Showing posts with label assembly. Show all posts
Showing posts with label assembly. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 24, 2026

Politics: Education Policy: The Fight for Italian American History in California Schools

 


Politics: The Fight for Italian American History in California Schools

Curriculum Battles, Legislative Efforts, and Historical Recognition in 2026


By Chris M. Forte


My Perspective: Growing Up Invisible

When I was growing up in California schools, I never knew I was an Italian American.

Yes, my mother’s side came from northern and western Europe and helped form the country around the time of the Revolutionary War — but those stories and customs were never really passed down. It was my father’s side — the Italian immigrants who arrived in the United States in the 1920s — that shaped my family’s identity.

And while we were very Americanized, blended in, and assimilated, there were still vestiges of that Italian immigrant and later Italian American heritage in my life: food, family culture, names, values, and stories.

But at school, no one ever called me “Italian American.”
No one even called me “European American.”

I was simply labeled:

  • White
  • Caucasian
  • Anglo — ironically a misnomer for Latin Italians

I was just another “White American.”

Meanwhile, I had Mexican American, Chinese American, and African American classmates — all of whom had units, lessons, or entire courses dedicated to their ethnic or racial history. I never learned about:

  • WWII restrictions on Italian Americans
  • Italians labeled “enemy aliens”
  • Fishermen removed from California coastal waters
  • The 1891 lynching of eleven Italians in New Orleans
  • Anti-Italian discrimination in California

Italian immigrants received maybe a sentence — sometimes a paragraph — in textbooks. Yet Italian Americans were one of the most pivotal ethnic groups in California history.

When I eventually discovered all of this on my own, I was frustrated. Not because I wanted special treatment — but because I realized my heritage had simply been ignored. I felt invisible in an education system that reduced identity to simplified racial categories.

Some Italian Americans don’t mind this. They argue:

We assimilated.
We blended in.
We are just Americans now.

And in many ways, I agree.

In a perfect world, everyone who comes to the United States blends into one people — one nation — E pluribus unum, out of many, one.

I am a proud American. American first. Always.

But does that mean we abandon our family history entirely?
Does it mean we stop learning about it?
Does it mean it has no place in education?

I don’t think so.

In a global society, learning about cultures — including Italian American culture — is not division. It’s education. It’s history. It’s understanding who built this country.

That is why this issue matters to me.


🏛️ A Quiet Political Debate With Big Cultural Stakes

In 2026, one of the most important political issues affecting Italian Americans in California is not immigration, foreign policy, or elections — it’s education.

Specifically:

Should Italian American history be taught in California public schools?

The question has become more urgent because California now requires ethnic studies courses in high school, and Italian Americans are often missing from the curriculum.

This has triggered advocacy, legislative resolutions, and growing political discussion across the state.


📚 The Ethnic Studies Requirement — And The Italian American Gap

California’s ethnic studies requirement means:

  • High schools must offer ethnic studies courses
  • Curriculum focuses on race, identity, and social justice
  • Schools choose which groups to include

Italian American advocates say:

  • Italians often not included
  • History reduced to Columbus debate
  • Mafia stereotypes appear more than real history
  • Major discrimination events ignored

This has led to calls for Italian American curriculum inclusion.


📜 What Advocates Want Taught in Schools

Historical Topics

  • 1891 New Orleans lynching of Italians
  • Anti-Italian discrimination in California
  • Italian fishermen forced from West Coast during WWII
  • “Enemy alien” restrictions on Italians
  • Italian American labor and agriculture history

Cultural Contributions

  • California wine industry pioneers
  • San Francisco fishing fleet
  • Bank of Italy → Bank of America
  • Italian American neighborhoods (Little Italys)
  • Italian American civic leadership

📰 Pull Quote

“Italian Americans helped build California — yet many students never learn that history.”


⚖️ Legislative Activity in California

Recent California political actions include:

Italian American Heritage Recognition Resolution

The California Legislature passed a resolution:

  • Recognizing Italian American Heritage Month
  • Encouraging schools to teach Italian American history
  • Promoting educational programming

While not mandatory, it signals state support for curriculum inclusion.


WWII Discrimination — A Growing Focus

One of the strongest arguments for inclusion centers on World War II abuses against Italian Americans.

Many students learn about Japanese internment — but not Italian restrictions.

During WWII:

  • 600,000 Italians labeled “enemy aliens”
  • Curfews imposed in California
  • Fishermen banned from coastal waters
  • Travel restrictions enforced
  • Arrests and relocations occurred

California later issued a formal apology, but this history is rarely taught.

Advocates now want this included in ethnic studies courses.


1891 New Orleans Lynching — A Forgotten Civil Rights Story

Italian American advocates also highlight:

The 1891 lynching of 11 Italian immigrants in New Orleans

It remains:

  • One of the largest mass lynchings in U.S. history
  • A major anti-Italian violence incident
  • Rarely covered in textbooks

Supporters argue this belongs in ethnic studies alongside other civil rights topics.


⚖️ The Debate

Supporters say

  • Italians faced discrimination
  • Italians shaped California
  • Ethnic studies should include all groups
  • Italian students deserve representation

Critics say

  • Italians now considered white
  • Curriculum time limited
  • Focus should remain on other groups

This debate is happening right now in California education circles.


🇮🇹 Why This Matters in California

California has major Italian American communities:

  • San Francisco
  • Monterey
  • San Jose
  • Sacramento
  • Los Angeles
  • San Diego

Italian immigrants helped build:

  • Fishing industry
  • Agriculture
  • Wine production
  • Banking
  • Construction
  • Small business districts

Yet many students never learn this.


📊 Sidebar: What Italian American Advocates Are Asking For

Policy Goals (2026)

  • Include Italian Americans in ethnic studies curriculum
  • Teach WWII restrictions on Italians
  • Teach 1891 New Orleans lynching
  • Include California Italian history
  • Recognize Italian American Heritage Month in schools
  • Reduce stereotypes in textbooks

🗳️ The Political Bottom Line

In 2026, the biggest political issue affecting Italian Americans in California is:

Recognition. Representation. Education.

The debate over ethnic studies is shaping whether:

  • Italian contributions are remembered
  • Discrimination history is taught
  • Italian American identity is represented

This is not just about curriculum —
it’s about who gets included in California’s story.

BACK

Monday, March 23, 2026

Politics: The Italian American Legislative Caucus of California

 


Politics: The Italian Caucus of California

A Small Beginning — and a Big Moment for Italian Americans in Sacramento

By Chris M. Forte

For more than a century, Italian Americans helped build California — from fishermen in San Francisco and farmers in the Central Valley to merchants in Los Angeles and the families who shaped neighborhoods like San Diego’s Little Italy. Their names are on wineries, churches, restaurants, civic halls, and family businesses across the state.

Yet in Sacramento, that presence has largely been invisible.

California has long had legislative caucuses representing major communities — Black, Latino, Asian Pacific Islander, LGBTQ, Jewish — but Italian Americans never had a comparable organized voice inside the Legislature.

That may now be starting to change.

A newly formed Italian Caucus of California — still informal and developing — represents what could become the first modern Italian-American legislative caucus effort in California history. Small in membership but large in symbolism, the caucus signals something many Italian-American leaders have quietly discussed for years: the need for recognition, coordination, and representation at the state level.


A Caucus Is Born

The emerging caucus is being led by two lawmakers:

  • Assemblymember Catherine Stefani
  • State Senator Dave Cortese

The two legislators have been identified as co-chairs of the Italian Caucus of California, presenting the initiative during meetings with Italian diplomatic officials and community organizations in early 2026.

Their message was simple: support Italian-American associations, preserve heritage, and strengthen ties between lawmakers and California’s Italian communities.

That may sound modest. But for a community that has historically lacked a unified political voice in California, it is significant.

Pull Quote:
“For the first time, Italian Americans in California are beginning to organize a visible presence inside the state’s political system.”

Unlike long-standing legislative caucuses, the Italian Caucus is still in its early phase. It does not yet have a published membership roster, legislative platform, or formal recognition in official caucus listings. But the foundation is there — and foundations matter.


What the Caucus Appears to Support

Based on public statements, appearances, and early outreach, the Italian Caucus of California appears focused on several core priorities:

Cultural Heritage Preservation

Supporting Italian-American cultural organizations, historical societies, and heritage districts across California.

Recognition of Italian-American Contributions

Highlighting the role Italian immigrants played in shaping California’s economy, agriculture, fishing industry, and urban neighborhoods.

Community Relationship Building

Connecting lawmakers with Italian cultural centers, Little Italy districts, and statewide organizations.

Youth and Language Preservation

Encouraging transmission of Italian language and cultural traditions to younger generations.

Public Visibility

Promoting Italian-American heritage events and statewide recognition initiatives.

These priorities resemble the early stages of many other ethnic caucuses — beginning with recognition, then expanding into policy.


Visits to Little Italies and Cultural Districts

One of the caucus’s most visible early activities has been engagement with California’s historic Italian neighborhoods.

Lawmakers connected with community leaders in places like:

  • San Diego’s Little Italy
  • Bay Area Italian-American organizations
  • Northern California cultural associations

These visits emphasize a key theme: Italian American history is not just nostalgic — it is living, evolving, and still relevant to California’s identity.

Pull Quote:
“Italian-American heritage in California isn’t just history — it’s a living cultural network that still shapes communities today.”


Why This Matters Now

Italian Americans in California occupy a unique position.

Unlike some other ethnic groups, Italian Americans are often seen as fully assimilated — part of the broader mainstream. That success, however, has also meant less organized advocacy, fewer coordinated statewide initiatives, and limited representation in policy discussions.

Meanwhile, other communities have built strong caucuses that influence:

  • Cultural preservation funding
  • Educational curriculum
  • Historical recognition
  • Tourism promotion
  • Community grants
  • Anti-discrimination efforts

The absence of an Italian-American caucus meant those issues were rarely coordinated statewide.

That gap may now begin to close.


Sidebar

Why an Italian-American Caucus Matters in California History

Italian Americans have played a major role in California’s development:

  • San Francisco fishermen and waterfront workers
  • Central Valley farmers and winemakers
  • Los Angeles merchants and restaurateurs
  • San Diego tuna fleet families
  • Northern California miners and laborers
  • Builders of Little Italy districts across the state

Despite this influence, Italian Americans have historically lacked:

  • A statewide legislative caucus
  • Coordinated heritage policy
  • Unified cultural advocacy
  • Consistent political representation

An Italian-American caucus could help:

• Protect historic Little Italy districts
• Support Italian cultural centers
• Promote Italian language education
• Recognize Italian-American history in schools
• Strengthen California–Italy cultural ties
• Celebrate Italian-American Heritage Month
• Support preservation of immigrant history

In short, it gives a historic community a modern voice.


Still Early — But Symbolically Important

It is important to be clear: the Italian Caucus of California is still new and developing.

It does not yet have:

  • A full membership roster
  • A legislative agenda
  • Official recognition in caucus listings
  • A large bloc of lawmakers

But every caucus begins this way.

Small. Informal. Growing.

Pull Quote:
“This may be a small caucus today — but historically, even small beginnings can reshape how communities are recognized.”


The Road Ahead

The future of the Italian Caucus of California will depend on several factors:

  • Whether additional legislators join
  • Whether the caucus formalizes its structure
  • Whether it introduces policy initiatives
  • Whether Italian-American organizations engage with it
  • Whether the community supports and grows the effort

If it expands, the caucus could become a meaningful voice for:

Italian heritage
Italian-American identity
Historic preservation
Community institutions
Cultural education
Statewide recognition

If it remains small, it will still represent something new: Italian Americans organizing politically in California in a visible, coordinated way.

Either way, it marks a moment worth watching.


Known Leadership (So Far)

Co-Chairs

  • Assemblymember Catherine Stefani
  • Senator Dave Cortese

Membership beyond leadership has not yet been publicly formalized.


A Quiet but Historic Development

California’s Italian-American story stretches from the Gold Rush to modern Little Italies. It includes farmers, fishermen, priests, activists, business owners, artists, and families who helped shape the state.

For decades, that story existed mostly outside Sacramento.

The Italian Caucus of California — even in its early stage — suggests that may finally be changing.

And sometimes, history begins quietly.

Assemblymember Catherine Stefani

Co-Chair — Italian Caucus of California




District: Assembly District 19 (San Francisco)
Website: https://stefani.asmdc.org
Capitol Office: 1021 O Street, Suite 5220, Sacramento, CA 95814
Phone: (916) 319-2019
District Office: (415) 557-2312
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/CatherineStefaniCA

Stefani is one of the co-founders of the Italian Caucus of California, working to strengthen ties between lawmakers and Italian-American organizations, cultural institutions, and heritage districts across the state.


“Italian-American heritage is part of California’s identity — and it deserves recognition in Sacramento.”


Senator Dave Cortese

Co-Chair — Italian Caucus of California




District: Senate District 15 (Santa Clara County)
Website: https://sd15.senate.ca.gov
Capitol Office: 1021 O Street, Suite 7520, Sacramento, CA 95814
Phone: (916) 651-4015
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/davecortesegov
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/davecortesegov

Cortese has described himself publicly as co-founder of the Italian Caucus of California, emphasizing heritage recognition, community outreach, and collaboration with Italian-American organizations statewide.


“Italian Americans helped build California — this caucus helps ensure that story is not forgotten.”

____________________________________________


Contact the Caucus

Since the caucus is still forming, contact through co-chairs:

Assemblymember Stefani
https://stefani.asmdc.org/contact

Senator Cortese
https://sd15.senate.ca.gov/contact


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