7:11 am By Maegan La Mala · Events|New York City|Puerto Rico|Women · Comments Off
26 Oct 2010Lolita Lebrón
A Commemoration of Her LifeSaturday November 20, 2010 @ 7:00 PM
Hunter College CUNY
68th Street and Lexington Avenue
West Building, 7th Floor/ Lecture Hall
ManhattanGuest Speakers:
María de Lourdes Santiago (Vice President of the Partido Independentista Puertorriqueño (PIP)
Pedro Nuñez Mosquera (Cuban Ambassador to the United Nations)
Carol Delgado (General Consul of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela in New York)
Linda Alonso Lebrón (Niece of Lolita Lebrón)
Dylcia Pagán (Former Puerto Rican Political Prisoner & Prisoner of War)Cultural Presentations by:
Delilah
Jani “Bomba” Rose
Veronica Verdad
Sery ColónMC: Nancy Cabrero
Sponsored by:
Casa de las Américas
Department of Romance Languages, Hunter College CUNY
Eugenio María de Hostos Student Club, Hunter College CUNY
Fundación Andrés Figueroa Cordero, Inc.
National Congress for Puerto Rican Rights
Partido Independentista Puertorriqueño
Partido Nacionalista Puertorriqueño
1:36 pm By Maegan La Mala · Immigration|Media · 2 Comments
25 Oct 2010
The Top 25 Censored Stories for 2009-2010 was recently released by Project Censored and the #4 most under-reported and ignored story by the mainstream media involves Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s (I.C.E) secret detentions an courts.
Agents of the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) are holding thousands of US residents in unlisted and unmarked subfield offices and deporting tens of thousands in secret court hearings.
“If you don’t have enough evidence to charge someone criminally but you think he’s illegal, we can make him disappear.” Those chilling words were spoken by James Pendergraph, then executive director of the Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s Office of State and Local Coordination, at a conference of police and sheriffs in August 2008.
People are held in a vast network of more than three hundred detention facilities, located in nearly every state in the country. Only a few of these facilities are under the full operational control of ICE—the majority are jails under the control of state and local governments that subcontract with ICE to provide detention bed space. However, ICE has created a network of secret jails designed for confining individuals in transit. These 186 unlisted and unmarked subfield offices are not subject to ICE detention standards, lacking showers, beds, drinking water, soap, toothbrushes, sanitary napkins, mail, attorneys, or legal information. Many of these subfield offices are in suburban office parks or commercial spaces revealing no information about their ICE tenants—nary a sign, a marked car, or even a US flag.
9:01 am By Maegan La Mala · Con la Vista al Voto|Immigration|Midterm Elections 2010|Politics · 1 Comment
25 Oct 2010Con la Vista al Voto : From now until election day 2010, VivirLatino is going to have at least one post a day looking at the midterm elections and issues around the election including policy and the much hyped Latino vote.
To jump off the series Con la Vista al Voto, I want to direct our bilingual and Spanish language dominant readers to a link/video clip from Pura Politica of NY1 Noticias, a NYC based cable news television show in Spanish.
In the clip, Margarita Lopez, former NYC Council Person, now part of the NYC Housing Authority and Angelo Falcon, of the National Institute for Latino Policy discuss the idea of abstention as protest in the context of the Latinos for Reform ad, which urged Latinos not to vote Democrat as an act of protest/punishment for not pushing comprehensive immigration reform.
While the clip is in Spanish and I have yet to find an embeddable version, it is worth watching here.
Margarita Lopez who was the first openly gay Puerto Rican to run for office here in NYC, makes an excellent point regarding abstaining by going to the polls but not voting for anyone, thus making your political presence count but not in favor of anyone. I wish she would have explained her position a little more. For example did she mean voting for a third (or fourth) party candidate that really has no chance of winning? Did she mean using the power of the write in vote?
Angelo Falcon points out that it wasn’t too long ago that a Democrat, Congress person Luis V. Gutierrez said something similar about Latinos not being motivated to vote but as a pressure point to move Democrats, not to suppress the vote or favor Republicans, as the Latino for Reform ad seems to do.
It’s been awhile since we heard something new from the Grammy-winning Spanish Harlem Orchestra(SHO), but on September 28th, 2010 they released their fourth album, Viva la Tradicion.
Aptly titled, Viva la Tradicion is as strongly rooted in the Latin salsa/jazz movement as the 13 piece collective is and in case you weren’t sure, the second song on the cd, Mi Herencia Latina(My Latino Heritage), opens the path by recognizing some the forepapis y foremamis of the genre: Celia Cruz, Hector Lavoe, Tito Puente, Beny More, Compai Segundo, Bobby Capo and acknowledging the many genres like bomba, plena, guaguanco, rhumba, and son that intersect like our own identities.
9:23 am By Maegan La Mala · Arts|Music|New York City · 1 Comment
22 Oct 2010Because our history is African, LatiNegr@, y AfroRican
BOBBY SANABRIA AND THE MANHATTAN SCHOOL OF MUSICAFRO-CUBAN JAZZ ORCHESTRA PRESENT A TRIBUTE HONORING
Rafaél Hernández (1892–1965)
Bobby Sanabria and the Manhattan School of Music Afro-Cuban Jazz Orchestra will pay tribute to Puerto Rico’s greatest composer, Maestro Rafaél Hernández, whose works include such masterpieces as Preciosa and Lamento Borincano and who made history as a trumpeter with bandleader James Reese Europe’s 369th Regiment Harlem Hell Fighters band during World War I.October 22 / 7:30 PM /
Borden Auditorium, Manhattan School of Music120 Claremont Avenue
(Broadway and W. 122nd St.)
All tickets $5
For tickets call 917-493-4428
3:50 pm By BiancaLaureano · Activism|crime|GLBT|New York City|Politics|sexuality|youth · 5 Comments
21 Oct 2010Many of our NY area readers may have already heard of the brutal and violent crimes against three gay Bronx Latino men (two who were 17 years-old) who were allegedly sodomized and tortured by several youth and adults involved with a gang. Eight men have been arraigned for gang assault, sexual abuse and unlawful imprisonment and a total of eleven men have been arrested.
In response to these acts of violence Latin@ Citywide has invited me to sit on a panel to discuss ways we can respond to such acts of violence, homophobia, and misogyny among our community. This is not the first conversation to occur in the LGBTQI community in The Bronx since these attacks, but it may be the first one to be led and centered in the Latino community.
I’ll be sharing this opportunity with Rev. Carmen Hernanded, Founder / President of NYC LGBT Chamber of Commerce who I met earlier this year at the 2010 El Diario Mujeres Destacadas Awards ceremony as we were both recipients this year. Also in attendence wtill be Andrés Duque, Blabbeando Blogger and LGBT Activist, and Ephraim Cruz, Co- Founder of Bronx for Change.
I’m happy to have been invited to speak at this space, it represents an attempt to expand this conversation in ways that are often ignored. As many VL readers know, my ideas on gang involvement and affiliation as well as sexuality education and access for youth of Color, are not very popular; and I’ll be speaking from this space. Because there is no press or elected officials allowed I will be speaking as Bianca the sexologist, professor, educator and activist.
This event is open to the public and I do hope that if you are in NYC and are able to attend that you please do so. I’d love to meet some of our readers in 3-D and have this conversation and action plan moved in a way that is productive and inclusive! If you are interested in attending please RSVP via email by October 22, 2010 to: jcartagena@CSSNY.ORG
The original email invitation is below with full details. Read more…
11:45 am By la Macha · arizona|Florida|Immigration · 2 Comments
20 Oct 2010Just saw this over at Change.org:
Tim Elfrink at Miami New Times (full disclosure: I work for the paper) reports that the law drafted by Florida state representative William Snyder, and supported by GOP gubernatorial candidate Rick Scott, includes a clause that “Even if an officer has ‘reasonable suspicions’ over a person’s immigration status … a person will be ‘presumed to be legally in the United States’ if he or she provides ‘a Canadian passport’ or a passport from any ‘visa waiver country.’” Elfrink points out that aside from four Asian countries, all other visa waiver countries are located in Western Europe.
What the…? Yep, that’s right. The Florida law in a nutshell: If you’re a white non-Hispanic, you’re presumed to be in the country legally and don’t need to show any proof. If you belong in the “all others” category, better carry your papers.
Of course, there’s an explanation for such blatant racism, as Snyder told a radio host: “What we’re doing there is trying to be sensitive to Canadians. We have an enormous amount of … Canadians wintering here in Florida … That language is comfort language.”
Ah, yes tons of Canadians wintering here in Florida … along with MILLIONS of South Americans. In the biggest tourism destination in the state, Miami, people from South America comprise 52% of the visitors alone. That’s not even counting tourists from Central America and the Caribbean. These are people with plenty of disposable income, and plenty of tourism options. If Florida became a state suspicious of Latinos, they would just take their billions of dollars elsewhere. For a state whose economy relies so heavily on tourism, especially from Latin America, you’d think politicians would be a little bit more worried about making everyone feel comfortable. But that’s what makes it obvious this little clause isn’t about tourism at all. It’s about using every thin veil and pretense possible to try to legalize racial profiling.
Things just get ever better, don’t they?
Read the whole thing here.
8:39 am By Maegan La Mala · Immigration|Nevada|Politics · 6 Comments
20 Oct 2010I have been critical of the expectation of the Latino vote as some life changing revolutionary force. I have been equally critical of those who see Latinos not voting Democrat as an act of laziness and apathy as opposed to an act of protest.
But let me be clear, those who would use the agency of Latinos who decide not to vote or who decide not to vote Democrat as a way to further divide along the lines of race and divert our eyes from the real enemies of Latino communities, well that’s just dirty and they aren’t representative of Latinos who want movement.
Watching this video ad, the Spanish version is slated to run in Nevada, and hearing that it comes from an org named “Latinos for Reform” you might think, damn they have a point and I’m down for reform.
Except Latinos for Reform is run by a Robert Deposada, a conservative Republican political consultant whose vision of reform doesn’t line up with the needs of Latinos.
2:50 pm By Maegan La Mala · Chile|Labor|Media|Politics · 4 Comments
18 Oct 2010
It’s been almost a week since the 33 miners trapped for 70 days in the San Jose mine in Copiapo, Northern Chile, were rescued. While the whole world watched the miraculous rescue, choreographed and controlled by the Chilean government, led by right-wing billionaire President Sebastián Piñera, now the world outside Chile continues their gaze on the miners, with an emphasis on their personal lives, poking for information on what films will be made, what books will be written, are they having nightmares, where did they use the bathroom, if they wanted to eat each other and which miner’s infidelities were exposed.
Also we see the miner’s experience, the result of weak government enforcement of safety standards and the failure of the company that owned the San Jose mine, San Esteban, to invest in worker safety, being commodified. The Phoenix 2, the capsule that brought rescue workers down and the trapped miners up, has already been slapped with a value, just in case it’s sold and every rescued miner has been given an iPod.
What isn’t be respected is the space needed to the miners to heal from this trauma. Their families also need to heal. And all this focus on the personal also lets the company that ran the San Jose Mine off the hook, the Chilean government off the hook, and fails to look critically at the dangers facing all laborers in Chile, Latin America, and globally.
10:46 am By Maegan La Mala · Immigration|Justice|pennsylvania · 11 Comments
18 Oct 2010
Last week, a jury in a Federal Court in Pennsylvania convicted Derrick Donchak and Brandon Piekarsky of violating the civil rights of Luis Ramirez, when the two former high school football players from Shenandoah, PA beat and kicked the Mexican immigrant to death in July 2008.
From the Cypress Times:
The jury found the defendants guilty of violating the criminal component of the federal Fair Housing Act, which makes it a crime to use a person’s race, national origin or ethnicity as a basis to interfere, with violence or threats of violence, with a person’s right to live where he chooses to live. In addition, the jury found that Donchak conspired to, and did in fact, obstruct justice.
The Feds stepped in with Hate Crime charges after the state court allowed Donchak and Piekarsky to get away with murder. Now the two face life in prison. Sentencing will be Jan. 24, 2011.
Is this the road to justice though?
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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