6:21 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Argentina| Chile| Latin America| Music| Women · 1 Comment
5 Oct 2009Mala is in family court this morning (oh the joy), so I leave you the joy of Mercedes Sosa’s beautiful voice singing Violeta Parra’s beautiful song, that has served as a lullaby to my children and to some of my lovers.
7:55 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Argentina| Culture| Music| Women · 1 Comment
4 Oct 2009I woke up to read the sad news that Mercedes Sosa, the legendary songstress from Argentina whose voice has brought me and many others to tears, passed away today at age 74. She has been in the hospital struggling with liver, kidney and heart ailments.
The Grammy award winning artist was born Haydé Mercedes Sosa on July 9th, 1935 in San Miguel de Tucumán. Her career spanned 60 years and her voice represented so much of Latin America’s history and political activism. She is considered part of the nueva cancion movement which was the musical representation of much of the protest movements in Latin America, especially in South America, in the 1960’s.
From the Washington Post:
Here are the lyrics of “We’re Still Singing,” which she sang accompanied by the large Andean drum called the bombo: “I was killed a thousand times. I disappeared a thousand times, and here I am, risen from the dead. . . . Here I am, out of the ruins the dictatorship left behind. We’re still singing.” Ms. Sosa came under official harassment and intimidation by the right-wing, nationalist junta that ruled Argentina from 1976 to 1983. The government was responsible for the deaths and disappearances of an estimated 30,000 real and perceived leftists, and Ms. Sosa transformed her sold-out concerts into rallies against the abuses of power.
Her songs were banned from Argentine radio and television, and she courted arrest by singing anthems of agrarian reform such as “When They Have the Land” at one performance in the university city of La Plata. Many in attendance were arrested by security forces, and Ms. Sosa was publicly humiliated by an officer who walked onstage and conducted a body search.
Teresa Parodi, a friend of Sosa said of her:
“…Mercedes, salmo en los labios
amorosa madre amada
mujer de América herida
tu canción nos pone alas y hace que la patria toda
menudita y desolada no se muera todavía,
no se muera porque siempre cantarás en nuestras almas…”…Mercedes, psalm on the lips
loving and loved mother
woman of wounded America
your song puts wings on us and makes the entire
small and desolate homeland
does not die yet,
you will always sing in our souls…
If there is a heaven, I imagine her there with Victor and Violetta and so many others, and they are all singing.
6:27 pm By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Argentina| Colombia| Drugs| Latin America| Politics| Violence| crime| mexico| military · 2 Comments
28 Aug 2009
Two Latin American countries recently have made moves to decriminalize the possession of certain drugs for personal use, a move that some are touting as a positive new direction in the “war on drugs”.
Argentina’s Supreme Court ruled on Tuesday that it is unconstitutional to prosecute cases involving personal marijuana use as long as it does not harm others. It did not, however, set a weight limit for what it considers personal use.
The judges’ decision urges the Argentine government to “create policies against illegal drug trafficking and adopt preventive health measures, with information and education against drug consumption directed at the most vulnerable groups.
And in Mexico:
Under the new law, a police search that turns up a half-gram of cocaine, the equivalent of about four lines, will not bring any jail time. The same applies for 5 grams of marijuana (about four cigarettes), 50 milligrams of heroin, 40 milligrams of methamphetamine or 0.015 milligrams of LSD.
5:56 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Argentina| GLBT| Music| mexico · 1 Comment
16 Jun 2009Here at VL we’ve been fans of the Kumbia Queers for a while now. The Argentine-Mexican queer combo seems to be an endless source of awesome-weird jams that get the cintura a-movin’. So what was my delight when I found that the Kumbia Queers had remade an old 90s favorite of mine — The Cure’s Love Song– in Spanish and rendered in the cumbia style. Check it out.
Emo-depressed mixed with cumbia lightheartedness…awesome translation with a mixture of seriousness and tongue-in-cheek silliness. It’s the best of both worlds!
9:36 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Argentina| Women| literature · Comments Off
20 Apr 2009
The inspiration for the heart wrenching song, Alfonsina y el Mar, Argentine poetisa Alfonsina Storni was an actress, teacher, and mother.
TÚ ME QUIERES BLANCA
Tú me quieres alba,
Me quieres de espumas,
Me quieres de nácar.
Que sea azucena
Sobre todas, casta.
De perfume tenue.
Corola cerradaNi un rayo de luna
Filtrado me haya.
Ni una margarita
Se diga mi hermana.
Tú me quieres nívea,
Tú me quieres blanca,
Tú me quieres alba.Tú que hubiste todas
Las copas a mano,
De frutos y mieles
Los labios morados.
Tú que en el banquete
Cubierto de pámpanos
Dejaste las carnes
Festejando a Baco.
Tú que en los jardines
Negros del Engaño
Vestido de rojo
Corriste al Estrago.Tú que el esqueleto
Conservas intacto
No sé todavía
Por cuáles milagros,
Me pretendes blanca
(Dios te lo perdone),
Me pretendes casta
(Dios te lo perdone),
¡Me pretendes alba!Huye hacia los bosques,
Vete a la montaña;
Límpiate la boca;
Vive en las cabañas;
Toca con las manos
La tierra mojada;
Alimenta el cuerpo
Con raíz amarga;
Bebe de las rocas;
Duerme sobre escarcha;
Renueva tejidos
Con salitre y agua;
Habla con los pájaros
Y lévate al alba.
Y cuando las carnes
Te sean tornadas,
Y cuando hayas puesto
En ellas el alma
Que por las alcobas
Se quedó enredada,
Entonces, buen hombre,
Preténdeme blanca,
Preténdeme nívea,
Preténdeme casta.
English translation after the jump.
Read more…
7:03 am By Maegan La Mala · Argentina| Cuba| Latin America| Politics · 3 Comments
23 Jan 2009
Absent Cuban president Fidel Castro, ever wiling to say what’s on his mind in his weekly essays, said what might be the first kind words ever uttered about a U.S. president. But he didn’t write down his first impressions of Barack Obama; instead he leaked them to Argentine president Cristina Kirchner at a meeting between the two yesterday. You might want to sit down before you read on because this is pretty incredible:
Mrs Fernandez said: “Fidel believes in Obama. He told me he had followed the inauguration of Barack Obama very closely, that he had watched the inauguration on television all day.“He had a very good perception of President Obama.”
The Argentine premier said Mr Castro called Mr Obama “a man who seems absolutely sincere, who believes strongly in his ideas and who hopefully can carry them out”.
12:07 pm By Maegan La Mala · Argentina| Culture| Music · Comments Off
29 Dec 2008
Just 50 centimeters below the ground in Buenos Aires‘ posh Palermo neighborhood, there was a piece of the city’s musical history just waiting to be discovered — and no one new it. The Cafe Hansen, called by some “the cradle of tango”, had been lost to the world for over a century now. But this cafe which saw tango rise to fame at the end of the 19th century is being uncovered by a group of archeologists who look to make their finding a way of educating citizens about the city’s history:
“The idea is to keep excavating and take advantage of the discovery to install a hall in which neighbors can get to know the way the city was in those years,” the minister of Culture of the Government of Buenos Aires, Hernán Lombardi, told Argentine newspaper Clarín.The cafe bore the name of its first owner, Juan Hansen, and is mentioned in historical chronicles as one of the places in which tango began.
BBC Mundo reports that the cafe was originally torn down in 1912 to make room for road infrastructure in the neighborhood.
Via / BBC Mundo
11:37 am By Maegan La Mala · Argentina| Arts| Cuba| New York City| history · 1 Comment
2 Dec 2008
Of all the things NY’ers could be angry about, some have chosen to be angry about a statue of someone pretending to be Che Guevara.
The statue actually depicts a Barcelona street performer portraying Che, part of three bronze sculptures by Christian Janowski, which were recently installed by the Public Art Fund…
“I am always fascinated to see all the examples of how, I don’t know, foolish and ill-informed people are,” said a man who gave his name as Peter. “I’m a student of the idiocy of Che Guevara worship, and I bet 99 percent of the people who see this think, wow, that’s cool. But he was just a thug. A butcher.”
4:53 am By Maegan La Mala · Argentina| Latin America| Peru| US Presidential Race 2008| World| mexico · 1 Comment
4 Nov 2008
Continued from a previous post.
No one feels the effects of what happens in the U.S. as much as Mexico. It’s as if the fault line we share were a conductor of not just seismic energy but also shared grief. And when things get bad in the U.S., they get worse in Mexico. Issues such as border control, the economy — which affects jobs done by Mexicans and subsequently remesas sent back home (one of Mexico’s top economic drivers) — and trade have Mexican analysts, politicians and journalists waiting with baited breath. The cover of today’s El Universal (Mexico City) newspaper could easily be mistaken for a U.S. newspaper. Under the masthead, prime page space is 100% occupied by poll information, predictions, photographs of the candidates.
And the ripple effect of the continues even further south. Buenos Aires’ Clarin proclaims, jubilantly, “Obama- McCain: an election that puts an end to the Bush era.” In the ranking of most popular news stories according to readers, a story about the death of Barack Obama’s grandmother is second only to news about soccer legend Diego Maradona.
And the same story in papers throughout the region and the world. Expectations are high in Latin America, perhaps as high as they are in the U.S., and the disappointment of 4 more years of failed Bush policy will be the same should McCain surprise us all with a victory tonight.
If you know a shaman, give him a call.
11:27 am By Maegan La Mala · Argentina| Media| Women · Comments Off
28 Oct 2008
With a mujer president leading the country, an organization of over 100 journalists in Argentina want to change the way crimes against women are covered in the media. They have drawn up 10 “commandments” for news coverage of gender-based crimes, which include avoiding expressions like “crime of passion” and incorporating terms like “femicide.”
The Argentine Network of Journalists for Non-Sexist Communication (PAR) will officially release the guidelines on Nov. 25, International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women. The list is a really good one that all of us should strive to use, not just those who work in media.
For the 10 Commandments of reporting gender-based violence, see after the jump.
VivirLatino is a daily publication published by 2 Mujeres Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse and influential Latino and Latina community in the U.S.
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