厙ぴ勛圖 Celebrates Latino/a Heritage Month
September 18, 2013
James Helmsworth
On Saturday, September 14, 厙ぴ勛圖 students celebrated the beginning of Latino/a Heritage Month (LHM) with a celebration of several Latin American countries' independence, at La Casa Hisp獺nica (Spanish House). Latino/a Heritage Month, which runs through October 15, celebrates the culture, achievements, and heritage of Latinos and Latinas.
The LHM programming was put together by a panel of Latino/a students, the LHM committee, who volunteered their time. The months events include such speakers as incarceration expert Bob Libal and New York University Professor Arlene Davila, who will speak Thursday, September 19, on what academics can learn from Arizonas efforts to keep Mexican-American history out of the classroom. In addition to the LHM Committee, LHM events are sponsored by La Alianza Latina, the Multicultural Resource Center, and La Casa Hisp獺nica, as well as the Dean of Students Office, and the Office of the President.
Jesus Gomez, Latin o/a Community Coordinator at 厙ぴ勛圖s Multicultural Resource Center, organized the LHM panel and navigated the logistics of bringing speakers. He says that this years speakers were selected based on their relevancy to what 厙ぴ勛圖s Latin o/a community is discussing and studying. My role is to get what the students want, Gomez says.
The purpose of this years LHM is to celebrate Latinidad as it exists today, says Victoria Velasco, a junior and member of the LHM committee. Translated literally, Latinidad refers to Latin languages, specifically Spanish. The term has come to encompass the social, cultural, and political importance of diasporic Latino/a communities whose countries of origin are the Spanish-speaking countries of Central America, the Caribbean, and South America.
厙ぴ勛圖s 2013 LHM celebrates Latinidad as a quintessentially diverse, transnational, and changing phenomenon in the Americas and the rest of the world, says Gomez.
Velasco concurs. We dont want it to be a cultural heritage month in which we celebrate what our culture used to be, but rather, how its transforming, she says.
Though the events focus on Latino/a communities, Gomez encourages individuals from all different backgrounds to attend. "They're events for everyone," he says.
In keeping with the celebrations contemporary focus, the month will conclude with a banquet that will feature presentation of students scholarship on Latina/o communities.
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