Marta Miranda Straub advocates for Kentuckians navigating through social services

*Reporter’s note: I sat down with this remarkable leader in 2022. I wanted to share her story so you can see where they get their motivation, inspiration and fearless drive. 

By Sherlene Shanklin, WHAS11, ABC Louisville

As we continue with Hispanic Heritage Month. She’s no stranger to the community as an advocate and activist.  In today’s Moments that Matter I sit down with Marta Miranda Straub. 

She answers the call and advocates for those who have no voice. Marta Miranda Straub is the Commissioner for the Dept of Community Based Services for the State of Kentucky.  She explains what brought her out of retirement. 

She says “The governor called and you know I said yes. Because I really respect his leadership during COVID, and his values and his congruency with helping. So of course, I said yes, but I hadn’t told my husband about it. I was retired, we were on our way to Florida. I got that tattoo, I wrote the memoir, I opened a consulting company, I’m ready to go.”

Marta heads to Frankfort with almost 50 years of experience in social work and advocacy.   She says “What happens is my team and I oversee 1000 staff, a billion dollar budget, we oversee social services in 120 counties.” Marta’s tells me how she came to America. “So my mother, father and brother applied for political asylum from Cuba, to the United States. And we came in 1966. I was 10 years old at the time. And at that time, you had to have a sponsor family to be able to come to the United States and the government had to approve you leaving.” 

Living in Miami and later moving to the mountains of Eastern Kentucky. Saying it was one of the best decisions she’s ever made.   Educating people about her culture why representation is important?  She says, “You know, its, we’re either fiery hearts and sexy or we’re criminals like Scarface, you know, there’s no reality of the majority of where we are. There’s also no understanding of the diversity within the Latino community. You know, there’s only 22 countries that we come from, you know, so we’re not all from here or from there. Representation matters. And unpacking that diversity within a group is really important.”

Losing her twin at birth gave her the power not only speak up for herself but others. While leaving an impression along the way. “My legacy is really my activism. You know, no matter what position I’ve been in, I’ve always been a voice.”

►Contact WHAS11’s Sherlene Shanklin at sshanklin@whas11.com or follow her on FacebookTwitter, or Instagram.  Photojournalist Nelson Reyes and Edited by Todd Prinz. 

To see the story click the link below: https://www.whas11.com/article/news/community/moments-that-matter/marta-miranda-straub-kentucky-hispanic-heritage-month/417-1a9fe7bc-aad0-4544-b6e9-aa1716645bbb

The VIPP Report: Kin Killin’ Kin Artist James Pate Visits Louisville

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(Louisville, KY) The Kentucky Center for African American Heritage is exhibiting James Pate’s KKK Series Kin Killin’ Kin Traveling Art Exhibition September 14 – November 12, 2018. The artist James Pate will give a gallery talk during the opening reception on Friday, September 21, 2018, 6:00 – 9:00 pm. Pate will discuss what motivated him to create Kin Killin’ Kin featuring scenes of young African-American men donned in Ku Klux Klan hoods committing acts of violence, creating an overt comparison between gang violence and the terrorism of the KKK. Pate says, “the numbers of Blacks killed by other Blacks since reconstruction far exceeds those lynched by “Whites”. Sadly, this pattern continued year after year, up to the present day”. The Center for Disease Control cites homicide as the leading cause of death for Black males between the age of 15 and 34.

Pate’s Kin Killin’ Kin is designed to shock and stop the viewer. Pate says “mainly, I want kids to pause and reflect”.

To close out the exhibition, a Youth Voices Against Violence Forum will held at the Heritage Center on Saturday, November 3, 2018, 1:00 – 3:00 p.m. During this forum, District 15 Councilwoman Cheri Bryant Hamilton will facilitate a panel of youth from our community who will discuss the themes of gun violence and other forms of violence occurring in our society today. This panel of youth will examine the themes of gun violence within the context of public health, bystander action, healing through arts, and mobilizing for change through community dialogues.

Kin Killin’ Kin curator Willis Bing Davis says, “art holds the power to promote change”. For Davis, that’s partly because art is a language that everyone understands. “It is the universal connection of the art,” he said. “Art is one of the things that touches all of us.” Art is also a liberating language, he says. “Sometimes the art can say something that we can’t say in words.”

The Heritage Center views this exhibition as a powerful tool to promote community dialogue and community action by delving deeper into the themes of the exhibit, highlighting current efforts in violence prevention in Metro Louisville and cultivating the youth voice in the community. The Heritage Center recognizes the increase in gun violence and its impact on the communities it serves and presents Kin Killin’ Kin for the community to take action.

If you would like to setup an interview and/or tour the exhibit, contact Sherlene Shanklin with VIPP Communications at 502-295-0435 or by email info@vippcommunications.com.  We hope you are able to post on your calendars so your viewers and/or listeners get an opportunity to see the exhibit while in Louisville.

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