Don Chema had spent 34 years working tirelessly as a janitor at a public high school in Ecatepec - Quieen - Chainityai

Don Chema had spent 34 years working tirelessly as a janitor at a public high school in Ecatepec – Quieen

A humble worker raised three orphaned daughters alone; 20 years later, they went to court… to defend him.

PART 1: THE JANITOR WHO FOUND DAUGHTERS WHERE OTHERS SAW PROBLEMS
Don Ernesto García had been working as a janitor at the Beito Juárez Elementary School in a humble neighborhood of Puebla for thirty-four years. He would arrive before sunrise, open the classrooms, sweep the hallways, fix clogged toilets, change light bulbs, repair broken toilets, and clean the floors until they shone.

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He earned little, barely enough to live on, but he never missed a single day. Not with a fever. Not with rain. Not when his knees hurt so much he had to climb the stairs holding onto the handrail.
The children loved him. To them he wasn’t “the cleaning man.” He was Don Neto, the man who always had a sweet in his bag, a screwdriver in his hand, and a kind word for anyone who arrived sad.

One early morning, twenty-four years ago, Don Ernesto opened the school gymnasium and heard a cry.
At first he thought it was a trapped cat. But when he pointed his lamp towards the bleachers, he saw a cardboard box.
Inside was a newborn baby wrapped in a yellow blanket.

Her face was red from crying so much and her little fists were clenched. Next to her, pinned to a lock, was a handwritten note:
“Please take care of her.”
When Eresto felt that the world stopped for him.

He had lost his only son years before, when the boy was barely three years old. After that, his wife left without saying goodbye, unable to bear the pain.

From then on, Doña Ernesto lived alone in a small house, with a closed room where his son’s cup still lay.
He took the baby in his arms.
“Calm down, little one,” he whispered. “You’re not alone anymore.”
He called the police, an ambulance, and social services. They told him they would look for a temporary family. But that night, no one came for her. Not the next day. Not the following week.

Doп Erпesto took her to his house “just for a few days”.
He opened the room that had been closed for years, cleaned the cup, washed the sheets and spent the first night pacing back and forth with the baby in his arms.
He named her Sofia.

Months later, when no one claimed the pineapple, he asked for its custody. The judge asked him if he understood how difficult it would be to raise a baby alone, with his janitor’s salary.

Doña Ernesto replied:
“I don’t have much money, judge. But I have time, I have skills, and I have heart. And this pineapple needs someone to keep it.”
They gave him custody.
Sofia grew up among mops, used toilets, and lunchboxes prepared before dawn.
Five years later, Valeria arrived.

Her mother, Carmen, worked in a kitchen and couldn’t afford daycare. In the afternoons, Valeria would sit in Don Ernesto’s cleaning storeroom, eat crackers, and do her homework while he arranged brooms and buckets.
One afternoon, the headmistress came in with a pale face. Carmen had died in a car accident.
No one in the family looked after Valeria.

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