Hello Liliana,
I meet you a few weeks ago and I immediately realized that you are a pillar of the Latino community here in Princeton.
You work for Princeton public schools and for the Princeton township human services department.
You are highly educated: you have a law degree from the University of Madrid and a Minor in international law from Harvard.
You've moved to Princeton in 2007 and a year later you were already deeply involved as a volunteer helping the immigrant community.
In 2010 you joined the board of the Koko Fund which subsidizes after school activities for children whose family can't afford it.
And in 2015, you were officially working as a community outreach liaison for the Princeton Public Schools. At the same time, you started distributing food for the needy in a program that was officially recognized as the Henry Pannell Mobile Food Pantry in 2018
Today you are part of Solidaridad that assists the immigrant community and the Princeton Children fund and other food sharing association which we will cover on another podcast.
Recently you became the Princeton coordinator for the Latin American Legal Defense and Education Fund (LALDEF) a program that assists first-generation immigrants in going to college.
Last May, the Princeton Council recognized you for your work for the community, the students and their families.
It seems that you’ve always lived to give and to help others. Is that so? If I could have asked your mother: ‘How old was Lily when you first realized that she cared so much for other people, what do you think she would she have told me?
Music from Kabbalistic Village
Housing Assistance Series 2/2: Carol Golden - Housing Initiatives of Princeton - US Politics, Social Issues and Housing Situation
Housing Assistance Series 1/2: Louise Kekulah - From Liberia to Princeton
Lieutenant Colonel Bryan Price - Afghanistan, Counterterrorism, Seton Hall University... America will be (see episode note)
Cecilia Birge - Anti-Asian racism during the Pandemic - Growing-up in Chinese Labor Camp - Student on Tiananmen Square protests
Marina Ahun — A Princeton Painter — From the Collapse of the Soviet Union to The Hardship of COVID-19
Part 1 - Mark Charles - Native American 2020 candidate Asks does 'We The People' includes everybody?
Part 2 - Mark Charles - Native American 2020 candidate Wants 'We The People' to Mean 'All The people'
19 Year-Old Princeton Student: Being Black in the US is Like Suffocating
Update: A Native American Candidate to US Election - Subscribe to our Mailing list
John Michael Greer an American Druid on Americans Individualism, Societal Collapse, and the Values of the Frontier Period
Gil Lopez: Guerrilla Gardening in Queen, Resilient Communities and the Power of Radical Ideas
Share My Meals - Princeton Non-Profit Keeps Restaurants Open During the Pandemic to Feed Those in Need
Jessica Baxter - Princeton High School Principal - Adjusting to remote learning during the coronavirus pandemic
Richard Heinberg: on building resilient communities - transitioning away from fossil fuels - Coronavirus - Collapse (effondrement)
Ron Menapace - Homestead Princeton - From Pharma to business owner: Challenges and opportunities in America
Trailer - Back in America - A podcast questioning our understanding of America
Carole Jury - 'La femme de...' se réinvente aux Etats-Unis et devient artiste peintre | In French
Princeton University Janitor & Mailman Tommy Parker Talks of Reparations and Civil Rights
John Lam: Boston Ballet Principal Dancer a Gay Vietnamese-American Reflects on his life Leading to Coming out, Marrying and Having two Kids
Quick Up-Date: Gay, Dad & Principal Dancer Coming-up + Follow-up on Social Media
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