A group of people are holding colorful protest banners and signs in front of a building. The main large yellow banner reads 'Care Creates Community.' Another banner in the foreground says 'El Puente Leaders for Peace & Justice.' Participants show support for immigrant rights, climate justice, and other causes.

Who We Are

El Puente is a human rights institution founded in 1982 with a mission to inspire and nurture leadership for peace and justice. Based in NYC and Puerto Rico with national and international impact, El Puente directly serves approximately 12,000 individuals annually from nine youth Leadership Centers across the Southside of Williamsburg and Bushwick, Brooklyn and Rio Piedras, Puerto Rico. 

El Puente creates community-led movements of self determination among low-income, oppressed peoples, Latine and communities of color through a holistic leadership and membership model, and high impact youth and community development programs.  The majority of those served by El Puente are Latine (63%) and Black (26%), Spanish-speaking and low-income; many are immigrants and some undocumented, including recently arrived migrant families and asylum seekers. These individuals and their families face high barriers of access to employment and educational opportunities, affordable and adequate housing, and arts and cultural preservation.


Group of young men posing with basketball in front of colorful backdrop, wearing casual streetwear.
Parade scene with large puppet and group of people in colorful outfits on a city street at night.
Outdoor area with 'El Puente' sign, autumn trees, and colorful mural on a wall.
A group of people posing for a photo outdoors. Some are wearing casual clothing with event T-shirts featuring a logo, while others are dressed more formally. Several people wear hats. There are colorful balloons and a mural in the background, suggesting a community event or celebration.
A group of people gathered outdoors, with a man in a suit leading a discussion and others listening, one holding a device.
Crowd of people holding signs and Puerto Rican flag in a street protest.

Our Story

Founded in 1982 in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, El Puente quickly became a sanctuary for young people seeking to find their voice, escape gang violence, and fight for justice. From the start, it took bold action, leading the 1986 PS 16 boycott to end segregation, halting a radioactive waste site (1988), and blocking a 55-story incinerator (1991). Environmental justice efforts like Espiritu Tierra Garden (1990) and the Green Light District (2011) ensured Williamsburg remained a place where residents could thrive.

Art and culture have been central to El Puente’s activism. Teatro El Puente (1987) used forum theater for public health education, while Los Muralistas (1990) turned Williamsburg into a vibrant expression of social justice. Annual traditions like the 3 Kings Show (since 1987) and WEPA Festival (since 2012) celebrate Latine and other communities of color’s heritage and cultural sustainability.

Education has been a pillar of El Puente’s mission. It founded El Puente Academy for Peace and Justice (1993), one of the first U.S. public high schools focused on social justice, and expanded with Beacon (1998) for early childhood development, Community Schools (2015), and Youth Ambassadors (2015), connecting young leaders with Puerto Rico’s self-determination movement.

El Puente’s influence extends beyond Brooklyn. It co-founded the U.S. resistance movement against the Navy’s bombing of Vieques (1999), built global youth coalitions through El Puente Scholars (2011), and tackled climate change in the Caribbean with the Latino Climate Action Network (2013). Art has remained a tool for justice, from CADRE (2009) to the award-winning No Control (2011) anti-gang violence campaign.

The organization has consistently responded to community needs. The Wellness Hub (2020) provided critical support during the COVID-19 pandemic, raising $400,000 for families. Nuestro Aire, Our Air (2019) fought for cleaner air and green spaces in Los Sures. In 2025, El Puente expanded its vision in Puerto Rico, acquiring a building in Río Piedras to create a climate refuge and a hub against gentrification.

Through decades of community-led action, El Puente remains an unwavering force for justice. From mobilizing thousands for the 2014 People’s Climate March to its continued advocacy for Puerto Rican political prisoners, the organization's legacy is one of relentless struggle and visionary leadership. Today, it continues to uplift the next generation, carrying forward the dream of its late founder, Luis Garden Acosta, whose passing in 2019 marked the end of an era—but not the movement he ignited.

A group of people in a street parade, holding signs advocating for just access to energy, soil, and water, and promoting citizen participation and energy transformation. They carry an art piece resembling a tree. Buildings and colorful decorations are visible in the background.

Our Vision

El Puente will expand its legacy as a leader in social justice, through programs in education, arts and culture, health and wellness, and environment for Latine and other communities of color. El Puente will extend its impact as a bridge to advance equity - citywide, nationally and internationally- through its research and evidence based models of advocacy and self-determination. El Puente will focus and expand its resources, facilities and programs to amplify its capacity as a movement to create a more just and equitable world.

Our Leadership

Our Funders

Allied Media Projects

Amplify Fund (Neighborhood Funders Group - NFG)

Arts & Letters Foundation

Blanchette Hooker Rockefeller Fund

Charter Communications Operating LLC.

Change Capital Fund

Climate Reality Project

Curtis McGraw Foundation

Department of Cultural Affairs Discretionary

Dormitory Authority from the State of New York

Foundation Segarra Boerman e Hijos Inc.

Frontline Justice Fund

Governor’s Island

Hispanic Federation

MacMillan Family Foundation

Maria Fund (Tides)

Michigan State University (MSU) & University of Puerto Rico (UPR)

National Endowment for the Arts

New York Community Trust: GoVote NYC

New York University (NYU)

NYC College & Career Awareness

NYC Council Discretionary Funding

NYC Department of Education

NYC Department of Youth and Community Development

NYC EJA (Environmental Justice Alliance)

NYCT Creative Youth Development

NY Renews' Regrant Program (Tides)

NYSCA (New York State Council on the Arts)

Office of Children and Family Services

Omni America

Pinkerton Foundation

Rockefeller Family Fund - Change in Horizon

The SC Group

UW NYC Community Schools