{"id":32290,"date":"2017-03-10T12:30:25","date_gmt":"2017-03-10T17:30:25","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/emu.edu\/now\/news\/?p=32290"},"modified":"2017-09-22T07:43:55","modified_gmt":"2017-09-22T11:43:55","slug":"since-1996-latino-student-alliance-celebrates-cultural-pride-offers-welcoming-space","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/emu.edu\/now\/news\/2017\/since-1996-latino-student-alliance-celebrates-cultural-pride-offers-welcoming-space\/","title":{"rendered":"Since 1996, Latino Student Alliance celebrates cultural pride and offers a welcoming space to all"},"content":{"rendered":"
\u201cPastel!<\/em>\u201d Student Sara Shenk-Moreno whispers dramatically in Spanish, pantomiming eating. Members of the 草莓社区 Latino Student Alliance (LSA) retrieve a decadent cake and sing \u201cHappy Birthday\u201d with extra verses in Spanish.<\/p>\n The song is fitting for the moment: Rick Casta\u00f1eda, who co-founded the club with four others in 1996, has just finished sharing about the club’s origins and early activity. One of the first things he told the gathered group was that festivity, with refreshments, has always been integral to the organization.<\/p>\n Intentionally, from the very beginning, every meeting was a celebration of relationship with each other. That was the goal. We had business to take care of, we had things to talk about, and Latinos are dynamic, wonderful, beautiful, smart people. And we can strategize, and we can meet, and can create these wonderful, amazing plans, where it\u2019s not just about the party \u2013 but it\u2019s also about the party. \u2014Rick Casta\u00f1eda<\/strong><\/p>\n Casta\u00f1eda first envisioned a student organization for Latinos during a Washington Study Service Year in 1995-96. During that year, he learned that his Latino roommate had suffered intense bullying while on campus. The harassment was so relentless that the once-straight-A student was now dealing with depression and on the verge of academic failure.<\/p>\n Casta\u00f1eda became determined to improve Latinos\u2019 experiences at EMU. Having graduated from Lancaster Mennonite High School, he was more comfortable in the Anabaptist culture than some Latinos at EMU. At the same time, though, he recognized that the culture could be exclusive: \u201cI kind of picture it as this beautiful, arm-in-arm group, these Mennonites. Arm-in-arm in a circle together, singing this four-part harmony. And it draws people to it \u2026 It\u2019s very supportive, very loving, very caring \u2013 if you can figure out how to get into that circle.\u201d<\/p>\n While in Lancaster over the summer, Casta\u00f1eda took his idea of a support group to close friends and family.<\/p>\n \u201cI quickly realized it wasn\u2019t my idea, it wasn\u2019t my vision,\u201d he says. \u201cIt was automatically this amazing symbiosis, this shared vision, and I had never had that experience before, and have never had it since.\u201d<\/p>\n His sister, Moniqua Casta\u00f1eda Acosta, her husband Dionicio (Nick) Acosta, and their friends Dave and Liliana Vega, all EMU students, began planning a club to support and celebrate Latino students on campus.<\/p>\n The \u201cLancaster five,\u201d as Casta\u00f1eda calls them, were soon joined by Costa Rican graduate student Willroy Grant, who became their first adviser in the fall of 1996. They wrote three purposes into the constitution: to provide encouragement, strength, support, celebration and pride for Latino students; to give a voice to Latino students and educate non-Latinos about Hispanic culture; and nurture the spiritual lives of each member.<\/p>\n And, of course, every meeting needed coffee, maybe a little pastelito<\/em>, music and dancing\u2014 for Latinos, and for all.<\/p>\n Latino Student Alliance wanted to say,\u00a0 “We\u2019re Latinos, we\u2019re not apologizing for it, but we also want to learn about you. We want to educate you about who we are, but we also want to learn about you. … Because that real honesty, working together despite differences, of loving each other despite differences, only comes from genuine, mutual love and respect, which only comes from actually building relationships with each other. \u2014Rick Casta\u00f1eda Casta\u00f1eda says that his friendship with a Caucasian roommate from Ohio helped form this philosophy. To this end, LSA held dances, hosted chapels, joined in Celebration hymn sings, and welcomed all into their meetings.<\/p>\n Art was a key strategy of both collaboration and education. Grant created a photography exhibit: black and white portraits of Latino students accompanied with responses to the question, \u201cWhat does it mean to you to be Latino at EMU?\u201d<\/p>\n
<\/a>‘Each meeting was a celebration of relationship’<\/h3>\n
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<\/a>‘We want educate you … to learn about you.’<\/h3>\n
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