The idea for the digital altar started in a private Slack channel for Latino staffers at the L.A. Times and grew when journalists from different departments pitched in to make it a reality.
They also knew the communities they were making it for might not want it.
“Because the Los Angeles Times’ history of mischaracterizing, vilifying and misrepresenting Mexican American and Latino communities, I understand why there’s sort of an aversion,” said Martinez, who writes the Latinx Files newsletter. “We basically have to build trust with the Latino community, and this project was an attempt at doing it.”
The team behind the digital altar hoped to build something that people want to be part of. They took extra care with the project and uploaded each ofrenda manually, making sure they have permission to use the photo.
The ofrendas offer a bit of space for words, and what’s submitted includes a specificity that shows who a person was, Martinez said.
Here are a few examples:
“I miss riding our bikes around the block and listening to your crazy dreams.”
“She left me with strength. I cook with her old wooden spoons.”
“I wish we could get out of control just one more time, another sip, another dance, another drive-thru.”
Martinez’s mission is “to tell more of our stories,” he said.
The digital altar was an experiment, and it’s one he can offer as an example of what happens when you write for a community instead of just about them.
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