Friday, December 25, 2009

Writer Betsy Phillips and Nashville Hispanic Chamber are among city's many "wise men" this season

I frequently commemorate holidays on this web site by posting a Bible passage, so posting the cartoon above that cracks a joke about the gift-giving of the magi seems like a 180 from that, and possibly offensive to some. But today is Christmas, material gifts were given on the first Christmas, materials gifts will be given to my children and family today (including some last night), and material gifts were given earlier this month to kids in families with immigration problems in news that was so outstanding that I believe today - Christmas - is the right time for a follow-up.

To recap, earlier this month, I posted about a Tennessean story describing kids being turned away from Christmas toy charity programs because of the immigration status of their parents, and about the subsequent outpouring of Nashville generosity to find toys for those kids.

This follow-up is to mention the efforts of local writer Betsy Phillips and also the Nashville Area Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, who demonstrated wisdom in their generosity this Christmas season. Their efforts reveal the wisdom and generosity of many others, also named below.

Betsy Phillips (lifting up Houston reversals, Tom Grimaldi, Catholic Charities, Metro Social Services, El Crucero, and the West Nashville United Methodist Church)

Nashville writer Betsy Phillips blogs as "Aunt B." at Tiny Cat Pants and in her own name at the Nashville Scene's Pith in the Wind. Phillips' multiple posts on the toys-not-for-those-tots controversy reached her sizable audience, from her initial post on the national story before it became a Nashville story:
But, in what I count as a Christmas Miracle, both the Salvation Army and the Houston Fire Department seem to have recently “clarified” their policy and children in the same circumstances as Jesus was will no longer be turned away.
...to her Sunday School lesson for the charities turning kids away, on the Nashville Scene blog:
It does take an act of God to get people to act decently toward each other.
...to her praise for Tom Grimaldi and others who were the focus of the Tennessean story on the people who contacted the newspaper to give gifts:
These are the folks next year who should get to be the Grand Marshalls of the city’s Christmas Parade.
...to her call to the Tennessee Immigrant and Refugee Rights Coalition for ideas on where people could send toys to these kids:
I have talked to TIRRC about whether they know of charities that don’t discriminate based on immigration status. They will be getting back to me. I will share what I know when I know it.
...to her reporting back on agencies giving gifts to children regardless of immigration status:
Catholic Charities
Metro Social Services
El Crucero
The Lay Pastor for Integrative Ministries at the West Nashville United Methodist Church (they also could use some volunteer help this weekend, if you’re bilingual).
As these posts demonstrate, Phillips readily and generously employs her passionate writing to shed light not only on the plights of immigrants but also on the boneheadedness or kindheartedness of their hosts, whichever the case may be.

Nashville Area Hispanic Chamber of Commerce

The Nashville Area Hispanic Chamber of Commerce also organized a toy drive for children regardless of immigration status. The event attracted the rare bipartisan support of the Middle Tennessee Hispanic Democrats and the Republican National Hispanic Assembly of Tennessee, and news of the drive was picked up by NewsChannel5. That report was then picked up by the national blog LatinaLista.

Over 200 children enjoyed toys, hot chocolate, food, singing, and time with Santa. The chamber posted photos of the event here.

"Merry Christmas to all."

Photo by Terry Hart. Licensed under Creative Commons.

Thursday, December 24, 2009

Christmas to bridge national differences and generational divides at Iglesia de Dios Hispana de Nashville

7 p.m. Christmas Eve service, 1500 expected to attend

"To introduce assimilated youth to their ancestry"

The Tennessean reports today on the Christmas celebration of Iglesia de Dios Hispana de Nashville, which is also advertised in the above video.

National and generational divides within the church are designed to be bridged by way of the cultural components of the celebration, according to writer Chris Echegaray:
The different offerings provided insight to the variety in Latin American culture even though the Spanish language unites most of the congregants, [Bishop Jose] Rodriguez said. The food and beverages also provided a way to introduce assimilated youth to their ancestry.

"We have a lot who are born here with Latino ancestry, so we want them to know the customs," Rodriguez said. "It's a way to teach them and for us to learn from each other as well."
This Hispanic Christian generational gap is a fairly universal phenomenon in immigrant churches. My family experienced it at a Spanish-speaking Southern Baptist congregation we attended for two years in Nashville, with the elders fretting about the deteriorating Spanish language skills of the youth group, and David Park has live-blogged the statistic that "up to 95% of post high-school churchgoers leave the ethnic church." Bridget Rivera's piece on her Southern and Latina identities is also insightful.

This is not a new phenomenon - I've mentioned before the the German Christian generational gap in 1870's Nashville:
By 1870 most of the Germans in the city belonged to the second generation. ... These younger Germans were much less concerned with maintaining European ties and traditions than their parents were. ... [T]hey had grown up in Tennessee and many of them had a distinctly Southern point of view.
Other highlights from today's story about Iglesia de Dios Hispana de Nashville:
  • 7 p.m. Christmas Eve service
  • Marks a 15-year tradition at the church
  • Food and drink from all over Latin America
  • 1,500 people expected to attend
  • Posters and murals created just for the event
  • Food baskets and 1,000 toys to be distributed
  • Church plans move to 25-acre site in 2011
People mentioned:
  • Jose Rodriguez, Bishop
  • Wendy Bustamante, from El Salvador, talking about learning about Venezuelan food
  • Mireya Quezada, missionary director
Read the story in its entirety here.

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

A plea at La Espiga bakery on Nolensville Road, "la espiga" in the Gospels, and Christmas thoughts of Alex, Alexis, and Alan

next to the cash register at La Espiga on Nolensville Road

Earlier this month, I was buying a "tres leches" cake at the La Espiga bakery on Nolensville Road.

If you haven't tasted tres leches cake, it's kind of moist. I don't really have a taste for it, but it's my wife's favorite, and it was her birthday.

As I was paying for the cake (and a few other pastries we called "Berliners" in Chile), I noticed a box next to the cash register, with this message:
"I need your cooperation with little boy Axel. He was born with a bone problem called 'antigriposis.' His parents Alexis and Alan were reported, and the three children stayed behind with their grandmother. I ask you for your help, brothers. May God bless you."
Axel, Alexis, and Alan: three names of Hispanic Nashvillians. Two of them - the "reported" parents, may or may not return here to be Nashvillians ever again. If they do, it will almost certainly constitute an immigration violation, at least under current law.

What "la espiga" means, and Jesus' lawbreaking disciples

Before I sat down at the computer to post this picture and this story, I had thought "La Espiga" - the name of this bakery - meant "the crumb." Actually, "miga" is the word for crumb, and "la espiga" means, "the head of grain." It's a word that comes up a lot in the Bible.

I went looking for some "head of grain" verses, and three of the four times the word appears in the Gospels is in a story about Jesus and his disciples being rebuked for lawbreaking.

One recounting of the story is in Mark 2:23-28 (NLT):
One Sabbath day as Jesus was walking through some grainfields, his disciples began breaking off heads of grain to eat. But the Pharisees said to Jesus:
Look, why are they breaking the law by harvesting grain on the Sabbath?
Jesus said to them:
Haven’t you ever read in the Scriptures what David did when he and his companions were hungry? He went into the house of God (during the days when Abiathar was high priest) and broke the law by eating the sacred loaves of bread that only the priests are allowed to eat. He also gave some to his companions.
My thoughts turn to Axel, Alexis, and Alan during this Nashville Christmas.

Monday, December 21, 2009

Middle Tennessee Christmas and Hanukkah services were in German


German was the predominant language in some of the mid-state's 19th century Catholic, Jewish, and Protestant congregations:

Catholic:
[A]t the Church of the Assumption most sermons were said in German until World War I
Jewish:
Jews were very active in civic life in Nashville. Many were involved with non-Jewish fraternal societies like the Masons and Odd Fellows. A number joined German-speaking lodges, reflecting their strong German identity. Indeed, most of the sermons delivered in Nashville’s synagogues in the latter half of the 19th century were in German.
Protestant:
They established Hohenwald (which translates into High Forest). The cultural traditions of the Swiss were kept alive by the Swiss Singing Society, a band called "Echoes of Switzerland," waltzes at Society Park in Hohenwald, and the annual production "Willhelm Tell." Church services at the Swiss Reformed and German Reformed Churches were conducted in German.

21st century Tennessee-Germany connections

Nashville extends its German traditions through to the 21st century in a variety of ways: Photo by Zadi Diaz. Licensed under Creative Commons.

Thursday, December 17, 2009

"Illegal" word problem



Criticism not applied to Americans, and not specific


The importance of a name


Whether the word "illegal" is an appropriate way to describe someone with an immigration problem is the subject of debate again.

On Tuesday, USA Today prominently used the term "illegal students" in an otherwise informative article about students trapped in their immigration status, and Change.org organized a petition in protest. I think it's important to sign the Change.org petition, even though I would quibble with its wording.

The use of "illegal" as an adjective or a noun has bothered me for a while. In October, 2006, a reader-inspired fake ad campaign (sample above) pointed out the ethical problem of how Americans break the law but never call ourselves "illegal." One of my January 2007 posts called out the Tennessean when it used the word "illegal" as a noun in a headline, a practice which the National Association of Hispanic Journalists said they are "particularly troubled" by. In October of this year, Kleinheider noticed my use of the term "visaless" in one of my stories about the Baby Yair case, in which the State wouldn't turn over a rescued baby to family members on the grounds of their immigration status.

Name-calling is easy when the name can't apply to you


When a label is a criticism, it's ethically important for the label to be one that could apply to the person making the criticism.

We all know we don't use "illegal" in the same way when we describe Americans with other legal problems. I remember seeing "illegal" used as a noun in an ABC News headline recently, so on a lark I just searched Google News for all ABC News stories using the word "illegal" in a headline. I went through ten pages of results, and there wasn't a single reference to an American lawbreaker. There were a few references to illegal conduct by Americans outside the context of immigration, but no use of the word "illegal" to describe the American person or people in the story.

A Google search revealed some reference to "visaless" in reference to Americans traveling abroad without permission, so that gives the label greater credibility as one that could be used in reference to foreign citizens who are traveling or living abroad (here) without permission.

The words "internationals" or "expatriates" are other words that are more often used to describe Americans abroad that could be adopted into our vocabulary of describing foreign citizens here.

Be specific


In describing the status of someone with immigration problems, "visaless" and/or "unvisaed" are also more specific than "illegal" or even "undocumented" or "unauthorized," because it's the lack of a visa that more specifically describes people without immigration status. Most visaless people usually are in possession of whatever documents the government allows them to have - you've never seen a visaless immigrant driving without a license plate, have you? And until the change in TN law, unvisaed immigrants had drivers' licenses, which made the concept of a driver who is legally licensed but still referred to as "undocumented" even more clearly nonsensical.

If you search the web for "unvisaed" you don't see the term used much here in the U.S., except by me in the pages of HispanicNashville.com - but it's a commonly used term in Australia. As mentioned above, "visaless" is an even more common term. Both are reasonable alternatives.

And just to be clear on two points: First, figuring out what word to use is not the same thing as figuring out or making a statement on what immigration law is or how people should act in regard to immigration law. Second, I use and have used a variety of terms to describe problematic immigration status (including the less favored ones described here), so my point in this post is not to force or prohibit the use of one term or another, but to encourage the use of the best possible terms.

"I have called you by your name"


Along those lines of encouraging the use of the best possible terms, and all this having been said, it's worth remembering that the best label for someone is their name.

Some people like to joke that those of us who resist the term "illegal" would call a thief in our homes an "undocumented explorer" or something like that. In response to that kind of joke, and putting aside for a moment the fact that they wouldn't use the term "illegal thief" either, my thought is that if someone is living and working in your house and getting paid for that work for a number of years, it's you who is out of place if you're calling them anything other than their name.

The importance of a name was eloquently invoked by Phil Bennett of Belmont Church in his recent post, "His name is James." I encourage you to read Phil's full post here. In the comments, Becky Nickins drove the point home for Christians:
"I have called you by your name; you are Mine”
Is. 43:1

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Nashvillians respond with generosity after children turned away from toy donation programs because of immigration law


Four-year-old Karla Montiel will be receiving gifts from kind Nashvillians this year, even though her parents were turned away from the Salvation Army Angel Tree program.

The Tennessean first reported Sunday on children being turned away, even if they are U.S. citizens, from programs that require Social Security numbers from their parents. The Tennessean then reported yesterday on the backlash of support for those kids.

Photo by Trevor Coultart. Licensed under Creative Commons.

Friday, December 11, 2009

Our Lady of Guadalupe hosts major celebration this weekend


Photo by Loraine Segovia

"Students and aficionados of Hispanic culture will want to witness firsthand this great event"

The Nashville Spanish Language Meetup Group sent out this invitation to Saturday's Festejo de Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe at Our Lady of Guadalupe Catholic Church at 3112 Nolensville Road in Nashville.:
Students and aficionados of Hispanic culture will want to witness firsthand this great event, probably the most celebrated date in the Hispanic calendar. Below is the schedule of the 2-day event beginning on Dec. 11, as celebrated by Our Lady of Guadalupe Catholic Church in Nashville.

NOTE: The first day's schedule is quite lengthy (about 7 hours) and no one is expected to stay for the complete duration of the event.

Because parking may be scarce, we will meet at 7 pm at the K-mart located at the corner of Harding Place and Nolensville Rd., then carpool as a group to the church.

El horario del Festejo (primer día) de La Iglesia Católica de Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe, ubicado en 3112 Nolensville Road en Nashville (former site of Radnor Baptist Church):

5 pm - Rosario
5:45 pm - Danza
6:30 pm - Reflexion
7:30 pm - Danza
8:00 pm - Reflexion
9:00 pm - Apariciones Guadalupanas
10:00 pm - Alabanzas y Ofrendas
11:00 pm - Santa Misa
12:00 pm - Mañanitas y Bendiciones de Objetos Religiosos


http://iglesiacatolicanuestrasenoradeguadalupe.org

Thursday, December 10, 2009

Mack talks taquitos, shares family memories


Mack

Both parents were Mexican citizens, met in the U.S., served in World War II, returned to education after childhood, and were voracious readers

Yesterday, in a post titled "1145 Words about Chile", Middle Tennessee writer Mack of Coyote Chronicles reminisced about his "countless hours" eating taquitos growing up, which all began with mother's taco stand:
Half a century ago, my mother operated a successful taco stand located in East Los Angeles. Eventually, she sold it to her sister, who parlayed that small business into a high volume Mexican food restaurant on the edge of the San Gabriel Valley. It wasn’t really a “sit-down” kind of joint, as patrons were required to order at one window, and pick up their food at another. In fact, for most of my life, the place didn’t have tables. My Aunt built her business on three items; taquitos, (seasoned beef or chicken tightly rolled into corn tortillas and fried to order) and red or green burritos. I remember countless hours sitting at my aunt’s feet as she rolled taquito after taquito. In front of her was a stack of warm tortillas, and a stainless steel pan with chicken or beef. She would roll 20 or 30 of them, then reach down and hand me one, un-fried, of course, and I would quickly gobble it down. They were soft and flavorful and I ate thousands of them growing up. Lately, I have been making them for my family, and the kids love them.
(Read the whole post, about cooking with chile, here.)

Mack's parents, both of whom were Mexican citizens who served in World War II, are an intermittent subject on his blog. In a heartfelt 2007 Mother's Day post, Mack said, "If I could choose any set of parents for another go-around on this Earth, I would pick you and Dad every time."

More about Mack's mom from his Mother's Day 2007 post:
My mother arrived in this country in a shoe box, crossing over from Mexicali with her parents and older siblings. She grew up poor, worked as a migrant fruit picker, until she met and married my father, and started a small taco stand in East Los Angeles, after working in the factories during WW2. She had an 8th grade education, yet read voraciously. Eventually, she returned to school and became a vocational counselor to our growing Vietnamese community. She raised four children, lost one as a newborn.
...
[She] was the type of woman that, if you showed up at her door at 3:00 a.m., she would make you feel that your visit was the highlight of her day, because it was. My mother loved unconditionally, I think this fact alone made her the most Christian person I ever knew, yet I can’t recall her ever setting foot in a church. She loved everyone like family. I mean everyone. Our house was always full of people, friends, family, and strangers, even, though I believe no one ever felt like a stranger for long in my mother’s home. She would happily cook for 1 or 100, it really didn’t matter to her. When I came home from school, or later, when I would just drop by to visit, she would head to the stove, and warm tortillas with butter magically appeared on a plate.
In April of this year, Mack wrote about his father:
My father was not a happy person. Sure, he had his moments, and the rest of the family never really knew how to deal with him when he was uncharacteristically joyful. He was explosive, violent, moody and reclusive. Until he returned from WWII, he had little education. His father died when he was young, probably from a combination of hard work and alcohol consumption. Not much is known about my father’s youth, the few stories passed down (almost always from his brother) portrayed him as a serious young man, prone to brooding and violence. I’m pretty sure that he never knew how to show his love except by providing, which he did well. He was detached, yet controlling.

Almost all of my memories of my dad at home are of him sitting in his chair, reading. He read everything. He spent so much time in the local library that, when he passed, the library dedicated an entire bookcase to my father’s memory.

I have spent much of my adult life wondering what it is that drove him. It was, I’m sure, a source of great pride that he went to college after the war (The G.I. Bill was and is a beautiful thing) and earned a degree in accounting.
Some other Hispanic Nashvillians who could share memories of California are Conexion Americas' "Orgullo Hispano" award winner Miguel Gonzalez, Metropolitan Nashville Airport Authority President & CEO Raul Regalado, WLLC-Telefutura Channel 42 General Manager Eric Alvarez, Nissan Americas' Hispanic employees including Jaime Ortiz and Stephanie Valdez Streaty, one-time Nicaraguan prisoner Eric Volz, Vanderbilt professor Lorraine Lopez, former Metro Schools director Pedro Garcia and his wife Priscilla Partridge de Garcia, sheetrock hanger Jose Ramirez, and clothier Manuel.

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Tennessee Immigrant and Refugee Rights Coalition holds 7th annual Membership Convention on Saturday


The award-winning Tennessee Immigrant and Refugee Rights Coalition (TIRRC) holds its seventh annual Membership Convention this Saturday, December 12 at the Hotel Preston Convention Center on Briley Parkway:
"My humanity is bound up in yours, for we can only be human together"

- Desmond Tutu

The TIRRC Convention is our biggest annual event where we come together as TIRRC staff, volunteers, supporters and member organizations to reflect upon the year, think strategically about 2010, and celebrate together as an immigrant rights movement. There will be some amazing workshops and trainings for individuals and organizations alike, as well as a Cultural Celebration Dinner to end the day!

When: Saturday, Dec. 12th from 9:30-5:00pm

Where: Hotel Preston Convention Center, 733 Briley Parkway, Nashville TN

REGISTER TODAY

Click here for stories on previous TIRRC conventions.

Monday, December 7, 2009

Every one

Every Face

Friday, December 4, 2009

Grammy-nominated Sones de México at TPAC Saturday


Fiesta Mexicana in Nashville
a Sones de México presentation

Saturday, December 5th 2009 @ 2:00 p.m.
James Polk Theater at TPAC
505 Deaderick Street, Nashville

Tickets: $11 & $14
Tickets available online and at the Theater

Nashville Scene preview here.

Knowing Your Rights in a Traffic Stop: seminar Saturday


WHO: Moderator, Attorney Lynda Jones-The Jones Law Group PLLC
Panelist, Attorney Jerrilyn Manning- Member of TN Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers
Panelist, Attorney Dawn Deaner- Metropolitan Public Defender
Interpreters, Nashville Area Hispanic Chamber of Commerce

WHAT: KNOWING YOUR RIGHTS IN A TRAFFIC STOP

WHEN: Saturday, December 5, from 9a.m. to noon
Free and open to the public

WHERE: PJ Hall of Fisk University's Jubilee Hall

From the Nashville Metro Police website:
Any person who feels that he or she has been mistreated by a sworn officer or a civilian employee of the police department has the right to make a complaint.
...
If at any time an officer or an employee of the Metropolitan Police Department mistreats, harasses, intimidates or commits a crime against you, remember the names of the officers, what they looked like and the time and date of the event.

You should then report the incident immediately. It may be reported to the officer's immediate supervisor, or any other person responsible for supervising the officer. It may also be reported to the Office of Professional Accountability (hereinafter O.P.A.), the Human Relations Commission or the Offices of the NAACP or the Nashville Area Hispanic Chamber of Commerce.
Photo by Kipp Baker. Licensed under Creative Commons.

Thursday, December 3, 2009

Diana Holland stars in "Christmas on the Pecos" December 4-20

"Rosa" character and her husband are joined by a cast of cowboys, Santa Claus, the Border Patrol and an angel

Holland most recently starred in "The Nashville Monologues"

Diana Holland, of Tango Nashville and Hispanic Link Consulting, will be starring in the Groundworks Theatre production "Christmas on the Pecos" December 4-20 at Darkhorse Theater in Nashville. Showtimes are Tue/Thu/Fri/Sat at 7:30pm and Sundays at 2:30pm. Admission is $15 Adults, $12 Students/Seniors, and $10 Tuesdays.

The story of "Christmas on the Pecos" is described in the official synopsis:
GroundWorks Theatre presents the gentle comedy, "Christmas on the Pecos," written by company founder Robert A. O'Connell. On Christmas Eve, two modern cowboys, sheltering from a storm, find themselves host to a couple seeking protection from the storm and the law. The arrival of Angel Vasquez and Rosa, his very pregnant wife, is soon followed by a man who thinks he just might be Santa Claus, two members of the U.S. Border Patrol and one amazing angel, who all make this a most memorable holy night.
The Nashville Scene says in its write-up that "O’Connell exploits the theme of illegal immigration here, presenting a parallel to Joseph and Mary’s journey to Bethlehem, and his cowpoke lead characters battle wits over the pluses and minuses of Christmas cheer."

The Tennessean recently reported here on Holland's decision to take to the Nashville stage:
Holland recently returned to acting after a long hiatus. She co-founded Tango Nashville as well as established her own business, Hispanic Link Consulting, but the chance to be back onstage has breathed new life. She recently finished The Nashville Monologues with Rhubarb Theatre Company, but is excited — albeit feeling the pressure — to be the first actor to play Rosa in the premiere.
Read the full Tennessean article, which also refers to Argentina-born Holland as being able to identify somewhat with a character looking for a better life somewhere else, here.

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Andres Gutierrez to conduct financial seminar in Spanish at Dave Ramsey's Brentwood HQ today

The Lampo Group unveils the new Spanish-speaking face of Dave Ramsey's financial education empire

The above invitation was sent out by the Tennessee Hispanic Chamber of Commerce* to its membership, announcing today's "Financial Peace" seminar in Spanish at the Dave Ramsey headquarters in Brentwood. The seminar will be led by Andres Gutierrez, who is the new face of Dave Ramsey's financial education empire to the Spanish-speaking audience. As Gutierrez puts it, he's "the Hispanic Dave Ramsey."

According to Gutierrez, Ramsey's Lampo Group has had trouble getting market penetration with its Spanish-language DVDs, due largely to the fact that even though videos of Dave Ramsey dubbed into Spanish may be effective with the individual Hispanics who take the course, the product doesn't relate culturally to a wider a Hispanic audience. Going forward, Gutierrez will the face of the "Financial Peace" message in Spanish instead of Ramsey. Over the next year, the Spanish-language DVD course will be re-written to apply to a Hispanic cultural perspective, and they will subsequently be re-filmed with Gutierrez as the speaker. Seminars and live events will feature Gutierrez, as well.

The one-hour free event today, Wednesday, will be held at 6:30 p.m., but guests are encouraged to arrive early. The venue is Financial Peace Conference Center, 1749 Mallory Lane, Brentwood, Tennessee, 37027. For more information, call 800-781-8897 or jorge.hoyos@daveramsey.com

Dave Ramsey, on hiring Andres Gutierrez: "I've found the guy we're looking for"

"We came to Tennessee, prayed about it and felt it was a calling from God"

Andres Gutierrez joined the Dave Ramsey organization in 2009 after attending a "platinum ticket" breakfast prior to a Dave Ramsey Total Money Makeover live event earlier this year, according to this recent interview with Gutierrez by his alma mater's magazine (coincidentally named Scene). Gutierrez told the Schreiner Scene how this breakfast, where he was in a room with Ramsey and only 100 other people, landed him the job:
"They were looking for someone to help reach the Hispanic community. His books had been translated, but they needed a more personal connection. I've been told he [Dave Ramsey] went back to the office after that event and said, 'I've found the guy we're looking for.'"
...
"They invited my wife and me to visit Nashville," he said. "We came to Tennessee, prayed about it and felt it was a calling from God. I hope to reach the Spanish-speaking community with this commonsense message so people can feel good about handling their finances."
Read the whole Schreiner Scene article here. It features a nice picture of Gutierrez with Dave Ramsey at the studio desk.

Prior to working for Dave Ramsey, Gutierrez was an owner at San Antonio-based Pax Financial Group, LLC, which still has this video featuring Gutierrez on YouTube. Prior to Pax, Gutierrez worked at MassMutual and John Hancock Insurance.

Gutierrez graduated from Schreiner University (Kerrville, Texas) in 1999 with a degree in chemistry. He played for the tennis team, according to his LinkedIn profile.

Gutierrez was born in Brownsville, Texas and grew up in Matamoros, Mexico. He moved back to Brownsville in high school and proceeded to Schreiner from there. Both Gutierrez and his wife still have family in Matamoros.

Gutierrez and his wife have been living in Nashville for four months, and he raves about how welcoming the city is, even telling the story of a neighbor bringing the couple a homemade pie, "like in the movies." The couple attends La Casa de Mi Padre church ("My Father's House") in Franklin.

The history section of the Dave Ramsey web site traces the organization's Spanish-language history back to the 2003 release of a Spanish translation of Financial Peace. In 2004, according to the same section, "Six FPU lessons are translated into Spanish, and more than 150 families go through the Spanish version of the program." A 2006 press release announces the translation of the full 13-week Financial Peace University DVD series into Spanish.

The company currently has two FPU Spanish advisors, Bengy del Villar and Jorge Hoyos.

how many Hispanic chambers are there in Nashville?

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

RSVPs due today for Tennessee Hispanic Chamber's Holiday Networking Luncheon


Reservations are due today for the Tennessee Hispanic Chamber of Commerce* Holiday Networking Lunch on December 3 at Chappy's:
Come Join Us for Our Holiday
Networking Lunch
Sponsored by SunTrust

Enjoy live music by Sones de México,
courtesy of TPAC.

Thursday, December 3rd
11:30 a.m. - 1:00 p.m.
@ Chappys Restaurant
Napoleon Banquet Room

(Located on 18th Avenue)
1721 Church St
Nashville, TN 37203-2921
Free Parking is Available.

R.S.V.P. by December 1st
www.tnhcc.org
how many Hispanic chambers are there in Nashville?
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...