How To Celebrate Latinx Heritage With Your Kids All Year Round
Latinx Heritage Month â also known as Hispanic Heritage Month â is a great time to celebrate the achievements of Latin Americans throughout U.S. history and the Latinx people who are making history today. But itâs also important to honor these things during the 11 other months of the year, too.
âI think having months that celebrate different cultures and races are a double-edged sword,â Jenny Torres Sanchez, author of âWe Are Not From Here,â told HuffPost. âThey help highlight a culture and race, which is wonderful, but also gives too many people the sense that theyâve done enough. That thereâs no need to seek, learn about and celebrate past that month. And thatâs regressive and damaging.â
AdvertisementAt a time when white supremacy continues to rear its ugly head on the political stage, itâs even more imperative for parents, especially white parents, to step up. And children of color are in need of mindful support and empowerment.
âCulture and race and ethnicity is not something you slip on and off. It is who we are,â Torres Sanchez said. âAnd all of us deserve to celebrate and acknowledge and love who we are all the time, without limitation.â
HuffPost spoke to parents and educators to identify some ways that parents can honor and engage with Latinx heritage â past, present and future â with their children all year long.
Use childrenâs books.AdvertisementâAs a family, reading picture books together â regardless of everyoneâs age â is a fabulous way to quickly expose your children and yourself to many sorts of Latinx lives,â said David Bowles, author of âMy Two Border Townsâ and co-founder of #DignidadLiteraria.
He said some of his current favorites are âMy Papi Has a Motorcycleâ from author Isabel Quintero and illustrator Zeke Peña, âDreamersâ by Yuyi Morales, âImagineâ by author Juan Felipe Herrera and illustrator Lauren Castillo, and âHair Storyâ by author NoNieqa Ramos and illustrator Keisha Morris.
âResearch shows that both children of color and white children benefit from greater exposure to inclusive texts, especially comics and other books written from the lived experiences of authors and illustrators, that accurately reflect our diverse society,â Bowles noted.
There are countless great texts that families can add to their bookshelves. Torres Sanchez recommended looking into picture books, middle grade and young adult novels from authors such as Margarita Engle, Aida Salazar, Juan Felipe Herrera, Yuyi Morales, Reyna Grande, Celia C. Pérez, Monica Brown and Guadalupe GarcÃa McCall.
AdvertisementAlejandra Tejada founded Enlingos, a Spanish-language and bilingual book service for kids after noticing the shortage of engaging resources to teach her son Spanish.
âIntroducing kids to Latina authors like Sandra Cisneros, Pat Mora and Monica Brown helps to show young children, especially girls, how much their voices matter,â she told HuffPost. Tejada added that sheâs currently loving books like âPepe and the Paradeâ from author Tracey Kyle and illustrator Mirelle Ortega and âNiños de Américaâ by author Francisca Palacios and illustrator Carmen Cardemil for the way they celebrate the different places people come from and teach about cultural traditions.
Take part in cultural events and celebrations.âThere are so many traditions around the holidays that come from Latin America â" DÃa de los Muertos, Novena de Aguinaldos (Las Posadas), DÃa de Reyes â" which is a great opportunity to learn about the history of these traditions and find ways to incorporate them into family traditions beyond Hispanic Heritage Month,â Tejada explained.
She encouraged Latinx families to research and celebrate the independence days of the countries their families are from.
âItâs another great teaching moment and, of course, gives an opportunity to celebrate by cooking meals, decorating with flags, learning about the people that have made contributions to the world from these countries and, of course, enjoying local music,â Tejada said.
Non-Latinx families can also honor these occasions, but itâs important to do so with respect for the people and culture being celebrated.
âEnjoy our holidays and food â though with respect,â Bowles said. âTongue-in-cheek, ironic appropriations are not appreciated.â
âAll kids from communities of color need to see their lives, their families, their communities and their culture as worthy of being included in those media, as important to academic study, as valuable and integral parts of not just personal and school life but of schoolwork and broader national conversations.â
- David Bowles, author of âMy Two Border TownsâBring the celebration home.Beyond books, there are many other ways to celebrate and to educate your children about Latinx heritage at home.
AdvertisementâDefinitely make a point of streaming a show or two that centers the Latinx experience,â Bowles advised. âBuy your kids comics and video games that feature Latinx characters.â
PBS is offering a number of resources to honor Latinx heritage, including a video about the origin and purpose of Hispanic Heritage Month in English and Spanish as part of PBS Kidsâ âAll About the Holidaysâ series. There are also episodes of the show âLetâs Go Lunaâ highlighting Mexico City and Peru, and giving recipes for Puerto Rican dishes such as mofongo and the frozen treat piragua.
Parents can also encourage their childrenâs schools to implement these kinds of activities and lessons if they arenât already.
âAll kids from communities of color need to see their lives, their families, their communities and their culture as worthy of being included in those media, as important to academic study, as valuable and integral parts of not just personal and school life but of schoolwork and broader national conversations,â Bowles said.
âIf all that Latinx/Hispanic kids â or any children from communities of color â are exposed to in books and entertainment is mostly just a generic, homogenous white American identity, they begin to internalize a view of themselves as unworthy, lesser, unimportant,â he added. âAnd when Latinx/Hispanic folks are erased from media, white readers who grow up consuming media that reflects only their identity internalize a view of the nation and its default culture as white.â
Expose them to role models.So representation matters. And thatâs not just with the characters in TV shows and books or the toys kids play with.
Itâs also important to expose children to real-life role models from different backgrounds. In terms of Latinx heritage, there are many historical and present-day figures to inspire your kids, including Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor, labor leaders César Chávez and Dolores Huerta, composer and actor Lin-Manuel Miranda, chef José Andrés, actor Gina Rodriguez, artist Jean-Michel Basquiat and astronaut Ellen Ochoa.
Parents can teach their children about these icons through media at home but also by visiting museums, attending performances and traveling to sites that highlight their achievements. In 2020, Congress approved legislation to start the process of creating the National Museum of the American Latino through the Smithsonian Institution, so future visitors to Washington, D.C., will have the opportunity to learn about influential figures there as well.
Start conversations.Advertisement
As you go about your everyday routine with your family, recognize the aspects of Latinx heritage that appear along the way, and use them as conversation starters.
âThere are usually many opportunities to teach kids about Latinx culture and histories,â said Raquel Vasquez Gilliland, author of âHow Moon Fuentez Fell in Love With the Universeâ and a member of the Las Musas literary collective. âThis spooky season, places like Target will probably carry DÃa de Muertos decor. Parents can talk about the history of this holiday with their kids. When eating Mexican and other foods, parents can discuss the history of certain dishes â for instance, tamales precede colonization.â
Donât be afraid to talk about less pleasant aspects as well.
âI would also encourage parents to make children aware of the racism many Hispanic/Latinx people face and why that is,â Vasquez Gilliland added. âIncluding all facets of the history and experience of a people is a great way to honor them and to make sure children donât inadvertently commit microaggressions.â
Educate yourself.If youâre going to do the work of educating your children about Latinx heritage, youâll likely also have to do some internal work as well. This means educating yourself about the Latinx experience of the past and present, learning different terminologies and even understanding the different opinions around the term âLatinxâ itself.
âEngage in a meaningful way, and approach teaching and celebrating our culture with an open mind and open heart,â Torres Sanchez said. âFind out more about the different countries and cultures that make up the Latinx community, the leaders and creators who have made a difference in our communities, our histories, our contributions and our struggles.â
Bowles said that as a Mexican American, he views this month as a time to celebrate his shared ethnicity with millions of Latinx people throughout the U.S. But he also sees it as an opportunity to expose others to this powerful heritage and identity.
âIn terms of the national conversation, our visibility and the cultural dignity that is every communityâs right, itâs more concretely a moment for opening the eyes of non-Latinx groups to the rich, important and amazingly cool nature of my people,â he said. âThe collective gaze of the country falls on us for 30 days, and we get to show them what theyâre missing out on when they dismiss or marginalize us.â
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