Allocution préparée pour être prononcée par la Première Dame Jill Biden lors d’une réception du Mois du patrimoine hispanique

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Welcome, everyone, to the White House! Thank you for joining us. Weren’t the Mariachi Joyas amazing? They’re students at Las Vegas High School.

The President wanted to be here with all of you today. But in this critical time, he knew he had to travel to Israel.

And, even as he is an ocean away, his heart is also here with all of you, because he will always stand with this community.

Kamala, you’ve been an incredible partner to Joe in supporting this community. He and I are grateful for your tireless work for the American people, and for your friendship. Thank you for joining us today. It’s always an honor to share a stage with you.

In 1914, in the doorway of a Laredo newspaper called El Progreso, Jovita Idár stared down a group of Texas Rangers who had come to destroy the newspaper’s building and everything in it.

Jovita was a Mexican-American journalist, suffragist, and outspoken champion for civil rights. Her writing boldly challenged injustice and had come to the attention of the governor, who sent the Rangers to silence her printing presses.

But Jovita stood in their way.

Earlier this year, she was honored with a new quarter celebrating her remarkable contributions to our history. But her whole story—the people she helped, the rights she fought to protect, the schools she opened, the legacy she left—cannot be told on a coin alone.

And the many stories of Latinos like her cannot either.

They are American stories—of courage and conviction. They showcase the strength, ingenuity, and optimism of our country and its people.

That’s why we need the National Museum of the American Latino to be built on the National Mall.