Estakio Beltran ('05) is engaged with the plight of
orphans.
Despite having lived in 70 foster homes before completing high
school, and never daring to dream of college, 2005 Gonzaga graduate
Estakio Beltran has only just begun his journey.
He came to Gonzaga on a Washington State Achievers Scholarship, a
program established by the Washington Education Foundation four
years ago that enables students who might not otherwise afford a
college education to realize their potential.
At Gonzaga Beltran has done just that. He has become an exemplary
spokesman for the plight of orphans, and worked this past summer
for an Illinois senator, pushing hard to get the Federal Tuition
Waiver Program – which he developed – enacted in Congress to help
fund college education for foster children.
He plans to study Arabic and teach English as a second language.
Law school at Harvard or Yale will be his next educational pursuit,
he says.
Beltran was placed in foster care as a toddler, and declared an
orphan at age 13. Stability and long-term relationships were absent
from his young life. He strived to be the “best little boy†he
could, hoping a nice family would adopt him and provide him with
the love and care he had only dreamed about.
Then, at age 17, as Estakio prepared for yet another move and
another school, his high school counselor at A.C. Davis in Yakima,
Wash., Jim Rigney, went to bat for Beltran. He found math teacher
Julie Barker at his school and her Presbyterian pastor husband
Steve to take Beltran in as a foster child. The fit was
right.
“They are such kind and caring people, opening their hearts and
their home,†Beltran said. “I had never been treated so warmly
before. Their care really stabilized my life.â€
While studies show that less than 42 percent of children in foster
care graduate from high school, Beltran graduated with a strong GPA
and SAT score.
Enter then-GU admission counselor Jim Schauble, who encouraged
Beltran to apply. Beltran found it difficult trusting Schauble at
first. But Schauble worked with Rigney to seal the deal.
“I can’t take credit for recruiting Estakio,†Schauble said. He
credits Rigney, a supportive Gonzaga staff, but mostly, Beltran
himself.
“He is obviously a very special person. He deserved it,†Schauble
said.
Now Beltran considers Gonzaga his first long-term placement, in
foster care vernacular. “I wouldn’t be anywhere without the help of
so many people at Gonzaga,†he said.
Beltran credits Adjunct Professor Anthony Bonanzino, a member of
Gonzaga’s Board of Regents, with providing a vision for his
future.
“Tony encouraged me to never settle for what everyone does. Don’t
be mediocre at anything. Excel. Figure out what everyone expects of
you and exceed it,†Bonanzino told Beltran.
Exceed, he has. Experiencing both the blessings and misfortunes of
foster care, Beltran is working to improve the system so others in
similar situations will be better off than he.
“Estakio has a tremendous amount of energy and he loves being
involved, he loves talking to groups and he loves sharing his
story,†said Bonanzino. “He has contributed to a lot of people.
Sometimes I don’t think he even realizes the contribution he
makes.â€
As a representative for the Orphan Foundation of America (OFA), he
speaks and advises on foster care and minority student issues
around the world. As a participant at the OFA 2002 OLIVER Project
in Washington, D.C., he met with members of Congress and spoke on
behalf of education benefits for foster youth.
He was awarded the prestigious Golden Tennis Shoe award by Sen.
Patty Murray, D-Wash., for outstanding citizenship, and honored by
GU in 2003 for his volunteer work. Beltran, who is a mentor intent
on helping students finish high school and beyond, said he is
excited about the next chapters in his life’s journey. A spiritual
soul, he feels he wouldn’t be here without the existence of a
Supreme Being in his life.
“God was the only thing I could cling to,†he said. “Yes, we did
get in fights. But He kept providing the next person who would take
me to the next stages of my life,†says Beltran. “Like the miracle
of Jim Schauble showing up at the right time and the right
place.â€
And the blessed journey continues.
