Maria Varela (born January 1940) is a Mexican-American civil rights photographer, community organizer, a writer, and a teacher. She has been actively involved in Civil Rights movements, advocating rights for indigenous communities and protects cultural heritage within African-American, Native-American, and Mexican-American in rural communities. She created and supported several non-profits organizations to help many minority groups, especially Native-American and Mexican-American. She won a MacArthur Fellowship in 1990 for her endeavor to help with the Native-American communities in northern New Mexico, southern Colorado, and northeastern Arizona to develop economic opportunities and preserve their human rights.
Maria Varela was born in Pennsylvania and lived in many different places in her younger days, but spent most of her time in the upper Midwest.[1] Raised Catholic by her Mexican father and Irish mother, she grew up in a rigorous Catholic environment.[1] She went to the St. Louis Academy for Girls in Chicago,[2] and then to Alverno College.[1] In college, she joined the national Young Christian Students (YCS) program where she was given the position to travel the country to encourage young students to support Civil Rights Movements.
In 1963, Varela went deep in the south to support the Civil Rights Movements where she began working with the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee in Alabama and Mississippi.[1] She later graduated from University of Massachusetts.[3]
She married Lorenzo Zuniga Jr.[4] She now lives in Albuquerque.[5]
From a young age, Maria Varela has been actively involved in various civil rights movements and organizations, from the Young Christian Student (YCS) program to Latinx Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), which sets a foundation for her later work in the Civil Rights movement and in helping Native-American and Mexican-American communities[6] She helped organize rural development[7] and find Tierra Wools co-op. She was also photographer for Black Star (photo agency) that works to include African-American representations for voters education, capturing critical moments in the Civil Rights Movement.[8]
She was also a visiting professor at Colorado College, and was adjunct professor at University of New Mexico.[9]
Since college, Maria Varela has been actively involved in the civil rights movement
Varela recognized the urgent issue of how the images provided for voter education materials excluded African American community and lacked diversity in racial representation. Thus, her works focused on documenting the significant steps made by African American leaders and captured the progression and evolvement of the Civil Rights Movement.
Maria Varela's literacy work is one of the most under-recognized and almost unstudied literacies in the U.S.[11] However, her multimodal works, collaboratively produced by Varela and the African American community, make the important argument about community activism, which is crucial and novel but seldom discussed. Her work plays a critical role in those communities developing a new ethos of place: an imagined and embodied relationship between local and national communities that offers a new identity and sense of participatory agency.
In 1962, Maria Varela was invited to start agricultural cooperatives and community health clinics in New Mexico.[12] Since then, she has been working with indigenous leaders to help them develop economic opportunities and protect cultural heritage within African-American, Native-American, and Mexican-American rural communities. Varela co-founded Ganados del Valle in 1981, a nonprofit, economic development corporation that dedicates to predominantly help Hispanic and Native-American communities in northern New Mexico, southern Colorado, and northeastern Arizona to preserve their pastoral cultures, lands, and water rights. She helped created a wool-growers cooperative that included a weaving and spinning enterprise, training in small business development, and cultural reaffirmation. She spent years trying to create and enable nonprofit organizations and viable enterprises to build upon and add to existing local resources, and was awarded was an MacArthur Award in 1990.