Latinx Heritage Month, Sept. 15–Oct. 15, recognizes the contributions of Latin Americans to the U.S. and celebrates the many cultures of Americans from Mexico, Spain, the Caribbean and Central and South America. For the ninth time, the celebration came to Athens for the annual Latinx Fest.
2018 has been a year of many struggles and triumphs for the local Latinx community.
In July 2017, Clarke County Sheriff Ira Edwards quietly instituted a new policy of complying with the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement requests to hold undocumented inmates for up to 48 hours. While detained, ICE could pick up and deport undocumented inmates, many of whom had not been convicted of a crime.
It wasn’t until January that the Athens community learned of the policy. Once made public, it was met with widespread criticism. As a result, Edwards reversed it in April.
On June 20, Kay Altschul, a librarian employee, sent out an email in the university-wide Listerv railing against undocumented immigrants and including content that could have violated the university’s Non-Discrimination and Anti-Harassment Policy.
In September, the Office of Multicultural Services and Programs and organizations such as the Hispanic Student Association, NAACP, Listo and MIXED received an anonymous letter that contained a copy of the email originally written by the library employee. The letter was received during National Hispanic Heritage Month.
The message was referred to UGA’s Equal Opportunity Office to investigate and determine if the message violated the NDAH Policy, said Greg Trevor, the executive director of media communications.
The university prohibits harassment or discrimination on the basis of race, color, ethnicity or national origin against “any member of the University Community on campus, in connection with a University program or activity, or in a manner that creates a hostile environment for any member of the University Community,” according to the NDAH policy on the EOO website.
Several university students and community members took to social media to voice their disappointment or outrage over the email. Crystal Gomez, a junior international affairs major from Claxton said she knows the negative values the employee associated with immigrants in the email are false.
“Most of the Latinx student community at the university were raised by immigrants or are immigrants ourselves. The values instilled in us were noble, ethical and positive so I’m just going to use what my parents taught me growing up and come out of this...and try to be a better person out of it,” Gomez said.
UGA Young Democrats also released a statement demanding the university terminate Altschul and condemning the “hatred” expressed in the email:
“The University of Georgia should not be complicit in hate, especially from its employees. Inaction from the University will demonstrate a lack of concern and a faulty commitment to the well being and success of underrepresented students, especially the Latinx students at UGA.”
Trevor said the university will not disclose the specifics of the investigations at this time, including the date when the case was referred to EOO. Altschul was not open to commenting on the email or the investigation.
For many, the Latinx Fest symbolized the community stepping out and uniting.
Mendoza said whether attendees were citizens, documented or undocumented, the festival was an opportunity for the community to come together, “because we are part of the same family.”
Credits:
Ashlyn Webb and Maddie Ray