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  1. Sep 1, 2021 · Both of her parents were born in Puerto Rico, moved to the United States, met after World War II, and married after Celina served in the Women’s Army Corps. Her father was a tool worker before passing away when Sotomayor was nine, and her mother worked as a nurse.

  2. Sep 28, 2022 · Her parents had both come from Puerto Rico separately in 1944. When she was three years old, the Sotomayor family moved to a newly constructed public housing complex, The Bronxdale Houses, located in the Soundview neighborhood of The Bronx.

  3. Feb 9, 2022 · June 25, 1954. 1961: Sonia Sotomayor and her younger brother, Juan Jr., with their parents, Juan and Celina, in the family’s Bronxdale Homes apartment, a public housing project. Sonia Maria Sotomayor was born in New York City in the borough of the Bronx, where she spent her formative years.

    • Where did Sonia and her family move?1
    • Where did Sonia and her family move?2
    • Where did Sonia and her family move?3
    • Where did Sonia and her family move?4
  4. Jul 13, 2009 · Her roots go back to the southwestern town of Lajas, a sleepy "pueblito" known as a gateway to the island's picturesque Caribbean coast, where Sotomayor's mother was born in 1927. They...

    • From A Young Age, Sotomayor's Battle Against Diabetes Drove Her to Succeed
    • She Was Discriminated Against at Princeton
    • One of Her Biggest Life Lessons Is 'Always Ask For Help'
    • Sotomayor Believes That Failure Helps 'You Grow in Positive Ways'
    • She Also Believes in The Power of Luck

    Sotomayor's parents initially planned to handle the insulin injections their daughter required to live. But her mother worked long hours as a nurse and her father's hands shook when he attempted this task. This prompted Sotomayor's decision to handle her own insulin shots. She did this even though she could barely reach the stove to boil water and ...

    When she'd first been advised to apply to Ivy League schools, Sotomayor hadn't been aware of what "Ivy League" meant — so she'd asked for more information, which set her on a path toward Princeton. She enrolled in 1972. The school was a big change from a housing project in the Bronx and she confided in a friend that she felt like she was in a diffe...

    Learned from her days at Princeton, Sotomayor continues to emphasize the importance of inquiry in uncertain situations. Once a woman spotted her injecting insulin in a restaurant bathroom. Sotomayor later overheard this woman tell a companion that the associate justice must be addicted to drugs. "Madam, I am not a drug addict. I am diabetic," Sotom...

    Adapting to changing situations is another Sotomayor trait that aided her when faced with adversity. After she was told that being a diabetic meant she couldn't join the police, she selected a new dream of becoming a lawyer and judge. She knew pregnancy was dangerousfor someone with diabetes and ruled out adoption because she was afraid of dying yo...

    Sotomayor also overcame adversity due in part to good fortune. Her family may have been poor, but they were supportive, with her mother understanding the importance of education. And if Sotomayor, born in 1954, had arrived on the scene a few years earlier, she might not have had the opportunity to attend Princeton and Yale Law School. "Without affi...

  5. Feb 4, 2014 · Sotomayor’s parents moved to New York City from Puerto Rico during World War II. Puerto Ricans are American citizens, and have been since 1917 when President Woodrow Wilson signed the...

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  7. Jan 21, 2013 · More than fine, it turns out: from federal court for the Southern District of New York she would move on to the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, and in 2009 she was...

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