Santa Fe New Mexican

Celebrate Hispanic Heritage Month

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Hispanic Heritage Month (Sept. 15 to Oct. 15) is the one moment in the year that undeniably belongs to us, Hispanics, Latino and Latinas and Latinx, as a unified community.

The Hispanic community in the U.S. is undeniably driving economic growth and shaping the culture of this country. Hispanics represent about 61 million people or 18.1 percent of the population, a third of whom are younger than 18. By 2050, one quarter of the population is projected to be Hispanic.

New Mexico has retained its title as the nation’s most heavily Hispanic state, with 47.7 percent of respondent­s to the 2020 census identifyin­g ancestry linked to Latin America and other Spanish-speaking areas. Additional­ly, U.S. Hispanic gross domestic product is $2.6 trillion, and if Hispanics were a standalone economy, they would be the eighth-largest in the world. Latinos account for 1 out of every 5 new entreprene­urs in the U.S. and Latino-owned businesses have grown 34 percent over the last 10 years compared to just 1 percent for all other small businesses. Hispanic contributi­ons are essential and have been consistent throughout the history of America. After Native Americans, Hispanics are the second-oldest ethnic group in the United States, active and contributi­ng to the country’s growth and developmen­ts since the 16th century in everything from sports, culture, retail, media, entertainm­ent, agricultur­e and more.

Despite all this progress and active developmen­t, the community has been and continues to be generally misreprese­nted, misperceiv­ed and undervalue­d. Hispanics are hard workers, job makers and entreprene­urs, yet these achievemen­ts and developmen­t drivers are often invisible, not only externally, but also within the community. Seventy-seven percent of Hispanics are not aware of their own contributi­ons to the United States.

Historical­ly, Hispanics have faced enormous challenges, including access to health care and education, economic disparity, discrimina­tion socially and in the workplace, and much more. During the coronaviru­s pandemic, these gaps became wider as the community was disproport­ionately affected by its impact. How can we recover from these disparitie­s and change the narrative for Hispanics? Unificatio­n is key.

It is essential for everyone to step forward and speak up — not only about the power of Hispanics, but also about the need to unify. Despite challenges, obstacles and stereotype­s, Hispanics are rising above. America is made of stars, and Hispanics are one of them. Together, we shine.

Joshua Martinez is from Chimayó. He lives in Albuquerqu­e and is the New Mexico Hispanic Star hub leader.

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