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On Saturday, April 16, Dr.
Juan Andrade, Jr., president of the United States Hispanic
Leadership Institute, based in
Chicago
, opened up this
10th annual event. Dr. Andrade summarized many of the
important stats dealing with Latinos in the
United States
that illustrated
Latino strength and importance, including:
“The 21st Century belongs to Latinos, who lead
the nation in population growth;
“By the year 2040, Latinos will comprise 33% of the
1-billion population of the Americas, with the remaining
percentages being 40% non-Latino Caucasian, 13% black, and 13%
Asian;
“Latinos are creating business three times faster than
non-Latinos in the United States, with 100,000 new businesses each
year; and
“Latinos have annual purchasing power of $500 billion
dollars, and this is growing by 1-billion dollars each week,”
said Andrade.
María
Elena Gaitán
of
Los Angeles
utilized her
extraordinary musical and oratorical skills to examine
cross-cultural, race, gender, and class issues, as they affected
Latinos in the
United States
.
Gaitán used graphic/dramatic slides, videos, and risqué
language to stress the immense discrimination received by Latinos,
especially Mexicans and Mexican-Americans in the Southwest.
Alba
Sánchez
of the
Bronx
, was all wit and
levity. She personified what young Latinos could accomplish, once
focused.
Baldemar
Velásquez,
president of the Farm Labor Committee (FLOC), based in
Toledo
, was the final
speaker. He emphasized the importance of action and the struggle
to overcome the plight of Latinos and the discrimination they
encounter, using the Mt. Olive Pickle Company Boycott as an
example.
The festivities concluded at the
Lorain
Party
Center
with the music
of Sammy De León and Mariachi Acero.
A special feature concerning this event will be published in La
Prensa sometime in May and then posted at
www.laprensatoledo.com.
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