妻友社区

妻友社区 celebrates Hispanic Heritage Month with food, music, art

Nancy Ciudad-Simmons
Nancy Ciudad-Simmons provides information about a 鈥淩etablo Ayacuchano" (Peru), a type of articulated box that is used for storytelling of historical, religious or everyday events.

The richness of the Hispanic/Latino culture was on display at 妻友社区鈥檚 (GGC) Hispanic Heritage Festival, held on GGC鈥檚 campus. Sponsored by the college鈥檚 (HACER) living-learning community and the Organization of Latin American Students (OLAS) student group, the event kicked of a long slate of campus activities to celebrate Hispanic Heritage Month.

Nancy Ciudad-Simmons said the event was designed to bring awareness, engagement and appreciation of the Hispanic/Latino culture. Ciudad-Simmons, who is a senior advisor at GGC said countries such as M茅xico, Costa Rica and Venezuela were among the Spanish-speaking countries represented at the event.听

Her colleague, student success advisor Diana Gonzalez displayed the pieces she created as part of the HACER Colores art exhibition at the event based on myths and legends from her home country, Colombia. HACER Colores drew students and staff who were eager to display art from their home countries to participants.

Gonzalez was also on hand to demonstrate a dance called 鈥淓l Sanjuanero鈥 with her dance partner, GGC senior information technology major Alejandro Osorio. The folk dance originates from San Juan de Pasto, Colombia and is performed along with a bambuco song bearing the same name. Gonzalez said in her culture, the traditional dance is typically learned at an early age. 听Gonzalez said she learned the dance when she was eight.

鈥淏ut I had to re-learn it for the presentation,鈥 she laughed. 鈥淚t took us about three weeks to re-learn the dance.鈥

GGC will continue its Hispanic Heritage Month celebration with campus events through mid-October.

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