Festival del Nino 2010

El evento que todos los niños de Vancouver han estado esperando todo el año - El Festival del Nino!

En fin, todos estan invitados a este evento familiar, la entrada es gratis. Lo organiza Latino Soy FM, 96.1fm(Fairchild Radio).

El Russian Hall es el lugar elegido para celebrar en grande el Festival del Niño, y se localiza en 600 Campbell Avenue, Vancouver. El evento empieza a las 12 a 6pm, que es un dia domingo, 12 de Diciembre.

Informes al 604-254-0272

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Ver mas eventos Latinos.
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Mariachi Los Castorcitos invitan a los ninos para integrarse al Mariachi Los Castorcitos.

Festival del nino 2010


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How would you feel if I said I wanted the European American community to benefit from my education and experience? It would sound like I wanted to exclude others, wouldn’t it? But because of people like you I feel like doing that very thing. It isn’t racism. It’s because every other f’ing group wants to exclude us. Often specifically. Some minorities want to only help their people and some want to band together with other groups against ‘whitey’. Well I think ‘whitey’ has had enough of that. It’s time we started doing for ourselves. We have plenty of poor uneducated people that need a hand up. They just usually don’t get it because they are the ‘wrong’ color and/or nationality.

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Here is my basic understanding. I’m a Puerto Rican who doesn’t mind being called a Latino/a or Hispanic. However, a lot of other Latinos/Hispanics are extremely particular about what they’re called (God I’ll embarressed if I get any of this wrong):Spanish- Someone from Spain. It’s acceptable to call someone who comes from Spain Spanish, but say, a Cuban couldn’t be called Spanish. All Latinos/Hispanics originally do come from Spain if you trace back into their family history far enough, but the term Spanish is correct only if they come from Spain recently.Hispanic- Well, Hispanic. The word descends from Spanish, but not people neccessarily that came right from Spain. A lot of Mexicans prefer this term. Not Brazilians, Italians or Portuguese are Hispanic. I’ll explain further below…Latino is a broad term- It can mean “Hispanics” but it also includes Portuguese, Italians, Brazilians, etc.. They can be Latino, but not Hispanic. I know a lot of Carribean Latinos (Puerto Ricans, Dominicans, etc.) prefer the term Latino. Latino/Latina comes from the language Latin.You’re going to find a lot of different answers in different places. A lot of people don’t know the difference or think they’re all the same.Good luck

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Latins = The original tribe of Latium near Rome (modern day Lazio area). Some of their descendants, combined with a partial Trojan ancestry per Virgil’s Aeneid, went on to build Rome. Later the term “Latin” was applied to all the territories of the Roman Empire which spoke a language derived from Latin. In their own languages (Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, Romanian, French), they call themselves Latino. The Italians are the closest modern relatives of the original Latins. In the Roman Empire, the others have lineage from Roman colonizers, but in Spain the people are also part Celtiberian, the French are also part Gaul, the Portuguese are part Lusitanii, but they all have a Latin lineage, and their culture is derived in some way from their Roman roots. It shows in the style of thinking, the family structure, the relationship with parents and elders, etc, sometimes in their physical similarity to Italians but not always. So I think of them as second-generation Latins.The next (third) generation of Latinos are the people in countries where the second-generation Latins explored and colonized. So French Quebec is Latin, and the Spanish-speaking areas of Central & South America and Caribbean plus the Portuguese-speaking Brazilians are Latins. This is mostly linguistic. Many people there are genetically “Latin” by ancestry, but many are Native American instead and have their own culture. Some have combined lineages, and some descend from Africa or other immigrants from anywhere in the world. Nevertheless, the most “Latin” families in Latin America usually have ancestors from Spain and Portugal, and sometimes Italy. It reflects in the type of family and its relationships, its values, culture, etc.Among the Latinos, the Spanish-speaking subset are Hispanic (those who speak the language of Hispania). Again this is mostly a linguistic term rather than an ancestral one. Some may have true Hispanic and Latin heritage and some may not, or some are partial.So an Italian is definitely a Latin (the original). In Italian that would be Latino. In the US most people think of Latinos as people coming from Latin America, where many people are truly Latinos but there are many people with other ancestries that are totally unrelated. But they all officially speak Hispanic (Spanish) which is the legacy of the Spanish Empire, which in turn has the legacy of the Roman Empire, which in turn was initiated by the tribe of Latium.

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Latino and Hispanic are very similar. The fiederfnce is that Latino describes all people in the Americas that have descended from a group of people that spoke a romance language(which root from latin). That categorizes french, Italians, Spanish, Portuguese, etc. Hispanic today describes people descended from those who are spanish speaking in the americas. In reality it is suppose to categorize people from Hispania(Iberian Peninsula). Spanish categorizes people with Spanish citizenship. They are also called Spaniards. Also many of the other answerers are incorrect in saying they are similar in race. Most Spanish are white while Hispanics and Latinos are racially diverse. They could be Amerindian(Native American), Mestizo(White and Native American, Mulatto(White and Black), fully white(either from spanish or other europeans), or a mixture between these. None of the terms describe a race. Latino and Hispanic describe an ethnicity, while Spanish describes a nationality.

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