"...She was about two years old before she really started understanding and comprehending me,” she continued.
Maybe it was because she was home alone with her father at seven-weeks-old when I went back to work and they bonded. He would talk to her only in Spanish and when I would come home, she did not quite understand me,” said Graham interviewed at her Penn Branch home on P Street SE that she shares with Anna Elizabeth’s father Efren Martinez Montero.
In Ann Elizabeth’s case, her crayon became a life line, earning her a national art award..."
A Penn Branch girl, living with autism, who is an artist...and Afro-Latina?
Though I am not, myself, autistic, ..my sister is. My family is Cameroonian, Ghanaian, Mexican AND American. We are also artists and proud Branchers, since 1965 [I was born in 1969]. So, we check ALL of those above boxes, and we are so proud.
Congratulations, Anna.
Read more in East Of The River magazine... https://eastoftheriverdcnews.com/2020/01/14/ward-7-student-places-first-national-art-contest/
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