Mission Empower community members by means of education for their active participation in the workforce, civic engagement and decision making with the purpose to promote socioeconomic development.
Mission Empower community members by means of education for their active participation in the workforce, civic engagement and decision making with the purpose to promote socioeconomic development.
To live in Lowell is to appreciate its rich history, educational environment, and the diversity among cultures and nationalities. Striving to provide more opportunities to the community and with the certainty of education being the foundation for success and social growth, a group of enthusiastic Hispanics began gestating the idea of creating an organization focused on fulfilling the needs for identifying and integrating the Latinx population so they can have active participation in the Greater Lowell.
The sense of urgency for a local organization focused on the Latinx population became prominent in Fall 2018, after meetings were hosted to start mobilizing and creating more awareness on the subject. As a response, on December 15, 2018, Latinx Community Center for Empowerment (LCCE) Executive Director, Luz Vasudevan and President, Diego Leonardo undertook the responsibility for making this idea a reality when LCCE was founded.
LCCE’s Timeline:
Latinx Community Members of the city of Lowell and sourinding cities with latinos populations.
We primary focus in the lowell area and we hope to expand to predominant latino communities in massachusetts and national
Short-term allow latinx members to find their place in the community and make their voices heard by civically activating the votes and engaging other members to advocate for latino issues. Long-term become a technical school that can provie an advocacy arm to integrate latino representation in positions of power and leadership.
Grants, donations, festival as a fundraiser and fee per services.
We use language as a systematic means of conveying our feelings, sharing ideas and experiences. We use language to feel represented; to communicate our thoughts; to be a voice in our community, for our community. In 2013, the American Community Survey (ACS) reported 380 languages spoken during the sample period (2009-2013), in the United States only. At a local level, while English is spoken by 60% of Lowell population, 43.8% of Lowellians reported speaking non-English languages, including Khmer (12%), Spanish/ Spanish Creole (11%) and Portuguese (6%). Despite studies demonstrating a wide range of benefits of bilingualism or