Vol. 61 No. 40 | Thursday, October 7, 2021

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Vol. 61 No. 40

|

Thursday, October 7, 2021

www.sdvoice.info

Serving San Diego County’s African & African American Communities 61 Years

Live well Center Groundbreaking

BLACK EDUCATORS TAKE ON

Hesitancy as Gov. Newsom Issues

COVID Vaccination Mandate

Photo: Katerina Holmes

By Aldon Thomas Stiles California Black Media As the COVID-19 pandemic lingers on with Black Californians still lagging behind on getting fully vaccinated, leaders in the state, including Gov. Newsom, are taking steps to push more people to get the shot. It is the most effective way, public health experts say, to end the global public health crisis.

see page 11

County officials and community members break ground at the new Live Well Center located at Euclid Avenue and Market Street on the former Tubman-Chavez Community Center lot. Photo: Mike Norris

See MANDATE page 2

What does being

PUBLIC HEALTH ORDER &

Covid-19 Updates

Afro-Latinx mean?

see pg. 19

Covid-19 cases in southeast 8,954

92115 7,361

92105

9,199

5,685 8,900

92102

92114

92113

4,421 92139 SOURCE: County of San Diego a/o 9/29/21

Monterey Jazz Hits Social Justice Vibe

Lincoln Homecoming Game

see page 10

see page 9

CA COVID-19 Rent Relief Program

Still Accepting Applications Voice & Viewpoint Newswire Although California’s statewide eviction moratorium ended on September 30, 2021, the California COVID19 Rent Relief program, put on by the State of California Business, Consumer Services and Housing Agency, is still available to help those struggling with paying off past due rent and utility bills. The end of the eviction moratorium means

Photo: Kindel Media

that California residents will now be fully responsible for paying past due rent. The CA Rent Relief program, however, will continue to accept applications until all funds are exhausted. Under this program, residents can have up to 100 percent of their past due rents and utility bills paid off. In addition, See RELIEF page 2

Henrietta Lacks estate sues company using her ‘stolen’ cells By Michael Kunzelman Associated Press The estate of Henrietta Lacks sued a biotechnology company on Monday, accusing it of selling cells that doctors at Johns Hopkins Hospital took from the

Black woman in 1951 without her knowledge or consent as part of “a racially unjust medical system.” Tissue taken from the woman's tumor before she died of cervical See LACKS page 2

Attorney Ben Crump, second from left, walks with Ron Lacks, left, Alfred Lacks Carter, third from left, both grandsons of Henrietta Lacks, and other descendants of Lacks, whose cells have been used in medical research without her permission, outside the federal courthouse in Baltimore, Monday, Oct. 4, 2021. They announced during a news conference that Lacks’ estate is filing a lawsuit against Thermo Fisher Scientific for using Lacks’ cells, known as HeLa cells. (AP Photo/Steve Ruark)

Photo: Courtesy of SpanishMama.com / Elizabeth Alvarado

During Hispanic Heritage Month, consider the complex identities within the Latinx community By Laura Onyeneho Word in Black It goes without saying that Blackness and Latinidad aren’t mutually exclusive. The identity of being Black and Hispanic is multifaceted and multidimensional. If you didn’t notice, this is Hispanic Heritage Month, and as we continue to celebrate Latinx history, their contributions to society, and the culture, we often don’t take into consideration the complex identities within the Latinx community. Why celebrate Hispanic Heritage Month without making these complex identities a topic of discussion? What does being “Hispanic” mean? According to the Pew Res e arch C enter survey, one-quarter of all U.S Latinos self-identify as AfroLatinx, Afro-Caribbean or of African descent with roots in Latin America. At times, we are accustomed to clumping together roughly 62 million people with ancestry in Brazil, Cuba, Honduras,

El Salvador, Columbia, Guatemala, the Dominican Republic (the list goes on) under one umbrella of being Hispanic, that we forget to ask what they truly identify themselves as. For four Houston-based Afro-Latinx members, racism, white supremacy, lack of education and exposure to the Afro-Latinx reality are some of the few issues impacting the community at large. Here’s what AfroLatinx in America means to them.

Let the People Be Heard “To me, being Afro-Latinx is being proud in your Blackness as a Spanish person. Often times I was told I either wasn’t “Black Enough” or “Latina Enough.” With having African and Latin roots, I descend from two powerful groups of people African American and See AFRO-LATINX page 2

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