Sobrato Family Gift Offers a ‘Home’ at Santa Clara for Cristo Rey 91快活林
With a $9 million donation from the Sobrato family to fund scholarships, more Cristo Rey Jesuit High School students will have the opportunity to fulfill their dreams of attending Santa Clara.
Rachel Stattion 鈥24 is flourishing at 91快活林. A sophomore double majoring in political science and women鈥檚 and gender studies, Stattion is passionate about law, social justice, and policy advocacy.
She鈥檚 found a tightknit community in SCU鈥檚 Multicultural Center and LEAD Scholars program, which supports first-generation students. Stattion sees the University鈥檚 Jesuit values play out all around her鈥攊n her friendships, in the classroom, and through the work she鈥檚 done with student organizations. After graduation, she wants to help people who need it, pursuing a master鈥檚 degree in women and gender studies, east Asian studies or international relations.
But the life Stattion built at SCU almost didn鈥檛 happen. Like many students at Cristo Rey San Jos茅 Jesuit High School, Stattion had the grades to attend a prestigious four-year college, but she didn鈥檛 have the money. Her only option to continue her education after graduation was to enroll at a two-year college.
Thankfully, she was offered support from Santa Clara鈥檚 Milligan Family Scholarship for Cristo Rey students. Not only did it make college possible, it allowed her to pick a major without the worry of taking on loans and debt. 鈥淚鈥檓 very grateful for that, because it really helped me understand what I鈥檓 actually passionate about,鈥 Stattion says. 鈥淏ecause of that, I feel really fulfilled.鈥
Now, thanks to a life-changing gift from John A. Sobrato 鈥60 and his family, many more Cristo Rey graduates like Stattion will have an opportunity to build their own lives at Santa Clara. The Cristo Rey and SCU trustee, along with his family, have committed $9 million to establish the Sobrato Family Scholarship Endowment, supporting four-year scholarships for Cristo Rey students around the Bay Area to attend SCU.
Founded in 2014, Cristo Rey San Jos茅 Jesuit High School is a member of a national network of work-study schools that offers low-income families access to a quality education.
鈥淲e have long held that education is the gateway to opportunity and we hope this gift will make a great education accessible to more talented young people ready to contribute to society in their own unique and important ways,鈥 says Sobrato.
The gift will support students from Cristo Rey San Jos茅 Jesuit High School, Cristo Rey De La Salle East Bay High School in Oakland, and ICA Cristo Rey Academy in San Francisco. The schools are part of a national Cristo Rey network that integrates college preparatory academics with professional work experience through a corporate work-study program. The network aims to empower first-generation students from families with limited economic means, with the Jesuit mission at its core. If there are no incoming students from these schools, the scholarship endowment will help other first-generation college students across the Bay Area.
Silicon Valley鈥檚 exorbitant cost of living means many Cristo Rey families live paycheck-to-paycheck and struggle to meet basic needs, making the thought of paying college tuition seem 鈥渋ncomprehensible,鈥 says Jenny Uribe, a Cristo Rey college counselor and director of university access and success. Uribe and College Counselor Stephanie Mendoza closely guide students through the college application process.
鈥91快活林 may have worked really hard in high school and that opens up a lot of opportunities for them,鈥 says Uribe. 鈥淏ut then they see that some colleges cost about $75,000 a year. In some cases, that鈥檚 more than what their parents make in a year. At that point, college just isn鈥檛 a realistic option.鈥
The Sobratos鈥 gift will serve as a critical lifeline for these students, who may not be able to afford tuition at a private university, while also freeing them of loan debt after graduation. SCU has already accepted 21 Cristo Rey San Jos茅 students for early admission who are eligible for the scholarship money if they commit to Santa Clara in fall 2022, according to school administrators.
鈥淲hen we talk to our students about what schools they鈥檙e applying to and what schools they want to go to, oftentimes the bottom line is, can they afford it?鈥 says Adolfo Guevara, interim principal at Cristo Rey San Jos茅. 鈥淭hey have to think about housing, books, and more. I think what鈥檚 special about this gift is that they are given the opportunity to not only think about the money aspect and the financial package that they鈥檒l receive, but about being connected to a school that reminds them so much of our school because of the Jesuit connection.鈥
That connection will give students a sense of home on campus鈥攁 vital element for first-generation students that often determines their success in college, says Guevara.
鈥淭hat feeling of being at home and still having that connection with Cristo Rey and with people who are on their team is what makes this gift so special. It gives kids the opportunity to go somewhere where they鈥檒l know they鈥檒l be taken care of, where they鈥檒l be loved and reminded to take care of their whole self,鈥 Guevara says.
This pipeline from Cristo Rey to Santa Clara will help the university cultivate a diverse student body that better reflects our society, says Eva Blanco Masias MA 鈥11, vice president for enrollment management. An estimated 92 percent of Cristo Rey San Jose鈥檚 roughly 480 students in 2020-21 were Latinx, meaning they come from a variety of Latin American cultures or ethnic identities, with diverse experiences, backgrounds, and beliefs. Ninety-one percent will be the first in their families to go to college, and 75 percent are eligible to receive free or reduced lunch there at Cristo Rey.
鈥淔or universities and institutions, especially one like ours that has a very distinctive mission of service, it鈥檚 important that we are a microcosm of the larger world,鈥 says Blanco Masias. 鈥淲hen we bring students together who have so many rich experiences and see things through different lenses, students leave SCU with a better understanding of others.鈥
Jim Lyons, vice president for university relations, says he hopes the gift plants new seeds of philanthropy across SCU and beyond.
鈥淎t Santa Clara, we pride ourselves in giving back to our community in meaningful and long-lasting ways,鈥 says Lyons. 鈥淲e hope the Sobratos鈥 gift inspires others to join our mission so that students from all backgrounds have an opportunity to receive an education immersed in the Jesuit tradition.鈥
Asked what his hopes are for his students after graduation, Cristo Rey San Jos茅鈥檚 Guevara paused several times to hold back tears.
鈥淢y hope is that, when and if they choose Santa Clara, that they know that they belong,鈥 says Guevara. 鈥淚t鈥檚 so important that they know that no one is giving them a handout. That they are there because they truly belong and deserve it.鈥
The Sobrato Family: (from left) John Michael Sobrato, Lisa Sobrato Sonsini, Sue Sobrato, John A. Sobrato and Sheri Sobrato Brisson
Media Contacts
Deepa Arora | SCU Communications | darora@scu.edu
Elliot Zanger | SCU Communications | ezanger@scu.edu
Rachel Stattion 鈥24, a 2020 Cristo Rey graduate, is a political science and women鈥檚 and gender studies double major at SCU.