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Garza first became interested in genealogy when he and his father were migrant workers in Texas, listening to his father’s family stories during long hours picking carrots. “I’m not going to say I’m embarrassed or going to apologize for what they did, because I have ancestors on both sides,” Garza said. Courtesy Teresa Vega“Enslavement [and] genocide were designed to cut the ties that bind,” said Teresa Vega, an African American and Puerto Rican genealogist and public educator based in New York. “I had been to Puerto Rico before, but I reconnected with my Taíno and Afro Indigenous side,” Vega said. At that time she was like, ‘There’s no way I’m going to own a store selling candles,’” Garcia said.
Persons: Colombia —, South America —, Moises Garza, Garza, “ I’m, ” Garza, ” Gates, , Teresa Vega, George Graves, Sampson, , ” Vega, ” Giselle Rivera, Flores, Giselle Rivera Flores Giselle Rivera, ” Rivera, Alexis Garcia, Princess Nokia, Garcia, Jerusalén Morales, ” Garcia, , Selina Morales, “ Selina, ’ ” Garcia Organizations: Vega, Latina, Rivera, Botánica Locations: Cartagena, Colombia, South America, Colombian, New York, Texas, Mexican, Mexico, Ghana, Toronto, African American, Puerto Rican, Puerto Rico, Worcester , Massachusetts, Cameroon, Congo, Nigeria, Senegal, Mali, Benin, Latin America, Bronx,
Vintage Red-Carpet Looks Are Having a Moment
  + stars: | 2023-03-11 | by ( Fiorella Valdesolo | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: +1 min
With awards season in full swing comes the red-carpet photo dump of picture-perfect celebrities: Hours have been spent on hair and makeup; limbs are dripping in six-figure jewels; and couture finery abounds. But on Instagram, a different, less fussy era of red-carpet dressing has begun to hold sway via accounts that serve as scrapbooks of what celebrities once wore. The 2002 MTV Video Music Awards as a new fashion touchstone, for example? A post last year on New York stylist and vintage fashion archivist Gabriel Held’s Instagram feed suggested as much, with a carousel of images featuring the likes of Molly Sims and Ashanti in various hip bone–baring, low-slung styles emblematic of the early aughts. “I feel like the Gen Z kids are at a point now where they’re kind of referencing the era that they were born in,” says Held.
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