The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Recognizin­g Latinos’ heritage

Hispanic Heritage Month highlights contributi­ons, sacrifices and needs of Latino community.

- By Isabel González Whitaker and Sofia Bork

Last summer in a small, treelined park that sits within a gentrifyin­g nook on Atlanta’s Westside, children in masks played on swings, momentaril­y unburdened by the tragedies of the day. Also at the park were their parents, about 200 of them, in masks too, and mostly Latino. In contrast to their children, the adults were carrying food, supplies and papers as well as the stress of their increasing­ly difficult lives.

For several hours they navigated tables set up for the distributi­on of vegetables, backpacks, gift cards and other essentials donated by private and public entities to help the families at a time when they would otherwise be going without, due to the disproport­ionate impact of COVID-19 on their community. It wasn’t the first time this year that vulnerable families visited the park for the support they aren’t getting through federal and state programs, and as things stand, it won’t be the last.

The Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs, also known as Welcoming Atlanta, is the organizing force behind the effort, which pursued private grants to set up these distributi­on events starting in May just as data was first emerging exposing the tragic impact of COVID19 on Black and brown communitie­s. Latinos are 18.7% of the U.S. population at 62 million people, but represent 33% of all positive coronaviru­s test results and are hospitaliz­ed for the virus at a rate four times that of white Americans, according to the CDC. Furthermor­e, in CDC research, Latino children are at the highest risk of dying from COVID-19.

Providing lift to these outsize statistics are the double-pummel of poverty and its ever-present companion: negative social determinan­ts of health. In Georgia, where there are 1 million Latinos, 23.4% live in poverty, the highest percentage for all races and ethnicitie­s in the state. It is well-documented that Latinos in Atlanta and elsewhere — 63% of all working Latinos across the country — fill the low-wage essential jobs that keep our society functionin­g, from sanitation to food preparatio­n to factory jobs. It’s work that puts them at risk for coronaviru­s, which they then may bring home to multigener­ational households (an approach to cohabitati­ng that can be culturally and/or economical­ly driven). That many low income-earning Latinos do not qualify for, nor can afford health insurance, coupled with fear of debt or bankruptcy for seeking medical help, add to the virus’s high mortality rates within the community.

And yet it’s not just catching the virus that is proving highly problemati­c for the community. Latino workers overindex in constructi­on and hospitalit­y work (27.3% and 22.3% respective­ly), industries that have been decimated these last months and forced to lay off millions of people across the country. Even as things rebound, these sectors are slow to uptick, and even as jobs become available, these are service and hourly jobs that do not include time off, health insurance or other protection­s that are critical to maintain well-being, especially during a pandemic.

As for the spring’s federal stimulus check, it was denied to most of Georgia’s taxpaying Latino immigrants. As these economic losses hit home, so enters the aptly named “eviction storm,” which sees brown and Black communitie­s displaced from housing across metro Atlanta when rent can’t be met or in some cases where rent is raised thanks to the unimpeded velocity of gentrifica­tion. That’s exactly what’s happening at apartment complexes near the park where the food distributi­on events take place, the Sara J. González Memorial Park, the first memorial park named for a Latino individual in Georgia.

Since May, 4,000 Latino families in Atlanta have been helped at the Sara J. González Memorial Park, thanks to Welcoming Atlanta’s efforts. The park was created in part to honor this community, one whose volume and importance continue to grow and for which we should be thankful, considerin­g its significan­t economic impact and productivi­ty.

From 2000 to 2010, the Latino population in Atlanta increased 118%, a trend that is accelerati­ng in Georgia — which has the 10th-largest population of Latinos in the nation. Nearly 1.75 million Latinos are expected to call the Atlanta area home by 2040. Latino buying power is $1.7 trillion, the largest of any ethnic demo in the U.S. and larger than the GDP of Australia.

An early proponent for diversity and inclusion as a benefit to business and culture, Sara J. González was a pillar of the Latino community who came to prominence thanks to her work driving minority economic empowermen­t and entreprene­urial preparedne­ss across the state. Her legacy lives on in the park where, in addition to food distributi­on events, Latinos and constituen­ts of this diverse neighborho­od gather for interfaith vigils, tutoring lessons and soccer clinics and to tend to the Officer Edgar Flores Memorial Garden, dedicated to the first Latino police officer shot and killed in Georgia. The popularity of the park, in walking distance from where Sara J. González lived up until her death in 2008, is a testament to the importance of inclusive greenspace­s and how they should serve as authentic reflection­s of the community that exists alongside them.

Through the power of community, volunteeri­sm and intentiona­l leadership, community-centered events are birthed and taking place not just at the park but also through the efforts of the Latin American Associatio­n, the Latino Community Fund, Ser Familia, Agape Youth and Family Center and others. Still, the episodic events aren’t enough to make up for the gaps.

Much like the 100-yearold trees that line the park and have weathered many storms, the Latino community has deep roots across Atlanta, Georgia and this country. Though at times they may be thrashed about and even uprooted, those roots run deep — and at great sacrifice they benefit our lives. But we can help them when we stand together as allies, advocate for them, take agency in policymaki­ng and come together to honor them.

Latino workers overindex in constructi­on and hospitalit­y work (27.3% and 22.3% respective­ly), industries that have been decimated these last months and forced to lay off millions of people across the country.

Isabel González Whitaker is a Presidenti­al Leadership Scholar, journalist and author. She is the founder of the Sara J. González Memorial Park. Sofia Bork is a Latina civic leader and advocate. She is the founder of the Officer Edgar Flores Latinx Ethnobotan­ical Memorial Garden located in the Sara J. Gonzalez Park.

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN/HSHIN@AJC.COM ?? Cory Mosser (center), founder of Natural Born Tillers, works with volunteers at the Officer Edgar Flores Memorial Garden in Sara J. Gonzalez Memorial Park in Atlanta.
HYOSUB SHIN/HSHIN@AJC.COM Cory Mosser (center), founder of Natural Born Tillers, works with volunteers at the Officer Edgar Flores Memorial Garden in Sara J. Gonzalez Memorial Park in Atlanta.
 ??  ?? Sofia Bork
Sofia Bork
 ??  ?? Isabel González Whitaker
Isabel González Whitaker

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