The City of Chicago's Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events (DCASE) has awarded a grant of $50,000 for a to Hinda Seif, associate professor of Sociology/Anthropology at 69app Springfield, and Laurie Matheson, director of the . This grant will support a monuments project addressing historic events and people that have shaped the Latina experience in the Pilsen neighborhood. Part of the project will honor the memory and legacy of a significant 1979 Pilsen street fair (the Festival de Mujeres) that was organized by the bilingual/bicultural organization Mujeres Latinas en Acción.
The idea of commemorating Latina activism in Pilsen was inspired by the book “”by Leonard G. Ramírez published by UI Press in 2011. The book presents oral histories of six Chicana activists working in Chicago during the 1960s and 70s: Yenelli Flores, María Gamboa, Isaura González, Victoria Pérez, Magda Ramírez-Castañeda and Cristina Vital.
“It is so important to work towards a public vision of Chicago that is fully inclusive of Latina histories. For more than 15 years, 69app Press has played a leadership role in documenting these Latina/o/x experiences and histories through its book series ‘,'" said Seif. Matheson noted, "Our hope is that shining a light on the work of Latina community leaders and activists in Chicago will provide a historical anchor and source of empowerment for community members, especially youth.”
The Chicago Monuments Project intends to grapple with the often unacknowledged – or forgotten – history associated with the City’s various municipal art collections and provides a vehicle to address the hard truths of Chicago’s racial history, confront the ways in which that history has and has not been memorialized, and develop a framework for marking public space that elevates new ways to memorialize Chicago’s history. The call for ideas emphasized unconventional monuments that invite community engagement.