Articles & Videos
Latina Immigrant Mothers Face Challenges in Receiving and Accessing Adequate Prenatal Care
BY EMILY NEIL WITH CONTRIBUTIONS FROM MICHELLE MYERS ON SEPTEMBER 23, 2022
Missing home and family, facing racism in doctor’s offices, and forging community to support one another: Three Latina immigrant moms in the Philadelphia area share their pregnancy stories.
GALAEI de Latinx a QTBIPOC
POR MICHELLE MYERS EL 30 DE ENERO DE 2022
GALAEI es la segunda organización latina más antigua del país. Pero después de que sus miembros notarán la diversidad en la sala se dieron cuenta de que sus identidades eran más diversas de lo que el acrónimo inicial de GALAEI podía abarcar. Ahora, después de 32 años, GALAEI ha ampliado oficialmente sus puertas a todas las personas queer de color. ¿Qué significa este cambio para la comunidad latinx queer de Filadelfia?
GALAEI from Latinx to QTBIPOC
BY MICHELLE MYERS ON NOVEMBER 4, 2021
In Philadelphia, poet and activist David Acosta took note of this disparity and founded GALAEI to give the queer latinx community a hub for services and linkage to care. Now, after 32 years, GALAEI has officially expanded its doors to all queer people of color.
El sombrero que perdio su nombre y la ecuatoriana que busca reivindicarlo
POR MICHELLE MYERS EL 3 DE NOVIEMBRE DEL 2021
En 2017 nació YAKU WARE. Yaku significa agua en quechua ,una de las lenguas indígenas de Ecuador, un ingrediente clave para la supervivencia de la palma toquilla que crece en la costa del país.
Story of a misnomer and the woman set to fix it
BY MICHELLE MYERS ON NOVEMBER 3, 2021
In 2017, YAKU WARE was born. Yaku means water in Quechua—one of Ecuador’s Indigenous languages, a key ingredient for the survival of the toquilla palm growing in the coast of the country.
What Sanctuary Schools mean for Latinx families in the School District of Philadelphia
BY BECCA HAYDU ON NOVEMBER 2, 2021
In 2020, ICE detained an immigrant mother as she was taking her child to school. The community, along with JUNTOS, responded by organizing a campaign to create Sanctuary Schools to address the education inequities that uniquely affect children with immigrant parents. On June 2021, the Philadelphia Board of Education approved the Sanctuary School Resolution.
Afro Latinx Voices: Behind the Cloisters of the Philly Pandemic
BY SANDRA ANDINO CAMACHO ON SEPTEMBER 20, 2021
Following are the voices of three special Afro-Latinx in Philadelphia that during the ongoing pandemic continue to lead efforts for fair representation and equal opportunity for immigrant communities in the U.S., and above all fighting racism and racist practices from deep within.
Una pandemia con Amor
POR EDGAR RAMIREZ EL 1 DE SEPTIEMBRE DEL 2021
Hace 4 años conocí a Dulce Ramirez durante una visita al museo de antropología, para entonces tenía un bebe de 3 años, Alan. Ramirez es originaria de Ciudad de México (México) y llegó a Philadelphia cuando apenas tenía 13 años, junto con sus padres. Su camino no ha sido fácil, pero siempre ha tenido la valentía de enfrentar los retos que la vida le depara, incluso durante la pandemia.
A Pandemic with Love
BY EDGAR RAMIREZ ON SEPTEMBER 1, 2021
I met Dulce Ramirez 4 years ago, during a visit to the Penn Museum of Archeology; back then she had a 3-year-old baby, Alan. Originally from Mexico City (Mexico), Ramirez arrived in Philadelphia when she was just 13 years old, along with her parents. Her path has not been easy, but she has always had the courage to face the challenges that life throws her way, even during the pandemic.
What does Afro Peruvian Women’s Day represent for the community?
BY SHARÚN GONZALES ON AUGUST 31, 2021
On Oct 1, 2020, law 31049 was approved by the Peruvian government, declaring July 25th as the National Afro Peruvian Women’s Day. The new date opens questions regarding the invisible violence affecting them and the diversity of experiences within this group. This year marks the first time Peru commemorates the date. A group of Afro Peruvian women living in the United States and Peru, share their perspectives with ¡Presente! Media.
The Kilomba Collective fights for Afrolatinx representation
BY GABE CASTRO ON AUGUST 23, 2021
Finding themselves within a society that doesn't seem to realize that Latinidad and African descent aren’t parallel lines, five Black Brazilian women founded the Kilomba Collective in November 2019.
The Time is Now for the Road to Citizenship
BY LETICIA ROA NIXON ON AUGUST 05, 2021
On February 18, 2021, President Joe Biden officially sent the proposed U.S. Citizenship Act of 2021 to Congress as part of his commitment to modernize the country's immigration system. The legislative proposal, led by Representative Linda Sanchez (D-CA) and Senator Robert Menendez (D-NJ), aims to create an 8-year pathway to citizenship to keep families together, embrace diversity, and promote the integration of immigrants and refugees.
El Tiempo es Ahora para el Camino a la Ciudadanía
POR LETICIA ROA NIXON EL AGOSTO 05 DEL 2021
El 18 de febrero de 2021, el presidente Joe Biden envió oficialmente la propuesta de Ley de Ciudadanía 2021 al Congreso, como parte de su compromiso para modernizar el sistema de inmigración del país. Esta propuesta legislativa, dirigida por la representante Linda Sánchez (D-CA) y el senador Robert Menéndez (D-NJ), tiene como finalidad crear un camino de 8 años hacia la ciudadanía para mantener a las familias unidas, acoger la diversidad, y promover la integración de inmigrantes y refugiados.
Identidades en Tránsito
POR CARLOS JOSÉ PÉREZ SÁMANO EL JULY DE 22 DEL 2021
Vine a lo que ustedes llaman América, un lugar en donde no tener una identidad definida te arrincona a solo poder expresarte en espacios de indefinición como la poesía. El espacio de la dislocación y la transmutación. Estados Unidos no genera identidades, las destruye. Las absorbe en generalizaciones, las disuelve.
Identities in Transit
BY CARLOS JOSÉ PÉREZ SÁMANO ON JULY 22, 2021
When I arrived in the United States I was surprised by the Mexican people who identify with ancestral cultures and even practice Mesoamerican dances. Now, I am one of them. But, sometimes I am not. Over time, one accepts one's demonym, especially when abroad. And one finds in pre-Hispanic cultures a way to share identity with those who come from the same place. Even when one knows that label doesn’t present the whole picture either.
The Virtual Evolution of Burlesque in Philadelphia
BY GABE CASTRO ON JULY 15, 2021
The COVID-19 pandemic has affected art programs and performances throughout Philadelphia quite drastically. Burlesque performers evolved their numbers to fit on screen.
Recognizing, understanding, and navigating guilt with immigrant parents
BY ERICKA CONANT ON JULY 08, 2021
Second generation immigrants have at least one parent who left their homeland. To be raised by an immigrant means that a portion of their shaping and molding of us as a person heavily references their immigration story — their exodus — and the constant comparison of their upbringing from our own.
Moving to North Philly from São Paulo taught me about Black and Latinx resilience
BY GABRIELA WATSON-BURKETT ON JULY 01, 2021 | PUBLISHER: PLAN PHILLY
¡Presente! Media Co-Founder Gabriela reflects on her time living in North Philly coming from São Paulo, Brazil.
“Luchando por un futuro mejor” - Behind Gen Z Latinx motivation to give back to the community
BY CELIA ALVES AND MICHELLE MYERS ON JUNE 24, 2021
Whether it is by protesting in the streets to support Black Lives Matter, better climate change policies and gun control, or undermining former president Trump’s Tulsa rally using their Tik-tok accounts, Gen Z members have proven themselves a force of change.
What is Fulton v. City of Philadelphia?
BY LAURA ANAYA-MORGA AND KRISTAL SOTOMAYOR ON JUNE 17, 2021
After years of dispute the case now awaits the Supreme Court decision. The main question is whether or not the government violates religious agencies First Amendment rights by requiring them to consider same-sex couples applications to become foster parents. This is the rundown of how Fulton v. City of Philadelphia got here and what its outcome could mean.