• Latinos Join Fight for Equality o As the 1960’s raged on with the Vietnam War, the Latino population was almost tripling in size. o They had started immigrating here since the late 1800’s in search of better job opportunities and to escape prosecution from their previous government.
Many Mexicans and Puerto Ricans began setting up communities throughout New York, Miami, and New Jersey.
Fidel Castro’s rule also played a big role in this mass immigration of Latinos to the United States. o Unfortunately, they too encountered severe segregation and discrimination across the nation, forced to live in neighborhoods known as barrios. o As their presence grew stronger and stronger, they began demanding equality and social change, just like …show more content…
o Along with equality, another motivation for the Latino community was that they wanted their culture and beliefs respected in the United States.
Congress eventually passed the Bilingual Education Act, allowing schools to have classes that taught about cultures from other parts of the world.
This then caused more demonstrations to break out demanding more Latinos and Mexicans to be hired as teachers, expanding their cultural pride. o Finally, the Latin community also began to gain some political power within the nation, as Jose Gutierrez founded the La Raza Unida, a Mexican political movement.
Even though some progress had been made, the Latino community still had a lot of work to do in order to achieve the change they truly desired.
• Native Americans Struggle o For years, Native Americans had always been seen as a savage and uncivilized ethnicity, as they were unable to govern their own lives still.
They would continually show resistance to following the normality of American society, and now had the change to fight for