Lánzate 2024

Lánzate 2024

Come to the political and cultural festival for Latinx changemakers who are building a future rooted in justice, liberation, and el Buenvivir.

Miami Escuelita: Aprendizaje Across Generations

We are so excited for our intergenerational panel at the Miami Escuelita for Latinx changemakers this weekend September 29-30!

Here’s a preview of the poderosas that will be sharing time and experience with us.

Rosa Alicia Clemente is an organizer, political commentator and independent journalist. An Afro-Puerto Rican born and raised in the Bronx, NY she has dedicated her life to organizing, scholarship and activism. From Cornell to prisons, Rosa is one of her generations leading scholars on the issues of Afro-Latinx identity. Rosa is the president and founder of Know Thy Self Productions, which has produced seven major community activism tours and consults on issues such as hip-hop feminism, media justice, voter engagement among youth of color, third party politics, United States political prisoners and the right of Puerto Rico to become an independent nation free of United States colonial domination. Rosa was the first ever Afro-Latina women to run for Vice-President of the United States in 2008 on the Green Party ticket. She and her running mate, Cynthia McKinney, were to this date the only women of color ticket in American history.

Her groundbreaking article, Who is Black?, published in 2001, was the catalyst for many discussions regarding Blackness in the Latinx culture. As an activist with Black Lives Matter she has continued to address issues of Afro-Latinx Identity and anti-Blackness through her writings. As a co-founder and national coordinator of the first ever National Hip-Hop Political Convention, Rosa helped bring together more than 3000 activists to create and implement a national political agenda for the Hip-Hop generation. She also co-founded the REACH Hip-Hop Coalition, a Hip-Hop generation-based media justice organization.

Rosa’s academic work has been dedicated to researching national liberation struggles inside the United States with a specific focus on The Young Lords Party (which she wrote her master’s thesis on), The Black Panther Party, and the Black and Brown Liberation Movements of the 60s and 70s, as well as the effects of COINTELPRO (Counter Intelligence Program) on such movements.


Francesca Menes is a social and political activist, Afro-Latina, survivor and advocate. She was born in Miami, Florida. Her parents migrated from the beautiful “Pearl of the Antilles,” Haiti to the United States in the 1970s. As Florida State Coordinator for Local Progress, a network of hundreds of progressive local elected officials across the country dedicated to shared prosperity, equal justice under law, sustainable and livable cities, and good government that serves the public interest, she works to bring progressive policy solutions to our local elected officials. Prior to joining Center for Popular Democracy, Francesca served as the Director of Policy and Advocacy for the Florida Immigrant Coalition (FLIC) and Political Director for FLIC Votes, where she led the development and implementation of strategic legislative, policy and voter engagement campaigns locally and statewide centered on intersectional social justice issues.

She co-coordinated the Florida Wage Theft Task Force, which led the passage of ordinances in several counties throughout the state, and coordinated a national network campaigning for Temporary Protected Status for Haitians. In 2014, she successfully led the statewide campaign “We Are Florida’s Future” to pass in-state tuition for undocumented students and led the campaign to establish the Office of New Americans of Miami-Dade County, establishing a public-private partnership to promote naturalization.

During the 2016 and 2017 legislative session, Francesca successfully coordinated the statewide campaign “We Are Florida’s Families,” which led to the defeat of 9 anti-immigrant and anti-refugee bills which sought to criminalize immigrants and remove from office local elected officials who support and vote on policies to protect immigrants regardless of their status. In 2017, she also led the passage of several Welcoming Cities and School District resolutions. Francesca also helped co-found the Black Immigration Network in 2008 and serves on the national steering committee.


Cindy Wiesner is a 25-year veteran of the social justice movement in the U.S. and internationally who currently serves as the national coordinator of the Grassroots Global Justice Alliance. She is also a steering committee of the Climate Justice Alliance, a group she co-founded, plays a leadership role in the Peoples Climate Movement that organized the massive mobilizations in New York, Washington, D.C. and the Bay Area in recent years, and is an advisor to Groundswell’s new Liberation Fund.

Cindy started organizing with HERE Local 2850 in Oakland, CA, and went on to become the director of organizing for People Organizing to Win Employment Rights in San Francisco and an organizer and board member for generationFIVE. She has also been a consultant for Men Overcoming Violence Everywhere and Mujeres Unidas y Activas.

She previously worked as Leadership Development Director of the Miami Workers Center and represented the group as a member of the U.S. Social Forum National Planning Committee. She has been active in many movement building initiatives over the years, including World March of Women, Social Movement Assemblies, International Council of the World Social Forum,  Fight Against the FTAA, UNITY, Building Equity and Alignment Initiative and, currently, It Takes Roots and the Majority.

Cindy’s main passions are training organizers in a transformative radical organizing model and building counter-hegemonic campaigns that not only fight what participants are against, but put into practice what they want to see manifested. She identifies as a lesbian and is of Salvadoran, Colombian and German descent. She is a grassroots feminist, internationalist, and movement strategist.

Lanzate 2018: San Antonio, Texas

On December 1st and 2nd, 2018, we are excited to gather once again, this time in San Antonio, Texas, for the third Lánzate convening. Right on time.

Lánzate 2018 marks our largest, national gathering since Trump took office. It will come after the many rounds of attacks on our communities, and after our brave response from the ballot box to the streets. It will come on the heels of victory, so that we may celebrate and strategize how to achieve more wins for our communities. It will come in recognition of what we have lost, to honor each other and to learn.

Mijente was launched at the first Lánzate in Chicago during December of 2015.

Coming out of the #Not1More deportation campaign, we birthed Mijente as both an invitation and a political vehicle for Latinxs and Chicanxs to collectively bridge the gaps that exist in our communities and movements and unite to confront the challenges of our time. We believe that in the times of politicos like Trump, our community can do more than survive, we can thrive. We set off to do it, recognizing that transformative change comes when we make it.

In 2016 we held Lánzate in Puerto Rico. For many of us it was a homecoming and for others, exposure to a whole political context that paralleled our own experiences. We never imagined that a year later we would be mourning and rallying for the recognition of the 4,645 estimated deaths resulting from the U.S. government’s colonial and negligent response to Hurricane Maria, and demanding justice for Puerto Rico against the corporations and federal government trying to profit off the crisis.

Why San Antonio?

We are gathering our gente in San Antonio, Texas, a place that is a microcosm of the attacks our Latinx and Chicanx communities are facing, but also of our resistance and spirit of sobrevivencia.

San Antonio has a deep history of weaving together cultural resistance and grassroots organizing. It’s a place where Latinx and Chicanx communities have built roots and infrastructure towards fighting por un buenvivir.

It is also a place that shows demographics is not destiny. Latinxs in Texas are on track to become the largest population group in the state by 2022, and in San Antonio they already are. Poverty, unemployment and disinvestment foreshadow what we see taking shape in cities and towns across the country where demographics are quickly changing. San Antonio is also home to one of the largest concentrations of military bases in the country, and was officially trademarked “Military City, USA” last year. In Texas broadly, we also must contend with the deep organizing and transformation that must happen within the Latinx and Chicanx community. According to one poll, 82% of Latinxs in Texas describe themselves as moderate or conservative, similar to the rest of the Texas electorate.

In San Antonio and many places throughout Southern Texas, the Trump administration’s white supremacist agenda to incarcerate, de-naturalize, detain, or deport people of color whether undocumented, permanent residents, or U.S. citizens, manifests. Last year the Governor of Texas signed into law SB4, a law that prohibits “Sanctuary city” protections, makes immigrant detention mandatory and imposes criminal and civil penalties for anyone not following these violent policies. Texas is the place where the border crisis is constantly present, where people’s passports are snatched from their hands and their citizenship questioned, where immigrants with and without papers are targeted, and where more private prisons exist than any other state to cage our people for profit. Our hope is that amidst the challenges, we can imagine how to reclaim, rebuild and recover our homes and communities in San Antonio and beyond.

Who is Lánzate for?

Lánzate is for any Latinx and Chicanx change-makers, whether your organizing is IRL (in real life) or URL, whether you don’t know what that means but are interested in making sure we work together towards better communities and a more just country for all of us. It is for Mijente members as much as for those who choose not to be. It is for those who want to build movement together with others who want to create change. It is for those who want to learn, share, grow and heal.

In the coming weeks you’ll hear more about the key themes that will be highlighted in the convening, as well as more information on the basics of what to expect and who is involved in pushing this effort forward.

Meanwhile, we invite you to start making your plans to join us at our third Lánzate. Let’s gather to share our knowledge, cultura and visions for what a Latinx, pro-woman, pro-queer, pro-poor, pro-Black, pro-indigenous, pro-Earth movement could look like.

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