Calo News

Sign Up for the Newsletter

Join the most important Latinx owned and operated outlet in Los Angeles.

  • Contact Us
  • Subscribe
  • Donate
  • HOME
  • ABOUT US
  • JUSTICE
  • EQUITY
  • OPINION
  • HEALTH
  • REPRESENTATION
  • POLITICS
  • EDUCATION
  • CULTURE
  • ESPAÑOL
  • Instagram
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
Skip to content
  • Instagram
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
CALÓ NEWS

CALÓ NEWS

Our community. Our narrative. Our history.

  • Contact Us
  • Subscribe
  • Donate
  • HOME
  • ABOUT US
  • JUSTICE
  • EQUITY
  • OPINION
  • HEALTH
  • REPRESENTATION
  • POLITICS
  • EDUCATION
  • CULTURE
  • ESPAÑOL
Home » Oaxacan

Tag: Oaxacan

Artists Esteban Zuñiga Ruiz and Francisco Flores hand-build the structure of a traditional turtle costume made from arundo reeds in the tradition of Mexico's Costa Chica region, the epicenter of Afro-Mexican culture.
Posted inRepresentation

The Costa Chica’s Afro-Mexican culture is coming to San Bernardino

by Leslie Berestein, LAist Staff March 21, 2023March 20, 2023

A special museum exhibit coming to San Bernardino this year will highlight a little-known aspect of Mexican culture: the Afro-Mexican community. The exhibit at the San Bernardino’s Garcia Center for the Arts will be titled “Afróntalo,” used here as a play on words. In English, the term means “face it.”

Posted inHealth

CALÓ HERO: MIRNA MARTINEZ, proud queer bilingual Oaxacan therapist in CA

by Brenda Fernanda Verano July 26, 2022

Martinez likes to refer to herself as a queer Oaxacan, first-generation American, bilingual therapist. At 27, she is also proudly among the approximately 6 percent of Latinos who serve as therapists in the U.S. Martinez credits her Oaxacan culture and the values instilled in her as a driving force for her current career and future goals.

Posted inEquity

MIRNA MARTINEZ, proud queer bilingual Oaxacan therapist in CA

by Brenda Fernanda Verano July 26, 2022October 6, 2022

Martinez likes to refer to herself as a queer Oaxacan, first-generation American, bilingual therapist. At 27, she is also proudly among the approximately 6 percent of Latinos who serve as therapists in the U.S. Martinez credits her Oaxacan culture and the values instilled in her as a driving force for her current career and future goals.

  • Instagram
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
An initiative of the Latino Media Collaborative - 501(c) 3.

  • Donor & Financial Transparency

  • Editorial Independence Policy
© 2023 CALÓ NEWS. Proudly powered by Newspack by Automattic