Photos
2024 Cultural Leaders Summit (March 23, 2024)
2023 A Talk with Dr. Makaziwe Mandela (Dec. 7, 2023)
2023 Fields Day at the Fields Center (Sept. 4, 2023)

















2023 Latinx Graduation (Full Photo Album CLICK HERE)
2023 Pan-African Graduation (Full Photo Album CLICK HERE)
2023 Asian Pacific Islander Desi American (APIDA) Graduation (Full Photo Album CLICK HERE)
2023 Middle Eastern, North African and Arab (MENAA) Graduation (Full Photo Album CLICK HERE)
2023 Cultural Leaders Summit
Conversation With Kelly Marie Tran 2023
Annual Women of Color Dinner 2023
Celebrating 50 Years of the Third World Center/Carl A. Fields Center [Reception & Dinner] 2023




























































































Celebrating 50 Years of the Third World Center/Carl A. Fields Center [Panel] 2023
Lunch Conversation With Danielle Ponder 2023
Latinx Heritage Month 2022
Asian Pacific Islander Desi American (APIDA) Graduation 2022
Pan-African Graduation 2022
Middle Eastern & North African (MENA) Graduation 2022
Latinx Graduation 2022
Race, Speech, and the University - April 19, 2022
Cultural Leaders Summit - March 26, 2022
“You are so lucky and blessed, so why are you complaining?” is something I’ve personally heard. When people are raising up their voices to share their experiences, they should definitely be heard rather than being silenced or hushed.
In environments like Princeton, the kinds of racism or discrimination that you experience will not be easily recognizable to you. In the Philosophy department, the white male canon that we learn makes me very conscious of my status as a woman of color.
I didn’t used to feel that there were that many people that I could relate to at Princeton. It’s something inherent to anyone from very far away. As you find community, the contrast becomes smaller and smaller. And I see that there are more similarities than I thought.
I hear about African American and other minority students having experiences with professors that were on the negative side—that tend to be something along the lines of: “You’re here because of your identity and not because of your academic prowess.”
It would be kind of nice to be able to bond with people who share my Hispanic ethnicity, but maybe right now I don’t need that.
Ideas around difference; ideas around access to goods in society? It’s one thing to talk about them as just ideas, but it’s another to think about how those ideas allow us to think about the daily challenges of people who don’t come from privilege.
Videos
