Astrid Silva: Meet the woman delivering the Democratic response to Trump in Spanish

Silva will deliver a speech on Tuesday night after Trump's address to Congress.

Here is more to know about Silva:

Having crossed the border from Mexico to the U.S., Silva’s family decided to make Nevada their home. Her father worked as a landscaper and her mother cleaned houses.

Living in America 'in fear'

Silva wanted to attend a magnet high school, but her parents said no because they were afraid someone would discover Silva was undocumented. But she applied behind their backs and was accepted. Silva finished magnet school at the top of her class and didn't want to stop there.

For the next five years, she worked as a babysitter in order to pay for community college classes, earning two associate's degrees in arts and political science. She then went on to earn her third degree from Nevada State College.

“But for all of my individual success, my family still lived in fear that we would be separated,” Silva wrote in a USA Today opinion piece.

Then in 2011, her father was detained and facing deportation.

Spotlighted by President Obama

Her speech at the 2016 DNC, however, was not the first time her story received national attention.

In announcing new executive action on immigration in 2014, President Obama used Silva’s story to show the plight of undocumented immigrants who have lived in the U.S. for most of their lives.

“Are we a nation that kicks out a striving, hopeful immigrant like Astrid, or are we a nation that finds a way to welcome her in?” President Obama said in his remarks to the nation on Nov. 20, 2014.

“When the president told my story, I looked at my dad, and then over to my mom, and I started crying with relief,” Silva wrote of her experience watching President Obama’s speech.

The next day, after the president’s speech, Silva introduced Obama at a rally at the Del Sol High School in Las Vegas.

Becoming an activist

Silva decided to become an immigration activist after her family could not return to Mexico to attend her grandmother’s funeral.

“That's when I realized I couldn't sit idly by and watch families being torn apart because of our broken immigration system. I knew I had to act,” Silva wrote in USA Today.

“My family and I are here because of people like Sen. Harry Reid. Who put themselves in our shoes and helped us,” Silva said at the 2016 DNC.

Adding that her family still is fighting for legal citizenship, she said, “And while President Obama's immigration action protected me, we live in constant fear that my parents could be taken away from their grandson, Noah.”