WASHINGTON – Joseph Medina's journey to the World War II Memorial on the National Mall began nearly a century ago, when his family crossed the border illegally from Mexico with Medina, then 5.
On Thursday the decorated 99-year-old Army veteran from St. Paul stood among the monument's triumphal granite pillars as an exemplar of the rights and potential of illegal immigrants brought to this country as children.
"It's beautiful," said Medina, who worked in Minnesota's sugar beet and meatpacking plants most of his life. "I never dreamed I was going to be here."
The dream Medina came to promote is the same one driving the two Apple Valley teenagers who accompanied him and who, like Medina, came from Mexico illegally as children and now want to serve in the U.S. armed forces.
Guillermo Illescas, 15, and Karen Velez, 17, are among the thousands of young people waiting for passage of the so-called DREAM Act, legislation that would open a path to citizenship for illegal immigrants who serve in the military or attend college.
The U.S. Senate passed such legislation with bipartisan support in June, but the bill awaits action in the House.
"I want to serve the country that's been mine, basically, since I was brought here when I was 5," Illescas said. Velez said she has known no country but this one and wants to make her parents proud.
"My dad came here because he wanted me to have a better life," Velez said. "I want to make them proud and be a role model for my little brother, who is 7."