8:36 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · media justice|New York City|Women · 1 Comment
6 Mar 2010
Women of Color Stirring a Pot of Awareness, Reality and Justice!Momma’s Hip Hop Kitchen Volume 3, Back to Our Roots, will be honoring International Womens Month by shedding light and creating awareness on Environmental Injustices and Educational Inequalities and their impact on women of color.
Momma’s Hip Hop Kitchen will bring together women of color educators, students, environmentalists, djs, emcees, b-girls, poets, visual artists, dancers, healers, pastors, organizers and activists. We will come together through a hip hop showcase to express our solidarity with women’s rights!
This event will take place in the South Bronx, the birthplace of Hip Hop, and the poorest congressional district in the nation, also called “The Forgotten Borough.” In reality, the borough of the Bronx is not forgotten because one of the wealthiest neighborhoods in the city, Riverdale, lies just northwest and has every amenity a human can ask for.
Hostos Community College will be hosting Momma’s Hip Hop Kitchen event for the second year in a row. Hostos Community College was created in 1968 in response to demands from the Latino community who were urging for the establishment of a college to serve the people of the South Bronx. Hostos was the first bilingual higher education institution in the United States.
The South Bronx is a community that has been in constant resistance, seeking justice in education and the environment. It is a community resisting pollution, asthma, toxic wasteland, and budget cuts for art, music, and gym programs. It is a community that lacks access to healthy fruits and vegetables, adequate health care and after school programs. The South Bronx’s need for reproductive and sexual health education is highly reflected in its high levels of HIV/AIDS and sexually transmitted infections.
In place of access to healthy alternatives, the South Bronx has an over abundance of jails and prisons.
However, the South Bronx is not lost. It has experienced a period of healing through leadership guided by community organizations and collectives. This leadership has lead to the creation of new parks, food co-ops, recycling programs, and successful cultural community centers. We have won many amazing victories as a community!
Join us as we fuse our energy, our politics, our ancestry, our traditions, art, song and dance into a brew for Environmental Justice and Education Equality.
Turn Up the Heat and Let the Soul Simmer, as We Stir this Soup for the Hip Hop Soul!When: Saturday, March 6th, 2010
@ the Hostos Center for Arts and Culture
450 Grand Concourse (at 149th St.) Bronx, NY
(Main Theater)Time: 2-5pm
This event is FREE and open to all ages.for more information about the event, please
visit our website @ http://www.mhhk.org
or email hiphopkitchen@gmail.com
FREE HIV TESTING – strictly confidential
9:49 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Chile|Music|New York City · 3 Comments
5 Mar 2010
This event is VL approved cuz it’s being organized by the Rebel Diaz crew and because it benefits the grassroots in Chile. NYC peeps if you have some $/time represent.
A BENEFIT CONCERT FOR CHILEAN EARTHQUAKE VICTIMS
Where: The Rebel Diaz Arts Collective
478 Austin Place, 2nd floor 6 train to E.149th St.When: 7pm-2am
Performing Live!
Rebel Diaz
Red Clay
Flaco Navaja
Los Brujoz
A Alikes
YC the Cynic
GTP
Reyes del Bajo Mundo
Kortezua
Waco Division
Majesty
Marcel Cartier
Jake Mate
Dj Laylo
Eli Efi
Abundance Child
Mike Reyes
Bodomas ( Grupo Garifuna)
Otavalenos del EcuadorSuggested Donation: $10-$20
sponsored by: RDAC BX, Taller Experimental de Arte, Trabajadoras Por La Paz, Vamos Pa La Pena del Bronx, Guerilla Republik,
Check out the livestream on www.circa95.com!!!!
En Beneficio de RH2A y Organizacion Mapuche Xeg Xeg
8:30 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Latin America|Music · Comments Off
4 Mar 2010What a week this has been so far. Earthquakes, break ins, and teabaggers, oh my. Before we start again here at VivirLatino some morning quesoliciousness via Emilio Estefan and a whole mess of Spanish language singers with their new version of We are the World / Somos el Mundo.
7:53 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Immigration|Media|Obama|Politics · 74 Comments
3 Mar 2010Seems like the National Council of la Raza is starting a new action center and at the heart of it is reminding President Obama about all those promises he made in order to earn the Latino vote, especially his promises on immigration reform.
8:48 pm By la Macha · Immigration · 32 Comments
2 Mar 2010How many times have we who work with immigrant populations heard that line–the “We don’t mind *legal* immigrants! Ones who come here according to the rules and assimilate and speak English…I *love* those immigrants!” line?
Well, in spite of how much everybody luuuurvs that honest legal eagle immigrant, we are still doing what we can to punish the shit out of him/her. From California comes the news that in an effort to deal with the hard economic times the state is collapsing under, it is proposing an end to assistance programs for legal citizens.
“How are we going to live?” asked 70-year-old Yong Hak Cho, who emigrated from Korea four years ago and is raising two grandchildren in Los Angeles. “Immigrants pay taxes like anybody else. So why do they want to eliminate programs for us? It is unfair and it is un-American.”
State officials say the cuts are painful but necessary, and there was no attempt to single out any population group in the proposed budget.
“The fact that we have to close a $20-billion budget gap, on the heels of a $60-billion gap last year, means that we have had to make the difficult decision to propose curtailing or eliminating many state-only programs, and these fall into that category,” said H.D. Palmer, a spokesman for the Finance Department.
When families petition to bring relatives to the U.S., they are required to sign affidavits agreeing to support them financially for up to 10 years. But many of these families have fallen on hard times. Affidavits are not required for people entering the country under various other programs.
Federal benefits have been restored to some recent arrivals, but most are not eligible for supplemental security income, food stamps, transitional assistance for needy families or Medi-Cal until they have lived legally in the U.S. for five years. Exceptions are made for refugees and a few other categories.
You know–there comes a time in an activist’s life where she just has to admit: the other side is not arguing with her in good faith. I think this is that moment for me.
8:42 pm By BiancaLaureano · Uncategorized · 2 Comments
2 Mar 2010In the beginning of February I shared a very grassroots collective effort called The LatiNegr@s Project which started February 1, 2010 in an effort to include LatiNegr@s in Black History Month. The project was a tremendous success and there were over 90 submissions in February alone on the LatiNegr@s Tumblr page.
As a collective we all agree that this is a project that is year round, 365 days 24 hours a day 7 days a week! As a result each of us will continue to write posts for various topics, months, and celebrations that highlight LatiNegr@s, so be on the look out for additional postings since March is Womyn’s Herstory Month! We are also still going to accept any submissions on the LatiNegr@s Tumblr.
Our hope is that this project will expand in ways we haven’t even imagined! One of the exciting features of the LatiNegr@s Project is our inclusion in a 30-minute segment about Afro-Latinos during Black History Month. The show will air tomorrow, Wednesday, in NYC on CunyTV’s Independent Sources which focuses on NYC’s ethnic, independent, and community media. The show is called “The Black/Brown Divide.” It will re-air and it will also be available online, so you know I’ll post the video when it is available!
Many thanks to everyone who contributed in various ways and who supported the project!
Here’s one of the first posts I have for March featuring a LatiNegra Magia MC, of the group Obsesion and La Fabrik. I really do adore this video and song!
8:35 pm By la Macha · children|Family|Immigration|Violence|Women · 1 Comment
2 Mar 2010I watched this video about women farm workers with a lot of pride and interest. They have been organizing against the sexual harassment a seventeen year old girl was subjected to and the retaliation experienced by those organizing against the abuse. The video is of these organizers turning in a petition signed by over 16,000 people showing support for the workers.
It made me especially think of my co-blogger Mala’s many writings about the subject of the mamihood and organizing. Mami’s are organizing against the same violence and horror that Feminists With A Big F are organizing against–sexual violence, gender discrimination, etc–but we are doing it with a baby asleep on our shoulder and in Spanish. And without all the resources that Feminists With A Big F have.
These women are a tremendous inspiration–and deserve our continued support!
8:21 pm By BiancaLaureano · Uncategorized · Comments Off
2 Mar 2010Some VL readers may have already figured this out, but I am the same Bianca that hosts the website Latino Sexuality. I am a Sexologist and have been in the field for over a decade providing counseling, training, and curriculum development especially to Latino communities but also to working class and communities of Color (you know the communities often forgotten in general).
My graduate work and curriculum development has focused on how popular culture is an important tool for teaching youth of Color and helping them unlearn and/or be conscious consumers in what they have acquired via media. I’ve created “comprehensive sexuality education” curriculums that not only focus on youth of Color, queer youth, and working class youth, but also uses the media that is targeted towards them and they they interact with in various ways. This was one of the reasons the homegirls at VL thought the film and musica space on VL would be a good fit!
All this to say: I’m going to be the keynote for the New York State Family Planing Advocates of New York State’s Youth Leadership Conference. Here’s some information about the conference which already has 250 youth attending:
On March 15th, 2010 hundreds of pro-choice teen advocates from across New York State will meet in Albany for Family Planning Advocates of New York State’s Youth Leadership Conference. This event offers high school and college students the opportunity to learn more about the legislative process, reproductive rights issues and how to become a better activist leader. More specifically, these students focus on the need for real sex education and learning how to advocate for access to comprehensive reproductive health information in their schools.
I’m very excited to have been offered this opportunity by the Family Planning Advocates of New York State. Not only did they find me via my Media Justice column, but after reading my column they STILL wanted me to speak to their youth! Let’s be honest, I don’t take the most popular positions in a very bright White field (have you seen who the “experts” are on Oprah, Dr. Oz, and other such shows?) and I’m very vocal about challenging what some of the most well-known Sexologists have said/done/found because they lack an intersectional analysis. I mean seriously, how “comprehensive” can your sexuality education be if you exclude youth of Color or working class youth?
If you work with young people and are in NYS, please consider signing up! There are two sessions of workshops scheduled, my keynote, and an opportunity for youth to “lobby” to their representatives later in the day. It’s an amazing opportunity for youth to hear a radical woman of Color Sexologist affirm their identities, encourage their daily acts of subversion, and mean it! [It's kind of odd to talk about myself in the third person, but I kind of like it.]
I’m also available to do other presentations/workshops and am still offering a FREE training about how to work with LGBTQ youth who are living in out-of-home care (i.e. the child welfare system).
2:10 pm By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Immigration|Media|Politics · 42 Comments
2 Mar 2010In many ways I’m still a 12 year old girl and the fact that this teabagger campaign has grown such scary wings makes me laugh and shake my head a little. As the United States moves toward mid-term elections and there is pushing from various directions on issues ranging from health reform to immigration, teabaggers are getting more and more attention. Some of the attention is undeserved, like when they are spreading lies on the role of Latino immigrants in the U.S. Some of the attention is deserved, like when good people are calling them out.
8:48 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Colombia|Music · Comments Off
2 Mar 2010The story that the FARC had released a merengue as a way to attract and recruit younger members came out last week.
I suppose the song is no worse than other songs used to promote political parties or candidates. I mean how many different Obama songs were there? Except of course Obama isn’t labeled a terrorist the way the FARC is. Que crees?
Via / The Latin Americanist
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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