Vanguards of longevity

As part of their well-rounded approach to wellness, Comunidades Unidas offers yoga demonstrations.

“Well, look, I am Mexican, so everything!” Silvia laughs as she tries to list her favorite foods. But she knows that not everything is healthy to eat, especially after she was diagnosed with diabetes and high blood pressure.

“In the beginning I got scared,” she says. She wasn’t looking forward to thinking about what you can and can’t eat. But things became easier after she learned about Comprando Rico y Sano through Wendy Cordova, a promotora de salud (community health worker) at Comunidades Unidas of Utah, an UnidosUS Affiliate.

There are 25 Affiliates implementing the program, providing cooking demonstrations and grocery store tours to more than 12,000 Latinos. Comprando Rico y Sano also helps qualifying families apply for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, helping them afford the healthy meals they’ve learned to cook.

Promotoras de salud teach the community about healthy eating.

When SNAP was threatened with budget cuts, UnidosUS’s advocacy helped protect the program, allowing it to continue being an important lifeline to more than 10 million low-income Latinos. SNAP is one of our country’s best ways to fight hunger, and around two-thirds of the recipients are children, seniors and the disabled.

But SNAP is also a fight against poverty: in 2015, at least 1.2 million Latinos were lifted out of poverty thanks to SNAP, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities. That’s why our advocacy work to revise the Farm Bill without cuts in federal food assistance programs or new work requirements was such an important win for our community.

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Vanguards of new beginnings

Anthony Javier Díaz Nazario.

He was ready. Anthony Javier Díaz Nazario was ready to make a change when his probation officer told him about our Affiliate One Stop Career Center of Puerto Rico’s program Paving New Paths to Success (PNPTS).

“When he arrived at One Stop, Anthony was finishing his associate’s degree,” Anthony’s PNPTS case manager, Jessica Milanés Romero, explains in Spanish. “From the very beginning, he was a polite young man, always paying attention to the workshops, always responsible, and never missing a class.”

Many of the nearly 450 participants in this program don’t have the tools or support to move on with their lives after involvement in the justice system. UnidosUS recognized this need, and developed its Reentry Initiative, supporting One Stop, as well as ConXión to Community and Youth Policy Institute in California, to work with justice-involved young adults ages 18–24 to help them access education and training that leads to gainful employment and reintegrating into their communities.

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Vanguards of the next generation

Avanzando fellow Carla Nayeli Mendoza met California Representative Graciela Flores “Grace” Napolitano during a visit to Capitol Hill.

Carla attributes her pride in being Latina to her family: “Being part of a family that was very supportive, that understood their identity as Mexican Americans, but also as immigrants, allowed me to embrace it and not see it as a shameful act.” Despite that pride, Carla has felt isolated in college due to her income status, as well as her family’s immigration status.

She craved connecting with students who had similar backgrounds and who embraced their identity. And then she heard about UnidosUS’s Avanzando fellowship. The fellowship develops civically, socially, and educationally engaged college students to act as changemakers in their campuses and communities.

In only its second cohort, the fellowship has helped students like Carla find their passion in leadership and organizing, through modules on the UnidosUS Theory of Change; Identity, Intersectionality, and Power Analysis; Legislative Advocacy; Community Organizing Tactics and Philosophy; and more. The program—modeled after our National Institute for Latino School Leaders, which has had six cohorts, 52 graduates, and around 2.5 million students and adults impacted from school districts and community-based organizations—is developing leaders to increase the power and influence of Latinos across all sectors.

Second cohort of Avanzando fellows at Capitol Hill this summer.

During the summer, Carla interned at a detention center, working with women fleeing persecution and trauma they had experienced in their home countries. It wasn’t an easy experience; she was preparing women for their interviews with immigration and asylum officers, and the stories she would hear stayed with her: “They would tell me: ‘I feel bad, and you probably think I am a bad person for putting my children through this experience, and I wish I hadn’t done it, but it was something I had to do.’”

Carla realized that women were left on their own to figure out what to do next after they were discharged, so as part of the Avanzando fellowship, Carla developed a system to provide  asylum-seekers with access to legal and health resources after being detained. The program focuses on creating a network of students who will manage cases of people released from detention and connect them with the resources they may need, from transportation to legal services, education, and more. Her project also involves advocacy to end family detention, and works with organizations to coordinate services for people released from detention.

Carla knew these women were going through many different struggles while simply looking for a safe place to raise their children. They would share how they felt their story was “wrong,” that nobody wanted them in the United States, “but I really have nowhere else to go,” they would tell her.

Avanzando fellow, Carla Nayeli Mendoza.

At that point, Carla remembered what her family taught her about embracing who you are. She reassured these women that there are people in this country ready to love and embrace them. There is a new generation of advocates ready to fight for what’s right, ready to help anyone who has been marginalized. Carla is part of that generation.