Community event in Nashville, TN

Spanish is the second-most-spoken language in Nashville, but it’s just one of many represented in Davidson County, which has seen a significant rise in its multicultural population in recent years…

…From the Uzbek cuisine at Osh to the city’s burgeoning Latin music scene, Nashville’s diversity enriches its character, offering multifarious perspectives, ideas and cultural identities. Plenty of research shows that diversity, in all its forms, enhances economic and social development across sectors.

Nashville Scene. Room for Interpretation: How Nashville Could Better Serve Its Multilingual Community

Nashville’s rapidly growing cultural diversity is its strength. The vibrant mix of backgrounds can enrich the lives of every resident.


La diversidad multicultural aquí en Nashville es su fortaleza. La mezcla vibrante de fondos puede enriquecer la vida de todos los residentes.

¿Quién está aprendiendo español aquí en Nashville?

Who is learning Spanish here in Nashville?

Paige

Paige

Reporter

As a reporter at WPLN we are lucky to partner with Nashville Noticias, which is an all-Spanish news outlet here in Nashville. I really wanted to work on my Spanish so that I could better participate in that partnership and also to make sure that when I’m telling stories about our city and the people that live here, I’m able to do that regardless of whether someone speaks English or Spanish.

I use Spanish every week to translate some of the stories we do for Nashville Noticias.

Haynes

Hayes

Musician

I felt like It would not only be fulfilling for me [to improve my Spanish], but also…the right thing to do to try to meet people in the middle and get myself to a place where I’m more comfortable speaking this language that so many other people speak in my [world] and in the city of Nashville.

I’ve seen so many times how language barriers completely stop relationships from happening, stop people from understanding one another. There’s just this wall between people that seems so silly to me.

Madga

Magda

Librarian

I wanted to learn Spanish because my neighbors are Spanish-speakers and I wanted to be able to communicate better. I work at the library and it is so much easier to help them if I can speak at least a little of their native language.

Nichole

Nichole

Spanish Heritage Speaker

I lovingly call myself a ‘no sabo’ kid sometimes, which is a joke in our Latino community based on a frequent mistake that people make in Spanish. I am the Latina who grew up in the States, but didn’t learn Spanish the way that some of my peers did.

The Latino population here in Nashville has grown by 60% in the past decade.


La población latino de Nashville ha crecido por 60% en la última decada.

1 in 4 students in the Metro Nashville Public School system has limited English proficiency. As our city grows, speaking a second language becomes an asset to anyone working in education.

Nashville schools, business, hospitals, banks, and social services need bilingual staff in order to thrive, and Nashvillians need to speak more than one language to stay competitive in the job market.

Nashville’s Latino community is projected to represent 34 percent of the population by 2040. This change is bringing new cultural and social opportunities to the city’s residents.