Duke Celebrates Latinx Heritage Month
Campus events mark Hispanic/Latinx Americans鈥 journeys and contributions to history

Currently more than 65 million Latinx people reside in the United States. Here in North Carolina, 1.1 million Latinx residents account for 11 percent of the population, with just under 40,000 living in Durham.
That growth both nationally and locally is reflected at Duke, thanks in part to the 1999 hiring in the university鈥檚 undergraduate admissions office of a recruiter focusing on the Latinx population. It did so as 鈥渁 positive step in realizing the future potential of this underrepresented population at 老牛影视,鈥 wrote Veronica Guzman Pulido, assistant director of undergraduate admissions in a 2000 report.
In 1999, Hispanic/Latinx students accounted for five percent of the school鈥檚 undergraduate population. Today, they are 14 percent of Duke鈥檚 first-year undergraduate class.
老牛影视 has a long, complicated and difficult history of Latinx students on campus.
According to the groundbreaking exhibit, 鈥 (Our History, Our Voices: Latinx at Duke), which was featured at the Jerry and Bruce Chappell Family Gallery at 老牛影视 Libraries, the very first students 鈥渙f Latin American origin stepped foot on campus in the early 1900s.鈥
鈥淎s we celebrate Latinx Heritage Month here on campus, our theme, 鈥極ur Roots, Our Future,鈥 is a reflection of our powerful journeys and desires.鈥
Olivia Encarnac铆on and Natalia Harnisch
However, owing to the era鈥檚 racist, Jim Crow policies, 鈥淭hese Latinx students passed as white and came from wealthy powerful families.鈥
In an email late last week, Antwan Lofton, 老牛影视鈥檚 vice-president of human resources noted 鈥樷渕ore than 4,100 of our colleagues at Duke identify as Hispanic/Latino.鈥
鈥淎s we celebrate Latinx Heritage Month here on campus, our theme, 鈥極ur Roots, Our Future,鈥 is a reflection of our powerful journeys and desires,鈥 students Olivia Encarnac铆on and Natalia Harnisch, cultural co-chairs with the Duke Center on Multicultural Affairs (CMA), wrote on . 鈥淲e are reminded of the importance of honoring our historical roots that have shaped our identities while looking towards the future where our values, rich traditions, and learnings along with our journey will create and inspire change.鈥
They added that this year鈥檚 theme 鈥渆ncourages us to think about the role we play in creating a future for ourselves and our community.鈥
Campus-wide events include a dance workshop, a forum that highlights the power of voting and participating in the electoral process, soccer night in Cary, an art and sip mixer, along with a discussion of feminist eco-theology and indigenous rights.