Lo Que Hay This Weekend Boston, NYC: Musica, Hip Hop Theater Festival, Cemetery Tours y Mas

Friday, October 28th, 2011

Boston

Considerado como uno de los mejores bajistas de Jazz del mundo, el puertorriqueño Eddie Gómez nos brinda una noche con lo mejor de su repertorio. Gracias a una colaboración entre Villa Victoria Center for the Arts y Berklee College of Music, esta especial presentación en Boston nos brinda la oportunidad de presenciar el talento de este gigante del Jazz.

Regarded as one of the best Jazz bass players in the world, Eddie Gómez will offer us an evening with the very best of his repertoire. Thanks to a collaboration between Villa Victoria Center for the Arts and Berklee College of Music, this one-night-only presentation is a unique opportunity to witness the talent of a true Jazz giant.

8 pm
Villa Victoria Center for the Arts
85 W Newton Street
Boston, Massachusetts
$10 hasta el 24 de octubre / $15 en la puerta

Purchase Tickets Here

New York City

Hip Hop Theater Festival
8pm: Workshop Performance of Re: Definition and Single Reflex
LaMama Experimental Theatre
74 East 4th Street, New York, NY 10003
Free to RSVP with $10 suggested donation at the door
Visit HHTF.ORG for more info/tickets

Saturday, October 29th 2011

Hip Hop Theater Festival
4:30pm-6pm: Book Launch for Say Word! and The Prophet Returns
LaMama Experimental Theatre
74 East 4th Street, New York, NY 10003
Free to RSVP with $10 suggested donation at the door
Visit HHTF.ORG for more info/tickets

Sunday, October 30

Bronx, NYC

Panel Discusssion: Who is Albizu?
3 – 6 pm
El Maestro, Inc., 1300 Southern Boulevard

Presenter: Camilo Matos

Panelists:
-Ponce Laspina: Partido Nacionalista de Puerto Rico, Junta de Nueva York
-Olga I. Sanabria: Puerto Rico Committee in the U.N.
-Iris Zavala-Martinez: Lecturer, Hunter College
-Carlitos Rovira: Former Young Lord
Music:
DJ Mellow G
Tato Torres
Fernandito Ferrer
Luis Cruz
Angelito Villot
Pichichi

Poets
Mariposa
Prisionera Jamas
Armando Pacheco Matos

Ongoing

Bronx, NYC

After Dark at Woodlawn – Annual Halloween History Tour

OCTOBER 29, 30 and 31, 2011

Creep Through One of the Nation’s Oldest Cemeteries and the Final Resting Place of Notorious New Yorkers

This year, the spookiest annual Halloween event is getting a dramatic makeover. On October 29, 30 and 31, an early evening walk through Woodlawn comes ALIVE with real-life interpretations of NYC legends and lore, surreal tales of unsolved mysteries and murders, and more. Folklorist Elena Martinez leads the tours, accompanied by bagpipers and other mysterious characters. Flashlights required.

Two tours—6PM and 7PM nightly

COST: $20 admission fee.

Reservations are required for the Halloween tours.

Call 718-920-1469

Meet at the Jerome Avenue Entrance
The Jerome Avenue Entrance is located near the intersection of Jerome Avenue and Bainbridge Avenue.

#4 train to Woodlawn Station

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Miercoles Movie ( y History Lesson) – Isabel Rosado : Nacionalista

Filmmaker Melissa Montero is working on a film about Puerto Rican Nationalist Isabel Rosado and is requesting the help of the community. I woke up this morning thinking about “Occupy Oakland” , police violence and tear gas. This got me thinking about the years of resistance in U.S. occupied Puerto Rico and the work of women in that struggle.

Please watch the preview and if you can, contribute to the finishing of this film.

Isabel Rosado, a centenarian, who at 30 years of age joined the Puerto Rican Nationalist Party and dedicated her life to the Puerto Rican independence movement. Through her story– as a Party member Isabel collected funds, sewed flags, delivered messages, cared for the stricken leader Don Pedro Albizu Campos, and took up arms in the fight for independence. We learn about the colonial relationship between Puerto Rico and the United States and Puerto Rico’s struggle for independence. Isabel, spending approximately 12 years in prison, has become a revered symbol of colonial resistance in Puerto Rico. Her life is a testament to the island’s unresolved conflict with political status, economic development, and a century-long struggle for independence. Isabel Rosado: Nationalist, chronicles the life of a woman of humble means who risked it all, endured persecution, and had her civil rights violated. Not only does her story highlight the central problem of colonialism but it also represents a marginalized community who for many years struggled for their nation’s right to self determination and sovereignty.

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District Court Orders ICE to Release S-Comm Documents

Last night, Judge Shira Scheindlin ordered the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency to publicly disclose by November 1 a previously withheld internal memorandum that advocates believe will shed light on the agency’s legal justification for turning Secure Communities into a mandatory immigration enforcement program.

You can read the order here (PDF)

The decision follows motions for summary judgment filed by all parties in NDLON v. ICE about the memorandum. The government claimed the memorandum was exempt from disclosure under the attorney-client and deliberative process privileges. Plaintiffs the National Day Laborers Organizing Network, Center for Constitutional Rights, and Cardozo School of Law Kathryn O. Greenberg Immigration Justice Clinic argued the memo was improperly kept secret from the public in the midst of important policy decisions related to Secure Communities. Indeed, this summer, opposition to Secure Communities reached new levels with the Governors of Illinois, Massachusetts, and New York formally rejecting the program. In response, ICE announced that all of its Memorandum of Agreements with States were dissolved and that the program would be imposed unilaterally. Despite serious questions from States, local jurisdictions, and advocates about ICE’s legal authority to make the program mandatory, the agency continued to withhold information about its legal reasoning and sought to keep the legal authority memorandum secret.

I’m hoping some of the legal heads from VivirLatino would offer up what the impact could be were it revealed that ICE explicitly meant this policy to be mandatory from inception but chose to deceive states and counties into signing on by implying that participation was optional.

In the end, I am not sure if it even matters. The fact remains that as it stands now, Secure Communities is one part of an overall national immigration policy that is focused on keeping deportation numbers up, while keeping immigrant communities, especially people of color immigrant communities down.

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Lo Que Hay This Weekend NYC : Blaktinas and Cuban Children’s Theater in the Bronx y Mas

This page will be updated throughout the weekend so keep visiting!

Domingo, October 23nd

In a rare US appearance, La Colmenita, an internationally acclaimed Cuban children’s theater group and UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador, will perform in New York City.
The US tour will introduce some of Cuba’s most talented children to an American audience that has, in spite of the decades-long U.S. embargo, enthusiastically embraced Cuban culture. It is their hope that their productions will build greater understanding between two countries whose people have been divided by politics for too long.

PS 154 – The Harriet Tubman Learning Center
Play: “Abracadabra”
Time: 3pm, Harlem, New York Admission Free

Ongoing

October 14 – 28th
BAAD! – Bronx Academy of Arts and Dance
2011 Blaktina Performance Series

The Bronx Academy of Art & Dance kicked off its annual BlakTina Performance Series, a festival celebrating works by Black, Latina/o and Blatina/o artists, last week and continues with film, music and dance! This year we are using BlakTina in the festival’s title to flip the Spanish language norm that uses the masculine to describe the universal.

For the complete schedule of events and to buy tickets visit the official website.

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From New America Media : Santa Clara County Ends Collaboration with ICE

Mala’s NoteI wanted to include this post from two days ago, made available to us at no cost from NAM, because of it’s relation to our continuing coverage to our recent original post on the Frontline report and recent S-Comm statistics. I felt it was important to show how a local jurisdiction can send a message of how they will work with immigrant communities. It doesn’t go as far as it should but it certainly isn’t following the lead of places like Arizona and Alabama, now is it following the deportation priorities of the Obama administration.

New America Media, News Feature and Video, Raj Jayadev and Fernando Perez

Santa Clara County Ends Collaboration with ICE, Creates Local Protections Against “Secure Communities” Program from DE BUG on Vimeo.

In what has been heralded as the most progressive policy in the nation, Santa Clara County today voted in a new set of guidelines for civil immigration detainers, which in effect ends the county’s collaboration with Immigration and Custom Enforcement (ICE).

Supervisor George Shirakawa, who championed the policy, told an audience of supporters after the County Board of Supervisors’ vote, “Today is historic. We now have the most progressive policy in this field, and the whole nation will be looking at us as Santa Clara County makes it official: we don’t do ICE’s job.”

Civil immigration detainers are requests from ICE to the county to detain jailed individuals after the completion of their sentence from a criminal charge in order for them to get picked up for immigration detention and deportation proceedings.

For immigrant advocates and county officials, the new policy – which will only honor a detainer request if, “there is a written agreement with the federal government by which all costs incurred by the County in complying with the ICE detainer will be reimbursed” — is a way to exert local control in the face of a controversial federal ICE program called Secure Communities. Having been rolled out in 2008, Secure Communities uses fingerprints gathered at jails to notify ICE agents of the immigration status of individuals to then initiate detainer requests. Since the inception of the program, the federal government has not reimbursed any county which has honored detainer requests issued through Secured Communities.

The program has received pushback from counties and states who say Secure Communities violates targeted individuals’ constitutional protections, places financial hardships on cash-strapped counties, and jeopardizes public safety by making immigrant communities fearful of law enforcement. In describing the often contentious relationship with ICE regarding Secure Communities, Supervisor Dave Cortese said, “Frankly, there has been a lack of integrity from ICE on these issues. Today, we are sending a message, one county at a time, you need to fix what’s broken before you ask us to enforce bad laws.”

Cortese’s frustration comes from a history of written commitments he says “were reneged upon” by ICE. The agency initially told counties that they had the option to opt out of Secure Communities only to rescind that offer after counties attempted to do so in 2010. Santa Clara County was one of the first in the country to attempt the opt-out. In the wake of ICE’s re-positioning around the opt-out, counties critical of Secure Communities were at a crossroads as to how to limit the fallout of the program.

Santa Clara County formed a taskforce of law enforcement agencies, informed by County Counsel, to craft a policy around the principle operating mechanism of Secured Communities – the detainer request — given ICE’s shifting information regarding the program.

On October 5, 2011, the taskforce came up with a policy that would limit the county to only honor detainers after conviction (through Secure Communities, even those who had not been found guilty of the crime that placed them in jail were still vulnerable to a detainer hold), would not honor detainer requests for juveniles, and would only honor requests for a specific list of “serious” and “violent” felonies.

Given that individuals convicted of this subset of criminal charges would go to the state prison system, rather than stay in the county jail once convicted, the policy in practice would mean only a narrow few would be subject to county detainer holds. Yet, as the taskforce recommendation moved along to the full County Board of Supervisors for a final vote, Supervisor Shirakawa, the head of the Public Safety and Justice Committee, added an amendment which further limits the scope of when the county would honor detainer requests.

His amendment added language around only considering detainer requests when given a written agreement for reimbursement by the federal government, and stating that except for particular circumstances, “ICE agents shall not be given access to individuals or be allowed to use County facilities for investigative interviews or other purposes, and County personnel shall not expend County time or resources responding to ICE inquiries or communicating with ICE regarding individuals’ incarceration or release date.”

In explaining the amendment to the rest of the Board, he said, “ICE has lied to us in the past with Secure Communities. We need to say enough is enough.”

Jazmin Segura, a policy analyst for Services, Immigrants Rights and Education, is part of a cross-ethnic county-wide coalition of civil rights organizations who has been pushing for the policy since Secure Communities was first introduced.

She says, “We congratulate the County Board of Supervisors for taking this historic step in sending a clear message to immigrant communities that local law enforcement is
not ICE.”

Segura says since Secure Communities was introduced, her office has received an uptick in calls from immigrant residents who were victims of crime, yet fearful to contact law enforcement.

While Segura says the policy change will greatly impact immigrant communities in Santa Clara County, some advocates see the policy as a signal that the tide is shifting as local communities develop similar strategies to respond to an increase in ICE enforcement.

Angela Junk, a staff attorney with the Immigrant Legal Resource Center, works with similar coalitions as the Santa Clara group in regions across the country. She says, “This policy sends the message that local participation in the enforcement of immigration laws is not mandatory and that due process and equal treatment under the law applies to all persons in the U.S.”

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Born Anew at Each AM : Puerto Rican Author/Poet Piri Thomas Passes On

Yesterday, It was with great sadness that I read about the death of Puerto Rican author, poet, and inspiration to many – Piri Thomas. According to a release that I received via the National Institute for Latino Policy, Thomas, 83 years old, passed away on Monday, surrounded by his family after struggling with pneumonia.

I, like many, first became aware of Thomas via his book Down These Mean Streets, which looks at life in el barrio (Spanish Harlem, NYC) for a young Afro-Cuban Rican, and how the complex intersections of race, poverty, and urban policies guided him through a struggle that included drugs, prison, activism and art.

I was a teenager when I first read Down these Mean Streets, struggling with my own NYRican identity and what it meant. His words were part of my learning to navigate identity and what to do with my definition of self. I was 18 when I was lucky enough to meet Thomas. I was in college and he was giving a presentation open to the whole school, but those of us in the Latino organization, Solidaridad Latina, were able to have a small intimate lunch with him. At this point I already considered myself a writer and and an activist – although an infant in both of these roles. It was during these meetings that I became exposed to Thomas’s poetry. If Down These Mean Streets is a brutally honest look at gritty realities and painful realities, his poetry is words on bright alas de mariposas offering a new vision for growth and evolution. I was struck by how hopeful and joyful Thomas was. The light he exuded was not in spite of his struggles – it was a direct result of it and he encouraged us all to work through our lives unapologetically and like the title of a poem of his that I always remember – he invited us to be born anew at each a.m.

So gracias Piri – no te digo adios because you live on through your words and your actions that have touched the hearts, minds, and souls of so many – including this NY Rican from Queens.

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Lost in Detention Gives Attention to Immigrant Detention and S-Comm but Lacks Alternatives

As Bianca posted yesterday, last night PBS’s Frontline featured Lost in Detention with Maria Hinojosa. The hour long investigative show looked at the immigration detention policies that have expanded under the Obama administration, specifically the impact of Secure Communities and the abuses in the ever expanding immigration jail industry.

I watched the special report last night and sadly wasn’t surprised by anything presented. The issue of how the Obama administration has focused on increasing deportations, using programs like Secure Communities, is one we have covered for years. I expect though that this program exposed how the current immigration policy is tearing apart families and leading to physical and sexual abuse inside the big business of detention centers to a new audience.

One of the disappointments I was left with after watching Lost in Detention was the way the show seemed to serve as a mic for the excuses given by the Obama administration for the terror it’s policies create. The answer that seemed to be given by Hinojosa for the question “what can be done to stop the deportations and growth of abuses?” was Comprehensive Immigration Reform. There were snippets of speeches by Obama and an interview with the administration’s vendecomunidad Latina spokesmodel Cecilia Muñoz. Some choice quotes from Muñoz:

“even broken laws have to be enforced.”

“as long as congress gives us $ to deport 400,000. That’s what we’re going to do.”

(more…)

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Maria Hinojosa Talks About Her Documentary “Lost In Detention”

Lost In Detention” will air tomorrow, Tuesday October 18, 2011 on PBS and examines the Obama administration’s immigration policy. Maria Hinojosa a FRONTLINE correspondent has travelled parts of the southern US and visited 3 immigrant detention facilities over a one year period. Below is an interview with Hinojosa from Presente.org discussing her documentary.

You may watch the documentary on PBS or online. As an educator I’ve used FRONTLINE documentaries in my classes each semester and they have provided amazing discussions. Often FRONTLINE produces additional teaching tools so that they may be accessible and used by community members, activists, and educators all over. I encourage you to each check out the website if you would like to see what they have available for this documentary.

The press release by PBS reads:
(more…)

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Today in NYC : PICKET FOR PUERTO RICO AND NEW YORK QUALITY PUBLIC EDUCATION

From the VL Inbox – (If you would like to see your event listed here please email info@vivirlatino.com)

Monday, October 17 – 5:00 PM
NYC Department of Education (near City Hall)
52 Chambers Street (Between Centre & Broadway)
FMPR Support Committee – New York
……………………………………………………………………………………………………….
Dear Sisters and Brothers,
The FMPR Support Committee – New York is making a call for you to join us to make your voices heard in support of free pubic quality education in Puerto Rico and New York. Join us to protest against the privatization of public schools with charter schools on Monday, October 17, 2011, at 5pm, in a picket at Mayor Bloomberg’s New York City Department of Education.

In Puerto Rico, protests have been called by the Teachers’ Union of Puerto Rico (FMPR) to denounce the education summit convened there by U.S. Secretary of Education, Arne Duncan, from October 17 -18, 2011. This “Education Summit” is the latest attempt to increase support for the devastating federal policies of No Child Left Behind (e.g. fraudulent punitive testing, teacher firings, school closings, privatized charters) and to counter the historic resistance to charter schools in this island-nation that has been a colony of the U.S. since 1898 (post Spanish-American War).

On October 17th we will denounce the undemocratic and dictatorial federal, state and city policies that relentlessly continue to destroy public schools here and in Puerto Rico through charter schools and the contracting-out to private companies.
Through teacher strikes, school stoppages, educational and militant organizing campaigns over the past decades, The Teachers’ Union of Puerto Rico (FMPR) has succeeded in blocking charters, school closings, teacher layoffs, and threats to member health, pensions and wage benefits.

Today, the anti-union, anti-worker administration of Governor Luis Fortuño has continued and escalated policies that are aimed at dismantling public schools and further undermining the right to a free public quality education. Virtually every day, the FMPR and its leadership with the active support of parents, students and community, shut down schools on the island in order to seek redress to these intolerable conditions. This year it will continue its standardized testing boycott and continue to organize against the fraudulent use of student test scores to evaluate teacher performance.

Because of it’s unrelenting campaigns to promote quality public education and to stop privatization, at the local and national level, the FMPR has been the target of intense government repression including police brutality, the illegal denial of union dues check-off, the revocation (for life) of their leaders’ teaching licenses and the denial of their legal union right to leaves of absence without pay. Despite these hardships, the FMPR remains steadfast in this struggle to defend the right to public education. This important struggle needs our support.

Our solidarity with the struggle for quality public education in Puerto Rico is essential at this critical juncture when Wall Street corporations (represented by Mr. Duncan & the Obama administration) continue to lay the groundwork to impose and establish charter schools. To do so, the government-corporate forces have increased their attempts to destroy the frontline of defense of the public schools, the FMPR, and to weaken all resistance.

A free quality public school education is a universal right that was won by working families and unions both in Puerto Rico and the U.S. The fight to defend public schools and to stop privatization through charter schools is a common fight in both countries. Therefore our efforts at stopping the destruction of public schools in favor of prívate charter schools and corporate profits, will be strengthened by standing together. We should stand united!

JOIN US TO DEMAND:

• No to charter privatization. Yes to quality public education. No to cutbacks and layoffs.

• Down with the Duncan/Obama/Bush No Child Left Behind, the Race to the Bottom for our Children.

• No to Fraudulent Testing & Punitive Teacher Evaluation. Respect for Teacher Tenure, Seniority and Job Protections.

• Stop School Closings and top-down dictates (turnaround, transformation, restart) that only erode education.

• Reduce Class Size by providing jobs to all excessed teachers.

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Lo Que Hay This Weekend en NYC : Blaktina in the Bronx y Mas

Please Keep Checking this Page as it will be updated throughout the weekend.

-Mala

Ongoing

October 14-28th

The Bronx Academy of Art & Dance presents its annual BlakTina Performance Series

A festival celebrating works by Black, Latina/o and Blatina/o artists. This year we are using BlakTina in the festival’s title to flip the Spanish language norm that uses the masculine to describe the universal.

Check out all the events at BAAD!’s website here

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