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Hispanic Heritage Month: Camila Ramos Rivera

PEOPLE | October 13, 2022
STORY BY: EDITORIAL STAFF
Photo of Camila Ramos

Hispanic Heritage Month takes place each year from Sept. 15 through Oct. 15. Throughout the month, The Daily has highlighted members of the university community who are of Hispanic heritage to celebrate their accomplishments and shed light on their experiences at 窪蹋勛圖厙.

When Camila Ramos Rivera was in high school, she took a career aptitude test that pointed her to the nursing profession. She decided nursing must run in the family. 

My aunt told me that my grandma would have been proud, Ramos Rivera said of her results. She died before I was born, but the impact she left in her neighborhood and the community was unforgettable. She would cook and take care of the neighbors who were sick. 

Though Ramos Rivera was born in Puerto Rico and lived there her entire life, she was determined to attend 窪蹋勛圖厙 after learning about its top-ranked nursing program, which offers students more than 1,000 clinical hours at four world-renowned health systems. 

Now a third year at Frances Payne Bolton School of Nursing, Ramos Rivera hopes to one day use her knowledge to help developor at least be a part of developing the profession in her home country.

In Puerto Rico, the nursing field, and even the hospital systems, [are] not as developed as the ones in the United States, she explained. Some nurses in the U.S. can prescribe medications to patients or administer anesthesia. In Puerto Rico, this scope doesnt exist.

Celebrating cultures

In her time living in Cleveland and studying at 窪蹋勛圖厙, Ramos Riveraa proud boricua (Puerto Rican)has reveled the opportunity to learn about and experience other cultures from around the world.

She said Hispanic Heritage Month offers her an opportunity to acknowledge the contributions and history of the people who came before her, and to share her knowledge with the campus community. 

You don't have to be hispanic to celebrate, she said. I love people who ask questions and who want to be part of supporting our culture.

If you ask her what she misses most about living in Puerto Rico, youre likely to hear a few thingsnotably, the Christmas holiday. Were just days away from Halloween, which means Ramos Riveras mother will start hanging Christmas decorations any day now. 

My mom [wont] take these decorations down until the third week of Janauryand [you would] never dare [question her], Ramos Rivera said. 

While she cant exactly match her mothers enthusiasm for Christmas in her dorm room, Ramos Rivera has been able to incorporate other aspects of her culture into her daily routine, whether thats making coffee using Mamis beans, a brand of coffee from Puerto Rico; playing salsa music while she washes dishes; or buying plantains to make mofongo (mashed plantains). 

Ramos Rivera has even made it a point to educate her friends about her culture through playing dominoes, where each piece has the Puerto Rican flag, and playing Briscas, a Spanish card game.

I have organized tournaments for these games, Ramos Rivera said, and Im hurt to admit that I have lost playing with them.

When shes not planning game nights with friends, Ramos Rivera is busy coordinating events as president of La Alianza, a Latinx student organization that serves the community, celebrates the Latinx culture and supports Latinx students at the university. 

This organization has brought me incredible memories, experiences and lifelong friends, said Ramos Rivera, whos been involved with the group since her first year. I get to learn and appreciate others' stories, for instance, first/second/third generations Latinx/Hispanic or mixed cultured students.