President George W. Bush joins the Rose Garden audience during a celebration Wednesday, Oct. 10, 2007, of Hispanic Heritage Month at the White House. Sitting with the President is Yamile Llanes Labrada, the wife of a political prisoner in Cuba, and Emilio Estefan.
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Washington -- U.S. citizens of Hispanic
background are the fastest-growing population group in the
United States, contributing to the country’s traditional
diversity and enriching its political, cultural and community
life, according to U.S. politicians and experts.
By using their talents, creativity and hard
work, “Hispanic Americans are living the dream that
has drawn millions to our shores,” President Bush
said October 10 during a ceremony in the White House Rose
Garden.
Marking the annual White House celebration
of Hispanic Heritage Month (September 15 – October
15), Bush said Hispanic Americans “strengthen our
nation with their commitments to familia y fe [family
and faith].”
The U.S. Census Bureau estimates that in
2006 the Hispanic population of the United States exceeded
44 million, or 15 percent of the total U.S. population.
The bureau estimates that by mid-2050, Hispanic Americans
may make up 24 percent of all Americans.
In the United States, Hispanic heritage
has been celebrated on a national scale since 1968, when
Public Law 90-498 authorized the president to proclaim the
week of September 15 and 16 Hispanic Heritage Week. The
dates coincide with Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala,
Honduras and Nicaragua’s Independence Day on September
15 and Mexico’s Independence Day on September 16.
In his White House remarks, President Bush
paid tribute to Hispanic-American police officers, firefighters
and emergency rescue personnel and to the 200,000 Hispanic
Americans who serve in the U.S. armed forces. “I appreciate
the fact that they have volunteered in a time of danger,”
Bush said.
Greeting his guests in Spanish, he also
honored Hispanic Americans who “give their time to
improve the lives of people that live across the street
from them” and “make ours a better and more
compassionate nation.”
The White House ceremony featured a performance
by a legendary Cuban musician, 89-year-old Israel “Cachao”
Lopez, who first performed in the White House for President
Harry Truman in 1948.
Born in 1918 in Havana, "Cachao"
is considered by many the inventor of mambo, which he helped
popularize in the United States in the early 1950s. He has
won several Grammy Awards for both his original work and
his contributions on albums by other Latin music stars.
Read more about American
Hispanic contributions to U.S. politics, literature
and sports.
For more information, see Hispanic
Americans.
The full
text of President Bush’s remarks can be found
on the White House Web site.
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