Advertisement

Archive for March, 2009

Do you guys remember this little piece of chisme history?

This incident came to be known as “el carterazo”, because PauPau hit a papparazzi, one Luz Amanda Orozco, with her cartera when the star was approached by Orozco at Miami International Airport in 2006. What came out of that incident, in addition to embarassment, was a lawsuit, filed by Orozco who demanded half a million dollars from La Chica Dorada.

There’s no telling what’s been going on behind closed doors, but it seems that Pau’s legal nightmares are over, as the pair seems to have reached a settlement. People en Español reports that the legal secretary handling the case was informed by attorneys today that there will be no suit, as some kind of agreement (mum’s the word) has been reached.

Via / People en Español

Post to Twitter

Colombian Gay Activist Murdered

10:24 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Colombia|GLBT · Comments Off

9 Mar 2009

alvaro2-viI wasn’t aware of the work of Alvaro Miguel Rivera, a Colombiano living and working in a FARC controlled area of Colombia who was dedicated to LGBT individuals and HIV positive people in what could be called one of the most homophobic regions in the country: El llano oriental (Colombia’s rural eastern plains).

From Blabbeando:

Back in 2001, Alvaro was living in Villavicencio, Meta, in a region set aside by the government as a ‘safe haven’ zone where FARC guerrilla members could walk around without fear of government intervention (it was part of a failed effort to reach peace with the armed insurgents). Alvaro, who had finished a degree in Agricultural Engineering, worked in a region known for it’s cattle ranches and was already known as a public advocate for sexual minorities and those who were HIV positive.

He loved Villavicencio, not the least because his family lived there. But, as FARC troops began to move in, Alvaro began to receive anonymous phone calls, felt he was being followed by strangers, and reported harassing calls to his employers with the intent to tarnish his repuation. In April of 2001, he finally reported it to the local authorities and they told him that they could only wait until something actually happened to take any action. Police only began to investigate when Alvaro went public sending a series of e-mail messages to different organizations (at the time, I translated some of them on his behalf, and alerted human rights organizations in the United States, including IGLHRC).

All this in a worsening environment for those in the area who were HIV positive. In October of 2001, El Tiempo reported that the FARC had begun to require local residents to get tested for HIV and were giving a week-long ultimatum for people who tested positive to leave the region.

A week after the article was published, Alvaro actually reported having attended a meeting held between local hospital personnel and members of the FARC in which the FARC agreed to temporarily suspend the program. El Tiempo had reported that by then, they already had access to testing equipment and had tested more than 3,ooo individuals for HIV.

The ‘safe haven’ zone might have been lifted since then, but the death threats and harassment against Alvaro continued, forcing him to leave a place he loved so much. He decided to move to Cali – the third largest city in Colombia, following Bogota and Medellin – where he became the Director of Colectivo Tinku, a local LGBT rights organization.

He also became one of the founders and leaders of the local gay chapter of the Alternative Democratic Pole political party (which is why, the moment I read “Pole LGBT leader murdered” headline, I feared it might be Alvaro).

Alvaro was murdered in his apartment on Friday night. I am saddened not just at the loss of Alvaro’s life pero also at the fact that even with my own following of events in Colombia around the FARC, that I didn’t know about Alvaro’s work.

Post to Twitter

A Russian neighbor last night asked me in the street, “What are you? Are you Spanish?”
I shook my head and said, “No, my family is Puerto Rican.”
“So not European?”
“No, Caribbean”
” So you don’t celebrate International Women’s Day?”
“Of course I do”
and we proceeded to congratulate each other on being women.

Yesterday was International Women’s Day and Latin American Women celebrated all we do and continue to do around the world.

The Chilean Planning Ministry is venturing online for their Women’s Day Campaign, and for today, they bring us a poem read by several women. The poem is Ode to the Washerwoman by Pablo Neruda, which paints us the image of a woman washing laundry for a living at night, with a lit candle and the moon as company:

La nocturna
lavandera
a veces
levantaba
la cabeza
y ardían en su pelo
las estrellas
porque
la sombra
confundía
su cabeza
y era la noche, el cielo
de la noche
la cabellera
de la lavandera,
y su vela
un astro
diminuto
que encendía
sus manos
que alzaban
y movían
la ropa,
subiendo
descendiendo,
enarbolando
el aire, el agua,
el jabón vivo,
la magnética espuma.

I’m curious as to why a poem by Gabriela Mistral, the first mujer Latin American Nobel Prize winner, wasn’t used.

In Peru, women members of the Colective Canto a la Vida marched in Lima, demanding the respect of women’s rights as well as sexual and reproductive rights: the right to therapeutic abortions, against forced sterilizations and for access to the Day After Pill.

In Cuba, the 8th Congress of the Federation of Cuban Women (FMC) is held a discussion on the organization”s daily and international work and female presence in the country”s economic life.

Latina Lista featured the words of Latin American women confronting violence in their lives.

How did you celebrate International Women’s Day yesterday?

Via / Global Voices Online, Inteligentaindigena Novajoservo/The Intelligent Aboriginal News Service

Post to Twitter

crossfieldDictators and torturers are made not born and many have been created in the School of the Americas. Father Luis Barrios of San Romero de Las Américas in Harlem, NYC was arrested on November 23rd, 2008 at Fort Benning, Georgia where the School of the Americas is housed. Today, Reverend/Activist Luis Barrios will meet with his community and supporters at 1:30 PM Monday March 9th, 2009 in front of the Metropolitan Correctional Center at 150 Park Row in New York City. Luis has been ordered to surrender before 2 P.M. to the M.C.C. to begin serving a two Month sentence for demonstrating his (and our) opposition to the existence of the United States School of Torture, the “School of The Americas”.

Read his powerful statement on why breaking the laws of man are justified when those laws are based on injustice.

I am a transgressor, in favor of peace with justice
Fr. Luis Barrios’ testimony in court
January 26, 2009

G. Mallon Faircloth
U.S. Magistrate Judge
Post Office Box 117
Columbus, GA 31902-0117

Honorable Judge Faircloth:

On Sunday, November 23rd, 2008, I, along with other human rights activists, crossed the gates of Fort Benning. I did so with a photo of Monsignor Oscar Romero, the former Archbishop of San Salvador. Upon his assassination, this brother, this companion, and this spiritual guide, was converted into our Saint Romero of The Americas. His assassination was planned and executed by graduates from the School of the Americas, with the blessings of the US Government, following a speech in which he pleaded for the army to stop massacring the Salvadoran people. In El Salvador, as well as all of Latin America, thousands of other women, men, and children have also been assassinated by agents of the School of the Americas. These silenced human beings, along with Saint Romero, deserve justice. To Saint Romero, as well as to the other victims, justice is what I am respectfully requesting here.

Hon. Faircloth, my meditation for that day, while I entered Fort Benning, was and still is this: I wish for this individual sacrifice to be transformed into a collective of spiritual ethics. Therefore, I confess in front of this court that I am not guilty of committing any crime against humanity. However, I’m guilty of being a transgressor of any “law” that pretends to justify the injustice of oppression, exclusion, or assassination. I do so because these are not laws!

I learned the spirituality of transgression from my brother and companion Jesus Christ, who in each of his actions in his native Palestine, while walking with the people, showed through a subversive ministry that it was necessary to violate the unjust laws of the Roman Empire. He was condemned for being a transgressor. Thus, I have learned from him to transgress against injustice, and against the immorality of disorder that we see in our society, to benefit humanity. This transgression, my action, is not only morally right, but it is also an obligation. This is a way of building a new world, a better world.

With no pretensions of being compared to Jesus, which would be nothing but a lack of respect on my part, I only wanted to follow his example, in the most humble way. This time, I transgressed and trespassed the gates of Fort Benning, with a strategy of peaceful resistance, founded in the basic principles of civil disobedience, an approach also known as “non-violence”.

My intention through the transgression of the gates of Fort Benning was, and still is, to be able to demonstrate that from its inception in 1946, the School of the Americas, disguised since 2001 as the Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation, is one of those military institutions that pretends to justify oppression, exclusion, and assassination, behind the semantics of national security and/or protection of democracy. When in reality its goal is to validate and protect the political, military, and economic hegemony of the United States in Latin America.

Hon. Faircloth, historically my pastoral and academic activism has taught me that apathy in front of unjust laws is an offense against peace with justice. Furthermore, it has taught me that it is my duty not to remain silent against injustices, on one side, and to fight rebelliously until justice prevails. This is the motivation behind my transgression on Sunday, November 23rd, 2008.

Hon. Faircloth, within this context, it is necessary to understand the political violence exercised by the School of the Americas, as well as the impunity that is granted to its graduates. In other words, this institution is a symbol of U.S. despotism towards our Latin American countries. That is why, whenever there is dissidence directed against U.S. expansionist policies, such in the cases of the Cuban revolution, the Sandinista revolution in Nicaragua, the Bolivariana in Venezuela, the Bolivian revolution in Bolivia, or the popular revolution in Ecuador – only to mention a few, the U.S. government has consistently aimed to block and defeat democratic governments, in favor of other governments that would help advance US interests. This is what is known as political terrorism.

The advancement of U.S-sponsored political terrorism and the effect on its victims can best be summed up by the words of Father Roy Bourgeois: Here is the School of the Americas. It’s a combat school. Most of the courses revolve around what they call “counter-insurgency warfare.” Who are the “insurgents?” We have to ask that question. They are the poor. They are the people in Latin America who call for reform. They are the landless peasants who are hungry. They are health care workers, human rights advocates, labor organizers. They become the insurgents. They are seen as “the enemy.” They are those who become the targets of those who learn their lessons at the School of the America.

Similarly, it is incorrect, Hon. Faircloth, your intention to send a message of neutrality, within the false context of interpreting some laws and applying their sentences. Your duty as judge and citizen continues to be protecting Justice. This partial neutrality, linked to injustice, makes you guilty of all the crimes committed by the School of the Americas and its graduates. Allow me to remind you that you have a moral responsibility in front of God and in front of Her people, to reject and combat unjust laws.

Even more relevant still, Hon. Faircloth, you could become part of the Amnesty International Campaign to push the United States to recognize, support, and submit to the International Criminal Court regulations. It is an embarrassment that a country such as the United States, which holds democracy as one of its core values, has been able to sabotage an international institution that guarantees communal existence, within a framework of respect, justice, and peace. It is not a secret either that this anti-democratic strategy only serves to guarantee USA’s impunity in relation to the crimes that this Criminal Court is to judge.

Hon. Faircloth, if you, or your system, plan to punish me through incarceration, aiming to correct or modify my behavior as a transgressor who favors justice and peace, I would like to let you inform that this is not possible. I do not believe in punishment. I believe in the restitution of justice, and that is the reason why I am here today. Hon. Faircloth, if it is your decision to send me to jail, what I would like to make clear is that by doing so, you will be guilty of keeping silent and embracing apathy. Furthermore, you will be an accomplice to the crimes originated at the School of the Americas. This fact will be part of both of our histories.

I will not try to escape from the consequences of my actions. This would do nothing but diminishing the validity inherent in these actions of civil disobedience. Nonetheless, Hon. Faircloth, remain assured that I will enter and later leave the gates of any jail standing up. Neither you nor your system will take away my dignity. The only thing that would be achieved is converting me into a prisoner of conscience, into an anti-terrorism activist.

Therefore, if these proceedings of punishment are meant to force me to ask for forgiveness, this will not be achieved. I will not kneel and beg for forgiveness. For it is to my Latin American people only that I ought to ask for forgiveness, for not acting earlier. I am a free person. You could incarcerate my body, but you would never imprison my love for peace with justice, because my conviction has made me free. These principles would fly away from jail at their leisure, beyond any prison bars or unjust gates that you may see fit for me.

Therefore, Hon. Faircloth, there are transgressors that have contributed to moving forward positive changes in history, because they dared raising their voices when injustice reigned, and when hope from the peoples remained unseen. Today it is my turn. I hope I will be able to make a contribution as well. I hope you also understand that with my solidarity love, the most important sacrament, I’m putting the system on trial. God bless us.

In peace with justice, San Romero vive!

Father Luis Barrios

Lbarrios@jjay.cuny.edu

Post to Twitter

speak
Last summer in Detroit, I was blessed and was a part of a group of incredible radical women of color media makers and media justice fighters. We spilled and spit our voices and experiences into a mic and transformed that into a CD compilation of spoken word, poetry, and song and ahora you can share our experience and in the process help mamis of color and other mujeractivistas attend this year’s Allied Media Conference.

Speak! is a women of color-led media collective. In the summer months of 2008, they created a CD compilation of spoken word, poetry, and song. After months of hard work, they are excited to finally share their first self-named album with the world!

With artists and poets from all over the country, the Speak! CD is a testament of struggle, hope, and love. Many of the contributors are in the Radical Women of Color blogosphere and will be familiar names to you. Instead of just reading their work, you’ll be able to hear their voices.

VL’s own Maegan la Mala (me!) is on the cd and you can also get a zine and download a curriculum porque the voices and experiences on the cd are not just meant to be listened to and forgotten pero rather are meant as steps to build movement forward upon.

The cd is $12 and $17 for the CD and zine. You can purchase the cd and zine here.

For more information on SPEAK! go aqui.

Post to Twitter

l_fb9ec626fab14f1e85e2bba261f0f557

NYC area folks need to pack up their hijos and head to this today. The only reason la Mala isn’t going is cuz she has a family emergency.

A MUSIC, DANCE, SPOKEN WORD, AND VISUAL ARTS EVENT CHANGING THE WAY THE WORLD VIEWS WOMEN OF COLOR AND HIP HOP

New York (February 28th, 2009)—Momma’s Hip Hop Kitchen (MHHK) announced today its second annual women of color in hip hop concert sponsored by the Hostos Center for the Arts & Culture. MHHK serves as a community organizing event that uses hip hop as an outlet for justice and the empowerment of women while educating the audience on social justice, HIV/AIDS, and other important issues.

The second annual Momma’s Hip Hop Kitchen Vol. II: Faith, Feminism, and Hip Hop will take place on Saturday March 7th, 2009 from 2-5pm at the Hostos Community College Main Theater, 450 Grand Concourse (at 149th St.) in the Bronx. The event is FREE and open to all ages.

The event is created for the community, by the community and features established and up and coming hip hop artists. The event will feature:

* Lah Tere of Rebel Diaz
* La Bruja
* Patty Dukes
* Rokafella aka La Roka
* Queen GodIs
* Misnomer(s)
* Bless Roxwell
* Charlotte Mishell
* LMNOP
* YaliniDream
* Yolanda Shoshana
* DJ SoYo
* DJ Jasmine Solano
* M-Squared
* Demostina
* GNU (Likwuid, Kween Kash, AtLas’)
* Kayan A. James
* Jennifer Cendaña Armas
* Denice Frohman aka Ms. Misconception
* United Steppaz
* 3XLADYCREW
* Big Nay the Ice Queen
* JoiLynn Productions
* Ciara
* Desire Lii
* Ne Ne Ali
* Nova
* BombaYo “Afro-Puerto Rican Youth Project”
* Las Dinosauras
* Sipainaru
* NY Bomberas

The public is invited to attend and enjoy performances by female DJ’s, Emcees, B-girls, poets, and artists (live art). This event was inspired by women and focuses on the intersections of hip hop, reproductive justice, and AIDS in communities of color. This year the theme focuses on faith and feminism.

For additional information regarding Momma’s Hip Hop Kitchen please contact Kathleen Adams at hiphopkitchen@gmail.com. To learn more about Momma’s Hip Hop Kitchen please visit www.myspace.com/hiphopkitchen.

Momma’s Hip Hop Kitchen Vol. II, Faith, Feminism, and Hip Hop Collaborators:

Casa Atabex Ache, Advocates for Youth, Hostos Center for the Arts & Culture, Rebel Diaz Arts Collective, Vamos a la Pena del Bronx, and Trabajadoras por la Paz.

About Momma’s Hip Hop Kitchen:

MHHK came to fruition through Kathleen Adams from Advocates for Youth and Lah Tere of Rebel Diaz to bring women of color activists together for an interactive community event. They were irritated with hip hop because it has dramatically changed in its 30-year evolution. Once a voice of the oppressed, commercialism and corporate America now make a mockery of the struggle of communities of color. These abusers use hip hop as a tool for violence, degradation of communities of color, and commit rampant violations against the feminine psyche and spirit. MHHK believes women of color are in a state of emergency. Where the face of women in hip hop was a powerful emcee promoting self-respect and esteem, the public is now bombarded with provocative, lustful images and it is our responsibility to take this issue by force and re-establish what it means to be a woman in the culture of hip hop.

Post to Twitter

Oprah 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!!!)


Via BBC News

Post to Twitter

y197076034139093It’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

Post to Twitter

Both Sides of the Prop 8 Debate

12:04 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · GLBT|Media|Politics|society · Comments Off

6 Mar 2009

Want 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

Post to Twitter

Chris Brown Arraigned

10:47 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Celebrities|Controversia|crime|Justice · Comments Off

6 Mar 2009

chrisbrowncourtRihanna 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

Post to Twitter


Hola!

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

VivirLatino on Facebook


blog advertising is good for you

blog advertising is good for you

Get our RSS Feed!