12:56 pm By la Macha · Detriot| Immigration · 1 Comment
16 Nov 2009One thing I love about writing on the Vivir Latino blog is that for probably the first time in my life, I have instant access to a wide range of Latino opinions and perspectives. Living in the U.S. Midwest is an often an isolating and solitary experience.
But one of the things I noticed about Vivir Latino is that it often focuses on the NYC experiences of Latin@s. Which is essential and vitally important! But I’ve been thinking that since I am from the Midwest, it’d be really great to use the platform that VL provides to start highlighting what’s happening with those of us who live in the Midwest!
One of the first things to note about politicized Latin@s in the Midwest is that very often there simply isn’t enough of us to do much “Latin@” based organizing. That is, we can’t organize huge parades (for example) like the folks out in California can–there simply isn’t enough of us.
So very often, we spend a lot of time organizing with other groups that are either dealing with the same sense of isolation or who are bigger and have more resources. For Latin@s in my area, this usually means hooking up with Arab and/or black communities.
Which means we spend a lot of time listening and learning. Not that we’ll ever know what it’s like to be Arab and/or black–but more that there are similarities and differences between communities that may lead to productive ways of allying together.
And one of the ways we “speak” when working together is through art. We may not understand each others languages, but how our art speaks volumes:
Dar Films Production © presents the first Palestinian Animation film. Inspired from a true story, Fatenah، a Palestinian woman who lives in Gaza Strip. Her simple wishes were her consolation in the absurd living situation around her. But when she discovers a lump near her breast, she will start a journey to save her dreams.
Directed and Animated by: Ahmad Habash
Executive Producer: Saed Andoni
Music: Said Murad
Editing: Saed Andoni
D.O.P: Ahmad Habash
Again, although the experience of Palestinians and Chican@s is not the same, it doesn’t have to be. And it actually makes us stronger that it’s not. In what ways can we in the Midwest be a part of creating an even stronger and more nuanced critical analysis of immigration–simply by sharing our stories with each other?
Are you a Latin@ from the Midwest? Or with a group that has organized with Latin@s in the Midwest? I’d love to hear your experiences in comments!
6:54 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Detriot| Immigration| Justice · 5 Comments
18 Aug 2009Call these two numbers:
1: Call LaSal Austin, director of the local DHS in Michigan, at 313-259-8562. Demand that he take legislators’ leads and take immediate action to defer the deportation of Herta Llusho.
2: Call Janet Napolitano, Secretary of DHS, at the comment line 202-732-3000 . Demand that she contact Mr. Austin in the local DHS office and take immediate action to defer Herta’s deportation.
SEIU also has a page where you can send a fax/letter in support of this young woman.
Edited to add more specific info:
Actions:
In order of priority:1. Call Janet Napolitano, Director of Department of Homeland Security, and leave comments of support for Herta and also ask that DHS stop her deportation: 202-282-8495 **note this is an answering machine, once it is full it is out of commission for day. Fill it up now with Herta calls.
2. Call Assistant Secretary to ICE, John Morton and leave a message urging him to take action and defer Herta’s deportation: 202.732.3000 **Note this is a live comment line, i.e. a human being will pick up and take your message.** Be very polite “I am calling to leave a message of support for Herta Llusho who is being deported tomorrow,. I ask that Director Morton contact Field Director Vincent Clausen and defer Herta’s deportation, she is an asset to this country.”
3. Call LaSal Austin, director of the local DHS in Michigan, at 313-259-8562. Urge him to take legislators’ (Senator Carl Levin and congresswoman Kilpatrick) leads and take immediate action to defer the deportation of Herta Llusho.
4. Join the facebook group for immediate updates: http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=111108019510
5. Sign petition which will be hand-delivered to targets: http://www.change.org/actions/view/stop_deportation_of_dream_student_herta_llusho
6. Use SEIU Click to Call Action Tool to call DHS: http://call.seiu.org/9/hertadhs
7. Send a FAX to DHS, copy and paste talking points and send: http://action.seiu.org/writeice4hertaFor the next calls you need to be very specific about your ask, these members have already voiced their support however now we need them to directly call assistant secretary to ICE John Morton and ask that he defer deportation. If the members call it will make an impact, much more than if their staff or if they call.
So the ASK: “Hi, I know that the member is in support of Herta Llusho’s struggle to stop her deportation, I am now calling to ask that the member DIRECTLY call the assistant secretary to ICE, John Morton, to ask that he stop Herta’s deportation. I know that his staff may have called someone at ICE but I am asking that the member themeselves call John Morton’s office directly. Thanks.”
1. Call Senator Carl Levin at both his DC office – (202) 224-6221 – and his Detroit office – (313) 226-6020.
2. Call Senator Stabenow at both her DC office – (202) 224-4822 – and her Detroit office – (313) 961-4330. **Stabenow herself will be in detroit office today, hit em up!
3. Call Congresswoman Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick at both her DC office – (202) 225-2261 – and her Detroit office – (313) 965-9004.Call in Script:
I am calling on behalf of Herta Llusho (A#96-139-441), an undocumented student who is facing deportation back to Albania on August 19th. Herta has lived in Detroit since she was 11, she went to Pierce Middle School and Grosse Pointe South High School. Herta excelled in everything during high school, graduating with a 4.05 gpa and she has continued to excel after high school. She has been very active in our community volunteering at homeless shelters, summer day camps, and tutoring programs, in addition to a lot of other things with her church.
Talking points to use (don’t need to use all, pick and choose):
• I’m writing to ask Michigan ICE Field Officer, Vincent Clausen to defer action on Herta Llusho’s deportation and review her case.
• Herta’s case number is A-96-139-441.
• Herta is scheduled to be deported to Albania on August 19th.
• Herta submitted a deferred action in February 2009 and it has yet to be adjudicated.
9:00 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Detriot| Media| Women| media justice · Comments Off
30 Jul 2009
Hijas de Speak! Winter y la Mapu
By knitting together a fabric of our many kinds of media into a warp and woofed whole we automatically strengthen the feminist public sphere. Our words will be louder, our images more brilliant, our analysis on women’s lives will deepen. All of this is to inform and encourage women in communities to tackle vital issues that will improve the conditions in their lives and for their families and communities.”
okay, what? Now I looked up woof and, keep in mind, I come from a very isolated town way down south “really really close to the border”-high school dropout- and I think in spanish sometimes and some words only come in Spanish and sometimes I can’t think straight[straight is overrated, AMC team -0 represent], but I asked folks and we couldn’t understand this. We strengthen the feminist public sphere. What about the mujeres who don’t have that aim, what does that mean? What public sphere is this? Who’s sphere, who’s public and who’s the audience?
“Our words will be louder.” Really? How much louder can I get? And how can our words get any louder if it’s all become unified into this magic tapestry? And images brilliant? Have you not seen the work of my sisters? Analysis will deepen? [this. hopefully this happened.]
All of this to inform [seriously? Are we not doing this already? Have you not seen/read/been transformed by the work of my sisters?]
…to tackle vital issues [seriously? Have you not seen/read/been transformed by the work of my sisters?]
… will improve the conditions [seriously? see above.]
All of this is to inform and encourage women in communities to tackle vital issues that will improve the conditions in their lives and for their families and communities.” Because…the mujeres…at a media summit…aren’t doing this already? Please see above.
2:15 pm By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Activism| Detriot| Family| Women| children| media justice · Comments Off
25 Jul 2009Cross Posted from la Mamita Mala
One of the first spaces I wa in in Detroit was at the Women’s Equity Media Summit. To say that it was an uncomfortable space would be too simple. There was a sense among many of the women of color I was with that we HAD to be there, since many of has had been given some money to help defray our travel costs. We would have been in Detroit anyway for the Allied Media Conference and truth be told we weren’t sure why we had been invited into the WEMS space? What was the mission and what was expected of us radical women of color media makers.
We all conglomerated in one corner of the room, close to the door, forming a protective circle of love and support around each other as other women spilled their female creds on the table, leaving many of us feeling marginalized. What of us who didn’t claim the word woman or the word feminist? What made one a “woman” in that space? Was it being born with a white vagina? Did bringing up these issues make us automatic enemies of the space of chairs and tables that wound around the conference room? What of us who had no interest or desire to be part of a non-profit structure? What of us who didn’t want their money?
What did come out of that space however and many other spaces in the days that followed at the AMC and after, were the gathering of mamis. That’s right, mamis not mommies. I even had to correct the spelling as it was written on butcher paper at the front of the room because for the last almost 12 years (carajo I feel vieja) it has been made clear to me that my experiences are not the ones being blogged about or written about in books. After all it was my mami’hood, with all the sex/gender/race/class/language issues you can pull from that word, that started me seeking others like me through blogging and organizing on the ground.
One of the first exercises I did in my small caucus of three, that included bfp and Noemi, was what do we need in order to do our work, which we translated as what do mami movement’s need. Here is a list of what I came up with:
mami’hood
justicia
not speaking for people
comunidad
multi-lengua’ed
access
accountibility
amor
apoyo
collective
seguridad
multiple points/ways of entry
poesia
arte
sexo
child-inclusive
childcare
sustainability
flexibility
What does your list look like?
9:42 pm By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Allied Media Conference| Detriot| Media| VivirLatino| Women| media justice · 1 Comment
22 Jul 2009Peeps may have noticed my absence over the last week. While I wasn’t blogging, I was hard at work meeting with other radical media makers, including our own la Macha in Detroit which housed the Allied Media Conference and the Women’s Equity Media Summit.
This was my second year attending the AMC and I consciously entered the experience with the intent of using it as an opportunity to examine my work here and in other spaces as a radical woman of color media maker. I was blessed with amazing experiences and sharing space with other radical women of color media makers who inspire me and teach me. I also left with a head full of ideas and projects that will be sustained with the help of some of the same women who busted ass making sure that I was housed, fed, and loved.
I will resume regular posting, some which will include deconstructing some of the experiences I have had over the last week so stay tuned and gracias for reading and supporting the important work we do here at VivirLatino.
Maegan is not the only one at the AMC right now! I, la macha, am also here, and I’m sitting in an auditorium getting ready for the Zapatista press conference. I’ll be live blogging it once the conference gets started!
2:52: woman saying hello introduces the Zapatista campaign: commitment to all in their community including queers, children, etc.
Next speaker calls the Zapatistas a national mexican movement to fight against neo-liberalism. Says that it is a movement with no centralized leaders, one that encourages new members: explains what you should “believe in” to be a Zapatista, including anti-neo liberalist, pro-indigenous, etc.
Speaker talks about using different types of media to transmit their message.
New Speaker: talking about Atenco now, explaining how commercial media has been hiding the truth of Atenco–which is why the documentary we’re now going to watch was made.
Video we are seeing is highlighting the fight between flower vendors in Atenco and the local/national government.
Now showing a scene of Indigenous peoples attacking the police, with the media encouraging government intervention–i.e. the indigenous peoples attack one police officer, so mass violent government crackdown on entire community is now justified.
Next scene: independent reporters that tried to cover the violence police were committing against protestors were attacked, arrested, beaten, had their equipment stolen.
Next scene: shows women getting harassed while a woman testifies about violence committed against her, including: fingers stuck in her mouth and vagina, breasts grabbed, arrest just for being on the street (for “being an idiot”).
Next scene: on May 4th 2006 after the media had relentlessly aired images of one group of men beating a police officer, the government stepped up the violence against Atenco.
Close up scene of police beating person (one of SEVERAL scenes) and you can hear clunking sounds–sound of batons hitting human body…
Police forced a corridor of local/indi media, so that media couldn’t get into the city where the raids were happening.
Police made indiscriminate raids on homes of citizens, arresting and throwing tear gas into homes of people without any disregard to if the citizen had participated in protests or not.
Citizens were trying to get in contact w/red cross and police weren’t letting them….
Movie ends
Next Speaker: Introduces next movie: was created as a way to begin dialogue with people in mexico and outside of mexico about Zapatistas and Chiapas.
Speaker in movie explains why Mexican immigrants in the U.S. are Zapatistas–why so many indigenous peoples are moving to U.s. because of neo-liberal u.s. practices.
From across the border: movement for justice
members of this movement call themselves “displaced”–implying that there was not a *choice* move–that capitalism has displaced them forcibly from their home lands/communities.
((side note: this is a REALLY interesting intervention this org is making into the traditional immigrant narrative))
Multiple immigrants are describing problems with housing…high rents with “inhumane and illegal living conditions”
“we can’t pay high rents because our pay is so low”
“We are displaced from our own countries–and now it’s happening here too”
“we are living through double displacement”
gentrification is a part of immigrant/migration displacement
“we are fighting for dignified housing”
“community has last word about what the fight will be about–a single person will never decide for the entire community”
“we don’t work with politicians because they don’t work with us–we declare ourselves autonomous”
El Barrio is not for sale!
Fight was against Steve kassner–the landlord that was named one of 10 worst landlords in the NY area–his central offices were in London.
campaign decided to evict landlord rather than be evicted.
***
campaign decided to expand their campaign from centralizing on gentrification alone to other forms of struggles as well–reached out to the Zapatistas.
Held a gathering where tenants of the building introduced themselves o the Zapatistas and vise versa.
flashes to Zapatistas fighting military off their land: connecting displacement in two different regions of the world together.
***
now we are watching a video from Atenco made in response to the message created by the camapign in N.Y.C
Marcos: speaking to crowd in Mexico ( i think Atenco) telling crowd that “we will support world wide action against injustice”
People of Atenco are now speaking–holding their machetes with “atenco vive” on them–they say “we will go on in our struggle against injustice because of strength given to them from brothers and sisters across the world”
Now a voice is explaining what happened in atenco in 2006 again. 30 women were raped–or at least as being on record as being raped. Still 13 people in prison right now, all with 112 year sentences.
WHole fight began as a fight keep control of land that govt/corporations were attempting to steal for an airport project. Indigenous peoples are still living off of that land–off of corn, beans, etc created and supported by that land.
Several actions involved blocking the highways, blocking access to land
Current situation of political prisoners: launching a campaign to help them and bring attention to plight: (information from philly IMC website)
“Their crime was to defend their land”
6:21 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Allied Media Conference| Detriot| Media| VivirLatino| media justice · Comments Off
15 Jul 2009
While all of you are reading this, I’m on the road again, this time returning to Detroit for a busy few days that I hope will recenter me and the work that I do.
Thursday I will be at the Women’s Media Equity Collaborative Summit.
A day long session of exchange in a nourishing environment
++ to build a strong women centered media movement
++ that broadens outreach, evolves programs and is sustainable* In Detroit a new women’s media strategy will evolve. POLICY in action!
* Emphasis on attendees from groups led by women of color, low income women, queer women, the disabled and moms – focus for scholarship assistance
* “Being there” is vital for long term sustainability of women led mediaCritical initiatives to explore and build:
* Create Trust & Relationships across race/class/geography/media-genre borders
* Share Field Developments and discuss the results of the survey
* Build For The Future, embrace new digital paradigm along with political/economic shifts
* Envision a New Fund that is sustainable and responsive to critical field needs
* Advocate Gender Justice amidst independent media and the larger public sphere
From Friday, I will be at the Allied Media Conference
The Allied Media Conference is the central project of the Allied Media Projects (AMP) network, which emerges out of ten years of organic relationship-building. Since the first conference (then the Midwest Zine Conference) in 1999, people have been compelled by the concept of do-it-yourself media. Later, as the Underground Publishing Conference, the emphasis was on building a movement of alternative media makers. With the shift towards Allied Media, the AMC has attracted more and more people who are interested in using participatory media as a strategy for social justice organizing.
1:49 pm By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Allied Media Conference| Detriot| Media| media justice · Comments Off
13 Jul 2009In preparation for work that will be done at the upcoming Allied Media Conference and beyond, a team of radical women of color media makers (myself included) created.
If you are planning on being at the AMC in the coming days, please take a few minutes to fill it out.
Landscaping Our Dreams: What Women and Genderqueer
Media Makers of Color Need and Want: http://www.surveymonkey.com/s.aspx?sm=kYIs3eJQ_2b8eOpSMCi8_2bRtw_3d_3d
6:12 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Allied Media Conference| Detriot| Events| Media| New York City · Comments Off
19 Jun 2009
NYC.to.AMC Happy Hour!
@ DCTV / 87 Lafayette Street, between White and Walker
Friday, June 19, 2009
6pm-10pm
$10 at the door (includes one drink!)
Get off work and bring your friends to enjoy…
* Fresh food!
* Sangria & Iced Hibiscus Tea!
* Live DJ!
* Raffle!
* Hot multimedia!
Come see how we’re representing for NYC at the 2009 Allied Media Conference.
Hosted by DCTV, PPH, and PEP. All proceeds benefit the media justice bus from New York City to Detroit for the Allied Media Conference, July 16-19, 2009. NYC-2-AMC Delegation includes People’s Production House, Downtown Community Television, Palestine Education Project, Red Hook Initiative, Nah We Yone, INCITE!, UPROSE, Regeneración Childcare Collective, Palabra Radio, Global Action Project and Queers for Economic Justice. (This list is growing. If you’re not yet on it, but should be, please let us know.)
Questions about the event or to get on the bus: nyc@alliedmediaconference.org.
RSVP on Facebook: http://tinyurl.com/m9gosf
About the AMC:
Allied Media Conference 2009
We Are Ready Now: Media and creativity to transform our selves and our world
The 11th annual Allied Media Conference will advance our visions for a just and creative world. It will be a laboratory for media-based solutions to the matrix of life-threatening problems we face. For the past 10 years, we have evolved our definition of media, and the role it can play in our lives – from zines to video-blogging to breakdancing, to communicating solidarity and creating justice. Each conference builds off the previous one and plants the seeds for the next. Ideas and relationships evolve year-round, incorporating new networks of media-makers and social justice organizers. The 2009 AMC will draw strength from our converging movements to face the challenges and opportunities of our current moment. We are ready to create, connect and transform. For more information and to register for the conference, visit www.alliedmediaconference.org.
11:57 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Detriot| Events| children · Comments Off
2 Jun 2009
The Allied Media Conference is so far the best conference I have attended in my adult life. It’s focus on independent justice centered media makes me feel right at home. The goal to make the AMC space for everyone, this includes children and this commitment is shown through the Kids Track. The Kids Track is more than just babysitting so that parent media makers can fully participate. It’s a series of workshops and events that work with the youngest on media issues. Some of the things slated include making digital zines, making zines with China Martens, Guerilla Gardening with Seed Bombs, radio ecology, book art for kids plus a party for the kids.
Pero none of this can happen without help. The Kids Track of the AMC needs volunteers. So if you are going to be in Detroit from July 16-19, please consider helping out.
From the amazing Kids Track Coordinator Katie:
The Kids’ Track is a children-centered space at the Allied Media Conference which recognizes kids as media makers by providing them with the skills to create media work influenced by their own points of view. The Kids’ Track aims to help create an intergenerational atmosphere at the AMC by linking children with the work of the Youth Media Track and the INCITE!, Media & Education, How-to and Media Policy tracks. Finally, by providing childcare during non-session times, the Kids’ Track will enable the participation of parents in the Allied Media Conference.
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