LULAC History - All for One and One for All
During its 80 years of history,
LULAC has worked hard to bring many of the positive social and economic changes that Hispanic Americans have seen.
In 1945, a California LULAC Council
successfully sued to integrate the Orange County School System, which
had been segregated on the grounds that Mexican children were "more
poorly clothed and mentally inferior to white children."
Additionally, in 1954, LULAC brought another
landmark case, Hernandez vs. the State of Texas, to protest the fact
that not a single Mexican American in Texas had ever been called to
jury duty. The Supreme Court ruled this exclusion unconstitutional.
Since then, LULAC has fought for voting rights
and full access to the political process, and equal educational
opportunity for Hispanic children. It has been a long and often
difficult struggle, but LULAC's record of activism continues
to this day, as LULAC councils across the nation hold voter
registration drives and citizenship awareness sessions, sponsor
health fairs and tutorial programs, and raise scholarship money
for the LULAC National Scholarship Fund. This fund, in
conjunction with the LNESC (LULAC National Educational Service
Centers), has assisted almost 10 percent of the 1.1 million students
who have gone to college.
LULAC's activism has extended to the realm of language
and cultural rights as well. In response to an alarming increase
in xenophobia and anti-Hispanic sentiment, LULAC councils
have fought back by holding seminars and public symposiums on
language and immigration issues, and its officers have spoken
out on television and radio against the "English Only"
movement to limit the public (and in some cases, private) use
of minority languages.