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Archive for October, 2011

I started today thinking about how difficult it has become to maintain VivirLatino and keep it up and running the way I want to. 6 years ago today, this site went live and it has three editors (of which I was one) and owners who had the best of intentions but who also wanted to capitalize on what was to become the “Latino internet boom”.

That was never my interest and it still isn’t. I, having already been personally blogging about my experiences as a single Rican activist mami in nyc, was and still am interested in the way life/struggle was (is) a reflection of larger social and political issues. This means that I rarely look at page stats, am a bad hustler/marketer, and have sacrificed a certain level of “success” because of my refusal to sell out to trends and/or organizations, because I don’t mind being confrontational if that means keeping it real.

6 years later, there are two editors (including me) and I own the site. My intentions, my integrity, my politics, and my passions have no changed but the face of Latino blogging has. I have witnessed a shift away from critical analysis and a move towards marketing our experiences. In the post Obama election period, I have seen the beltway (Washington d.c.) shift in terms of the level of engagement they (represented by both politicians and non-profit orgs) are willing to have with spaces like VivirLatino. We are not the “traditional” media and thus can be shut out in a way that mainstream media cannot. I have also seen a steep decline in revenue, mostly because as the recession get deeper and deeper orgs didn’t have the money so many of us independent bloggers struggled to get. As a result the field of independent (meaning not tied to an organization) Latino political/activist bloggers has gotten smaller and smaller. Dear and talented voices have gone silent (online- their work continues in other spaces) and trust me – when you are a space like VivirLatino – you need all the allies you can get.

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The Harvest/la Cosecha Available on DVD & VOD Today

8:43 am By Maegan La Mala · Labor|Movies · Comments Off

11 Oct 2011

Produced by Desperate Housewives’ Eva Longoria, Cinema Libre Studio‘s The Harvest/la Cosecha – a documentary about young Latino farmworkers in the United States – is available today on DVD and video on demand.

Read my review of the film here. 

<iframe src=”http://player.vimeo.com/video/25874029″ width=”400″ height=”225″ frameborder=”0″ webkitAllowFullScreen allowFullScreen></iframe><p><a href=”http://vimeo.com/25874029″>The Harvest/La Cosecha – Theatrical Trailer</a> from <a href=”http://vimeo.com/shineglobal”>Shine Global</a> on <a href=”http://vimeo.com”>Vimeo</a>.</p>

 

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While the clip of the PBS film , Against Mexico – The Making of Heroes and Enemies, featured below, has nothing to do really with Columbus Day, I chose to share it this morning because the subtext is a common one. How are holidays around history invented? What are the messages that we internalize around our inherent worth as diasporic peoples? How do we accurately portray history understanding that the “winning” side is not always the just side? What language do we adopt and what vocabulary do we reject in the context of how ethnicity still plays a role in how people are treated? And how do we approach these issues with our children so that they do not struggle, feeling they have to be “good” or “bad”?

Watch the full episode. See more PBS Presents.

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Here are a few events of interest this weekend happening  in various parts of NYC including the Bronx and down at #OccupyWallStreet. If you want to see your event listed here please email info@vivirlatino.com

Sunday, October 9th

Friends of Woodlawn is proud to present Azucar! Celebrating the Life and Legacy of Celia Cruz with The Bronx Music Heritage Center, Casita Maria Center for Arts and Education, and City Lore.

1:00 p.m.

A  FREE event honoring the legacy of The Queen of Salsa, whose timeless work continues to have a major impact on jazz, pop culture and Latin music worldwide.

Program includes:

• Panel discussion on the life and influence of Ms. Cruz organized by preeminent City Lore folklorist Elena Martinez and moderated by Grammy-nominated musician Bobby Sanabria
• Selection of Ms. Cruz’s music performed by students from The Celia Cruz High School of Music
• Guided visit to the Cruz mausoleum, La Guarachera de Cuba’s final resting place.

“EL GRITO DEL MUNDO” – MUSICOS LATINOS SE UNEN A #OCCUPYWALLSTREET

6 pm

La reciente formada Coalición de Músicos Latinos de Nueva York anuncia gran concierto acústico en apoyo a #Occupywallstreet este Domingo 9 Octubre a las 6:00PM. Invitamos a toda la comunidad latina sin importar su status migratorio a manifestar su apoyo a través de la música y cultura en forma pacífica, solidarizando con el grupo #occupywallstreet que se mantiene en protesta contra las políticas económicas adoptadas por Estados Unidos como además a las movilizaciones en distintas ciudades del país, frente al descontento general, hacia la crítica situación.

“Estamos a favor de políticas, reformas sociales y económicas que favorezcan a todos los habitantes de EEUU incluyendo las minorías e inmigrantes”

Las malas decisiones tomadas, afectan desproporcional y principalmente, a las familias de menores recursos y minorías en este país. Dentro de los denominados 99% que se ven afectados, nos encontramos la mayoría de inmigrantes latinos. Nosotros junto con muchas otras comunidades en los Estados Unidos, estamos siendo perjudicados, aún más, que el resto de los indignados.
Es por eso que saldremos a cantar por la justicia social, la paz y por mejores leyes de inmigración.

Estamos a favor de la unión y la reunificación de las familias de trabajadores indocumentados, y en contra de políticas de criminalización que solamente crean un ambiente de xenofobia, violencia y discriminación rampante. Por tanto, también pedimos poner un alto a todas las deportaciones y exigimos una reforma migratoria ahora. La necesidad para nosotros, de ser parte del movimiento #occupywallstreet se manifiesta, en este momento, como imprescindible. Bandas independientes neoyorquinas como Kofre, Eskarioka, Eskarroneros, Paracuta,Earthdriver, Changala, RadioArmada, The Times (lista en formación); montaran un concierto acústico en la Plaza Zuccotti, ahora apodada “Plaza de la Libertad.”

Llamamos específicamente, a todos los inmigrantes, cualquiera sea sus estatus migratorio. El grupo de abogados que apoya la causa, se encargará de establecer el dialogo con NYPD, y se responsabiliza por la seguridad de todos los asistentes.

Also at #OccupyWallStreet

This Sunday, October 9th at 6 p.m., members of Movement for Justice in El Barrio, an organizanization that is part of the Zapatista initiated The Other Campaign have been invited and will participate in Occupy Wall St.

They will share a message written by the humble immigrant community of East Harlem on their seven-year struggle for dignity and against neoliberal displacement. In this message, they will speak on their vision of the world, their analysis of the problems that besiege it, and how they seek to change it. They will offer their grain of sand and make echo the voice of all the dignified people who are struggling to build a new world from below and to the left.

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From National Immigration Law Center email alert:

A month ago, Arlyn was arrested during a raid in Kenner, Louisiana. Please call ICE to prevent him from being deported in the next three days. Numbers are below.

On August 29th, Arlyn and two dozen other workers gathered to collect their unpaid wages. It was an ambush. ICE had coordinated with 3 law enforcement agencies to carry out an immigration raid. The arrests were violent.

The arrested workers are members of the New Orleans Workers’ Center for Racial Justice and the Congress of Day Laborers. They were involved in a dispute with their employer over failure to pay minimum wages and other egregious labor rights violations. ICE knew that. But rather than give these workers the civil rights and labor rights protections they deserve, ICE is deporting them. ICE’s actions contradict the agency’s recent public statements about its enforcement priorities and its exercise of prosecutorial discretion.

Most of the workers arrested during the raid have been released from detention and await deportation proceedings. But Arlyn and three others remain in detention.

Make a phone call now and tell ICE not to deport Arlyn and the other community leaders arrested during the raid.

Call to STOP the deportation of these important Community Leaders:
Call DHS head Janet Napolitano: 202-282-8495
Call ICE head John Morton: 202-732-3000
Call Scott Sutterfield, Acting ICE Field Office Director, at 318-335-7500 ext.7650

Sample Script:
I am calling to ask that four civil rights leaders be released from detention immediately and be allowed to remain in the US. Their names and immigration numbers are Arlyn Jose Caranza-Espinal A#094-923-622, Pedro Moreno-Cruz A# 098-500-026, Luis Ramon Franco-Martinez A# 099-653-230, and Cesar Gutierrez A# 088-018-479. Please stop their deportation.

For further information or to support the campaign please contact Jacinta Gonzalez at jgonzalez@nowcrj.org, (504) 655-6610

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I have written extensively of how the bodies of self-identified Latina women and their wombs are the battlegrounds over immigration policy.

Prena Lal in an article posted at AlterNet highlights a recent example where so-called “progressives” expel a group of pregnant women who were challenging the idea that it is their bodies and babies that are causing environmental harm.

During a talk by Californians for Population Stabilization’s Ben Zuckerman on the “impact of our growing population on our natural environment,” one woman asked the question: “Are you saying that the life inside of me is the problem? Won’t the next generation be leading us to new solutions?” According to a bystander, shortly after, the same mother stood up and said “my child is not the problem. My child is the solution.” As the other mothers stood up to show support, security guards physically escorted them out of the room while women sang “this little light of mine. I’m gonna let it shine. This little light of mine, I’m gonna let it shine.”

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Latino Heritage Month Reminders

7:12 pm By BiancaLaureano · Arts|Culture · Comments Off

5 Oct 2011

Lots  going on regarding Latino Heritage Month, and Meagan, as usual, did a fab job of reminding readers of the complexity of this month’s celebrations. I wanted to highlight a few things for VL readers:

30 Days of Latino Heritage Tumblr page which Maegan created in 2009 is still up and running! You may submit something that represents Latino heritage to you and see what others have posted and shared.

LatiNegr@s Tumblr page is also still up and running! This was something I co-created after being inspired by Maegan’s 30 Days of Latino Heritage Tumblr and highlights/centers the experiences, realities, narratives, testimonies, and representations of LatiNegr@s/Afr@Latin@s/BlakTin@s/etc. You may also submit something to this Tumblr page as well. There is also a Twitter account that you may follow @BeingAfroLatino.

October 15 is National Latino AIDS Awareness Day and we encourage you to get tested for HIV to know your status! There are many was to find FREE and quick testing sites all over the US. Place your zip code at this site and it will give you locations in that area.

And a shameless plug, over at RH Reality Check, I’m focusing on Latin@s whose work impacts the reproductive justice movement. I did this last year as well and highlighted 5 folks and I plan to do the same this year as well. Posting is not on a specific schedule so check back for any updates.

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I just got this in my inbox and it seems interesting. I’m glad that this relatively newly formed group exists and I look forward to being able to see what it’s all about. Unfortunately part of the problem is that because I have to work to (barely) survive, tonight and Sunday’s meeting are ones I cannot attend but hopefully there are other ways to participate/engage/evolve.

If other Latin@ identified peeps can go, I would welcome hearing their experiences in this space.

Call Out to People of Color From the #OccupyWallStreet People of Color Working Group

To those who want to support the Occupation of Wall Street, who want to struggle for a more just and equitable society, but who feel excluded from the campaign, this is a message for you.

To those who do not feel as though their voices are being heard, who have felt unable or uncomfortable participating in the campaign, or who feel as though they have been silenced, this is a message for you.

To those who haven’t thought about #OccupyWallStreet but know that radical social change is needed, and to those who have thought about joining the protest but do not know where or how to begin, this is a message for you.

You are not alone. The individuals who make up the People of Color Working Group have come together because we share precisely these feelings and believe that the opportunity for consciousness-raising presented by #OccupyWallStreet is one that cannot be missed. It is time to push for the expansion and diversification of #OccupyWallStreet. If this is truly to be a movement of the 99%, it will need the rest of the city and the rest of the country.

Let’s be real. The economic crisis did not begin with the collapse of the Lehman Brothers in 2008. Indeed, people of color and poor people have been in a state of crisis since the founding of this country, and for indigenous communities, since before the founding of the nation. We have long known that capitalism serves only the interests of a tiny, mostly white, minority.

Black and brown folks have long known that whenever economic troubles ‘necessitate’ austerity measures and the people are asked to tighten their belts, we are the first to lose our jobs, our children’s schools are the first to lose funding, and our bodies are the first to be brutalized and caged. Only we can speak this truth to power. We must not miss the chance to put the needs of people of color—upon whose backs this country was built—at the forefront of this struggle.

The People of Color Working Group was formed to build a racially conscious and inclusive movement. We are reaching out to communities of color, including immigrant, undocumented, and low-wage workers, prisoners, LGTBQ people of color, marginalized religious communities such as Muslims, and indigenous peoples, for whom this occupation ironically comes on top of another one and therefore must be decolonized. We know that many individuals have responsibilities that do not allow them to participate in the occupation and that the heavy police presence at Liberty Park undoubtedly deters many. We know because we are some of these individuals. But this movement is not confined to Liberty Park: with your help, the movement will be made accessible to all.

If it is not made so, it will not succeed. By ignoring the dynamics of power and privilege, this monumental social movement risks replicating the very structures of injustice it seeks to eliminate. And so we are actively working to unite the diverse voices of all communities, in order to understand exactly what is at stake, and to demand that a movement to end economic injustice must have at its core an honest struggle to end racism.

The People of Color working group is not meant to divide, but to unite, all peoples. Our hope is that we, the 99%, can move forward together, with a critical understanding of how the greed, corruption, and inequality inherent to capitalism threatens the lives of all peoples and the Earth.

-Mala

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From the VivirLatino Inbox:

DC 37 employees play a critical role in our school community as parent coordinators, tech support, and school aides who help our schools run like clockwork. They are invaluable members of every school community. Laying off DC37 workers not only hurts the learning of all children, but disproportionally affects low-income communities of color like the Bronx. Some neighborhoods are slated to lose up to 25% of their DC 37 staff members!

How can you get involved?

•                Wear GREEN to school on Tuesday, October 4 to show your support to all DC37 employees throughout the city.
•                Join DC37 workers at a protest rally at City Hall on Tuesday, from 4pm-6pm.
•                Call 311 to tell the mayor to stop the layoffs of all 700 DC37 workers. Our students need these workers and there is a surplus in the budget!
Tuesday, October 4: Day of Action Against School Pushouts and to Create Positive Discipline in NYC Schools (City Hall, 5pm)
•                In collaboration with the DC37 rally, students, parents, educators and organizers involved with Dignity in Schools Campaign-NY will also be at City Hall on Tuesday, at 5pm.  This New York City rally and student street theater action is part of a national campaign supporting local and federal policy change to reduce suspensions, expulsions and arrests, and implement positive approaches to school climate and discipline like restorative practices and positive behavior supports.

•                Supporters will walk from the DC37 rally to the other side of City Hall for the Street Theater Action at 5pm.October 1- October 8 (this week) National Week of Action on School Pushout.

Students and educators across the country are participating in political actions to raise awareness of the negative impacts of zero-tolerance discipline policies and over-policing of public schools.  These policies contribute to a disproportionate number of poor (especially Black and Latino) students who end up dropping out of our schools. Some facts:
•                Nationwide, over 1 million students who start high school this year won’t finish.
•                In New York City in 2008-2009, there were 73,000 suspensions in public schools.
•                Students with disabilities in NYC are four times more likely to be suspended than students without disabilities.
•                More than 38,000 Black students are suspended every year in NYC, and the majority are male.

 

 

 

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As the #OccupyWallStreet protest enters it’s third week, I was finally able to head down to Zuccotti Park aka Liberty Plaza to get a first hand sense of what was happening.

I will admit to feeling somewhat ambivalent about the #OccupyWallStreet actions. Not because I don’t believe that Wall Street is fucked up – I temped at a big investment bank for a number of years and witnessed first hand the manipulation of other people’s money and other people’s governments. My lack of full support is not because I don’t think the economy is jacked up – no one needs to tell me how hard it is for people to pay bills, keep roofs over their heads and feed themselves. These are issues I struggle with daily – as do most of my neighbors. My guarded enthusiasm comes from a concern with the messaging – which is critical in any action that claims to be resisting existing power structures. So I went to witness and to feel the messaging, not just by reading words on signs but by seeing who are the participants and who are they representing.

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Hola!

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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