►
From YouTube: GitLab Hispanic Heritage Month Wrap up Video
Description
Thanks for celebrating with us! Here's some highlights from the month.
Links:
Make an Issue for an event you want to see! https://gitlab.com/gitlab-com/latinx-tmrg/-/issues
Gente Slack channel: https://gitlab.slack.com/archives/C01JL1MGGV9
A
B
B
Hello
and
welcome
to
our
Hispanic
Heritage
Month
wrap-up
video.
We
hope
that
you've
enjoyed
the
events
that
our
team
members
work
so
hard
to
plan
over
the
past
30
days,
and
we
were
so
excited
to
have
the
opportunity
to
share
some
of
the
huge
variety
of
customs
and
culture
that
our
Latin,
a
community
has
here
at
git
lab.
C
We
feel
fortunate
to
be
able
to
share
these
wonderful
events
with
all
the
team
members
across
the
world
in
this
celebration
of
so
many
different
cultures
that
make
up
the
latinx
community.
Thank
you
especially
to
everyone
who
was
able
to
join
us
for
these
events.
We
loved
planning
them
and
it
meant
even
more
to
be
able
to
see
everyone
show
up
with
an
interest
to
learn
and
share
about
other
cultures.
B
This
video
we're
going
to
show
is
a
collection
of
clips
from
the
events
our
team
members
hosted
this
past
month
in
celebration.
We
had
a
super
fun
cafecito.
We
got
the
chance
to
do
an
intersectionality
round
table
with
our
pride
tmrg
and
an
awesome,
Brazilian
music
lecture
with
lots
of
cool
Clips.
We.
C
Also
had
an
arepa
making
class
a
chat
with
Dolce
about
mental
health
and
a
lecture
from
two
William
and
Mary
professors
about
colonialism.
We
also
had
an
opportunity
for
folks
to
practice
their
Spanish
in
a
zoom
meeting.
We
wanted
to
ensure
that
everyone
could
be
a
part
of
our
celebration,
so
we
created
several
events
at
a
variety
of
times.
Once
again,
thank
you
to
our
hente
team
members,
broader
git,
lab
team
members
and
the
e-team
for
all
your
support
and
participation
this
month,
gracias.
C
B
Are
so
excited
to
keep
the
celebration
going?
Please
join
us
next
quarter,
we're
going
to
have
a
great
personal
branding,
Workshop
that
we're
going
to
co-host
with
our
women's
tmrg
we're
going
to
do
a
holiday
version
of
what
ended
up
being
our
most
popular
event,
the
cafecito,
where
we're
going
to
exchange
traditions
and
just
hang
out
if
you're
interested
in
hosting
any
events.
If
you
have
ideas
for
us,
please
go
ahead,
find
us
in
our
gitlab
project
and
you
can
create
an
issue
at
the
link
below.
B
E
D
F
D
F
G
The
way
you're
you're
asking
me
this
right
after
a
very
big
family
reunion,
so
you
know
like
on
a
personal
level,
it's
like
okay,.
E
G
Can
answer
your
girlfriend
like
I
I?
Can
I
can
talk
about
this,
but
that's
the
reality
right
like
it's.
You
know
someone
was
asking
me
this
morning
and
this
is
personal
and
I
hope
it's
okay
with
you.
Please
tell
me
if
you
feel
comfortable
with
me
sharing,
but
someone
asked
me:
how
are
you
and
I
was
like?
G
You
know
what
I'm
disappointed
and
it's
okay
for
me
to
say
it
right,
because
sometimes
we
don't
even
give
ourselves
permission
to
say
that,
because
they're
our
family
and
because
you
know
like
how
is
the
saying
goes
something
like
that
right,
like
yeah,
it's
like
no
like
and
then
you
know
it
was
like
no
I
am
disappointed
because
I
was
expecting
something
else,
and
maybe
that
was
naive
for
me
or
whatever
it
was
like.
Maybe
I
was
romanticizing
it,
but
yes,
I
am
sad
and
I
am
disappointed.
Significant.
A
In
terms
of
promoting
you
know,
this
is
the
this
is
Brazilian
culture.
This
is
Brazilian
music
to
the
to
to
the
the
Paris
and
the
European
audience
and
also
kind
of
like
a
cross-pollination.
He
also
was
you
know,
absorbing
everything
that
he
saw
there
and
heard
there.
Of
course,
you
know:
American
Jazz
was
also
present
in
Paris
at
that
time,
as
many
of
you
know,
Paris
was
a
very
rich
intellectual.
A
You
know
City
at
that
time,
with
many
authors
and
Painters
and
musicians
and
everybody
exchanging
ideas
in
Paris,
so
he
was
able
to
live,
live
that
for
for
at
least
you
know
six
months
and
and
and
experience
that.
So
when
he
came
back
to
Brazil,
he
brought
even
more
Jazz
sensibilities
to
his
music.
You
know
expanded
the
band
and
it
was
more
kind
of
like
a
big
band.
You
know
just
like
you
know
the
big
bands
in
the
US
and
the
in
the
in
the
30s
and
40s
and
so
forth.
A
So
let's
listen
to
to
this.
This
is
in
the
same
kind
of
genre
of
shoru,
but
you'll
see
how
it's
evolved.
You
know
with
a
bigger
band
and
and
more
of
a
jazz
sound
on
top
of
the
the
Brazilian
rhythm
foreign.
H
H
Were
represented
again
in
Spirit
of
the
time
15th
century
most
of
Europeans
did
not
read:
okay,
less
than
30
and
conservative
estimates,
so
imagery
was
Uber
important
super
important,
and
these
are
the
imagery
that
circular
Europe
about
indigenous
peoples
all
around
you
can
see
it
yep.
H
So
this
is
a
portrayal
of
the
legionist
peoples
in
the
Caribbean.
Okay,
there
is
a
particular
Trope,
an
aesthetic
trope
in
which
they're
cast
as
monsters
of
course,
like
it's
not
about
the
validity
or
whether
the
people
exist
like
that
existed
or
not.
Most
importantly
is
what
they're
doing
so:
they're
cutting
human
chunks
and
they're
capturing
in
people
for
their
consumption.
H
Okay.
This
is
another
one
very
early
on
depicting
the
and
again
the
barbecue
people
carrying
human
parts.
H
Very
old
depiction
is
supposed
to
be
a
map,
and
this
you
see
the
roasting
of
a
person,
and
here
are
a
little
bit
more
graphic,
but
at
the
top
you
can
see
Saturn,
who
is
the
Roman
god
that
consumed
that
you
know
it
consume
their
their
children
right,
a
a
medieval
representation
of
cannibalism
and
monstrosity.
I
Mission
as
well,
and
when
the
Portuguese
here
and
I'm
saying
Columbus
was
not
a
a
hero,
not
someone
that
was
extraordinary.
He
was
just
another
guy,
because
the
Portuguese
before
they
got
to
the
Americas
they
did
they
achieved
something
that
is
there
for
us
to
see
in
the
maps.
Today
they
crossed
the
Cape
of
storms.
They
went
around
Africa
and
then
renamed
it
Cave
of
Good
Hope,
that's
Cape
Town,
and
they
did
that
in
1488..
That's
the
guy
bartolomeo
Diaz.
I
If
you
go
there,
there
will
be
a
plot
for
him,
a
monument
in
Cape
Town,
so
Diaz,
really
navigated.
The
South
Atlantic
the
last
ocean
to
be
navigated,
on
earth
right
and
understood
how
to
go
around
the
sea
to
follow
the
currents.
So
he
was
able
to
to
get
to
it
to
Asia,
eventually
right
or
open
the
door
for
vascular
gamma
to
get
to
Asia.
But
what
is
important
in
this
Voyage
of
1488
is
that
bartolomeo
Diaz
is
figuring
out
that
he
cannot
just
enter
the
South
Atlantic
and
go
around
Africa.
I
There's
like
a
bunch
of
currents,
powerful
currents.
So,
in
order
to
go
around
Africa,
you
need
actually
to
navigate
West
to
almost
get
to
the
coast
of
Brazil,
and
then
the
currents
are
gonna,
throw
you
East
again
and
that's
how
they
did
it,
but
when
they
are
doing
what
they
call
going
around
the
sea
deals
in
his
crew.
They
saw
a
bunch
of
seagulls
right,
you're
navigating
for
two
months.
I
You
are
that
you're
super
wasting
the
seagulls
and
they
see
a
specific
type
of
seaweed
that
the
new
only
appears
near
land,
so
the
Portuguese
were
like.
Yes,
there
is
land,
it
is
either
a
big
island
or
something
right,
and
we
don't
want
nobody
to
know
about
this,
because
this
is
our
route.
We
want
to
get
to
India
before
everybody
else.
I
So
when
Columbus
arrives
in
in
in
in
in
the
Indies
right
in
the
West
Indies
the
Portuguese
right
to
say,
okay
good
for
you,
you
got
it
wrong.
Two
years
later,
they
they
got
the
pope
to
say:
okay
to
a
treaty,
the
Treaty
of
torresillius,
a
treaty
between
Spain
and
Portugal,
and
the
Portuguese
say
like
let's
put
a
line
here
and
everything
east
of
this
line.
Right
is
ours
and
you
can
get
the
Caribbean,
we
don't
care,
they
protect
it.
They
land
cattle
like
around
the
mouth
of
the
Amazon
river
right.