6:09 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · El Salvador| World · Comments Off
6 Mar 2007
El Salvador’s bloody civil war separated countless families, some of which have never been reunited. But at least one mother and one daughter have found each other again — 24 years later:
It was 1983 when Francisca Quinteros, who lived in the La Cruz section of the town of Jucuarán, some 150 km southeast of San Salvador, left her daughter in the care of other people, due to the danger she faced as a young woman in a war zone.“The war was so dangerous that I couldn’t care for my daughter, that’s why I asked some people to take care of her for me. After a while, they thought I had died, so when I came back they told me they had given her up to a family for adoption,” says Quinteros, now 40.
1:01 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · El Salvador| Immigration| Justice| Women| children · Comments Off
12 Sep 2006
It’s the opposite of the Elvira Arellano case. Jonathan Martínez came from El Salvador at age 8 with a teenage cousin into the United States without papers. According to Univision, Jonathan came in search of his mother, whom he had not seen in 4 years. When he was caught by United States Border Patrol, Jonathan was turned over to his mother, who lives and works in the United States legally. That was two years ago. Jonathan now is enrolled in the fifth grade, speaking English and playing along with his classmates. On Monday a judge may send Jonathan back to El Salvador, without his mother.
9:18 am By Maegan La Mala · El Salvador| Money| mexico · Comments Off
20 Mar 2006
Every day immigrants send millions of dollars back home, to where they came from and families they left behind. In the words of Martha Stewart, it’s a good thing. Or is it? An article posted today at AlterNet calls takes a really interesting look at some of the negative consequences of remesas. For example is the dinero that is being sent back home and being pooled to provide infrastructure development letting foreign governments off the hook from providing services they are responsible for providing like clean water? On a more global scale, do so called First World governments like the U.S. take into account the amount of money being sent back home when developing foreign aid packages? This article takes the issue to a different level I know I personally never have reached when passing the countless money transfer locations here in New York City.
Via/ AlterNet
6:06 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Blogs| El Salvador| Politics| Women · 3 Comments
17 Mar 2006
History was made today in El Salvador as the capital city of San Salvador elected its first female mayor, Violeta Menjivar, who claimed victory by a margin of just 61 votes. Menjivar belongs to the FMLN party.
Tim’s El Salvador Blog offers coverage and interesting comments from people who were present on election day and witness to the violence that broke out before Menjivar’s victory was declared. It seems that the recount people were taking too long, and many began to suspect fraud.
According to another blogger in El Salvador (in Spanish) the newly elected mayor claimed that members of her party had marched on the hotel Radisson, where the recount was taking place, in a pacific manner. The blogger himself disagrees and describes what sounds like an angry mob situation. Elsalvador.com describes a similar scene.
La alcadesa herself says “get over it!”:
The FMLN organizers set up a march to the Hotel Radisson. Did you like the outcome of that march?What I didn’t like was that the police hurt seven people. Because in all parts of the world there are marches when institutions don’t work. What’s wrong with a group of people being worried about dragging out the recognition of victory? I think the police went too far. Maybe the march wasn’t necessary, I don’t know, but I don’t think we need to make drama out of it.
A Latin American election without drama just wouldn’t be a Latin American election.
Via / Sources listed above
2:16 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · El Salvador| Immigration| houston · Comments Off
7 Mar 2006
The story is a common one: a person immigrates to the United States out of necessity, but vows to return for the rest of his or her family. The promise is kept and the family also leaves for the States. The new vow is to return home one day, when things get better. This doesn’t usually happen. Sucked up by the daily strife of just making it in a country as daunting as the U.S., that dream is easily erased for some.
Fortunately, that isn’t the case of a group of Salvadoreños from Houston. Not only are they helping their pueblo, Olomega, solve some very basic infrastructure issues such as the building of bridges and roads, they are taking it one step further: they plan to make their pueblo a destination, and hopes that tourists begin to see it for the beauty it as for them:
Standing on the shore of the serene Lake Olomega, Nora Pineda envisions passenger boats cruising its surface, amateur fishermen lining its edges and musicians serenading tourists along a boardwalk.She said hundreds of tourists could visit Olomega on weekends if restaurants, hostels and fishing spots are built near the water.
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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