In Georgia, Latinas are starting companies at a rapid pace, but these businesses need more support to face the challenges at the intersection of gender and ethnicity.
Annette Rios sat with her brother and son to talk about her mom, Fabiola Rios, who was 85 years old when she became another victim of the COVID-19 pandemic..
Annette Rios sat with her brother and son to talk about her mom, Fabiola Rios, who was 85 years old when she became another victim of the COVID-19 pandemic. “I made a promise to my dad that I’d take care of Ronnie and my mom,” she said. “She was the light of our lives. She had the biggest heart. She.
I need to take care of him, she said.
Rios talked about when her mother became very sick. They took her to the hospital and she never came home, she said.
Rios said the hospital let her see her mom for just a moment Friday. By then, she wasn t conscious. This past Saturday morning, Rios said she walked in on her brother kneeling in prayer. I said, Are you praying for mom, Ronnie? And he said, Yes, I m praying for mom. And he kept pointing up. And then I got the telephone call and it was the doctor and I knew it wasn t going to be good news.
Annette Rios sat with her brother and son to talk about her mom, Fabiola Rios, who was 85 years old when she became another victim of the COVID-19 pandemic..