Facebook Instagram Twitter Youtube
  • News
    • Campus
    • Local
    • World
  • Arts and Entertainment
    • Performing Arts
    • Visual Arts
    • Music
    • Film
    • Fashion
  • Lifestyle
    • Campus Happenings
    • Community Happenings
    • Food
    • Business
    • Travel
    • Calendar
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • Video
    • Globe News
    • What’s Bruin
    • Bruin Lens
    • Film
    • Music
    • Globe Shorts
  • Radio
Search
62 F
Salt Lake City
Friday, September 19, 2025
  • Newsletter Signup
  • Contests
  • About The Globe
    • Staff
    • Jobs
    • Issue PDFs
Facebook Instagram Twitter Youtube
Sign in
Welcome! Log into your account
Forgot your password? Get help
Privacy Policy
Password recovery
Recover your password
A password will be e-mailed to you.
The Globe The Globe
The Globe The Globe
  • News
    • Campus
    • Local
    • World
  • Arts and Entertainment
    • Performing Arts
    • Visual Arts
    • Music
    • Film
    • Fashion
  • Lifestyle
    • Campus Happenings
    • Community Happenings
    • Food
    • Business
    • Travel
    • Calendar
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • Video
    • Globe News
    • What’s Bruin
    • Bruin Lens
    • Film
    • Music
    • Globe Shorts
  • Radio
Home News Campus SLCC clubs unite, create new ceremony to celebrate student graduates
  • News
  • Campus
  • Lifestyle
  • Campus Happenings
  • Don't Miss

SLCC clubs unite, create new ceremony to celebrate student graduates

By
Pearl Ashton
-
April 28, 2025
0
Natalie and Fernando speaking to a seated audience
Native Indigenous Student Union President Fernando Rodriguez Camarena, right, stands with Student Highlight Speaker Natalie Cabrera Mansilla at the “We Write Our Own Stories” graduation celebration on April 14, 2025. Camarena and other SLCC club leaders created the event after Utah House Bill 261 effectively ended affinity celebrations on campus. (Pearl Ashton)

With the semester coming to a close, student clubs and organizations are preparing to celebrate their graduates. However, celebrations look a little different this year.

Utah House Bill 261 disrupted the way colleges cater to students after the bill prohibited higher education from engaging in “discriminatory practices.”

To “protest” against HB 261, Fernando Rodriguez Camarena, president of the Native Indigenous Student Union at Salt Lake Community College, collaborated with other clubs to hold the “We Write Our Own Stories” graduation event on April 14.

“Normally, we would do separate events. But because of lack of money, the lack of people helping us, and with the [state of the] administration currently right now, making students feel unwelcome … because of the immigration laws that are starting to happen, a lot of us feel down,” said Camarena.

With the political changes, Camarena wanted to progress towards an event that included all identity-based clubs to demonstrate that they are not separate, but united.

Creating community

Camarena stated that the collaboration enabled the clubs to help each other and create a community. He said that due to the identity-based clubs being the targets of the bill, he wanted to have a student-led graduation.

“When the immigrant laws happened, we created a support group for undocumented students here. Then, women were being represented in all these bills trying to control their bodies. We had an effort to help women and to show, like, ‘You’re recognized. You’ve always been seen.’ Then, we had a fashion show representing that queerness and love of queerness and how it’s always existed,” shared Camarena. “We’ve been fighting HB 261 for a while. And then towards graduation and just seeing all of us struggle … I decided to just be like, ‘let’s just all have fun together.’”

Camarena has multiple qualities to his background — including being Indigenous, a darker-skinned Latinx and queer — that led him to grow the concept of a combined graduation celebration.

“Seeing my community of immigrant people, undocumented people, fighting so hard … It really stood in my heart,” said Camarena.

Camarena didn’t want anyone else to write his story. He also wanted to empower other students at the same time.

“Let’s show their stories. Let’s talk about our strong history and remind each other that it wasn’t always easy for us. We had to fight to get up here,” said Camarena. “We have to always celebrate [victories] because a lot of students are like, ‘I just graduated with my associate’s, that’s nothing.’ I’m like, ‘No, [graduating] is a big deal.’”

Guest speakers

The event featured four graduates who spoke of their achievements: Umme Haq, who represented the Kurdish Club; Marya Al Mashhadani, who represented the Global Connections Club; and Liliena Ahoafi-Noa and Natalie Cabrera Mansilla, who were student highlight speakers.

During the “history through higher-ed” presentation, Camarena spoke on behalf of the Native Indigenous Student Union. Other speakers included Amna Latif, representing the Muslim Student Association; Thanya Kajik, representing the Asian Student Association; and Mone Langi, representing the Pacific Unity Association club.

Rep. Angela Romero, D-Salt Lake, the minority leader of the Utah House of Representatives, served as the event’s keynote speaker. A dedicated advocate for social justice, community empowerment and public service, Romero encouraged students to continue to move forward and get involved.

“Tell your story. Don’t tell the story that people want you to tell,” said Romero. “I really, really encourage all of you to get involved, whether it’s at a school board level or at a municipal level, or whether it’s at a state level, or whether it’s in a non-profit that advocates for different communities … You’re opening doors, you’re changing the direction for your families.”

1 of 5
Poster for "We Write Our Own Stories" graduation celebration
The first-ever "We Write Our Own Stories" graduation celebration took place April 14 in the Taylorsville Redwood Campus Oak Room. The event allowed several clubs to celebrate their student graduates in a manner permissible under Utah House Bill 261. (Pearl Ashton)
Student club leaders serving food to event attendees
SLCC graduate speakers serve food from Beirut Cafe to fellow students during the "We Write Our Own Stories" graduation celebration on April 14, 2025. (Pearl Ashton)
Food servers distribute food from warming trays
SLCC graduate speakers serve food from Beirut Cafe to fellow students at the "We Write Our Own Stories" graduation celebration on April 14, 2025. Food items included Halal and vegetarian options. (Pearl Ashton)
SLCC students and staff listen to club introductions at the inaugural "We Write Our Own Stories" graduation celebration on April 14 in the Oak Room on the Taylorsville campus. (Pearl Ashton)
Natalie and Fernando speaking to a seated audience
Native Indigenous Student Union President Fernando Rodriguez Camarena, right, stands with Student Highlight Speaker Natalie Cabrera Mansilla at the "We Write Our Own Stories" graduation celebration on April 14, 2025. Camarena and other SLCC club leaders created the event after Utah House Bill 261 effectively ended affinity celebrations on campus. (Pearl Ashton)
  • TAGS
  • Angela Romero
  • club events
  • Fernando Rodriguez Camarena
  • graduation
  • HB 261
  • Native Indigenous Student Union
  • On-Campus Events
  • Salt Lake Community College
  • Spring 2025
  • Student Clubs
  • We Write Our Own Stories
Pearl Ashton

RELATED ARTICLESMORE FROM AUTHOR

Pacific Islander men and women seated on a stage playing drums

Pacific Unity Association: A ‘rock’ for SLCC’s Pacific Islander students

Lineworker moving a pin insulator while on a power pole

SLTech program graduates celebrate with a lineworker’s rodeo

Samantha Alegre hosting a news show in the TV studio

Globe News: May 6, 2025

SLCC monument block letters outside West Valley Center

Growing changes due to HB 265 on the horizon for many Utah colleges

Avelina working at a table surrounded by graduation items for sale

Cuenta regresiva para la inauguración de SLCC: Celebrando un nuevo capítulo

The Globe
ABOUT US
About The Globe
Staff
Jobs
Issue PDFs
FOLLOW US
Facebook Instagram Twitter Youtube
  • About The Globe
  • Staff
  • Contact Us
  • Jobs
© 2025 The Globe