Nuestras Historias

News & Updates from Nuestras Raíces @RILA

Latino Oral History Project /RILatino Arts Awarded Competative NEH Grant


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Rhode Island Latino Arts • Latino Oral History Project, in partnership with Rhode Island Council for the Humanities has been selected to receive a competitive Latino Americans: 500 Years of History (LA500) grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) and the American Library Association (ALA).


As one of 203 grant recipients selected from across the country, Rhode Island Latino Arts (RILA) will receive a very competitive grant to produce public programming on Latino history and culture.

At the center of the programming is the six-part, NEH-supported documentary film Latino Americans, created for PBS in 2013 by the WETA public television station. The award-winning series chronicles the history of Latinos in the United States from the 16th century to present day. (Learn more about the series here.) The funding will enable RILA to present the PBS series with locally generated programming that connects Rhode Island Latino history to the national stories shared in the series.

The grant will also contribute to the development of local Latino history projects, including augmenting RILA’s Nuestras Raíces: Latino Oral History Project of RI archive with the creation of a Foto Historias tour on Rhode Tour, a statewide mobile historical smartphone application that tells stories by and about Rhode Islanders. With these grant funds, Rhode Tour partners – Rhode Island Council for the Humanities, Brown University’s John Nicholas Brown Center for Public Humanities and Cultural Heritage, and Rhode Island Historical Society – will join Rhode Island Latino Arts in exploring issues of translation as well as intersections with Latino history on currently completed tours.

“Latino Americans are the country’s largest minority group, and they are the fastest growing population group in Rhode Island. The development of Latino communities is one of the state’s most important and compelling stories,” said Elizabeth Francis, executive director of Rhode Island Council for the Humanities. “Through this support, we will be able to expand the history collected to date and further explore issues that Latino Rhode Islanders share, as well as the diversity that makes Rhode Island distinctive. By linking the national story with local dynamics, we also will be able to continue a dialogue about moving forward,” commented Marta V. Martínez, executive director of Rhode Island Latino Arts.

Rhode Island Latino Arts programming will begin on August 15, 2015 from 12-2PM at the Southside Cultural Center with a Kick-Off of Café Recuerdos, a traveling humanities art installation that will engage participants with the theme of "Re-Examining America's Social and Cultural History."

The installation takes the form of a peddler's cart, designed by Cuban-American artist Ana Flores. It features coffee cans painted with portraits of Latino Rhode Island immigrants featured in Nuestras Raíces: The Latino Oral History Project of RI, and a story board where participants can add their own stories. As it travels throughout the state, coffee will be served, and oral histories will be collected by staff and volunteers of Nuestras Raíces. Humanities questions addressed will include: What is home? Is there any one American immigrant experience? From August to December, community partners will host the installation, providing additional programming and promotions. Learn more about Café Recuerdos here.

Click here to see a complete list of upcoming programming related to LA500. All events will be FREE and open to the public, so we hope you can find time to join us