1:05 pm By la Macha · Uncategorized · Comments Off
31 Aug 2009
The NYTimes has a really important article about the elderly in the immigrant community.
In this country of twittering youth, Mr. Singh and his friends form a gathering force: the elderly, who now make up America’s fastest-growing immigrant group. Since 1990, the number of foreign-born people over 65 has grown from 2.7 million to 4.3 million — or about 11 percent of the country’s recently arrived immigrants. Their ranks are expected to swell to 16 million by 2050. In California, one in nearly three seniors is now foreign born, according to a 2007 census survey.
Many are aging parents of naturalized American citizens, reuniting with their families. Yet experts say that America’s ethnic elderly are among the most isolated people in America. Seventy percent of recent older immigrants speak little or no English. Most do not drive. Some studies suggest depression and psychological problems are widespread, the result of language barriers, a lack of social connections and values that sometimes conflict with the dominant American culture, including those of their assimilated children.
I recently was at a party hosted by U.S. citizens, but had several citizens with their immigrant parents there. None of them spoke English–which, in my mind is not a problem. If I moved to Russia tomorrow and remained there the rest of my life, I promise you, I wouldn’t physically be capable of learning more than a few words of survival.
What is a problem, is that there are SO few accommodations ever made for people who don’t speak English in the U.S.–a place where citizens are notorious for refusing to learn more than one language (I remain convinced the U.S. is the only nation in the world that prides itself on the stupidity of it’s citizens.) and finds it a point of national pride on offering no help, not one drop, and not an iota more to those whose quality of life could be vastly improved by help. For example, although many of the English speaking children said hello to the older folks, after a small amount of time, we all drifted back to each other and, through language, restricted the older folks to the outside of the conversation. We literally used language to displace people in space where they were invited in.
What must happen to these same folks who are facing ageism, racism, sexism–AND a nationalism that equates knowledge of English language with worth?
The article brings up really important points about how the children of older immigrants steal social security checks, how older folks often refuse to accept assistance they are entitled to, how Congress was sure that old folks were trying to bilk the system and imposed a 5 year wait period before immigrants (those in the country LEGALLY) could apply for aid.
But even more importantly, the article ends with a touching description of what makes a home a home, of what makes a family a family:
So at the end of his day counseling others, Mr. Shahi sits with his mother before she goes to bed. He always asks if she needs any warm milk.
“The small things matter,” he said of his mother and other elders longing for home. “The feeling that they are welcomed.”
When you are in a strange place among strange people, sometimes, all you really need is a glass of warm milk. Something to remember as we continue the endless never-going-to-happen immigration debate.
12:32 pm By la Macha · Uncategorized · 5 Comments
31 Aug 2009I am a Latina with a Master’s degree. I am also a Latina that got diagnosed with depression only after I went through several breakdowns while getting that Master’s degree. I had been told by liberal parents since I was a small kid that the only way a Latina would make it in this world was if I got an education–and yet I found getting education to be one of the most sustained experiences of violence I’ve ever been a part of. I promise you right now, if I hadn’t had multiple Latina and women of color mentors helping me deal with the constant racism, classism, sexism, etc, that shows itself every single minute in academia, I would have given up after the semester.
At the same time, “getting and education” has provided me with precious little in terms of economic safety. I live in a state that has consistently lead the nation in terms of unemployment. The city that employs many people on my block is also a city that has almost 30% unemployment. Three people I know have been laid off in the last year alone, and I know almost nobody who has full time employment. A Master’s degree is almost a burden rather than a help–employers know they have to pay me more. So guess whose resume makes it into the reject pile first?
But in spite of all of this, I am very glad to see that somebody is taking the needs of Latinas in education seriously.
Even if there are no jobs for Latinas to go home to once they’ve finished school, a *good* high quality education that provides support and resources is probably one of the best things that could happen to a Latina. We need the words to describe our experiences, to understand how to negotiate our experiences. And if you live in city like I do, one where radicalism looks like “white, male, citizen,” you are never going to get the words you need on the street (Lucky folks in L.A. or in Texas!!! Ya’ll got community!). Unfortunately, we exist in a world where if you don’t have the “right words,” you very rarely are taken seriously. It also becomes doubly difficult to reach out to other marginalized communities to more effectively create alliances.
We are not stupid. White folks and men had to learn the words to play the game too. They’ve just had more resources and help for a longer period of time than we have. So they are better at playing the game–NOT SMARTER.
It’s good to see that institutions are beginning to realize this.
Check out the link for a whole bunch of resources, including a list of scholarships and a whole bunch of fact sheets!
7:00 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Music|Puerto Rico · 1 Comment
30 Aug 20096:41 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Brazil|housing · 3 Comments
30 Aug 2009On Monday, following a court order, 240 police went to evict 800 families from the Olga Benário squatter settlement in an area called Capão Redondo, sprawling southern São Paulo. The property had been occupied for two years by hundreds of families, many from the social movement Frente de Luta por Moradia (the Front of Struggle for Housing). The property’s owner, a transport company, was able to get an eviction order from a judge, even though it owes back taxes, and even as the State Public Defender’s office was attempting to protect the residents. The eviction ended with burned houses and cars, and hundreds of families on the street in the mud.
Having just come out of a personal housing crisis myself here in NYC where the cost of living continues to rise and gentrification is swooping into neighborhoods of color making it hard for old timers to stay, and for new immigrants to find homes, I have to wonder why isn’t housing a right, especially for families with children?
6:27 pm By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Argentina|Colombia|crime|Drugs|Latin America|mexico|military|Politics|Violence · 2 Comments
28 Aug 2009
Two Latin American countries recently have made moves to decriminalize the possession of certain drugs for personal use, a move that some are touting as a positive new direction in the “war on drugs”.
Argentina’s Supreme Court ruled on Tuesday that it is unconstitutional to prosecute cases involving personal marijuana use as long as it does not harm others. It did not, however, set a weight limit for what it considers personal use.
The judges’ decision urges the Argentine government to “create policies against illegal drug trafficking and adopt preventive health measures, with information and education against drug consumption directed at the most vulnerable groups.
And in Mexico:
Under the new law, a police search that turns up a half-gram of cocaine, the equivalent of about four lines, will not bring any jail time. The same applies for 5 grams of marijuana (about four cigarettes), 50 milligrams of heroin, 40 milligrams of methamphetamine or 0.015 milligrams of LSD.
6:35 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · New York City|Politics · 7 Comments
28 Aug 2009
I first noticed the Spanish language door hangers in my Latino NYC hood last week. The door hangers were promoting NYC Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s run for a third term.
Now, I don’t think he should have been allowed to run again. Here in NYC there was this big push for term limits but now because the billionaire mayor wants to keep power, he’s using the poor economy as justification for a third term in office. I think that fear mongering, especially when his model of city as business instead of as communities of people, has hurt more people than it has helped, is a disgusting way to maintain control. Pero people are buying it and supporting him. In NYC the Latino vote is especially important which is why Bloomy is spending alot of time and effort lining up endorsers with Spanish last names.
One of the latest endorsements comes from a non-New Yorker, Puerto Rico’s pro-statehood Governor Luis G. Fortuño. .
In a statement released by the Bloomberg campaign, Fortuño called the mayor an “honest and independent leader who can make the tough, necessary decisions that will create jobs, keep the streets safe and continue the strides in education that have been made over the last few years.”
“New York also needs a leader who understands the diverse nature of the city, appreciates how invaluable it is, and works to ensure this diversity,” Fortuño added.
“When it comes to Latinos, Mayor Bloomberg wants to make sure that all of us are heard.”
8:11 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · crime|GLBT|Justice|mexico|Violence · Comments Off
27 Aug 2009
I have a pretty radical stance towards hate crimes legislation. I’m not the type of person who likes to push legislation as an answer to way communities are brutalized. Laws certainly won’t bring back the dead and a society with hate woven into the fabric of its narrative isn’t going to stop attacking people it sees as “imperfections” in that weave.
That being said, in Mexico City there have been at least 6 murders of gay men that have not been classified as hate crimes. Instead, authorities in the D.F. label the deaths as “crimes of passion”. From vecino Blabbeando:
LGBT advocates have already claimed that homophobia might be at play in the murders of six gay men during the last year, even if authorities have said otherwise. The latest, they say, occurred on August 15th, when 24 year old Victor Galán, who had moved to live in Mexico City a month earlier, was stabbed 12 times and found dead in his apartment. Advocates say that robbery was not a motive in the crime and that they suspect he was killed based on the fact that he was gay. Authorities, on the other hand, say that they have not ruled out a “crime of passion.”
4:02 pm By la Macha · boston|Massachusetts · 1 Comment
26 Aug 2009Remember how I said that I didn’t think that Edward Kennedy has as deep of a connection to migrant workers as his brother? Turns out I was wrong. Via the UFW blog:
Since Sen. Edward M. Kennedy championed the cause of Cesar Chavez and the Farm Worker Movement after picking up the mantle from Sen. Robert F. Kennedy following his assassination in 1968, no national political leader has more effectively and selflessly embraced the farm workers’ cause.
Year after year, Sen. Kennedy stood shoulder to shoulder with the farm workers in good times and bad during marches and rallies, political campaigns and legislative battles from the halls of the United States Senate to the dusty farm fields of California.
As United Farm Workers co-founder Dolores Huerta once said, Robert and Ted Kennedy “didn’t come to us and tell us what was good for us. All they said was, ‘What do you want? And how can I help?’ That’s why we love them.”
With his impressive record on healthcare reform, it’s easy to forget that Kennedy cut his teeth first on immigration. He began his first race for the Senate with a call for immigration reform in 1962 and has been fighting for a more inclusive America ever since. Senator Kennedy fashioned our modern-day legal system of immigration. He created humane refugee and asylum policies. And he set the stage for a 21st century solution to the problem of illegal immigration. These are no small feats.
With his 1965 immigration legislation, Senator Kennedy made sure families were reunited without regard to race, religion, or national origin. With his 1980 Refugee Act, he made sure refugees were protected– whether stranded in overseas camps, or seeking asylum on our shores. In recent years, Sen. Kennedy has fought tirelessly for the kind of comprehensive immigration reform that would extend rights and responsibilities to the 12 million immigrant workers and family members living in our nation without legal protection.
12:46 pm By la Macha · Immigration · Comments Off
26 Aug 2009As I’ve been doing research on Edward Kennedy, I’ve discovered that he was one of the driving forces around the Immigration Act of 1965. What this act did was remove the racial quotas that privileged immigration from European countries over other (i.e. brown) countries.
It abolished the national origins system set up in the Immigration Act of 1924 and modified by the Immigration Act of 1952. While seeming to maintain the principle of numerical restriction, it so increased the categories of persons who could enter “without numerical limitation” as to make its putative numerical caps—170,000 annually for the Eastern Hemisphere with a maximum of 20,000 per nation plus 120,000 annually for the Western Hemisphere with no national limitations—virtually meaningless within a few years.
It was pretty difficult to find even this fairly simple explanation of the act on the internet–for some reason, there is website after website of nativist rhetoric explaining exactly how this legislation was one of the worst pieces of legislation ever created in all of history.
Whatever could the reason for these websites be? Read more…
11:06 am By la Macha · boston|Massachusetts|Politics · 2 Comments
26 Aug 2009Joe Biden has a reputation of being a bit of bumbling jackass when it comes to talking (remember the panic button he hit with his commentary on airplanes and swine flu?), but with his remarks on Edward Kennedy passing away, he even had me teary eyed.
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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