads inaccessible and with stagnant water that foster mosquitoes born illnesses. These waters emit unpleasant odors and can pose huge health risks for residents.8 The flooding leaves behind massive amounts of mud that residents must tread through to get to the school bus in the morning, leaving students with muddy all over their shoes and a clear indication of which side of town from where they come. 9

When Sister Gerrie Naughton arrived in the town of Las Milpas in 1987, these were the conditions she found this community in. Shortly after, she became she brought with her tremendous hope to each colonias community and became known as “la monjita en la bicicleta.”10 She listened and engaged with each community and took actions to help improve daily lives individually and collectively. The inadequacies described above posed and continue to pose severe health risks to the community members and have not been properly addressed by county officials. Sister Gerrie and the women of ARISE developed community programs to help alleviate the burdens felt by their neighbors. English lessons, information sessions to apply for residency or citizenship (depending for what one qualified), after-school and summer programs for the youth at new community centers and celebrations that glorified their culture and roots, ARISE provided a safe haven for each segment of the community. 11

Since their founding in 1989, ARISE Adelante has developed six different pillars of focus and has created community led teams to spearhead events, fundraisers, demonstrations, and petitions to advocate for and educate the community. These pillars include education, environment and health, housing and infrastructure, immigration, civic engagement and leadership, and spiritual development. 12

ARISE Adelante Logo | Courtesy of ARISE.

Each pillar has specific courses and events attached to it that are organized and executed by community members. Through these pillars, ARISE Adelante, with the leadership and direction of Sister Gerrie, has lifted their community higher than any of them could have ever imagined. The organization now has four centers across the region with over one hundred volunteers. One thing that Sister Gerrie instilled in this group was, “We will not do for the community what they can do for themselves.” Volunteers developed many self-help classes and seminars to empower its members. By advocating for better infrastructure, better schools, and providing a safe space for people of any religion, ethnicity, and income, ARISE has become a home away from home for countless individuals. The leadership, all women, has also become a model for the community. There is so much beauty in the fact that ARISE Adelante is a non-profit organization completely led by women. These women have created a support system, not only for volunteers but for all women across their communities. No matter their background, they support one another in every endeavor and bond over mutual experiences. Sister Gerrie fostered a sense of pride that had been lost.13 She expected from the community, not for perfection but excellence, because only God is perfect.

Although Sister Gerrie passed away in 2009, her legacy lives on. She serves as an inspiration to all women led organization and provided a true example of working within a community, with the community, for the community. The women of ARISE continue to follow Sister Gerrie’s lead as their beacon of hope and prosperity. Despite the great progress that has been made, the colonias of the Rio Grande Valley have sprawled on and require many further improvements. Nonprofits such as ARISE Adelante shed a much need spotlight on the disparities that exist across the region in disparate infrastructure and access to education. ARISE Adelante succeeded by mobilizing the community toward a common goal and ensuring that their voices were heard. Unfortunately, many city and county officials remain unwilling to listen. Statewide elections in recent years have also set the momentum back. By redirecting or removing funds from the Colonias Project out of Texas A&M- San Antonio, Governor Abbott has single-handedly stalled research into these communities. Alongside the lack of funding for adequate housing and infrastructure improvements such as public lighting and paved roads, community leaders must wind their ways through processes that require seventy-five percent of the original landowner’s signatures for petitions before they can come before committee for consideration. Nevertheless, the fight continues. The women of ARISE Adelante focus their daily efforts to educate their community and build from the ground up following the lead of Sister Gerrie Naughton.

  1. The Attorney General of Texas, “Colonias Prevention,” (2015) https://www.texasattorneygeneral.gov/divisions/colonias-prevention .
  2. Texas Office of the Secretary of State Colonias Initiatives Program, “Tracking the Progress of State-Funded Projects that Benefit Colonias,” (2014) https://www.sos.state.tx.us/border/forms/2014-progress-legislative-report.pdf .
  3. Mark Estes, Kingsley E. Haynes, and Jared E. Hazleton, “Colonias in the Lower Rio Grande Valley of South Texas: A Summary Report,” Policy Research Project Reports University of Texas at Austin 18 (1977).
  4. Center for Public Policy Priorities, “State of Texas Children 2017: Child Well Being in the Rio Grande Valley,” Texas Kids Count Project October (2017).
  5. United Nations, Universal Declaration of Human Rights, (1948), accessed October, 4, 2020, https://www.un.org/en/universal-declaration-human-rights/ .
  6. Wendy Jepson and Heather Lee Brown, “‘If no gasoline, no water’: privatizing drinking water quality in South Texas colonias,” Environment and Planning 46(2014): 1038-1048.
  7. Wendy Jepson and Heather Lee Brown, “‘If no gasoline, no water’: privatizing drinking water quality in South Texas colonias,” Environment and Planning 46(2014): 1038-1048.
  8. Irma N. Ramos M.D., Marlynn May, PhD., and Kenneth S. Ramos, PhD, “Environmental Health Training of Promotoras in Colonias Along the Texas-Mexico Border,” American Journal of Public Health 91(April 2001): 568-570.
  9. “Communities on the U.S. border ‘grow from within’,” Soli Salgado, publish June 6, 2016, https://www.globalsistersreport.org/news/ministry/communities-us-border-grow-within-40201.
  10. “Communities on the U.S. border ‘grow from within’,” Soli Salgado, publish June 6, 2016, https://www.globalsistersreport.org/news/ministry/communities-us-border-grow-within-40201.
  11. ARISE Adelante, accessed October, 4, 2020 http://www.arisesotex.org/ .
  12. ARISE Adelante, accessed October, 4, 2020 http://www.arisesotex.org/new-page-5.
  13. “Communities on the U.S. border ‘grow from within’,” Soli Salgado, published June 6, 2016, https://www.globalsistersreport.org/news/ministry/communities-us-border-grow-within-40201.

Tags from the story

#Culture

ARISE

clean water

colonias

community

Hispanic

infrastructure development

Recent Comments

Nydia Ramirez

Hi Angela! I loved how informative this article was and I think journalistic explanatory was a great choice for a topic like this. I really resonated with this article because I am also from the Rio Grande Valley, specifically Brownsville, Texas. You mentioned that the conditions of colonias across the Rio Grande Valley and the entire Texas-Mexico border are unacceptable. You also stated how these communities have been studied for decades and little progress has been made since. I can concur with these statements. There has been little progress made in terms of immigration along the border let alone colonial. Thank you for shining a light on an issue and a great organization that addresses it.

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26/09/2021

10:31 pm

Amy Hotema

I thoroughly loved reading about Sister Gerrie’s legacy and the good deeds she done for communities. I’m very happy to hear that, even though she passed away in 2009, her work continues to motivate several female members of various organizations, including ARISE. I appreciate how committed you have been to colonias throughout the course. It was a subject you explored at the start of the course, so I’m happy to see that you are learning more about it and sharing what you learn with others. Loved being able to read this!

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25/01/2023

10:31 pm

Matthew Holland

The author does a fantastic job of painting a very clear picture of what they experienced and really allowed me to envision what they were writing about in great detail. It made for a much better reading experience and made the story more impactful for me. The search for clean drinkable water is one we should not be having in the 21st century but unfortunately, we are, and I am glad to hear there are organizations helping fight this issue in areas that do not get the attention they deserve. It only takes one stunning individual to create a strong civil engagement movement, it was sad to learn of Sister Gerrie’s passing but am happy to know her movement lives on.

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27/01/2023

10:31 pm

Esmeralda Gomez

Coming from Brownsville myself, I had never heard of La Monijita, or her powerful and impact story. The state of the colonias across the Rio Grande Valley is something that needs to be addressed, but sadly, most would rather forget the inaccessible and impoverished areas of a city than spend money to improve the conditions and potentially save the lives of thousands who live in these colonias. Angela, I loved your article. It hit pretty close to home for me and it leaves me wondering what more I can do for my community. Thank you for writing such an inspiring piece.

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29/01/2023

10:31 pm

Natalia Bustamante

Such an amazing piece, Angela. I really admire you for your experience at ARISE Adelante. I also comprehend what you stated about the colonias and the really bad shape that they are in. I am also from a border town, Eagle Pass, and the colonias near the bridge are in horrible shape, almost in unlivable conditions. I appreciate your article, and we have to raise more awareness of this situation. Again, great article Angela.

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29/01/2023

10:31 pm

Michaell Alonzo

I found this article very inspiring and feel as if it could serve as a story of renovating faith in humanity. I really put into perspective how one person can have an impact on generations and push for good. Colonias are Poor housing complexes with occupants who lack access to essential utilities like clean water, sewage treatment, and paved roads are common along the Texas-Mexico border. They play a considerable role in a student’s capacity for academic success, inhabitants’ weakened immunity and greater vulnerability to infectious diseases, and general bad mental health. Everyone has a right to a decent quality of life, which includes access to food, clothing, housing, and medical care, that is sufficient for their own health and the well-being of their families. This norm is obviously broken by the conditions in colonias. In Las Milpas, Texas, the center of these colonias, Sister Gerrie founded a non-profit organization called ARISE Adelante in 1989 in response to these worries. The heart of these colonias are made up primarily of immigrants who came here in search of better chances for their lives. By helping these families, Sister Gerries demonstrated that she cared about them and showed them that their troubles were important, that they mattered. She listened to each community, interacted with them, and took action to enhance both their individual and collective daily lives. ARISE has transformed into a home away from home for countless people by fighting for better infrastructure, better schools, and offering a safe space for people of any religion, ethnicity, and income. I really liked that sister Gerrie emphasized this idea of expecting from the community, not for perfection but excellence, because only God is perfect. Although Sister Gerrie passed away in 2009, her legacy lives on. She sparked hope and change and has bettered the lives of many underprivileged people.

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29/01/2023

10:31 pm

Sierra Christa

I loved the Taylor Swift detail in the beginning and the description of the drive, it made me feel connected to this piece. I also admire that this story was personal to you as you experienced it. It also helped that you mentioned the language that the Unites States use to describe these towns of houses and the levels of severity. This article made me also appreciate and value of those involved in ARISE and the work they do.

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29/01/2023

10:31 pm

Karah Renfroe

Sister Gerrie and ARISE is an extraordinary example of the power that underrepresented communities possess. I am truly inspired by the amazing work done by ARISE. Community organizing such as this can have a tremendous impact on the people around us and the world at large. I appreciate how the article focuses on the fact that this organization was women-led.We are seeing this become more common today, however, during this time, women were often heavily undermined. Seeing these women overcome the stigma of women being able to create change and community build effectively is important for future generations of women who wish to do similar work regarding issues they are passionate about.

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29/01/2023

10:31 pm

Maya Naik

Your description on the quality of those explained in the article were very vivid and showed me how prominent the problem is. Water security is a problem in many countries, but it is so sad to come to the realization that there is trouble maintaining water security so close to where I reside. I have a lot of friends who live in border cities such as the valley and El Paso. This made me realize that I have such a close connection to the areas in the U.S. that are struggling with water security. This was a bittersweet realization because I have been so close to the problem, but now that I have more awareness I can do more to help. The legacy of Sister Gerrie is very inspiring, and I hope that I can start making a difference the way she did.

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29/01/2023

10:31 pm

Gaitan Martinez

I honestly had never heard about La Monjita en La Bicicleta or colognias, but after reading this article, I’m certain that these stories deserve more attention because of how inspiring it is. It’s obvious that colognias are cause for concern because as the article said, if public health is at risk, then it affects everyone and the community. One small incident can lead to a more significant one, a whole domino effect.

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29/01/2023

10:31 pm

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