03/24/2026
QEPD el Profe. Rudy Acuña.
Rudy Acuña didn’t just teach Chicano Studies — he was the key architect in building it.
He challenged power, told our stories, and helped generations of students see themselves in history.
That is legacy. My deepest condolences to his family, friends and loved ones. Rest in power, Profe. 🕊️
As someone who pursued a minor in Chicano Studies, I know how transformative that education is — it laid bare the systemic racism and institutional barriers our communities have organized, resisted, and fought to dismantle.
That is why, when I served in the State Assembly, I was a principal co-author of Ethnic Studies 101 — so every high school student could learn our history - history that for so long has been denied to us and that has only been accessible if* you went to college. Our stories belong in our classrooms.
And if you haven’t read his book, “Occupied America,” I encourage you to pick it up. Its lessons on history, power, and resistance are more relevant in today’s political climate than ever before.