Formed in the Catholic Ignatian tradition, Linh’s faith informs her
commitment to building a more just world that protects the dignity of
every human being. As a Fellow for CLUE this summer, she is excited to
learn more about immigration justice, how immigration policy is
affecting the Asian American and Pacific Islander communities in
Southern California, and how interfaith organizing can be used as a
powerful tool that builds solidarity and advocates for necessary
change.
Mary Entoma is currently attending UCLA
majoring in Political Science and Labor Studies. Growing up in the Bay
Area, she has always shown interest in social justice due to the
issues that she saw in her community and her experiences within her
own family as a first-generation Philipino immigrant. She grew up in a
Catholic household which has guided much of her organizing - using her
faith to guide her in fighting against injustice. Aside from working
with CLUE, she also works with UNITE HERE Local 11 mainly doing
community organizing at UCLA and USC. She is also involved with
student groups at UCLA working to make campus more welcoming and
equitable for BIPOC students.
Nathan Carbajal was raised in Long
Beach/Lakewood, California and is a recent graduate of California
State University, Long Beach. At CSULB Nathan was a student organizer
and became exposed to union organizing through the California Faculty
Association. Before that, Nathan worked several sanitation jobs
including being a janitor on campus. Nathan was born into the
Jehovah’s Witness denomination but left while studying in college.
Recently, Nathan has felt a call to return to a church and has been
attending St. Luke’s Episcopal church in Downtown Long
Beach.
Angeles Urban grew up in a traditional
Latino, Spanish-speaking evangelical denomination in Inglewood, and
has since expanded her faith tradition to include The Episcopal
Church. She is currently a seminarian at Fuller Theological Seminary
where she is pursuing a bilingual Masters of Divinity degree. Her
faith calls her to actively confront the systems that perpetuate evil
and injustice, and she is passionate about getting there alongside the
Spanish-speaking faith community.
Riya Patel was raised in the small, predominantly
low-income city of Chino, California in San Bernardino County. With
her parents immigrating to the U.S. from India, Riya grew up as a
first-gen Indian-American, struggling to find her identity in a
community that looked nothing like her. She grew up listening to her
parents share stories of Mahatma Gandhi and reading about other
activists in the Civil Rights Movement and the abolitionist movement
in the U.S, which inspired her to learn more about nonviolence and
social movements. Trying to better understand the economy and its
disparities, she studied Economics and Labor Studies at UCLA and
recently graduated as the quarantined class of 2020. (Go Bruins!).
Her experience with conducting research with the UCLA Labor Center
on the barriers faced by student workers in LA County has encouraged
her to learn more about different ways to organize and bring systemic
change to communities of color. She was introduced to the work of CLUE
through her amazing Labor Studies professors and she wishes to learn
more about faith-rooted organizing as a tool to unite individuals from
different faith traditions together and bring economic justice to the
forefront of our agendas.
Cecilia Ribordy is a student at Dickinson College
double majoring in Environmental Studies and Latin America, Latinx
& Caribbean Studies. Cecilia grew up as a missionary kid in Sao
Paulo, Brazil, where she first witnessed the important role people of
faith play in achieving equity and justice. Over time, Cecilia started
developing her own passion for social and environmental justice, and
uses her filmmaking and organizing skills to help raise awareness and
organize people to fight for justice. She has produced, directed and
edited award-winning short films that are centered around issues such
as immigration, deforestation and mixed-race realities. Outside of
these experiences, she also has led and participated in many
campaigns, protests and organizing efforts. As a CLUE 2020 Fellow,
Cecilia hopes to expand her knowledge on faith-rooted organizing and
fulfill her calling to join CLUEs fight for economic justice.
Welcome, Fellows!