Skip to main content

Sep 19, 2022 4:33:47 PM

Point Foundation

Back to all Posts

Hispanic and Latine Heritage Month



Sep 19, 2022 4:33:47 PM
Point Foundation

Point Foundation is excited to celebrate Hispanic and Latine Heritage Month. We are eager to highlight the voices and history of our Hispanic and Latine students who, like our society, are always at intersections of their identities. 

Hispanic and Latine identities have always been a part of the LGBTQ+ community. As our community becomes better at acknowledging the importance of diverse voices and realities of history, celebrating intersectionality is more important than ever.

Hispanic and Latine students make up 26% of our current student body at Point Foundation and 20% of students in higher education in the US. Yet, Hispanic and Latine students have debt higher than their white peers, averaging about $17,000, and taking out loans that they are more likely to default on than white students (35% vs 20%), according to NBC News. This is why Point continues to seek out and support Latine and Hispanic students through all of our scholarship programs.

“Community is survival; and as a gay, Latino Mormon raised in Texan, I know first-hand that my life wouldn’t be what it is without the community I found,” said Point Executive Director and CEO Jorge Valencia. “Growing up, I was worried about what people would think of me if they found out that I was gay. I was nervous that my Latino and religious communities would ostracize me.” 

“Keeping myself hidden away and living with fear kept me from even daring to dream what my future could look like,” Jorge said. “It wasn’t until I started to find people like me, started exploring and opening up about who I am, that I really got to focus on the life I wanted and celebrate all aspects of myself."

Read more about Jorge's journey as a gay Mormon Latino growing up in south Texas in his Advocate piece.

What is Hispanic and Latine Heritage Month?

September 15 to October 15 is National Hispanic American Heritage Month. The start of this celebration aligns with the independence days of many Hispanic and Latine nations; Oct. 15 is the independence days of Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras and Nicaragua. Chile and Mexico celebrate their independence Sept. 16.

This distinction originated as Hispanic Heritage Week in 1968, signed into law by President Lyndon Johnson, which was later expanded in 1988 by the legislature and President Ronald Reagan. The original declaration recognized Hispanic people in the United States as being essential in the growth of the American economy and being a part of American heritage.



December 13, 2021, Hope Harris

Point Scholar Perspectives: Out in Higher Education

This November, Point Foundation presented our inaugural Out in Higher Ed Week, a campaign designed...

Read More

December 01, 2023, Point Foundation

2023 in Review

Point Foundation, our scholars and our alumni accomplished a lot in 2023 . Our community remains...

Read More

October 31, 2022, teampoint

Challenging School Policies and Decisions

DOWNLOAD THE RESOURCE Updated March 2025 Despite great strides in LGBTQ+ belonging in recent years...

Read More

Join the Mailing List