Kidnapped at four: How I found my way home
After being stolen, Antonio Salazar-Hobson didn't see his family for 24 years. A promise to return to his mother, and a dream to help his people, got him through his darkest hours.
Antonio Salazar-Hobson was four years old when he was kidnapped from his Mexican migrant worker family in Arizona by the white couple who lived next door. From Phoenix, he was taken more than 300 miles away to California, where he grew up suffering terrible abuse. Throughout his ordeal, he replayed the memories he had of his family over and again - especially of his beloved mother Petra - and swore to himself that one day he would make it back to her. As a teenager, he sought out other Mexican-American families to hold on to his roots, and threw himself into left-wing activism on behalf of workers like his family back home. There, he met renowned labour union leader Cesar Chavez who encouraged him to study and become a lawyer; it was an encounter which would change the course of his life. After going to college, and finally escaping his abductors, he began to track down the family he'd been stolen from so many years before.
This programme contains references to child sexual abuse and suicide.
Presenter: Jo Fidgen
Producer: Zoe Gelber
Photo: Antonio Salazar-Hobson. Credit: Billy Douglas
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