Skip to main content

Oscar Romero, 2011 - 2025

 Record Group — Container: Shelf 07, Box: 16
Identifier: 07.16

Scope and Contents

Includes:

01. Oscar Romero Award to Nassera Dutar, 2011 02. Romero, 2011 03. Romero, 2011 04. Oscar Romero award, 2011 05. Invitations-Oscar Romero Awards, 2011 06. Oscar Romero Award-Nassera Dutar, November 13, 2011 07. Rothko Chapel Celebrating 40 Year/Rorvero 2011 Paper, 2011 08. Brunch in memory of Oscar Romero, April 29, 2012 09. 2013 Oscar Romero Award, April 7, 2013 10. Preview Party for 2013 Oscar Romero Awards, February 7, 2013 11. The Violence of Love: The Legacy of Archbishop Oscar Romero, February 27, 2014 12. Oscar Romero Award-Listening to Voices Not Silence Program, 2015 13. Presante: A Conversation with the 2015 Oscar Romero Awards, November 11, 2015 14. Oscar Romero, 2015 15. Oscar Romero Award-Correspondence, 2015 16. Romero 17. Oscar Romero Award, 2017 18. 2017 ORA Ceremony and Celebration Programs 19. 2017 ORA Questions from Community for Panelists 20. 2017 ORA Postcards 21. 2017 ORA Ceremony Flyers 22. Burundian Culture Event with ORA Recipient Pierre Claver Mbonimpa, November 11, 2017 23. 2020 Oscar Romero Public Program Agreements 24. Oscar Romero Speeches, June 30, 2020 25. Oscar Romero Award, March 26, 2023

Dates

  • 2011 - 2025

Extent

From the Series: 10 Linear Feet

Language of Materials

English

Abstract

Additional information about 2020 ceremony:

Livestream Event via Vimeo Free event with suggested contributions $5-15

Ceremony in English and Spanish - Interpretation Services provided by Antena Houston Ver descripción del programa en español.

The Rothko Chapel's biennial Óscar Romero Award has been given every two years since 1986 in recognition of courageous, grassroots human rights advocacy. The award is named in honor of Archbishop Óscar Romero of San Salvador who was assassinated on March 24, 1980, because of his vocal opposition to the violent oppression of his fellow citizens.

Building upon climate change topics addressed at our 2019 Spring Symposium: “Toward a Better Future: Transforming the Climate Crisis,” the Chapel will honor three recipients who are committed to climate justice, and together represent the Chapel's intersection of art, spirituality and human rights.

2020 Awardees include: Gérman Chirinos, Founder of MASSVIDA (Honduras); Bernadette Demientieff, Executive Director of the Gwich’in Steering Committee (Alaska); and Jorge Díaz, Co-Founder of AgitArte (Puerto Rico).

The virtual ceremony was led by David Leslie, Executive Director of the Rothko Chapel and an invocation was given by Myokei Caine-Barrett, Shonin, the Resident Priest of Myoken-ji Temple in Houston.

This year's Óscar Romero Award Nomination Committee included Cassandra Carmichael, Executive Director at the National Religious Partnership for the Environment; Guillermo Kerber, former Program Executive for Climate Justice at the World Council of Churches; Cara Mertes, Project Director for Moving Image Strategies at the Ford Foundation; Marianne Møllmann. Director of Regional Programs at the Fund for Global Human Rights; Bryan Parras, Healthy Communities Campaign Organizer at the Sierra Club; and Nato Thompson, Artistic Director at Philadelphia Contemporary.

About the Awardees: Gérman Chirinos is a land and water rights activist from Honduras. Over the past 10 years, protected and publicly held lands in southern Honduras have been privatized, and large-scale energy projects and logging have limited access to water and land. Motivated by this growing environmental crisis, Gérman joined other activists in 2014 to found the Southern Environmental Movement for Life (Movimiento Ambientalista del Sur por la Vida) or MASSVIDA, an association of 37 communities in active resistance to the destruction of land and water. There have been two attempts on Gérman’s life. When asked what difference the award will make for MASSVIDA, Gérman said: “We will no longer be silenced, our work will become known.”

Bernadette Demientieff is the Executive Director of the Gwich’in Steering Committee and she is Gwichyaa Zhee Gwich’in. She was raised in Fort Yukon and spent her summers in Venetie. Bernadette’s great grandmother was Marcis (Horace) Moses from Old Crow in the Canadian Territory of Yukon, and her grandfather, Daniel Horace, is from Fort Yukon, Alaska. Her parents are Betty (Walter Flitt) of Alaska and Bernard (Melanie) Hornsby of Louisiana. Bernadette is the mother of 5 children and grandmother of 5 beautiful grandchildren. She takes this position very seriously and it has transformed her life to better serve her people. Bernadette stands strong to protect the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge-Coastal Plain, the Porcupine Caribou Herd and the Gwich’in way of life. Bernadette is a council member for the Arctic Refuge Defense Council. She also serves as an advisory board member for NDN Collective, the Care of Creations Task Force, Native Movement Alaska, and Defend the Sacred Alaska. She is a tribal member of the Gwichyaa Zhee Gwich’in Tribal Government, and on the leadership council for ITR. When asked about her years of advocacy, Bernadette said, "We must all remember that we are on a spiritual path and that co-existing and respecting each other’s ways of life is important."

Jorge Díaz co-founded AgitArte in 1997 and is an editor of the book When We Fight, We Win! He is a puppeteer, popular educator and bicultural organizer with over 25 years of experience. He is deeply committed to working class struggles against oppressive systems, namely colonialism, patriarchy, white supremacy, and capitalism. Jorge is also a founding member of Papel Machete, a collective of radical artists and street theater/puppetry workers dedicated to education, agitation and solidarity work in 21st century Puerto Rico and its Diaspora. He received his BA in Mass Communication from Emerson College in Boston, MA. Jorge strives to be a rigorous, organic intellectual and is based in his hometown of Santurce, PR. Upon announcement of receiving the award, Jorge said, "I take this award as an opportunity to reaffirm my individual commitment to continue in the collective struggle for a life in which we can be free from violence."

This program was underwritten by The Jacob and Terese Hershey Foundation. Additional support is provided by the City of Houston through the Houston Arts Alliance, the Houston Endowment, and the Brown Foundation. To support the Rothko Chapel Óscar Romero Award, donate here.

Abstract

Additional information about 2023 ceremony:

2023 Rothko Chapel Óscar Romero Awards Since 1986, the Rothko Chapel has given the Óscar Romero Award in recognition of courageous, grassroots human rights advocacy. This award is named in honor of Saint Óscar Romero of San Salvador, who was assassinated in March 1980 while conducting Catholic Mass in a local hospital chapel. Romero is championed internationally today for risking his life and reputation to speak out against military violence and in defense of poor and marginalized communities. The 2023 Award recognizes individuals and organizations engaging in advocacy to further civil rights in the United States, at a time when many urgent, intersecting civil liberties and human rights are under attack and actively losing protections.

Welcome Troy Porter, Board Chair, Rothko Chapel

Introductory Remarks David Leslie, Executive Director, Rothko Chapel

Invocation Rev. Laura Mayo, Senior Pastor, Covenant Church & Rothko Chapel Board Member

Awards Ceremony Awardee Introductions by Kelly Johnson, Program Director, Rothko Chapel

The People’s Paper Co-Op (Philadelphia, PA): Founded in 2014, The People’s Paper Co-op is a women led, women focused, women powered art and advocacy project at the Village of Arts and Humanities in North Philadelphia. The PPC looks to women in reentry as the leading criminal justice experts our society needs to hear from and uses a variety of art forms to amplify their stories, dreams, and visions for a more just and free world. Since 2018, the People’s Paper Co-op has collaborated with the Philadelphia Community Bail Fund on their annual Black Mama's Bail Out campaign. Each year, the PPC connects a powerful cohort of women in reentry with artists and advocates to co-create a poster series and corresponding set of exhibitions, parades, press conferences, and events to raise awareness and funds for the campaign. peoplespaperco-op.weebly.com

Rev. Erika Ferguson, Principal, Envision Justice & Reproductive Justice Post Roe (Dallas, TX): Rev. Erika Ferguson is the principal of Envision Justice—the reproductive justice strategy firm of the future, and Reproductive Justice Post Roe—a vibrant online community. Envision Justice provides strategic guidance, tactical support, and mission assistance to organizations, private companies, and government leaders to craft messaging and create frameworks for unique programs around reproductive justice. As the visionary of Reproductive Justice Post Roe, Rev. Erika started the online movement that provides practical knowledge, real tools, authenticity skills, and engagement energy required for any individual to influence their own circle on reproductive justice. Rev. Erika is proud of the abortions she had, considers herself privileged to have access to them, and has made it her life’s mission to ensure this privilege is possible for future generations.

Secunda Joseph, Co-Founder & Director of Smart Media & Organizing with ImagiNoir/BLMTX (Houston, TX): Secunda Joseph, aka “For The People Bae,” is a devoted and conscientious activist-organizer and justice worker based in Houston, TX. She firmly promotes organic, community-based approaches to solidarity work and activism, and shirks at those who ignore the capacities of those for whom they advocate. Although her activist-organizer work broadly focuses on humanitarian rights and concerns, she utilizes Black abolitionist principles and concepts to create, build, and work beside vulnerable communities toward more liberating life options for future generations born to inequity. Joseph is a Co-Founder and Director of Smart Media & Organizing with ImagiNoir/BLMHTX, a collective whose aim is to educate, empower and build coalitions that address issues adversely impacting Black lives in Houston. In addition to training, consulting, & mutual aid work, Joseph delivers multimedia interventions and mind/body strategies toward liberatory existence. blmhtx.org

Conversation Moderated by Omar El-Halwagi, Rothko Chapel Board Member & Program Committee Chair

Special Thanks Underwriting Support for the 2023 Rothko Chapel Óscar Romero Awards is provided by [Insert Dougherty Logo & Hershey Logo] and the Dominican Sisters Congregation of the Sacred Heart, Michele Sabino & Scott Weissman

Support for the Rothko Chapel 2022-23 Program Season is provided by Andrew C. Schirrmeister, Beryl A. Hogshead, Beth & Karam Hanhan, Beverly Fanarof, Brigid & Tom Earthman, Bryan S. Scrivner, Calvin Payton Jr., Carey C. Shuart, Christina & Troy Porter, Ellen Benningjoven & Michael Schafer, Elsa Ross, Emma & Victor Del Frate, Erika de la Garza & Alejandro Chaoul, Evan Anne Rathjen, Juan R. Palomo, Macey & Harry Reasoner, Mark H. Rosenberg, Mary Welch & Ernesto Maldonado, Michael E. Bacon, Rajiv Pandya, Joell & Thomas Doneker, and Virginia & William A. Camfield

Repository Details

Part of the Rothko Chapel Archives Repository

Contact:
1409 Sul Ross
Houston TX 77006 USA
713.660.1410