11:44 am By la Macha · youth · 2 Comments
10 Jun 2010I already posted this below, but I wanted to put it in it’s own post, up top, so that people are sure to see it. The following is a Democracy Now! show that has video of Sergio Guereca’s mother speaking about his murder. Remember, Guereca is the 15 year-old that was shot and killed on the border.
I, for one, am so achy and tired of posting the latest video of a tearful mami, her heart breaking for all the world to see. How many times do we have to see the pain, the horror, that uncritical violence perpetrates against human beings before we begin to question–do things have to be this way?
3:14 pm By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Activism|Education|Immigration|New York City|youth · 1 Comment
3 Jun 2010I went back to 47th Street and 3rd Avenue, in front of Senator Chuck Schumer’s office, to check up in how the 9 young people engaged in a hunger strike were doing as they entered Day 3 of their fast for a stand-alone DREAM Act.
All of the participants were in good spirits and were reading recent media coverage from the New York Times and the NY Daily News.
Senator Schumer’s office has yet to acknowledge that there are 9 young people outside his office demanding action. The fasters will be holding a vigil tomorrow night, at 7 pm, at 47th Street and 3rd Avenue.
7:46 pm By BiancaLaureano · Arts|Culture|Media|youth · 1 Comment
2 Jun 2010Vivir Latino will be covering the Human Rights Watch International Film Festival, specifically the world premiere of Youth Producing Change series where young media makers from all over the world create and produce messages and share stories important to them! From June 18-19th there will be 11 films featured.
Adobe Youth Voices presents the World premiere of Youth Producing Change, an innovative program of youth-produced short films from across the globe showcased with the Human Rights Watch Film Festival. Eleven films will be shown this year, selected from over 250 international submissions.
All screenings are at Film Society of Lincoln Center Walter Reade Theater
165 West 65th Street, Upper Level (Between Broadway and Amsterdam) in NYC. The films are affordable and there are special discounts! For example:
Special Offer: BUY ONE TICKET for $8~ GET ONE FREE
Select the “YPC Special” online and receive a 2nd complimentary ticket at the Walter Reade Theater box office. This offer is subject to availability and only good for the YOUTH PRODUCING CHANGE screenings in the HRWIFF10. For group tickets please email ypc@hrw.org
I’m so excited to be able to see these films. Below is a list and brief synopsis of each film at the festival this year. Are there any specific films you VL readers would love to hear more about?
HANDS OF LOVE:
For David Were and his community in Kibera, the largest slum in Kenya, having access to simple facilities like a bathroom can be a matter of life and death. After a devastating attack on his father, David and his friends know their work to provide security, latrines, and clean-up projects is more than a struggle for a healthier environment —it is part of ensuring the survival of their community. *David Were and Justus Ongera will attend the festival.KAMRAN’S STORY:
Drawing from a series of dramatic life-changing events, 14-year-old asylum seeker, Kamran, narrates the story of his courageous escape from Afghanistan and his unaccompanied journey to the United Kingdom. *Kamran Safi will attend the festival.MIGRATION:
Young people find themselves left on their own when parents are forced to seek work in other countries in order to support their families. Migration provides a new take on immigration, from the perspective of children left behind.ALIMENTATION D’UN CONGOLAIS MOYEN
(AN AVERAGE CONGOLESE MAN’S DIET):
For 14 years, Congo has been ravaged with conflict. In Congo, food insecurity remains the norm. Millions have died mostly due to malnutrition or lack of access to basic medicine. The simple truth for children in Congo – having a meal isn’t always a given.17 & UNIDENTIFIED:
Born in Batey Cuchillia, Dominican Republic of Haitian descent, Deivei was never provided with a birth certificate. Without it, he cannot continue his education, find a job, marry or travel. *Filmmaker Alicia Wade will attend the festival.
GROWING UP IN INDIA:
In the northeastern desert state of Rajasthan in India, Sangita feels the limitations of her culture’s caste system when she decides she must forgo an education to train as a dancer in order to support her family.BABICA:
The Roma people have been the target of persecution and discrimination for centuries. A Roma grandmother shares her hopes for future generations as she prepares bread with her granddaughter. *Martina Hudorovič will attend the festival.HUDUD:
Being 16 in the Occupied Palestinian Territories today is to have one’s life dictated by curfews, clashes with soldiers at check points, arbitrary searches and arrests. Hudud (an Arabic word for restriction) illustrates the challenges that Israeli construction of the “separation barrier,” or wall, pose for Palestinian youth.MARIPOSA:
As Espie prepares for her quinceañera, a traditional rite of passage celebrating a 15-year-old Latina’s debut, her family comes to terms with Espie’s decision to “come out” in a different way. Espie’s story embraces the complexity of family tradition and sexual identity with an honest and brave heart.*Espie Hernandez will attend the festival.SEE. LISTEN. SPEAK. NGARRINDJERI’S BEING HEARD:
After water is diverted from natural streams and lakes in the rural Coroong community and delivered by pipeline to larger cities, the aboriginal Ngarrindjeri face a disastrous water crisis, threatening their way of life. Ngarrindjeri youth speak out to protect their culture and traditions.IMAGE OF CONTAMINATION:
The course of Air Force enlistee Diana López’s life changes forever when she learns that toxic waste has been seeping off nearby Kelly Air Force Base and into her community’s ground water. *Elizabeth Gonzalez and Antonio Rodriguez will attend the festival.
3:40 pm By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Activism|Education|Immigration|New York City|Politics|youth · 8 Comments
2 Jun 2010Earlier this morning, I wrote about a 72 hour fast that was being supported by some local non-profits and NYC politicos for comprehensive immigration reform and the DREAM Act.
But….
All my sources in D.C. tell me Comprehensive Immigration Reform is dead, so why all the fronting? Why the show for the media and why not support the students who have been risking deportation by putting their undocumented lives on the line through civil disobedience actions? Seems like there is a rift in the struggle. So today, instead of going downtown to where the politicians would be, I went to where the students were, 47th and 3rd Avenue in Midtown Manhattan. There 9 young people are camped out in front of Senator Biometric Chuck Schumer’s office on an indefinite fast demanding that he stop bs’ing and get to stepping on the DREAM Act.
One of the Starving for a DREAM activists, Gabriel Martinez, was nice enough to allow me to sit with him on the sidewalk and speak with me as traffic rushed past.
I will be adding a transcript after the video later.
8:56 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Activism|California|Education|Immigration|Michigan|youth · 3 Comments
21 May 2010President Obama may have reaffirmed his commitment to Comprehensive Immigration Reform, again, but DREAM Act students aren’t having it anymore. Tired of living in limbo and having their experience used as a wedge issue in the wider immigration reform movement, they have been stepping it up hardcore through a series of civil disobedience actions and now hunger strikes aimed at getting a stand alone DREAM Act.
The escalation was set off by the brave actions of students in Arizona, who now face deportation following a sit-in in Senator John McCain’s Arizona office. Fear is not winning however, as more students risk arrest and deportation in the name of having their DREAM fulfilled.
Yesterday, 9 U.S. citizen students were arrested in an act of solidarity with their undocumented brothers and sisters for blocking Wilshire Boulevard in Los Angeles.
3:07 pm By BiancaLaureano · GLBT|Puerto Rico|Violence|youth · Comments Off
13 May 2010It broke all of us in the VL familia (writers and readers alike) to hear of the murder of 19 year-old Jorge Steven López Mercado almost 5 months ago on November 14, 2009. I just read that the suspect tried for his murder, Juan José Martínez Matos, pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 99 years by Judge Miriam Camila Jusino.
Primera Hora has an interview with Jorge’s parents on their site (in Spanish only). the EDGE, a Boston media source, translated part of the statement Primera Hora reported Jorge’s parents:
“We are able to find a bit of peace in this aspect, but it still not going to return Steven,” she said. “But at least there is justice in Puerto Rico.”
Jorge López evoked his faith.
“I want to send a message to Juan (Casper) and tell him there is hope in Christ,” said López with tears in his eyes. “The lord has forgiveness for him, Irregardless of what has happened. God has a plan for him if he opens his heart to Christ. God will forgive him also.”
Read more about hate crimes targeted towards Latinos by our own Mala who wrote “Hate Crimes In Context” last year.
1:38 pm By BiancaLaureano · Arts|Books|Culture|society|youth · Comments Off
12 May 2010I shared earlier last month about Sofia Quintero’s latest and first Young Adult (YA) novel that was released called Efrain’s Secret. Her book centers the experiences of a young Latino living in the Bronx. The book is in stores now. Sofia has a sample chapter available for readers to check out prior to purchase.
Sofia agreed to be interviewed about her book for the readers at Love Isn’t Enough who are mainly parents interested in discussing and addressing various topics, most especially race and ethnicity. Here’s a bit of what Sofia shared in our interview:
What was your motivation for writing Efrain’s Secret?
The story for Efrain’s Secret has been incubating within me since 1985. That summer, a high school senior from Harlem named Edmund Perry was shot to death by a plain clothes police officer in Morningside Park. It caused a great deal of controversy because Eddie had just graduated from Philips Exeter and was going to start college at Stanford that fall. And yet the police officer and almost two dozen witnesses stated that Eddie and his brother had mugged and assaulted him. It was such a tragedy. No winners in that one. This was the summer before my senior year of high school. I was an honor student myself, hoping to attend an Ivy League college, but I wasn’t oblivious or immune to the forces that could derail me. I had classmates like Eddie who were leading double lives, and this fascinated me. What compels people to attempt to reconcile what society insists is irreconcilable? This and related questions are recurring themes in my work, and Efrain’s Secret is my first exploration of this theme from the perspective of a person who is young and male.
Many of the instructors that Efrain has are women, Sra. Polanco, his Spanish teacher, he identifies as having educated him on his own radical cultural history as a Caribbean and Latino man through using various forms of texts in her classroom (books, films, music, etc.). Did you plan to have the women in the novel be the primary people who transmit culture and communal history in the book?I sure did, and then some. I see Baraka playing this role, too, but he is away at school acquiring his own knowledge. There’s much ado about young men of color going astray because they do not have male role models in their lives, it bothers me when this is driven by a sexist devaluation of what female adults can offer boys. Sure, we lose too many boys because their fathers and other male role models are not present in their lives or are present in a toxic way. But there also are many amazing men who were raised, taught and otherwise loved and nurture primarily by women. For the record, I think boys and girls alike need both masculine and feminine adult influence in their lives. Again, influence of a certain type. I know quite a few men who are healthy and happy because (1) a dysfunctional parent kept his or her distance and (2) other loving adults filled the void. I hope the adults who read Efrain’s Secret have dialogues, among other things, about whether Rubio’s fleeting presence in Efrain’s life – especially given the choices he made as a husband and father – is truly a “better than nothing” proposition. Was this a model of masculinity that served Efrain? What kind of difference might Rubio have made if he were a better financial provider yet still the same social model? What if he were a different social figure yet no better an economic influence? What kind of difference would that have made if any? I myself don’t have definitive answers on any of these questions, but that’s why I raise them. I’d love to hear what others think.
Read the full interview here. And have the young person in your life meet Sofia this week in NYC at Latin@ Young Adult Panel in East Harlem.
5:53 pm By BiancaLaureano · Education|Puerto Rico|youth · 26 Comments
11 May 2010I’ve been reading a bit about the student protests regarding the privatization of the University of Puerto Rico (among other things such as tuition increases). I’m very grateful for the posts by activist educator Marisol Lebron who writes at post pomo nuyorican homo that provides a useful and multi-media perspective of what is occuring.
Marisol writes:
In these videos Calle 13 (and a number of prominent Puerto Rican and Latin American artists through video message) support the struggles of of Puerto Rican students fighting against the privatization of the University of Puerto Rico and state divestment from education. This video was super powerful for me and really impressive.Many scholars of neoliberalism are pointing to the ways in which Latin America is at the vanguard of anti-neoliberal struggles. This video reminds us that Puerto Rico IS also part of Latin America and is also at the forefront of crucial struggles for social justice.Education is a right and the students at the University of Puerto Rico are reminding the world of that.
Last Monday, April 19th, the students at the University of Puerto Rico declared a strike. By Wednesday hundreds of students occupied the university and closed down all five entrances to the university. They are resisting the 100 million dollar budget cuts, the tuition hikes, and the privatization of the school, that has been put forward by the administration for next semester. These cuts are taking place in a university that is already marked by long lines in administrative buildings and students waiting for years to take classes that are required for graduation because they are often full to capacity. It means a freeze on all promotions, and new hires, as well as a salary reductions for faculty and staff. The tuition will increase but the quality of the services available will be seriously reduced.Since the occupation, which has been called ocup(arte) the students have participated in street theater, as well as mass bench painting campaigns, puppet making workshops, poetry and music gatherings both inside and outside the university. The riot police has been stationed outside the university, but the students have remained non-violent. They have been assaulted mainly with pepper spray and tear gas, there have been several wounded but a surprisingly small amount of arrests. This is definitely a proud moment in student history for the University of Puerto Rico. The students inside the university have had so much support by their fellow students and other community members that they have had more than enough food, and have subsequently donated to food pantries. Classes have been canceled for the rest of the semester and the strike is indefinite. I will keep you posted as events continue to develop.
12:29 pm By la Macha · arizona|Women|youth · 18 Comments
27 Apr 2010Wow. These are eye opening videos. I always knew that Arizona was a scary state for immigrants–but this is pretty horrifying.
What the videos are: The state senator who is the author of the SB 1070 legislation (the legislation that requires racial profiling), has an apparently long historical connection to White Supremacist organizations. These videos show him at rallies where White Supremacist language, flags and signs are on prominent display.
11:58 am By la Macha · Women|youth · 3 Comments
27 Apr 2010This looks like a pretty amazing conference. I wish I could go to it, but I think I’ll have to just wait for some report backs from the fine people in New York!
BTW, I’ve worked with the NAPW before as a blogger, and they are nothing but completely right on as advocates for pregnant women. They work in a multi-cultural context (i.e. everybody), but they are one of the few organizations that I’ve ever worked with that claim to work for “all women” and actually have a race analysis that they put into action.
NAPW and NYU to Provide Latest Research on Drugs, Pregnancy, and Parenting for Professionals in Child Welfare, Medicine, and Law
Part II of Popular Continuing Education Program to Examine What Happens to Children of Drug-Using Parents
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: Emily Whitfield, emily@emilywhitfield.org, (917) 686-4542
Cassandra Burrows, cmb@advocatesforpregnantwomen.org, (773) 307-9686
Tuesday, April 27, 2010
NEW YORK – At an afternoon workshop at New York University School of Law this Thursday, April 29th, more than 200 professionals in the fields of child welfare, social work, medicine, and law will hear from nationally recognized experts about the research on issues of drug and alcohol use during pregnancy and beyond.
The gathering (and related events taking place tomorrow) are part of an ongoing effort to challenge assumptions, identify valuable resources, and generate hope about families when drug use is an issue, according to National Advocates for Pregnant Women (NAPW), one of the conveners.
The program, which takes place on Thursday, April 29th from 12-5 p.m. at NYU School of Law, 40 Washington Square North in lower Manhattan, is presented by NAPW, NYU School of Law, and NYU Silver School of Social Work. Continuing Education Credits in the areas of law, social work, and CASAC (certified alcohol and substance abuse counseling) will be offered.
“Hard-working people in the fields that deal with drug use generally learn about the issue from popular culture, and rarely have the opportunity to hear from experts,” said Lynn Paltrow, Executive Director of NAPW. “As we see it, the question of how best to respond to the issue of drug use in families has never been about whether the professionals involved lack concern, but rather whether they have had access to evidence-based research.”
The dynamic program, Drugs, Pregnancy, and Parenting: What the Experts Have to Say—Part II will feature nationally renowned researchers, social workers, and legal experts from around the country, as well as parents in recovery who can speak from direct experience. The program—which follows up on a popular conference presented by the same conveners last year—will specifically focus on the question of what happens when children remain with parents who use drugs. Last year’s conference brought researchers together to address such issues as the effect of prenatal exposure to drugs. (A video of a talk at that conference given by the renowned researcher and pediatrician Deborah Frank, MD is available at http://vimeo.com/3916613.)
The distinguished presenters and hosts of Thursday’s event include: Marylou Behnke, MD; Fonda Davis Eyler, PhD; Martin F. Guggenheim, JD; Carl L. Hart, PhD; Sabra Jackson; Gretchen Lord, LCSW; Lynn M. Paltrow, JD; and Jane M. Spinak, JD. More information about the NYU program, including speaker bios, is available at: http://napwedprogram.eventbrite.com.
In addition to convening the NYU program, on Wednesday some of these same experts will be presenting two special sessions on the same topics for groups of professionals; the first at Roosevelt Hospital and the second as part of a “Lunch and Learn” program for New York State Family Court judges and staff at Manhattan Family Court. The court program will also be broadcast to all family courts in the state via closed-circuit television. The meetings were requested by each of the groups. NAPW’s Paltrow noted: “We are delighted to be collaborating with these vital institutions and to have an opportunity to explore the value of evidence-based research in the provision of both health care and family justice.”
These events convene as courts around the country are considering many of the same questions, Paltrow added. In Kentucky, for instance, the state’s Supreme Court is currently weighing treatment versus punishment in the case of a woman whose child tested positive for cocaine. Meanwhile, a unanimous South Carolina Supreme Court recently acknowledged that current research has found that “cocaine is no more harmful to a fetus than nicotine use, poor nutrition, lack of prenatal care, or other conditions commonly associated with the urban poor.”
NAPW’s mission is to secure the human and civil rights, health, and welfare of all women, focusing particularly on pregnant and parenting women, and ensuring that families are not needlessly separated based on medical misinformation.
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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