Latino resistance
Latino influence on culture
Afro-Latino Identity
Latino innovation
100

Co-founder and Vice President of the UFW union, she organized the Delano grape strike and negotiated the first union contracts for farm workers

who was Dolores Huerta

100

This city is the largest Spanish-speaking city in the world.

What is Mexico City

100

This historical event caused the "creation" of Afro-Latinos by bringing millions of enslaved people to Latin America.

what is slave trade?

100

Through the innovation of non-violent resistance, this labor leader organized the "Pilgrimage" march from Delano to Sacramento in 1966 to secure better wages and freedom from exploitation for farmworkers

Who is Cesar Chavez

200

(Yes, we can) She coined this famous slogan, which became the rallying cry for the UFW and a motto for social justice movements nationwide.

Sí, se puede meaning

200

Named for their signature headwear, this protest group fought for Mexican-American rights and better schools during the Chicano Movement of the 1960s.

What are the Brown Berets?

200

This country has the largest population of Afro-Latinos in Latin America.

what is Brazil?

200

This 20th-century Brazilian educator created a revolutionary literacy method designed to give the poor "freedom" by teaching them to read so they could engage in social justice and political resistance.

Who is Paulo Freire

300

A Mexican-American journalist and activist who fought for civil rights and suffrage in Texas, founding La Liga Feminil Mexicaista.

 Who is Jovita Idár

300

This Disney-Pixar film brought the Mexican tradition of Día de los Muertos to a global audience, winning two Academy Awards.

What is Coco

300

According to the U.S. Census, Latino/Hispanic is classified as an ethnicity, meaning Afro-Latinos can be this specific thing, including Black people.

What is race?

300

To combat voter suppression and protect the voting rights of Latinos, this Mexican-American civil rights leader innovated by founding the Southwest Voter Registration Education Project in 1974.

Who is Willie Velasquez

400

Founded in Laredo, Texas, in 1911 by journalist and activist Jovita Idár, it was a pioneering, feminist, and social welfare organization dedicated to empowering Mexican-American women, providing free education to children, and defending civil rights.

 what is La Liga Femenil Mexicanista

400

Eight years before Brown v. Board, this 1946 California case successfully challenged the segregation of Mexican-American students in public schools.

What is Mendez v. Westminster

400

 In 1947, this Mexican-American doctor and WWII veteran founded the American G.I. Forum to innovatively use veteran status as a tool to fight for the civil rights and medical justice of Hispanic soldiers

Who is Dr. Hector P. Garcia

500

On July 14, 1970, the Young Lords, a Puerto Rican activist group, staged a 12-hour occupation of Lincoln Hospital in the South Bronx led by Juan Gonzalez to protest unsafe, racist, and inhumane conditions for healthcare.

Who was Juan González

500

What music genre originated in Panama and Puerto Rico and was deeply influenced by Jamaican reggae, dancehall, and American hip-hop?

What is Reggaeton

500

A Mexican scientist won a Nobel Prize for his 1970s research, discovering that chlorofluorocarbons were destroying the Earth’s ozone layer.

Who is Mario Molina

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