Skip to main content

Latinx Panel Shares Stories, Struggles and Solutions Related to Immigration


The tears flow as soon as Alvaro Martinez, Jr. starts talking about moving from Mexico to the U.S. at age nine. “My life completely changed once I moved to the U.S.,” he said. “I have lived through many difficult situations throughout my life.”

Martinez was part of an Oct. 9 panel discussion dubbed “Latinx Immigrants: Stories, Struggles and Triumphs in Utah,” held in the Oak Room of the Student Center at Salt Lake Community College’s Taylorsville Redwood Campus. Mequette Sorensen, interim associate dean for the SLCC School of Economics, Psychology & Sociology, formed a committee to plan and secure funding for the panel as part of Hispanic Heritage Month, which runs Sept. 15 to Oct. 15. “I felt it was time for me to organize another opportunity for our Latinx students to celebrate their heritage, bring important issues to our college and provide an educational forum for all students to learn more,” Sorensen said.

The panel included Martinez, a Hunter High School graduate and business major at SLCC, University of Utah Dream Center Director Alonso R. Reyna Rivarola, Comunidades Unidas’ Mayra Guadalupe Cedano Robles, Utah Sen. Luz Escamilla and Utah’s Mexican Consul Jose V. Borjon.


Martinez, 20, a first-generation college student who is SLCC’s Student Association president, talks haltingly about not being able to travel with all of his family members for fear of an immigration stop and possible detainment and deportation due to lack of proper documentation. When asked about his own successes, he reminds people that his is an average story. “The change we can make as just average people is huge,” he said. “The average person really matters. I made a difference in my community, representing students, and I hope you guys go out as high school students or average people and make a difference in your community.”


About 100 people, many of them high school students, asked questions of the panel that covered a variety of topics, including racism within one’s own family. Reyna, who moved from Peru with his mom and brother at age 11, said his brother, who was light skinned, made fun of him growing up. “It was something that was really hard for me,” he said. Escamilla encouraged the audience to use the pain of “dissonance,” whether within your own family or community, as a voice for change. “If you speak up as someone who has had to cope with that,” she said, “when you see confrontation or injustice, you have that experience. Your voice is so powerful, and no one can take that away from you.”

Escamilla was also asked about children being separated in mass numbers from their parents at the U.S./Mexico border, and she emphasized the fallout is ongoing. “They haven’t fixed the problem. Until there is enough outcry, they’re not going to fix it. You’re going to go down in history. This is going to be in our U.S. history books – I guarantee it. You might want to be on the right side of history and do something.”









Popular posts from this blog

SLCC Automotive Repairs

Click to enlarge. Attention: SLCC Students, staff and faculty! Many SLCC automotive programs need vehicles to work on in these areas: 30 point inspections Oil changes Tire rotation Engine repair Brake systems repair Automatic and transmission repairs Air conditioning repair Electrical troubleshooting & repair Suspension & steering system repair Auto-body repair and painting (on a very limited basis) Please be advised that any repairs are done at the discretion of the instructors due to the subject areas they are teaching.  Because we are using your vehicles for training purposes, we offer members of the College discounts on parts and labor. Parts are at our cost plus 15% and the service fee is $20 per hour based on industry time standards (if the industry assigns an hour for a repair, that's all you're charged for, regardless of how much time it takes the student). We can also offer these services to non-college personnel on a limited basis with...

SLCC All Access

Did you know you can access SLCC lab software for free from your own computing device?   Come learn how SLCC is supporting BYOD (Bring Your Own Device) with All Access. The goal of All Access is to provide any time, any place, and any device access to college computing and lab software SLCC students, faculty and staff.  All Access works on almost any device from a PC or Mac, to tablets and smart phones.  With All Access you can use programs like Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Publisher, AutoCAD, MatLab, Mathematica, MyITLab, NetBeans, and online Library Databases.  We also provide you with online storage space so you can save your files in the cloud and have access to them wherever you are.  Anyone is welcome to this session where we will cover the basics of All Access, give you some tips and tricks for getting the most out the system, and we’ll also have some people there to help get your computer set up.  When and where: ...

SLCC Alumnus and U.S. Diplomat to Speak at 2025 Commencement

Salt Lake Community College’s 2025 Commencement speaker Branigan Knowlton will share his perspectives drawn from a 12-year career as a Foreign Service Officer with the U.S. Department of State. In serving his country, Knowlton has honed his foreign relations and diplomacy skills in Hong Kong, Mexico, Colombia and Italy. Knowlton is also a proud Salt Lake Community College (SLCC) alumnus (2002).     Knowlton currently serves at the U.S. Embassy in Rome. Before reporting to the embassy, he was detailed to the Italian Ministry of Infrastructure and Transport as part of the Transatlantic Diplomatic Fellowship program. In Bogotá, Knowlton worked for the Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement, and in Hermosillo, Mexico, he worked for the Bureau of Consular Affairs. His first assignment abroad was in Hong Kong, where he worked for the Bureau of East Asian and Pacific Affairs.     "I've actively sought opportunities that push me into the unfamiliar, even when ...