From CNN comes the news of the migrant family that became the icon of a generation:
McIntosh is the girl to the left of her mother when you look at the photograph. The picture is best known as “Migrant Mother,” a black-and-white photo taken in February or March 1936 by Dorothea Lange of Florence Owens Thompson, then 32, and her children.
Lange was traveling through Nipomo, California, taking photographs of migrant farm workers for the Resettlement Administration. At the time, Thompson had seven children who worked with her in the fields.
“She asked my mother if she could take her picture — that … her name would never be published, but it was to help the people in the plight that we were all in, the hard times,” McIntosh says.
“So mother let her take the picture, because she thought it would help.”
The next morning, the photo was printed in a local paper, but by then the family had already moved on to another farm, McIntosh says.
“The picture came out in the paper to show the people what hard times was. People was starving in that camp. There was no food,” she says. “We were ashamed of it. We didn’t want no one to know who we were.”
The photograph helped define the Great Depression, yet McIntosh says her mom didn’t let it define her, although the picture “was always talked about in our family.”
“It always stayed with her. She always wanted a better life, you know.”
Her mother, she says, was a “very strong lady” who liked to have a good time and listen to music, especially the yodeler named Montana Slim. She laughs when she recalls her brothers bringing home a skinny greyhound pooch. “Mom, Montana Slim is outside,” they said.
The differences in how white folks who are in poverty are treated compared to brown skinned people is really upsetting to me. While a picture of a white family brought help and change from the government–the same picture of a brown family would get ignored if the community was lucky or an ICE raid if they weren’t. The life the woman describes here is no different than what Mexicans (among other groups) are living right now today–but nobody considers that a tragedy. And in light of what happened to the black immigrant worker whose life was made less valuable that a 69$ camera by shoppers, I have to ask all those who insist that unions are no longer necessary–are you serious?
As a follow up to the story Mala wrote about earlier in the week about the Wal*Mart worker that was trampled to death by the day after Thanksgiving crowds, there comes the news that the family of the murdered worker, Jdimytai Damour, will be filing a wrongful death suit against Wal*Mart and others:
“We’re going to be suing Wal-Mart as well as the owner of the mall, the security company, and we’re contemplating an action against the police and the county of Nassau, although we’re waiting to see what our investigation fleshes out about their involvement,” Hecht said.
The lawsuit was filed Wednesday against Wal-Mart and the Green Acres Mall in Nassau County, N.Y. Damour, a 6-foot-5, 270-pound temporary worker, died there Friday morning of asphyxiation while trying to shield a pregnant shopper from the throngs of bargain hunters pushing their way into the store in Valley Stream, N.Y.
The suit was filed in New York Supreme Court in the Bronx on behalf of Elsie Damour Phillipe, one of Damour’s sisters.
Nassau County Police Commissioner Lawrence Mulvey told FOX News on Monday that investigators were scanning surveillance tape in an effort to identify individual shoppers involved in the melee.
“We are reviewing film … from individual cell phones, from cameras that are in place in the store, trying to identify, if in fact we can identify, people that are culpable in this,” Mulvey said. “And it is difficult because a lot of people in the front of the line were pushed forward, and it’s difficult for us to decipher who is more responsible in all of this.”
But Hecht said the retailer should have been prepared for the crowds when it offered sale items that included a Samsung 50-inch Plasma HDTV for $798, a Bissel Compact Upright Vacuum for $28, a Samsung 10.2 megapixel digital camera for $69 and DVDs such as “The Incredible Hulk” for $9.
While I totally support the family’s lawsuit and stand in solidarity with Damour and his co-workers as fellow workers–I have to say things have come to a pretty sad day indeed, when it makes sense that really good deals require extra security and training in order to prevent deaths.
What in the hell is wrong with people? I would try pose a more eloquent question or more eloquent commentary–but it’s just impossible to me. What kind of person literally walks on a human being to get to those damn $69 cameras? What kind of people do something like that?
11:22 am By Maegan La Mala · Activism|Music|Women · Comments Off
3 Dec 2008Odetta, a musical legend who lent her powerful voice to powerful causes, passed on yesterday at age 77.
With her booming, classically trained voice and spare guitar, Odetta gave life to the songs by workingmen and slaves, farmers and miners, housewives and washerwomen, blacks and whites.
First coming to prominence in the 1950s, she influenced Harry Belafonte, Bob Dylan, Joan Baez and other singers who had roots in the folk music boom.
Odetta called on her fellow blacks to “take pride in the history of the American Negro” and was active in the civil rights movement. When she sang at the March on Washington in August 1963, “Odetta’s great, full-throated voice carried almost to Capitol Hill,” The New York Times wrote.
Via / The Huffington Post
With many Latinos in the mainstream blogosphere feeling snubbed by President Elect Obama passing over Bill Richardson as Secretary of State, the focus is shifting to who are the other Latinos in Obama’s cabinet, feeling that a Latino in the cabinet will mean that our interests are looked out for. Apprently no one learned from Alberto Gonzales’s time that having a Latino in and of itself doesn’t guarantee a damn thing.
Another Latino in the Obama White House is Cecilia Muñoz, senior vice president for the Office of Research, Advocacy, and Legislation at the National Council of La Raza (NCLR). She was named as Director of Intergovernmental Affairs, coordinating the White House’s relations with local and state governments.
Today it’s expected the President Elect Obama will name his once presidential rival, Bill Richardson, as Secretary of Commerce. Richardson was touted as a strong choice for Secretary of State, a position that went to another Obama once-rival, Hillary Clinton.
Many feel that Obama’s passing over Governor of New Mexico Richardson as Secretary of State was a snub to Latinos, especially given his international experience as United Nations ambassador under the Clinton presidential administration.
VivirLatino is a daily publication published by Mamita Mala Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse Latin@ diaspora.
About | Advertise with us | Contact | Twitter