Ana Gil Garcia

Image: Manny Alvarez

Ana Gil Garcia

Illinois Venezuelan Alliance co-Founder, Interviewed 2025

Dr. Ana Gil Garcia hails from Isla Margarita, Venezuela and migrated to the United States in 1991. She is a professor Emerita, five-time Fulbright Scholar, published author, and an esteemed community leader.

In the first clip, Dr. Gil Garcia describes her and her family’s experience of the economic crisis in Venezuela. She describes how economic desperation and authoritarianism contributed to Venezuelans fleeing to other nations, including the United States. Dr. Gil Garcia also shares how thousands of Venezuelans showed up to vote in Chicago for a Venezuelan recall referendum in 2016. She explains how she and others founded the Illinois Venezuelan Alliance in the context of rising migration from Venezuela to Chicago.

In the second clip, she describes how the Illinois Venezuelan Alliance suddenly became a frontline organization for assisting thousands of Venezuelan migrants, including families with children, that arrived in Chicago in 2021 and beyond.

This interview is part of a Mellon Foundation-funded series of oral history interviews that examine the history and present of the Venezuelan migration to Chicagolandia.

Mark Jaeschke

markjaeschke.com

Mark Jaeschke

interviewed 2022

Mark Jaeschke was born in Lima, Peru but was raised by his adoptive parents in Arlington Heights, Cook County, Illinois. In this interview clip, Mark describes how being a transracial adoptee and growing up in a mostly-white suburb led him to struggle with his identity early in life.

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Elizabeth Barrios

Elizabeth Barrios

associate Professor, interviewed 2025

Elizabeth Barrios is currently Associate Professor of Spanish at Albion College. Barrios grew up in Mérida, Venezuela, but emigrated with her family to the Aurora, Illinois area at age 12, just as Hugo Chavez was elected president of Venezuela for the first time. In this interview, Barrios describes with brilliant complexity the challenges of being part of an early wave of Venezuelan migration to the US, and how it shaped her worldview, career, and scholarship. She shares her deep insight into the roots and reality of the recent out-migration of millions of people from Venezuela to places such as Illinois. This interview is part of a Mellon Foundation-funded series of oral history interviews that will examine the history and present of the Venezuelan migration to Chicagolandia.

Luis & Lorena Muñoz

Luis & Lorena Muñoz

Chilean immigrants, interviewed 2018

Luis and Lorena Muñoz are originally from Talca, Chile. In this interview, they describe coming of age under the dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet, the fear-filled climate of their youth, friends who were arrested or disappeared, and facing Chilean police during protests against the regime. The couple shares the joys and difficulties of moving to Mexico and later the United States. They raised their children in the Elgin area.

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