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.

Tejiendo Pa’ el Futuro: Latinx Power Now

Training our Gente in Texas

This past weekend Mijente launched Tejiendo Futuros, an organizing training series for Latinx community members  that centers strategies and learnings from building people power throughout Latin America. Our first training was held in Laredo, Texas, an area we have been investing in since the beginning of this year. We collectively created a space where we laughed, witnessed each other’s stories, built relationships, practiced organizing skills and conversations that helped us remember our history and ancestral wisdom. In the room, we had 16 participants from Laredo, Fort Worth, the Rio Grande Valley, and Houston; folks came from different sides of organizing, some of us work to defend access to water, immigration rights, health and reproduction education and electoral fights. 

What Tejiendo Futuros Looked Like 

During the training, we spent the first day grounding ourselves in Texas organizing history, naming the conditions that have shaped us and inform our participation in our communities. We also developed a shared analysis on Latin American resistance and class struggle over time, and how they impact our organizing today. On the second day, we took the training sessions to the streets, leading a door knocking session that allowed us to have conversations with more community members. We wrapped up the weekend with sessions on base building and mapping our own connections. 

Learning the Needs of our Gente in Texas

The door knocking session served as an opportunity to train participants on connecting with people at the doors, and better understand together the needs of the community we were in. In Laredo’s District 1, local residents discussed debilitating water boil orders that tend to be acutely felt in the area, improving infrastructure to make the community safer, the need for new leadership to challenge business as usual attitudes, and more. 

Why We Educate, Organize, and Agitate

How we come together to create change is an ongoing practice. Recent surveys have shown that 95% of the population in Laredo, Texas identifies as Hispanic/Latinx – the highest concentration of Latinx people in a US metropolitan area. We know that even as our community grows, the changes we need for el Buenvivir – for racial, economic, gender, and climate justice – are actively ignored by those in power. What does this look like? 4.5 million people were without power during the 2021 Texas Winter Storm; 24 rural hospital closures in the last decade, the highest in the country; and in Laredo, constant water boil notices leaving residents unable to access safe water to drink, cook, or bathe with – lasting anywhere from 2 weeks like in 2022 or 2 months like in 2020. Our gente, our communities, deserve better. 

That’s why we made the decision to start our Tejiendo Futuros training series in South Texas. In order to strengthen our movement and the local organizing infrastructure, it is critical that we gather juntxs to sharpen our skills, facilitate base building conversations, and put our organizing into practice. 

We are excited to continue doing base building for our long-term work in Texas. We know that building people power is always a winning strategy. Stay tuned for more updates on our Tejiendo Futuros training series.

This weekend training in Laredo is part of our educational efforts through El Instituto to build a shared analysis of the organizing landscape and train our Latinx communities on the fundamental skills needed to organize. These are efforts towards long-term base building in order to build people and political power to make change happen. These training sessions also help us continue to foster confidence and deepen relationships with leaders, community members, and partner organizations in places like Laredo, Fort Worth, Corpus Christi, the Rio Grande Valley and throughout South Texas.

Mijente En South Texas

Organizing For El Buenvivir With Our Gente

Two weeks ago, we joined with our compas, members, and Texas community organizers in Laredo, Texas. During our Texas Organizers Workshop, we led sessions focused on the sociopolitical state of things in Texas, the threats to the Latinx community, and the opportunities for organizers.

These workshop offerings are part of our El Instituto efforts to build a shared analysis of the organizing landscape and make space for organizing possibilities. In Texas we are building upon our relationships with organizers in the state to create a shared language around strategy and analysis and strong networks of connection across the state and in specific regions.


Throughout the weekend we were joined by 30 participants from the Rio Grande Valley, San Antonio, Laredo, and Dallas. Texas Mijente members Barbie Hurtado and Juan Livas opened with a group activity for attendees to identify the threats and wins over the past 10 years across the state of Texas. Later, organizers participated in rounds of debates and fishbowl activities geared at opening our discussions and understanding of the realities shaping the lived experiences of Latinxs in Texas. 

Our staff led various activities sharing the Mijente framework of Sin, Contra, y Desde el Estado work. We detailed how this framework has been instrumental in shaping our organization’s multi-strategy approach to organizing and movement-building, along with how building without, against, and within the state can look like in Texas.

This time with our Texas compas was filled with laughter, analysis, song, debate, and connection. As we develop our approach to our continued efforts in Texas, we are taking what we learned to inform our Sin, Contra, y Desde el Estado efforts. We hope you’ll stay tuned to what comes next and how we continue building Latinx, Chicanx, and Tejanx poder for and with our gente.