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PHOTOS: La Santa Cecilia enlivens Berkeley’s UC Theatre for Día de Muertos celebration

For Día de Muertos, La Santa Cecilia graced Berkeley’s UC Theatre with their GRAMMY-award winning music catalog. Led by Marisol “La Marisoul” Hernandez, the bicultural group from Los Angeles performed their diverse sound, blending modern sensibilities with an array of traditional notes. Hernandez spoke in between songs with fans handing her flowers — acknowledging those […]

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Midterms Offer Glimpse of ‘New American Majority’

[Story by Peter Schurmann; Images via Flickr] On Tuesday night Ruwa Romman became Georgia’s first-ever Muslim woman elected to the state legislature and the state’s first-ever Palestinian American elected to public office. Her win capped a stronger than expected midterm showing for Democrats nationally that defied polling.   The burning question on pundits’ minds now is, […]

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PODCAST: Domestic workers have rights, including those in San Francisco winning paid sick leave

On the latest #RadioTeco News, El Tecolote reporter Lorena Garibay talks to us about her reporting on domestic workers in San Francisco getting access to paid sick leave. This legislation was passed in 2022, and was celebrated and touted as the first of its kind, but questions remain as to how it will be enforced. […]

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Alive and Active

For over 35 years, I was immersed in a — generally speaking — wonderful place. A place of learning, a place of teaching, a place where diverse generations exchanged their thoughts and aspirations. A place where the young and the not-so-young conversed and smiled at each other, as it should be. The University atmosphere, at […]

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Cross-cultural art project showcases collaboration between immigrant Latina and Chinese women

Story and Photos by Andrew Brobst Presented by the Chinese Culture Center of San Francisco, “How I Keep Looking Up/Como Sigo Mirando Hacia Arriba/仰望” is a trilingual, multiethnic, community-based public art action engaging 16 working-class immigrant Chinese and Latina women in the creation of flags that tell stories of power and resilience. Artist Christine Wong […]

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On Dia De Los Muertos, COVID informs how we celebrate our loved ones, we protect our loved ones

[by Francine Rios-Fetcho, BA, UCSF Latinx Center of Excellence in Health; Angela Gallegos-Castillo, PhD, Instituto Familiar De La Raza; Roberto Ariel Vargas, MPH, UCSF Center for Community Engagement and CTSI; Courtesy photo] The symbolic and participatory ceremonies of Dia De Los Muertos are so old they pre-date the presence of the Españoles in Mexico. Our […]

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COVID ‘long-haulers’ advocate for more research, labor protections, and people-centered health policies

[Illustration by Jaycee Felkins — Mara Cavallaro is El Tecolote’s Report for America Corps Member who reports on mental health and healthcare inequality in the Latinx community.] In May of 2020, Dr. Michael Peluso saw his first patient with long COVID at San Francisco General, before long COVID had a name. She was young, he […]