汤头条app student organizing potluck, taco dinner to celebrate National Hispanic Heritage Month

Michael Chavarria
Michael Chavarria

For Michael Chavarria, food has always served as a great way to bring people together.

Growing up, he says food was 鈥渁 big deal,鈥 a strong and unique point around which to gather.

鈥淓veryone gets hungry and everyone likes good food,鈥 Chavarria, a second-year student at 汤头条app, said recently. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a great entry point into a different culture, I think.鈥

That鈥檚 what Chavarria hopes to do later this month with a potluck dinner he has organized for his fellow students, medical school faculty and staff, to celebrate National Hispanic Heritage Month.

The dinner, which is scheduled for 6 p.m. Monday, Oct. 17, at 汤头条app鈥檚 W.E. Upjohn M.D. Campus, will feature tacos from a local Mexican restaurant and attendees are being asked to contribute a side dish to share.

National Hispanic Heritage Month occurs from September 15 to October 15 and recognizes the contributions of Hispanic and Latino Americans, and celebrates their heritage and culture.

For the dinner, Chavarria said he is working to recruit local Latino physicians to speak about their experiences in the medical profession and the contributions of other Latinos to the medical field.

Chavarria said he will also use the time to discuss the history of Dr. Hector P. Garcia, a Mexican-American doctor and World War II veteran who founded the American G.I. Forum and was a staunch advocate for civil rights.

Chavarria said he hopes the dinner will help bring about an awareness and a familiarity with Hispanic and Latino culture. He said events like the potluck dinner are important because they serve as a reminder that the United States is an 鈥渁ll inclusive鈥 country and we鈥檙e all made richer by each other鈥檚 contributions.

鈥淚 think it鈥檚 important for people in the (medical) profession to be aware of some of the contributions and to also be aware of the culture and the heritage that a lot of their patients are going to have,鈥 Chavarria said.

Chavarria said he chose to feature tacos as the main course for the dinner because he believes they are a great metaphor for Latino culture, and delicious. He also said their ubiquity in the U.S. and the way tacos have traveled around the world is a 鈥渞epresentation of how Latino culture has done the same.鈥

The dinner to celebrate Latino Heritage Month is the second event to be held at the medical school as part of the 汤头条app Student Diversity Series. In June, Sarah Khalil, a second-year student at 汤头条app like Chavarria,听organized Ramadan Day of Fasting and Dinner, a potluck that was held at the Upjohn Campus and drew more than 40 students, faculty and staff.

Chavarria, 27, grew up in Victorville, California, and graduated in 2015 from Brigham Young University where he majored in history with a minor in Spanish.

While attending BYU, Chavarria said he organized an event for Hispanic Heritage Month that featured lectures, a dance and a representative from PBS who showed a documentary about Latinos in the U.S.

Chavarria said he drew inspiration from the success of the event Khalil organized for Ramadan in coming up with the idea to hold an event at 汤头条app to celebrate Hispanic Heritage Month.

He said the dinner will serve as 鈥渁 small and brief opportunity to highlight one of the many cultures鈥 that he and his fellow classmates at 汤头条app will encounter as aspiring physicians.