US Census
I look forward to the day when "Latinos", not Hispanics, are the majority in the United States
Elisete sings the Jewish song 'Hevenu Shalom Aleichem'.
Translation into Portuguese by Elisete. Guitar: Ron Laor
www.elisete.com
You all know why I hate the word "Hispanic". So when Marisa from Latina Lista sent this around the other day, I couldn't stop myself from bashing them for using that most detested word.
As a Latinoamericanista by training, Latin American and by extension, Latino, means to include non-Spanish speaking countries like Brazil and Haiti. Hispanic doesn't.
Also, when we speak Latino, we don't speak of people who are only of Castillian Spanish ascendancy. They could be descendants of Persian Jews, Lebanese Christians, Tagalog Filipinos or simple any of the hundreds of Native South American and Caribbean tribes that populate our countries.
If universities across the country can make a distinction between Hispanic and Latino studies, it would behoove the political elites to make those distinctions, no? It's why I've never understood the insistence of advocacy and organizations to use the anachronistic term "Hispanic".
Any organization that doesn't embrace the diversity of the Latino community, with all our languages, ethnicities, cultures and races, is bound to always be political weak. Especially in these times when mobile and internet technologies, along with transnational economies, are breaking down the barriers of racial, ethnic and linguistic identity while fortifying those of class.
Anyhow, thanks Marisa. Am pulling a lazyweb on this one and just cutting and pasting on the blog.
Culture | Demographics | Ethnicity | Hispanic | Identity | Language | Latino | population | Race | Spanish | Latin America | US Census






















