Hi! Did you know your browser is outdated? For a more robust web experience we recommend using Safari, Firefox, Chrome or Opera.
Grad_2013_speakers_thumb2.jpg
Class of 2013 Celebrates GraduationStory
Grads at Alum Grad night 2013_thumb
Alumni Graduates Dinner Celebrates Class of 2013Story
Rod Fong_thumb
Rodney Fong Joins Law School as Assistant Professor and Co-Director of Academic Support ProgramStory
Garvey_nuclear_book_cover_2thumb
Professor Garvey’s New Book Proposes Path to Nuclear CounterproliferationStory
Magee_thumb
Professor Rhonda Magee Wins USF’s Ignatian Service AwardStory
Alex Leenson

First Year Student Alex Leenson Awarded Peggy Browning Fellowship

Story
John Trasvina_thumb2
John Trasviña Named Dean of USF School of LawStory
Vargasm_thumb
Vargas Publishes Building Better BeingsStory
honigsbergp
The Witness to Guantanamo Project Completes 100 InterviewsStory

Iglesias Participates in Immersion Trip to El Salvador

August 31, 2009

USF School of Law Professor Tim Iglesias joined University of San Francisco faculty and staff during a summer immersion trip to El Salvador that brought participants face-to-face with their own economic privilege.

USF faculty and staff visit a hospital in El Salvador during an immersion trip to raise awareness about the university's social justice mission.

Led by Mike Duffy, director of the Joan and Ralph Lane Center for Catholic Studies and Social Thought, 10 faculty and staff from university departments as varied as residence life, politics, and law met with Salvadoran elected officials, clergy, and leaders of the University of Central America.

The trip to the city of San Salvador and surrounding suburbs, where USF has organized study and immersion trips with various social justice programs supporting the poorest of the poor since 1998, was intended to highlight the role that foreign trips play in expanding USF students' worldview and cultural appreciation.

One of the group's first stops was at Hospitalito La Divina Providencia, where Archbishop Oscar Romero of San Salvador was assassinated in March 1980. Archbishop Romero, after whom a USF student leadership award is named, was well known for speaking out against economic injustice and military repression in El Salvador leading up to the country's civil war.

The itinerary for the weeklong trip included meeting with El Salvador Minister of Labor Victoria de Aviles, El Salvador Minister of Finance Hector Dada, and sweatshop workers, as well as touring a hospital, Catholic school, women's support group, and a squatter community on the outskirts of San Salvador. Iglesias also presented on the selection process of supreme court justices in the United States and El Salvador to the Fundacion Salvadorena para el Desarrollo Economico y Social (Salvadoran Foundation for Economic and Social Development).

The visit was similar in purpose to previous immersions organized by USF President Stephen A. Privett, S.J. in 2007 and 2008 for USF trustees, vice presidents, and deans. The intent is to concentrate USF's administrators, faculty, and staff on the university's mission of educating students to create a more humane and just world by introducing them to those who live vastly different lives than most Americans.

"The stories of the El Salvadoran people put my own privileged life in sharp and sometimes painful relief," Iglesias said. "I found myself surprised at their capacity for hope. Getting to know these people so intimately inspired in me a desire to use my own privilege in solidarity with them."