America has never before met a wise Latina like Sonia Sotomayor.
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I first met Sonia in 1998, after she had been sworn in as a
federal judge for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second
Circuit. I was the Editor-in-Chief of Latina, and a mutual friend,
New York attorney Lee Llambelis, suggested that Sotomayor was
someone I should meet since I’d probably want to write an
article on her (which appeared in our March 1999 issue).
Sotomayor’s life story not only inspired readers, but also
captivated me.
Since then, we’ve been to each other’s homes for dinner and
shared many sweet, honest and confidential conversations. A
doting hostess, she puts together cheese platters, makes tasty
salads and hooks up a mean churrasco with a tangy lemon
marinade. This past spring, she promised to share some of her
culinary secrets, so we set a date to fire up the grill in her small
yet superb two-bedroom condo in the heart of NYC’s Greenwich
Village. Sonia thought things would finally slow down for her by
the summer—but that’s when things really started heating
up.
Sonia Sotomayor Rules in Favor of
Fashion
During those grueling confirmation hearings in July, Republican
senators Lindsey Graham, Jeff Sessions and Jon Kyl dissected her
now-famous “wise Latina” phrase, uttered during an
inspirational lecture to Latino law students at the University of
California, Berkeley’s Boalt Hall School of Law in 2001.
The senators aggressively argued that her remarks proved she
would bring bias and a liberal agenda to the bench. But
Sotomayor repeatedly explained that her comments were part of
a regrettable “rhetorical flourish that fell flat.” “I want to state up
front, unequivocally and without doubt: I do not believe that any
ethnic, racial or gender group has an advantage in sound
judging,” she said. She added that she was simply trying “to
inspire young Hispanics, Latino students and lawyers to believe
that their life experiences added value to the process.’’
Sonia Sotomayor continues to be
attacked
As the new personification of an intellectual rock star,
Sotomayor has been inundated with interview requests—from
Vogue to Newsweek, El País to Le Monde. But the new justice has
yet to agree to a sit-down, aside from one she granted C-Span
for a documentary on the Supreme Court. When I asked about a
formal interview for this magazine, she told me, “I am not doing
interviews and have said no to everyone. I do not want to be
seen as having favorites.”
She did, however, agree to have her portrait taken for the cover
and inside pages. And she went as far as granting me her
blessing: “You will have to write based on our history
together.”
And that’s exactly what I’ve done.
Sonia Maria Sotomayor, born in the South Bronx on June 25,
1954, is the oldest child of Celina Baez and Juan Sotomayor, two
puertorriqueños who migrated to New York City in the 1940s in
search of the American Dream. Reared in the Bronxdale housing
projects, she’s a red lipstick–wearing Cancer who loves the
Yankees and is credited with saving baseball by putting an end
to a 232-day Major League Baseball strike in 1995.
Sonia Sotomayor, Latina in the supreme
court
After excelling at Cardinal Spellman High School in the Bronx,
she graduated with the highest academic honors (summa cum
laude and as a member of Phi Beta Kappa honor society) from
Princeton University. She went on to Yale Law School and served
as an editor on the prestigious Yale Law Journal. For nearly five
years, she worked as a young prosecutor under iconic
Manhattan district attorney Robert Morgenthau. She practiced
international business law in private practice for another nearly
eight years. For the last 17 years, she served on the federal
bench, first on the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of
New York, and most recently as a judge in the U.S. Court of
Appeals for the Second Circuit. She represents many legal firsts,
such as being the first person appointed to judicial posts by
three U.S. presidents from two different parties (presidents
George H.W. Bush, Bill Clinton and Barack Obama)....
One evening this past spring, as we prepared dinner for a group
of friends, I asked her for some advice. She listened closely as I
relayed my marital problems. I still recall her words, which I
carry in my heart to this day. She told me that we have been
wrongfully taught the Cinderella fairy tale as a paradigm of what
happy relationships are supposed to be. And when we fall short
of that, we suffer for it. To find happiness in love, she said, we
have to make up our own rules. It’s not easy, but it’s doable. The
process may involve unlearning what we have been taught and
then figuring out what makes us happy. There are all types of
relationships and arrangements to choose from. Of course, the
trick is finding a companion who shares those values.
Sotomayor refuses to renounce 'wise
Latina' words
Love is not the only area where Justice Sotomayor has faced her
fears and worked her way through them. Even as recently as
April, she had doubts about her potential rise to the Supreme
Court. She had been on President Clinton’s Supreme Court short
list, but no seats became vacant. When Obama won the White
House, the legal world hedged their bets on the brilliant judge
with the impeccable résumé. But weeks before Obama made
public his pick to replace Souter, Sotomayor called her
confidante and good friend Llambelis, telling her that she
wanted to pull her name from consideration.
“You have to understand that Sonia is a very private person,”
Llambelis explains. “She didn’t want to go through another
public vetting process and a potential public dressing-down by
those on the Republican right who opposed her nomination.
Sonia was happy being a Federal Appeals judge, loved her life in
New York and felt fulfilled. She worried about having less time to
spend with her mother, family and friends, particularly given her
mom’s age and potential health complications.” Llambelis recalls
listening to her friend, whose “I can” mantra was being drowned
out by last-minute uncertainty. She told her to think beyond
herself. “At this point, this is not about you,” Llambelis said to
her. “It’s about little girls and boys, brown and black, who live in
the projects and in poor communities around our nation, who
can dream bigger if you are in the Supreme Court. You cannot
back down now.” Sotomayor promised to think about it
overnight. And in the morning, she woke up with a lighter heart
and a bigger purpose.
Latina on the Rise
In her short tenure so far on the court, the justice we have
witnessed is no shrinking violet. She asks tough questions and is
not intimidated by her rookie status. Sotomayor’s charm and
confidence surprise very few people who know her, including
the man who nominated her. While President Obama’s staff was
preparing Sotomayor for the confirmation hearings in a White
House office called the War Room, the team covered all the
potentially explosive questions and briefed her on every minute
detail, including how to dress for the cameras. They even
advised her to keep her nails a neutral shade, which she did. But
on the day of the White House reception celebrating her
appointment, Sotomayor asked the president to look at her
freshly manicured nails, holding up her hands to show off her
favorite fire engine–red hue. The president chuckled, saying that
she had been warned against that color.
She sure had, but Sotomayor was not finished. She then pulled
her hair back behind her ears, exposing her red and black semi-
hoop earrings, a beloved accessory among Latinas across
America—from the South Bronx to Houston to East Los
Angeles.
Obama joked that she had been briefed on the size of the
earrings as well. Without skipping a beat, Sotomayor replied:
“Mr. President, you have no idea what you’ve unleashed.” He
responded, “Justice: I know and remember it’s a lifetime
appointment. And I and no one can take it back.” And that, as
they say, is the final verdict.
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VIDEO: HOW EXPERTS BELIEVE SOTOMAYOR WILL RULE
CASES IN HIGH COURT
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