Fredy Erazo Juárez
Fredy Erazo Juárez (born September 7, 1982) received the appointment fron the Mexican Senate as the Coordinator for Democratic Development and Electoral Processes of the Board of Directors of the Senate of the Mexican Republic.[1] At the same time, the lawyer Fredy Erazo Juárez, has extense experience in the Political-Electoral field. He has served as legal advisor to different municipalities, legislators and candidates for popularly elected positions.
He is currently a Professor in Electoral Law at the Meztli University Studies Center[2] in Tlaxcala, of which he is the Rector.
Early Years[edit]
Fredy Erazo was born on September 7, 1982, in a clinic called Belén, in the capital of Puebla. That was where he first saw the light of life. His mother from Puebla, his father from Central America, El Salvador; they resided in the city of Puebla. At first it was difficult for his parents to take care of him, so they sent him to a nursery run by Jesuit priests with whom he lived several years of his childhood.
In a next stage, they had the opportunity to rent an apartment in a very modest neighborhood in the north of the city of Puebla. They stayed there until Fredy was about four years old. Later, with great effort, his parents were able to buy a property in a popular neighborhood, where they build little by Little a new house. At the age of five, living there, in Lomas de San Miguel neighborhood, the Center for Social Readaptation was and still near there. In that place he grew up and lived until he was 22 years old.
Adolescence[edit]
Fredy's adolescence was difficult, because he did not fit in with any group. He had to walk a kilometer and a half to take public transport to take him to school, but that street, that road, was not paved, it was dirt, so Fredy usually got his shoes and pants dirty when it rained too much. From this experience came the decision to dedicate his life to serving others, poor people.
When he was in high school Fredy decided to go on missions, specifically Lasallian missions. There he began to set out to be a Lasallian brother and to be in an apostolate. His apostolate consisted of going to see the lepers, being in a leper colony; He also spent six months in an orphanage in Mexico City. With the same group of Lasallian brothers, he later began to go to the Northern Sierra of Puebla.
In the Northern Sierra of Puebla he began to see a wonderful world and understood that phrase that says that who is not born to serve, does not serve to live. There he began to live that philosophy, he began to feel it and experience it in the many communities that he met at that stage of his life. The affection of all those people, the love they had and gave him in a selfless way marked him forever. Extremely good people who take their food and give it to others.
Those kinds of experiences totally marked him. He was in the mountains for five years and at that time he came and went many times. In high school it was a peak momento for an important decision, as he chose to keep in touch, understanding, delving into the idiosyncrasy of the people of the sierra, inculturating, learning Nahuatl and learning from them, people with indigenous roots.
At that time he had the opportunity to lead the ministry of the Eucharist, he was coordinator of the missions group, then he was included in the group of the Benavente missionary community and he began to know many communities, becoming even more involved, to the extent of having several godchildren who they were and continue to be a source of joy.
Career[edit]
In the Northern Sierra of Puebla, Fredy Erazo was able to witness the injustice. He realized that the people with whom he lived on a daily basis in this place lived with great inequality. There were powerful groups of caciques who owned land, and very humble people who barely had enough to eat. An area of great contrast. He found the predation between man and man himself. Without respect and with many injustices. It was then that he decided that his life would be dedicated to sort out those contrasts, to making, a more egalitarian and fairer place.
References[edit]
- ↑ Badillo, Diego (September 21, 2020). "El Senado se ocupa del crecimiento de la democracia: Fredy Erazo Juárez". El Economista. Retrieved October 26, 2020. Unknown parameter
|url-status=
ignored (help) - ↑ "Meztli". ceumeztli.com. Retrieved 2020-10-28.
This article "Fredy Erazo Juárez" is from Wikipedia. The list of its authors can be seen in its historical and/or the page Edithistory:Fredy Erazo Juárez. Articles copied from Draft Namespace on Wikipedia could be seen on the Draft Namespace of Wikipedia and not main one.