3:39 pm By la Macha · Celebrities|children|Colombia|Health · 2 Comments
6 Mar 2009Oprah needs to wake up and pay attention to our lovely Shakira. While Oprah is busy funding her single well-meaning, but ultimately highly problematic school for girls, Shakira is taking on poverty by empowering communities through education. And I think Shakira is doing a much better job of it:
To travel with multi-million-selling pop star Shakira is to travel behind tinted windows, on private planes and on Shakira time – always at least an hour behind schedule and always stopping for autographs and photos. It involves long waits while she has hair and make-up touch-ups before emerging from cars, planes and buildings.
But at the centre of the superstar entourage is a young Colombian who is disarmingly friendly and passionately eloquent about education.
And education was the reason we travelled with Shakira to the north-west border province of Choco, deep in the Colombian jungle. It is remote and poor.
Why is Shakira seemingly easily doing what Oprah is struggling to achieve? They both have highly ambitious noble goals–but Shakira is setting her work within communities. That is, she is empowering entire communities *including girls and women* to better fight their way out of poverty (a near impossible feat especially when a government seems absolutely adamant in doing nothing to help).
Oprah, on the other hand, removed girls from their communities–which is always going to cause problems. Girls are going to miss their families, families are going to miss their girls–and that doesn’t even get into the issue of sexism and misogyny that might influence a parent to come take his/her child back home, get angry at Oprah, or even cause moments of danger within Oprah’s school itself.
When girls (and women) have the resources, knowledge and support to stand up for themselves at home, they generally will. And if they don’t, at least they have the resources, knowledge and support to keep themselves safe in bad situations. When they are stuck in some strange building with some strange girls being led around by some strange woman with a camera–where does the empowerment come from? How brave are grown ups when it comes to standing up for themselves when they have to do it alone, by themselves, and in a strange place?
(on a side note, Shakira is so beautiful without all her makeup!!!)
2:04 pm By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Brazil|children|Health|Religion · 7 Comments
6 Mar 2009
It’s so horrific that it physically hurts me to think about: a 9 year old child (allegedly) raped by her stepfather and then she becomes pregnant.
A nine-year-old Brazilian girl who was impregnated after being allegedly raped by her stepfather underwent an abortion yesterday.
The child- who’s identity is being kept private- would’ve had her life in danger had she allowed the pregnancy to continue according to doctors. (At the time of the abortion the eighty-pound girl was in her fifteenth week of pregnancy). “She is very small. Her uterus doesn’t have the ability to hold one, let alone two children,” said Fatima Maia- the director of the hospital where the abortion was performed.
And instead of the faith community offering compassion and comfort to a child, the Roman Catholic Church has come down on the girl’ mother and doctors for saving her physical life.
A Roman Catholic archbishop says the abortion of twins carried by a 9-year-old girl who allegedly was raped by her stepfather means excommunication for the girl’s mother and her doctors.
Despite the nature of the case, the church had to hold its line against abortion, Archbishop Jose Cardoso Sobrinho said in an interview aired Thursday by Globo television.
“The law of God is higher than any human laws,” he said. “When a human law — that is, a law enacted by human legislators — is against the law of God, that law has no value. The adults who approved, who carried out this abortion have incurred excommunication.”
I worry about the girl’s emotional life, her soul and not in the sense of if she will go to heaven because she had an abortion. I wonder about how this child can comprehend all that she has had to face and will continue to face.
I also wonder what the hell the Catholic Church is thinking when they lack the basic compassion and love that Jesus preached.
Via / The Latin Americanist
12:04 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · GLBT|Media|Politics|society · Comments Off
6 Mar 2009Want to hear some intelligent debate on the Prop 8 issue? Well, you’ve come to the wrong place. I just wanted to call attention to what Fox News attempts to pass off as intelligent debate these days. Check it out.
But could you really expect more from Glenn Beck? “M&Ms and donuts”…yeah….
Via / YouTube
10:47 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Celebrities|Controversia|crime|Justice · Comments Off
6 Mar 2009
Rihanna may have forgiven boyfriend Chris Brown for allegedly physically abusing her — indeed, some reports are emerging that the couple has even married — but justice has not. U.S. Today reports that Brown will face two felony assault charges for the beating he gave the pop star:
After being charged by the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s office with two felonies, R&B singer Chris Brown, 19, did not enter a plea at his arraignment hearing Thursday. His attorney, Mark Geragos, asked for and was granted a continuance until April 6.
The charges, one count each of assault with force likely to produce great bodily injury and making criminal threats, could result in a sentence ranging from probation to four years and eight months in state prison, district attorney’s spokeswoman Sandi Gibbons said.
Mark Geragos? Guilty!
Brown did not enter a plea at his arraignment.
With these charges, the message sent by all of Brown’s supporters that physical abuse can somehow be justified is — at least a little — countered by the fact that the state of California says you can’t get away with beating your girlfriend up, even if she refuses to press charges.
TMZ reports (take it at face value) that Chris went out partying last night after court.
Update: CNN reports:
Singer Rihanna, through her lawyer, asked a judge Thursday not to prohibit her boyfriend, singer Chris Brown, from having contact with her while he faces felony charges of assaulting her.
The request was granted.
Via / USA Today
9:07 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · chicago|Health|Immigration · Comments Off
6 Mar 2009
Yesterday La Macha wrote about President Obama’s Healthcare Summit and how he said what so many of us already know, that the healthcare system needs to be built anew and fast. Pero what do we do in the meantime especially in immigrant neighborhoods where so many of the undocumented are uninsured? I know my neighborhood is full of storefront clinics and if those clinics were to close? That’s exactly what one immigrant community in Chicago is facing.
The University of Illinois at Chicago says it’s closing a medical clinic geared for low-income women in a mostly Mexican neighborhood. But a community group is fighting to keep the facility open. We report from our West Side bureau.
UIC says it runs 10 community clinics in the city. In Pilsen, the Center for Women and Families last year handled some 6,400 patient visits.
The university says the clinic runs an annual deficit of $200,000. A spokesman says Illinois’s budget crunch leaves no choice but to close the facility by June 30.
The decision isn’t going over well with campus unions or a neighborhood group called the Pilsen Alliance.
PAREDES: This clinic is really important for our community.
The alliance’s Rodrigo Paredes spoke to pickets in front of the clinic last night.
PAREDES: All the women come here. All the pregnant women want to come here. So it’s our time to fight. The community of Pilsen is going to fight to the end.
Paredes says a petition drive will begin this weekend.
The university, meanwhile, is referring the patients to another clinic about four miles south
Four miles may seem like nothing if you have a car or access to public transportation and access means more that having a train or bus nearby. It means being able to afford that transportation. So I was wondering if the right to health care includes having good local healthcare?
Via / Chicago Public Radio
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.
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