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Gomez-Bethke, Irene (1935–2021)
“We are one race—the Human Race.” These are the words of Irene Gomez-Bethke, a daughter of Mexican parents who immigrated to Minnesota. Throughout her life, she played a leadership role in bending the arc of history toward social justice, serving as Minnesota Commissioner of Human Rights, guiding boards and commissions as a volunteer, and co-founding both Centro Cultural Chicano and Instituto de Arte y Cultura.
Irene Gomez-Bethke was born in Minneapolis in 1935. Her parents, Jesse Gomez and Maria Gomez, had immigrated from Mexico to Minnesota in 1923. Irene recalled her family’s journey in a speech she gave in 2016: “My parents came from Mexico to Texas, where they met, and both their families were enticed by the sugar beet industry to allegedly what was said to be good paying jobs in Minnesota. They came to Hector, Minnesota, in 1923. What they found was inequity of pay, substandard living conditions, and the experience of working from sun up to sun down. There was no water, and no bathroom facilities in the fields. The housing was deplorable.”
Irene’s commitment to social justice began at an early age. At her mother’s request, between 1945 and 1947 she accompanied neighbors to court dates and acted as a translator. “I remember growing up in Minneapolis and my mother asked me to translate for a neighbor who had to go to court. I quickly learned that it was not enough to know Spanish and English, one also needed to know the legal terminology. Because of the differences in Mexico, one is guilty until proven innocent, and here, you are innocent until proven guilty. I remember sharing this with our neighbor as their translator in court, so that they would be treated fairly, and to only answer the question before them. By today’s standards, it seems unreal that a child would be the only means for translation for a defendant.”
Irene married Jack Arthur Bethke at St. Joseph’s Church in Minneapolis in 1953. They had six children (Jack, Mary, Julia, Patricia, Anita, and Jesse) and lived in Minneapolis, Brooklyn Park, and New Hope. Gomez-Bethke’s career took off in the 1970s when she worked first as a manager at a KMart, then as food service director at Homeward Bound, and then as an administrative aide to Minneapolis Mayor Donald M. Fraser. At the City of Minneapolis she organized two national conferences: the US Conference of Mayors and the National Endowment for the Humanities. In the same decade she also helped found Centro Cultural Chicano and then Instituto de Arte y Cultura (IAC), of which she was executive director. During her tenure at IAC, she introduced Hispanic Heritage month to Minnesota.
Gomez-Bethke served as the chair of the Hispanic Advisory Committee to the Mayor and City Council of Minneapolis two times: first under Albert Hofstede (mayor 1974–1975) and then Donald M. Fraser (mayor 1980–1994). Minnesota Governor Al Que appointed her to the state’s Spanish Speaking Affairs Council during his term in office (1979–1983), and his successor, Rudy Perpich, did the same.
In 1982, Perpich appointed Gomez-Bethke as Minnesota’s Commissioner of Human Rights. Commissioner Gomez-Bethke then developed a plan that eliminated a 3,000-case backlog in the Human Rights Department that preceded her appointment. She also recruited and advocated for other state employees of color. In part because of her influence, Perpich appointed the first diverse group of judges in the state’s history, including Judge Alberto Miera (1983) and Judge Isabel Gomez (1984).
Gomez-Bethke joined committees and boards of directors representing a variety of local and national organizations, including the United Way of Minneapolis, Centro Legal, the Urban Coalition of Minneapolis, the National Association of Human Rights Workers, the National Board of Directors, and the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis. She was board president of Centro Legal in the mid-1980s. She was guided by her faith, and in particular by her devotion to Our Lady of Guadalupe. Archbishop John Roach appointed her to the Deanery Council of the Archdiocese of St. Paul/Minneapolis in the mid-1980s.
In 2016, the Latino Law Students Association of Mitchell Hamline Law School held a ceremony honoring Gomez-Bethke with a lifetime achievement award. Thinking back over her career, she recalled, “When Governor Rudy Perpich offered to appoint me to the position of the Human Rights Commissioner for the State of Minnesota, I was very grateful for the opportunity to not only serve the people of Minnesota but also to be a part of his Cabinet. I knew of the governor’s interest to create a more diverse government, and I quickly spoke to the governor about the lack of diverse judges. He was very open to this and he asked me to help recruit diverse candidates, which I did.”
Gomez-Bethke passed away on March 21, 2021, survived by her four siblings, her six children, fourteen grandchildren, and twenty-one great grandchildren.
Bibliography
Bjorhus, Jennifer. “Irene Gomez-Bethke, Chicana Activist and Former Minnesota Human Rights Commissioner, Dies at 86.” Minneapolis Star Tribune, March 25, 2021.
https://www.startribune.com/irene-gomez-bethke-chicana-activist-and-former-minnesota-human-rights-commissioner-dies-at-86/600038620
College of Liberal Arts, University of Minnesota. Chicano & Latino Studies.
https://cla.umn.edu/chicano-latino
Irene Gomez-Bethke papers, 1970–2001
Manuscripts Collection, Minnesota Historical Society, St. Paul
Description: Papers of a Minneapolis-born, Mexican American woman who was a leader in the Minneapolis and St. Paul Hispanic communities. The papers document her work with and involvement in several Hispanic cultural, legal, and human service organizations in the Twin Cities, the Hispanic ministries of the local Roman Catholic archdiocese, and her service in state and local government.
http://www2.mnhs.org/library/findaids/00039.xml
Reyes, Peter M, Judge of the Minnesota Court of Appeals. “Memoriam of Irene Gomez-Bethke.” Minnesota Hispanic Bar Association, 2021.
https://minnhba.org/in-memoriam-of-irene-gomez-bethke
Roethke, Leigh. Latino Minnesota. Afton, MN: Afton Historical Press, 2007.
US Department of Labor, Wage and Hour Division. Field Sanitation Provisions of the Occupational Safety and Health Act.
https://www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/agriculture/field-sanitation
Related Resources
Web
Archdiocese of Saint Paul & Minneapolis. Ministerio Latino.
https://www.archspm.org/ministerio-latino
Centro Tyrone Guzman.
https://www.centromn.org
Migrant and Seasonal Agriculture Protection Act.
https://www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/agriculture/mspa
Minnesota Department of Human Rights.
https://mn.gov/mdhr
Minnesota Judicial Branch, Interpreter Resources.
https://www.mncourts.gov/Help-Topics/Court-Interpreter-Program/Interpreters.aspx
Minnesota Legislative Reference Library, Minnesota Council on Latino Affairs.
https://www.lrl.mn.gov/agencies/detail?AgencyID=2220
MN Statute 630.11. “Right to Interpreter, State Policy.” Minnesota Statutes, 2021.
https://www.revisor.mn.gov/statutes/cite/611.30
The Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970 (OSHAct).
https://www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/agriculture/field-sanitation
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Irene Gomez-Bethke
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Irene Marie Gomez with family
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Irene Marie Gomez in high school
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Jack Bethke and Irene Gomez-Bethke
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Jack Bethke and Irene Gomez-Bethke with their children, 1960s
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Jack Bethke and Irene Gomez-Bethke with their children, 1970s
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Irene Gomez-Bethke, 1970s
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Irene Gomez-Bethke and Ronn Vargas with Minneapolis Mayor Don Fraser
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Irene Gomez-Bethke at her college graduation
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Irene Gomez-Bethke at a community event
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Irene Gomez-Bethke with Rudy and Lola Perpich
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Irene Gomez-Bethke and Jack Bethke with Walter Mondale
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Irene Gomez-Bethke and Jack Bethke with one of their great grandchildren
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Irene Gomez-Bethke with her husband and children
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Irene Gomez-Bethke with her lifetime achievement award
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Turning Point
In 1982, Governor Rudy Perpich appoints Irene Gomez-Bethke the Human Rights Commissioner of the state of Minnesota’s Human Rights Department. The Minnesota State Legislature confirms her appointment.
Chronology
1923
1970
1983
1935
1945
1953
1974
1982
1983
1980s
1990s
late 1990s
1998
1999
2001
2016
2021
2022
Bibliography
Bjorhus, Jennifer. “Irene Gomez-Bethke, Chicana Activist and Former Minnesota Human Rights Commissioner, Dies at 86.” Minneapolis Star Tribune, March 25, 2021.
https://www.startribune.com/irene-gomez-bethke-chicana-activist-and-former-minnesota-human-rights-commissioner-dies-at-86/600038620
College of Liberal Arts, University of Minnesota. Chicano & Latino Studies.
https://cla.umn.edu/chicano-latino
Irene Gomez-Bethke papers, 1970–2001
Manuscripts Collection, Minnesota Historical Society, St. Paul
Description: Papers of a Minneapolis-born, Mexican American woman who was a leader in the Minneapolis and St. Paul Hispanic communities. The papers document her work with and involvement in several Hispanic cultural, legal, and human service organizations in the Twin Cities, the Hispanic ministries of the local Roman Catholic archdiocese, and her service in state and local government.
http://www2.mnhs.org/library/findaids/00039.xml
Reyes, Peter M, Judge of the Minnesota Court of Appeals. “Memoriam of Irene Gomez-Bethke.” Minnesota Hispanic Bar Association, 2021.
https://minnhba.org/in-memoriam-of-irene-gomez-bethke
Roethke, Leigh. Latino Minnesota. Afton, MN: Afton Historical Press, 2007.
US Department of Labor, Wage and Hour Division. Field Sanitation Provisions of the Occupational Safety and Health Act.
https://www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/agriculture/field-sanitation
Related Resources
Web
Archdiocese of Saint Paul & Minneapolis. Ministerio Latino.
https://www.archspm.org/ministerio-latino
Centro Tyrone Guzman.
https://www.centromn.org
Migrant and Seasonal Agriculture Protection Act.
https://www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/agriculture/mspa
Minnesota Department of Human Rights.
https://mn.gov/mdhr
Minnesota Judicial Branch, Interpreter Resources.
https://www.mncourts.gov/Help-Topics/Court-Interpreter-Program/Interpreters.aspx
Minnesota Legislative Reference Library, Minnesota Council on Latino Affairs.
https://www.lrl.mn.gov/agencies/detail?AgencyID=2220
MN Statute 630.11. “Right to Interpreter, State Policy.” Minnesota Statutes, 2021.
https://www.revisor.mn.gov/statutes/cite/611.30
The Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970 (OSHAct).
https://www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/agriculture/field-sanitation