Perhaps the American Dream is more than just an ideal after all. Two years ago, Boston Globe reporter Billy Baker wrote the touching story of two young brothers working hard to lift themselves out of an impoverished background and, now, the story has developed: with academic drive and a little luck, it appears dreams do come true.
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As reported by Baker two years ago, the two high school students, George and Johnny Huynh, grew up in the struggling neighborhood of Dorchester, which is just outside of Boston and plagued by violence. The brothers' parents divorced in 2008, the year their father committed suicide, and their mother's mental disabilities made her unable to hold a job outside the home to support the children. A Vietnamese immigrant, she spoke little English and, as Baker reported, they speak little Vietnamese.
Despite their lack of support and financial pressure, both boys are hard-working students who pursued better educational opportunities outside of their neighborhood at the prestigious Boston Latin School. As the nation’s oldest school, it offer students a "famously rigorous curriculum," as described by Baker. Since the seventh grade, the brothers commuted every day on Bus 19 to Boston Latin, and they were both in the top of their class.
The Boston Globe video below tells the story of their life in greater detail.
In it, the boys are described as "high achieving" and appear devoted to working hard to achieve their dreams. What's more, despite George's childhood struggles alongside his older brother Johnny, he has just announced his acceptance to Yale University. According to Baker, George initially shared the news of getting into the preeminent U.S. university on his Facebook page Tuesday by thanking everyone who helped him get to his goal. Baker tweeted the image of George below, celebrating the good news:
Say hi to George, everyone. "Smile if you just got accepted to Yale!" pic.twitter.com/ZhKAGirkhk
— Billy Baker (@billy_baker) December 17, 2013
Baker, who has continued to stay in touch with and mentor the boys long after the original story was published, shared this heartwarming development to their story via Twitter on Monday in an emotional narrative that took the social network by storm, starting with the simple line, "I'm going to tell you a story."
To conclude, Baker tweeted, "Sorry for flooding you with this experiment. But it's a story about what's right when we spend too much time writing about what's wrong." That story is reproduced in its entirety below.
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Image: Yoon S. Byun/The Boston Globe
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