8:21 pm By BiancaLaureano · Arts|Colombia|Movies|Women · 4 Comments
9 Apr 2011The trailer for this documentary film about indigenous struggles in Colombia came to my attention earlier this week and I wanted to share it with VL readers as many of you may be interested in coordinating a screening or supporting the documentary. Below is the synopsis from the film website as well as the trailer which is in Spanish with English subtitles.
Colombia has 102 indigenous peoples that are currently caught in the crossfire between Latin America’s oldest guerrilla group and the army. WE WOMEN WARRIORS is a journey inside the war-torn native nations that are surviving Colombia’s internal armed conflict, guided by three valiant female leaders who illuminate salient examples of bravery and nonviolence.
WE WOMEN WARRIORS shares intimate stories of resistance and survival. Doris Puchana, 26, is a young mother who defends the vulnerable Awá population that grows coca leaves (the base for cocaine). Ludis Rodriguez, 34, a spunky Kankuamo widow, tells us from prison how she was framed and captured on false charges of rebellion. Tiny in height but tremendous in spirit, Flor Ilva Trochez, 36, is the first female leader for the Nasa tribal government. She leads peaceful demonstrations to fight for the removal of police barracks set up in the Nasa community that endanger civilians by placing them in the line of fire.
WE WOMEN WARRIORS is both personal and political. Despite her life being threatened after denouncing a massacre in her village, Doris does not abandon her tribal post. Once Ludis is freed she joins other widows in the struggle to move onward, coping and healing after systematic violence swept through her region. Meanwhile, Flor puts Colombia’s constitutional indigenous autonomy into practice and strives toward creating a territory free of armed fighters.
In 2009, Colombia’s Constitutional Court ruled that nearly one-third of its native peoples are in danger of extinction because of the warfare. WE WOMEN WARRIORS bears witness to human rights abuses and offers stories of female empowerment, unshakable courage and faith in the survival of indigenous culture.
WE WOMEN WARRIORS from Nicole Karsin on Vimeo.
7:26 am By Maegan La Mala · Colombia|New York City|Poetry · Comments Off
8 Apr 2011
It’s National Poetry Month : step outside of what you know and head into Queens where talented poets and artists from Latin America will gather to remember one of their own, recently passed friend Ricardo León Peña-Villa. Ricardo was not only a poet but an activist who played a key role in the struggle for housing in the Lower East Side.
Cuando : Friday, April 8 · 6:00pm – 9:00pm
Donde: Teatro Natives
82-22 NORTHERN BLVD, JACKSON HEIGHTS, NY 11372
Tren #7 hasta la parada 82nd Street
El Colectivo Poetas en Nueva York invita a la comunidad neoyorkina a rendir homenaje y celebrar la vida de Ricardo León Peña-Villa “El Poe”, quien falleciera recientemente en la ciudad. En esta ocasión miembros del Colectivo Poetas en Nueva York se han integrado a la organización del evento para unir esfuerzos en la realización de un homenaje de despedida a una de las figuras más destacadas de la diáspora latina en New York durante los últimos años.
El evento de homenaje tendrá como epicentro el teatro NATIVES ubicado en el 82-22 NORTHERN BLVD, JACKSON HEIGHTS, NY 11372, en donde se harán presentes diferentes agrupaciones musicales de calidad internacional, entre los que se destacan Edy Martínez, Pablo Mayor y Folklore Urbano, Samuel Torres, Gregorio Uribe, Mario Barreiro, Daniel Reyes Llinas, Café Dorado y muchos más, quienes interpretarán composiciones propias y letras de Peña-Villa. Además se contará con la participación de poetas residentes en la ciudad de Nueva York.
Durante el evento que se realizará el 8 de abril de 2011, desde las 6pm, se celebrará la vida, la poesía, la música, el legado, la lucha pacífica y de revolución cultural, de este hombre que falleciera el pasado 11 de Marzo.
Así mismo el Colectivo Poetas en Nueva York, está organizando como apertura del evento una Masa Alegre (manifestación alternativa poética de toma de calles) que se realizará el mismo 8 de abril a las 5pm, y que emulará un carnaval de despedida, que partirá de la calle 83 st y Roosevelt Ave, hasta las instalaciones del teatro Natives. En esta Masa Alegre se cantarán coros de memoria a “El Poe” y se leerá su poesía durante el recorrido.
De antemano agradecemos su colaboración y participación activa en este evento en respaldo de quienes construyen la cultura. Los eventos serán totalmente gratis y abiertos a quienes quieran participar y acompañar a “El Poe” en esta celebración de despedida.
12:38 pm By Maegan La Mala · Detriot|Immigration · 11 Comments
6 Apr 2011The first time I saw an Immigration & Customs Enforcement van was in Detroit. For some children of immigrants in Detroit, they may say the same thing and add that the last time they saw their parents was in an ICE van.
The Fair Immigration Reform Movement (FIRM) is reporting that in Detroit ICE followed parents taking their children to the Hope of Detroit Academy, detained at least two parents, and essentially forced other parents to remain inside the school, afraid of leaving and afraid of being detained by ICE. Eventually the ICE officers left.
Read more…
10:12 am By Maegan La Mala · Activism|DREAM Act|Education|Georgia|Immigration · 2 Comments
6 Apr 2011Yesterday, undocumented youth in Georgia amped up the action by committing an act of civil disobedience, risking deportation. The arrests of Georgina Perez, Viridiana Martinez, Jose Rico, Dayanna Rebolledo, Andrea Rosales, David Ramirez and Maria Marroquin near Georgia State University, were preceded by the state’s first “coming out” event, where the young people first publicly declared their undocumented status. The young people also delivered
a letter to the Georgia State University President asking him to not comply with the recent Georgia Board of Regents ban of undocumented youth from the top 5 public universities.
With no DREAM Act currently in play in the U.S. Congress (although that may change soon), DREAMers across the country have been working locally to make sure that all young people have access to education regardless of their immigration status.
CNN has the following video of the protest and arrests.
Read more…
It’s National Poetry Month! In the past we have posted poems by Latino and Latin American Poets. This year, besides writing my own poetry, I am also going to highlight a few notable poetry collections I have on my bookshelf and have not yet reviewed.
Are there rainbows in New York after the storm?
This is the question Cuban poet Orlando Ferrand leaves of with at the end of the first poem sharing the name of his first published collection, Citywalker. Reading through the 49 poem collection is to accompany the citywalker, perhaps Ferrand himself, perhaps urban migrants like you or your friends and neighbors, on a journey to find the answer to the question first proposed.
Ferrand’s poems take us walking on water, both lyrically and in terms of setting between two islands. Cuba is wrapped in memory and longing as exemplified by Family Landscapes. Water surrounds islands and surround Citywalker through setting and metaphor. New York City is an encrypted map where the citywalker searches for love but first finds lust and loneliness.
From No Man’s Land:
Narcissus, homeboy
drowning into my eyes
I’ve been looking for the tempest
haunting Harlem’s brown stone palaces.
Citywalker can also be seen as a poetic narrative of Latino gay life in NYC. For example there is a poem which references the life and death of Andre Melendez aka the club kid Angel Melendez and other references to imagined and real gay life in the 80′s and 90′s.
Support independent Latino writer’s.
You can purchase Citywalker here and read the rainbows for yourself.
12:25 pm By Maegan La Mala · Immigration|Texas|U.S.-Mexico Border · 5 Comments
4 Apr 2011Editor’s Note : The following article is reprinted with permission of New America Media. I thought it was important to share given the mainstream media’s focus on the U.S. Mexico border as if there aren’t communities there. Additionally, given how there are complaints in my city of NYC of immigrant communities also being undercounted by the Census, here we have an example that goes beyond the often given excuse of scared or disinterested immigrant communities. – Mala
Equal Voice Newspaper/NAM, News Report, Claudia Rowe
Low-income families along the Texas border could lose millions of dollars over the next decade and see their voice in government even further diminished because, from the statistical reality of the federal government’s 2010 census, they don’t exist.
ensusThe 10-year population count may have missed as many as 300,000 residents of the Lone Star state, almost all of whom live in the unincorporated subdivisions along the Texas-Mexico border known as colonias. Mired in deep poverty, most residents lack basic amenities like running water and paved streets. Though predominantly Latino, 65 percent of colonia residents — and 85 percent of those under 18 — were born in the United States.
Unwilling to have so many people ignored, Hidalgo County has hired a lawyer who plans to sue the federal government for violating protocol by failing to mail census forms to 95 percent of colonias residents. Several other Texas jurisdictions may follow.
The stakes are high. Census figures determine how much money states and regions get in federal funding. They also trigger the reapportionment of voting districts so that residents are equally represented in government. Yet decade after decade, advocates for marginalized groups protest the official numbers, galled that those most in need of government services are the same people deemed “hard to count” and repeatedly overlooked.
The term “hard to count” is based on a scoring system that tabulates everything from community income to whether you have a telephone at home, lack fluency in English, or live in a rural area. Residents of the colonias fit all the criteria.
Which is why organizers in those communities spent months carefully preparing families, explaining the importance of the count and its potential impact — about $440 billion in federal grant dollars are tied to the results nationally, not to mention the shape of voting districts that can determine everything from county commissioners to congressional representatives. Yet in April, as the deadline for returning those forms arrived, organizers learned that the documents had never been mailed. Census workers instead planned to go door to door in the colonias.
“It was the craziest, worst strategy they could have thought of,” said Armando Garza, a city councilman in San Juan, Texas. “People in the colonias don’t answer the door to strangers or people with federal badges.”
Garza and a dozen others from the community met twice with census officials — including Robert Groves, head of the bureau in Washington, D.C. — to challenge the plan and implore officials to take another route. Hiring colonia residents to deliver the forms, for example, might at least put a familiar face on the government’s questions, they said.
But those suggestions were rebuffed, and, in the end, an estimated 95 percent of colonia residents — about 300,000 people — never received their forms. A few spoke in person with enumerators from the Census Bureau, but most were never seen at all.
“We had so many people calling us, saying ‘I haven’t gotten that form, and I want to be counted,’” said Mike Seifert, a leader in the Rio Grande Valley Equal Voice Network. “It was just a perfect disaster.”
To Ann Cass, executive director of Proyecto Azteca in San Juan, Texas, a local nonprofit that helps families build their own homes in the colonias, the entire procedure smacked of incompetence. “Probably there’s a dash of racial bias, too,” she said. “Assumptions that people in the colonias don’t count — and, if they don’t count, we don’t need to count them.”
Raul Cisneros, a spokesman for the Census Bureau, said his office had made unprecedented efforts to get an accurate measure, establishing 1,200 partnerships with community groups in the region and hiring 30 local residents to help with face-to-face counting.
“We visited 47 million households across the country,” he said. “We want to get to everybody. Homeless people — everyone. We went into homeless shelters, went into tent cities. We went into rural Alaska.”
Central to last year’s effort was a vow from Washington, D.C., that the bureau would work with community groups — such as those in the Equal Voice network — to ensure that even the hard-to-count were noted. But Seifert, Garza and Cass say that mixed signals and conflicting information left them with the distinct impression that their input was not welcome.
“It was really about race and partisan politics,” said Mike Sayer, an organizer in Mississippi who traveled to Texas to work with community groups there. “The Census Bureau officials didn’t want to be seen as working intimately with ‘them folks’ — or rather, us folks — who are identified very clearly with Democratic politics.”
Sayer, who helps organize poor families in the Mississippi Delta, has seen it all before. In his home state, whole neighborhoods go uncounted, he said, and the reverberations can last for years. A report by Pricewaterhouse Coopers found that undercounts in the 2000 census cost Mississippi about $12.5 million in funds for Medicaid, education and other federal programs.
In Texas, the 2000 census missed about 373,570 people, resulting in $1 billion lost to state coffers. Officials estimate that each uncounted person costs a community between $3,000 and $10,000 in government monies.
This year, Texas did only slightly better. Legislators estimate that census workers missed about 225,000 people in Hidalgo County, including 60,000 uncounted in the areas surrounding McAllen and Brownsville.
The border region is the fastest growing — and youngest — in the nation, struggling with dire poverty and a population increase of about 20 percent in the last decade. A recent report ranks Texas as worst in the nation for its rate of uninsured children and for the number of people over 25 without a high school diploma. Meanwhile, the state is contemplating draconian budget cuts, and more federal dollars following into some 185 programs calculated on a per capita basis could have been an important stopgap.
“Their bad work — they’re not going to suffer for it,” said Seifert. “But, down here, it’s a different story. The most vulnerable of America will be uncounted if you don’t do the census right.”
Aside from money, census undercounts can drastically affect political representation by triggering the redrawing of electoral districts. So across the nation, inaccurate population figures could affect elections for thousands of government offices over the next 10 years — everything from school board members to state representatives. The Rio Grande Valley, for example, stands to gain two congressional seats and, depending on the final numbers, two in the state Legislature.
Problems extend beyond rural areas. Chicago organizers and legislators say 200,000 people were missed in the Windy City last year — most of them African American — and Illinois is now at risk of losing a congressional seat.
The Census Bureau has a standard procedure for handling such disputes and concedes that in addition to undercounting some groups, it over counts others — most of them wealthy and white. These disparities take time to sort out — often more than a year — while voting district reapportionment cannot wait. In 2000, after receiving claims from 1,080 areas, the bureau revised its total national population by only 2,700 people.
“That’s one one-thousandth of a percent,” said Census Bureau spokesman Cisneros, in Washington, D.C. “The indicators we have so far for last year are that we’re all good. The count came in very close to our estimates.”
For Garza, the San Juan city commissioner, the import is clear: “It’s huge for our area, which is neglected by the federal and state governments,” he said. “If the light company and the IRS can use the mails to find people in the colonias, how come the Census Bureau can’t?
8:00 am By Maegan La Mala · Activism|chicago|DREAM Act|Education|Immigration|Justice|Media|Politics|Videos|youth · Comments Off
4 Apr 2011This past, March 10th, young people, many whom would be eligible for the DREAM Act (if politicians would just get it passed already), came out of the shadows and declared their immigration status, without fear and without apologies.
The following is a video from the “Coming Out of the Shadows” rally in Chicago, organized by the Youth Justice League.
The film moved me to tears, and I was really appreciative of how it showed the diversity of the young people involved in the struggle for the DREAM Act.
If you want to support these youth or want to learn how to get involved. Visit the Youth Justice League online or email them at info@iyjl.org.
1:23 am By Fabiola · Culture|history|Los Angeles · 2 Comments
3 Apr 2011Managing Editor’s Note : The following guest post is by Fabiola Sandoval, an LA based writer, photographer and friend. I feel really blessed that she has joined us here through her words and giving us a little West Coast perspective. Please join me in welcoming her. -Mala
In Los Angeles the opening La Plaza de Cultura y Artes takes place April 16th, located in the Los Angeles Plaza Historic District, home to La Placita Olvera. A place of cultural and spiritual significance for many Mexican, Mexican – American, and Central American Angelenos among other communities, and a highly visited location for non – Angelenos, it is considered one of LA’s treasures; currently undergoing redevelopment, as in other areas of the city of Los Angeles.
From La Plaza’s website:
LA Plaza de Cultura y Artes is the nation’s premier center of Mexican American culture and arts. Providing an experience unlike any other, LA Plaza’s interactive exhibits and dynamic programs invite visitors to explore as well as contribute to the ongoing story of Mexican Americans in Los Angeles and beyond. Located near the site where Los Angeles was founded in 1781, LA Plaza’s 2.2-acre campus includes two historic and newly renovated buildings (the Vickrey-Brunswig Building and Plaza House) surrounded by 30,000 square feet of public garden.
The land and site have another story, as do most places. The angle of the location’s history includes the Gabrielino-Tongva Indian village before 1781, when the settlement that entailed the birth of Los Angeles began. During the construction of La Plaza it is believed that more than 90 human burials were discovered, resurrecting the knowledge that the area was indeed the oldest recorded cemetery in the city and highlighting the complex history of Los Angeles.
The conundrum lies in the precipitous time line of the construction of La Plaza, in its historic location, and the county of Los Angeles’ response to the Tongva community’s pleas for support in investigating and relocating the remains.
The location brings forth the complex relationship that ties Mexican, Mexican – American and Indian history in Los Angeles. There’s an opportunity, that seems currently trampled by the County Supervisor, Gloria Molina, and other invested players in the time-line of La Plaza, disrespecting a process that affirms the preservation of culture, allowing for a diverse and complex history that recognizes place, preservation of Native culture, and memorializing.
Let’s unveil complex history and celebrate rich diversity, affirming the multiple layers, struggles and beauty that entails the City of Angels.
Citing: City’s Birthplace Becomes Battleground Over LA History, 89.3 KPCC
Irina Contreras activism and info compilation from the – Gabrielino – Tongva Community press release, and other research.
9:30 am By BiancaLaureano · Arts|Events|New York City|sex|sexuality|youth · Comments Off
1 Apr 2011Miss Kings County 2011, is Carmen B. Mendoza, a Latina whose platform is de-stigmatizing getting tested for HIV. As part of her goal to begin discussions with Latinos and youth around HIV and topics of sexuality, she is coordinating a special exclusive screening of the documentary film LET’s TALK ABOUT SEX. This film is scheduled to air on TLC Saturday April 9, 2011. If you live in the NYC area you can check the film out before then.
Carmen has coordinated a panel of speakers to discuss the topics presented in the film, including director James Houston, media maker Aiesha Turman and yours truly will be on it as well! I’ve shared the stage with Carmen before and I’m super excited to have this opportunity again. She is an amazing young woman who is pushing the ideas and expectations of beauty pageants in a direction that it has never gone into before.
And before ya’ll anti-pageant folks get all up on this post, read up on what this program focuses on and remember there are many paths to doing this type of work, and this is one of them. If we are committed to reaching folks in various spaces, we have to recognize that doing that work may mean going to where they are, and we need folks doing this work everywhere, not just on the Internets!
Below is the press release for this event. RSVP at MissKingsCounty2011@gmail.com film is at 7pm at Center Stage 48 West 21st Street. Read more…
9:03 am By Maegan La Mala · arizona|Immigration|U.S.-Mexico Border · 7 Comments
1 Apr 2011When Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano visited the U.S./Mexico border at Texas last week, it was to assure people that the border is safe, thanks to the deployment of armed troops. Safety is relative however, and it seems is dependent on who you are, meaning your ethnicity and the perception of your legal status. Just ask the family of Carlos de la Madrid, a U.S. citizen who was shot in the back by U.S. Border Patrol while climbing a fence into Mexico. What happened echoes other shootings of young men at the border by Border Patrol, with reports of rocks being thrown being met with bullets. The video report below is valuable for the interviews with the widow of de la Madrid and an activist from Border Action Network, who point out the Border Patrol’s policy of shooting to kill and the often used justification for such action, illegal activity such as drugs.
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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