R 433 |
2023 -- H 6534 Enacted 06/15/2023 |
H O U S E R E S O L U T I O N |
PROCLAIMING SEPTEMBER OF 2023 AS "LATINO HISTORY MONTH" IN THE STATE OF RHODE ISLAND |
Introduced By: Representatives Sanchez, Morales, Alzate, Giraldo, Diaz, Shekarchi, Blazejewski, Chippendale, Felix, and Batista |
Date Introduced: June 15, 2023 |
WHEREAS, Latino History Month provides an ideal opportunity to reflect on the |
common humanity underlying all people and to raise awareness and foster respect for the heritage |
and contributions of people of Latin-American and Caribbean descent; and |
WHEREAS, American Hispanic/Latino history is rich, diverse and long, with |
immigrants, refugees and Spanish-speaking or indigenous people living in the United States since |
long before the nation was established; and |
WHEREAS, Bringing with them traditions and culture from Mexico, Spain, Puerto Rico, |
the Dominican Republic and other Latin American and Iberian nations, America’s Hispanic |
population continues to grow, reaching a record 62.5 million in 2020, or 18.7 percent of the |
United States population. From early Spanish colonialism, to civil and worker rights laws, to |
famous firsts, to recent Supreme Court decisions, many notable events in United States Hispanic |
and Latino History have occurred; and |
WHEREAS, Thirty-six percent of residents in Rhode Island are Latin-American people |
of color, including several racial and ethnic groups. The Latino population is mainly of |
Dominican and Puerto Rican background, followed by Guatemalan, Mexican, and Colombian; |
and |
WHEREAS, The 2020 Census shows the Latino American population of Rhode Island |
has reached 182,101, or 39.4 percent of the Rhode Island population; and |
WHEREAS, In 1968, President Lyndon Johnson signed a bill designating the week of |
September 15 as “National Hispanic Heritage Week”; and |
WHEREAS, In 1988, Rhode Island Latino Arts launched the first statewide recognition |
and celebration of “National Hispanic Heritage Week”, and since then the State and its residents |
have recognized Hispanic Heritage Week and Hispanic Heritage Month, and have continued to |
celebrate Latin American ethnic and racial diversity that enriches and strengthens our nation; and |
WHEREAS, In 2023, Rhode Island Latino Arts and Hispanic Heritage Month will |
celebrate 30 years in the State of Rhode Island; and |
WHEREAS, The contributions of Hispanics and Latinos to the United States are long and |
storied, and history shows that the first known colony in America was not Jamestown, but the |
Spanish colony of St. Augustine in Florida; and |
WHEREAS, Latinos are Americans and they form an indelible part of the American |
fabric; and |
WHEREAS, People of Latin-American descent have participated in every aspect of |
America’s effort to secure, protect, and advance the cause of freedom and civil rights, and have |
stories that are an inspiration to all citizens, that reflect the triumph of the human spirit, and that |
offer everyday people the hope of rising above both prejudice and circumstance to build lives of |
human dignity; and |
WHEREAS, People of Latin-American descent or Latin-American Americans have made |
measurable differences in Rhode Island, in their communities and respective industries and |
professions, such as: |
1. Cecilia Rodriguez Saglio from Argentina, who helped found and became the President |
of El Club Panamericano, a group of Spanish-speaking individuals at the International Institute of |
Rhode Island, in the early 1940s, through this group, she helped connect the few Spanish- |
speaking professionals who were studying or chose Rhode Island as their home in the 1940s and |
1950s; |
2. The Ortega brothers, Zanoni and Gimel, who moved to Rhode Island from Mexico in |
the late 1940s and became physicians at Roger Williams Hospital in Providence. The Ortegas |
were the first Mexican family to settle in Rhode Island and lived here for the next five decades; |
3. Dr. Dario Herrera from Argenina, who moved to Rhode Island in 1954 for a job as a |
cardiologist at St. Joseph’s Hospital and the Hindle Memorial Clinic in South Providence. Dr. |
Herera is an avid runner who founded the Ocean State Marathon in 1977 and later became |
medical advisor to John Treacy of Providence College, who went on to win a Silver Medal in the |
marathon at the 1984 Olympics; |
4. Josefina “Dona Fefa” and Antonio Rosario, from the Dominican Republic and Puerto |
Rico respectively, who opened and were co-owners of Fefa’s (Restaurant) Market, located on |
Broad Street in Providence, which was the first Dominican bodega in the State of Rhode Island. |
Additionally, the Rosarios were instrumental in establishing the first Dominican enclave in South |
Providence during the 1960s and 1970s, |
5. Gustavo Carreno, Horacio Gill and Valentin Rios, the first three Colombians to arrive |
in Central Falls in 1964, to work at Lyon Fabrics; |
6. Osvaldo “Ozzie” Castillo, originally from Puerto Rico, who became the first Hispanic |
Police Officer in Providence in 1974; |
7. Jose Gonzalez, a Puerto Rican who, with his brother Roberto, co-founded the first |
Latin American Student Organization (LASO) on the campus of Rhode Island College in 1972; |
8. Victor Mendoza, from the Dominican Republic, who founded the Hispanic Cultural |
Arts Committee and who organized the first Latin American Festival of Music, held at the |
Temple to Music in Roger Williams Park in 1979, an event that attracts close to 20,000 people; |
and |
9. Roberto Gonzalez, who was the first Latino appointed to the Providence School Board |
by Mayor Cianci. He was also subsequently elected as the first Hispanic delegate to the Rhode |
Island Constitutional Convention, and later became the first Latino Judge in Rhode Island, |
appointed to serve on the Providence Housing Court in 1994; |
10. Marta V. Martinez, a Mexican/Chicana, who founded the Hispanic Heritage |
Committee of Rhode Island and Rhode Island Latino Arts in 1988, and with a seed grant from the |
Rhode Island State Council on the Arts, organized the first celebration of Hispanic Heritage |
week. In 1991, the celebration became Hispanic Heritage Month, a 30-day statewide event. In |
2023, Hispanic Heritage Month and Rhode Island Latino Arts will together celebrate their 35th |
Anniversary; |
11. Anastasia Williams, a Panamanian-American who became the first Hispanic in Rhode |
Island to be elected to a statewide office as a State Representative from District 9 in Providence; |
12. Luis Aponte, The first Latino and Puerto Rican to win a seat on the Providence City |
Council, in 1998; |
13. Grace Diaz, the first Latina to represent District 11 in Providence, in 2004. She is the |
first Dominican-American Latina elected to State Office in the history of the United States; |
14. Angel Taveras, a Dominican-American who became the first Latino Mayor of |
Providence in 2011. He is also the third elected and fourth serving Dominican-American Mayor |
in the United States; |
15. James Diossa, a Colombian-American, who was the first Latino Mayor of Central |
Falls, and is also the first Colombian-American Mayor elected in the United States; and |
16. Nellie Gorbea, the first Latina and Puerto Rican to be elected as the Secretary of State |
of Rhode Island. She is also the first Hispanic to win statewide office in New England, and the |
first to run for Governor; now, therefore be it |
RESOLVED, That this House of Representatives of the State of Rhode Island hereby |
proclaims September of 2023 as “Latino History Month” in the State of Rhode Island, recognizes |
the 35th Anniversary of Rhode Island Latino Arts and Hispanic Heritage Month, and extends |
appreciation to the aforementioned persons for their contributions to the State of Rhode Island |
and our Nation; and be it further |
RESOLVED, That the Secretary of State be and hereby is authorized and directed to |
transmit a duly certified copy of this resolution to Ms. Marta Martinez, Executive Director, |
Rhode Island Latino Arts. |
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LC002365 |
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