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César Chávez Humanitarian
Dinner, March 27, 2008 Address given by Sonia Troche, Executive
Director of Adelante, Inc.
Buenas Noches,
Bienvenidos, and thank you for taking the time to join us, as we
celebrate the lifetime achievement and humanitarian service of a
distinguished Latina member of our community.
You will agree
with me when I say that past recipients like Dolores Rodríguez,
Sue Campos, Baldemar Velásquez, and Rudy Lira epitomize
the true spirit of this award. |

Sonia
Troche and Ruth Garcia |
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Tonight, one
more deserving member of our community will join this fine group.
These recipients of the César Chávez Humanitarian Award
serve as a source of inspiration and pride for those youth who
will be acknowledged this evening and those of us whom have
benefited from their efforts and struggles.
As I sat down
to meet with tonight’s Humanitarian Awards recipient, in her home,
I was pleasantly surprised to learn of the González family roots
and history in México and Northwest Ohio. I smiled to think that
her family went from Pancho Villa to Carty Finkbeiner.
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After the
meeting, I reflected on what she had said and was immediately
taken aback to think her life’s work to overcome the struggles of
language differences, community acceptance, economic and civil
injustice, under-education, and in some cases lack of education,
under representation in government, denial of social and basic
services, is being threatened fifty years later.
You heard me
correctly; I am not here tonight to talk about Adelante’s Success
Stories; while I would love to give you an overview of Adelante’s
accomplishments in this past year and speak of the great work that
the staff of Adelante does on a daily basis.
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Ruth Gonzalez de Garcia |
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Tonight I
speak with great concern about how the progress of the Latino
Community is being threatened locally, at the State and National
level. ¿Como puede Adelante?
How can
Adelante, The Latino Resource Center, its leadership and the
leadership of our community claim accomplishment of hers and that
of past Humanitarian Award recipient’s dreams when the
cornerstones of their effort have begun to crack.
When Our
Latino children graduate Our high schools with high
academic achievement yet are denied the opportunity to realize
their dreams of going to college with the aid of scholarships to
area universities and colleges, the wall is cracking;
When our
children are not proficient in math, language arts, science by
third grade and are destined to drop out of high school, our wall
is cracking;
The wall is
cracking
When we fail to advocate for our Latino brothers and sisters who
live in fear of deportation and are at the peril of economic
injustice, the wall is cracking;
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When we fail to
receive or participate in workforce development training and
programs in the midst of high unemployment and under-employment,
the wall is cracking;
When we fail to
support childbearing Latina women who don’t have access to quality
health care, the wall is cracking;
When we remain
silent as our local governmental leaders fail to support workplace
diversity by recruiting and promoting Latinos, the wall is
cracking;
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Robert Torres, Sonia y hijas y
Marcy Kaptur |
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When Latino
representation in city, county and state government, and
representation that advocates for Our issues is
non-existent, the wall is cracking.
Several years
ago, our good friend and former Blade writer Clyde Hughes
wrote an expose on the rise of the Latino community in Northwest
Ohio. In the article our Latino community and its leaders spoke of
laying the cornerstone to better times for Latinos in Northwest
Ohio.
The reality is
that many of those leaders have gone on to other pursuits. Yet,
there has been no one to replace them. Remember when we had a
Council President, City Council member, Director of Latino
Affairs, Executive Officer to the Mayor, and I so forth… “Hermanos
y Hermanas”, Mi Gente, long gone are those days.
The cornerstone
they represented must now be replaced by the efforts of you and I.
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Adelante, The
Latino Family Resource Center can not fight these struggles alone.
As we reflect on the events of today and the accomplishments of
those who have come before us, let us honor their efforts by
rededicating ourselves to addressing activism.
If
César Chávez was here today, ¿Que diria? What would he do?
I
never met him, but I would have to believe that he would tell us
to challenge the system and those who look to deny us the American
Dream.
If
our schools don’t understand our children, recruit Latino teachers
and administrators; then challenge Latino board members to
advocate sound and responsible policies. |

Victor Leandry and Sonia Troche
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If
healthcare is not accessible; advocate and demand for Latino
representation on hospital boards and county health commissions.
When our immigrant families are the target of hate-seeded policy;
let’s make those policymakers accountable for their votes. When
those candidates come around our Latino neighbourhoods, our
fiestas and festivals, let’s hold them accountable for the
commitments that they make in supporting the advancement of issues
in our community.
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Last, when local, state & federal dollars are disbursed to
projects in our community, let us make a commitment to advocate
representation on the funding committee and to be present at those
public hearings and allocation process.
In
doing this, we keep the legacy of César Chávez his work,
accomplishments and those that worked along side him, alive.
Yes, the wall may appear worn, worn of the struggles and the
apathy; yes, the task may seem insurmountable at times since there
are many cracks to repair. |

Marcy Kaptur and flag
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But fifty years ago a Mexican family from México and many others
like them dared to dream a different life for their children. They
set a course for Northwest Ohio and worked the fields, worked the
railroads, worked the steel mills, and worked the shipyards.
They are the original builders of our foundation, laying the
cornerstone of opportunity for you and me. We must and we will
rebuild that foundation, even if it takes us brick by brick.
We
do it now so that our children, grandchildren will not have to
overcome those same issues.
Thank you and God bless.
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Claudia Annoni, Melissa Avalos
and Guiselle Mendoza |

Josh Flores Abuelita Olivia
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Monica Morales |

Fred y esposa y Ruth |
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Marcy Kaptur and Ruth Garcia
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Lilleana Victor Ezra |
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