7:25 pm By la Macha · Women|youth · 4 Comments
30 Jul 2010I watched this video and remembered Mamita’s post about how the experience of immigrant women is so hidden, so unknown. And yet, here they are, on the front lines, being attacked and horribly brutalized by the police in the name of “immigration enforcement.” (trigger warning for violence in video)
Are the protection of borders worth this? And please don’t tell me that this was the mother’s fault. I know that all the anti-immigrant people will be here soon to tell me that it’s their fault, and I can handle that. But if any supposed “ally” says “what were they thinking?” I have a few suggestions. First, sit for a moment and open yourself up to the humanity of these women and the humanity of their children. Know what it feels like to feel terror and confusion and a fear you can’t breathe through. Then take a moment to consider that even when the government offers you something, you, a black immigrant mother that may or may not be legal, may actually have considerable reason to not trust that government.
And then go back and remember the humanity of these women. And the humanity of their children. And then remember that sometimes immigration plays out in the streets in a much different way than they do in the cloistered halls of Netroots Nation. The start considering how we can change tactics to meet the needs of those in the streets, instead of the pocket books of all the 501c3s.
4:31 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Brazil|france|travel|World · 2 Comments
1 Jun 2009We’re calling it an incident, but everyone is expecting the worst: a catastrophic accident in the disappearance of Air France’s flight 447, which left Rio De Janeiro last night and hasn’t been heard from since. Search crews still haven’t found any wreckage, but with this much time off radar we can only speculate that the aircraft met with a bitter end. Judging from the passenger manifests, as would be expected, the nation of Brazil will be one of the hardest hit in terms of victims, second only to France:
The airline company identified the nationalities of the victims as two Americans, an Argentinean, an Austrian, a Belgian, 58 Brazilians, five British, a Canadian, nine Chinese, a Croatian, a Dane, a Dutch, an Estonian, a Filipino, 61 French, a Gambian, 26 Germans, four Hungarians, three Irish, one Icelandic, nine Italians, five Lebanese, two Moroccans, three Norwegians, two Polish, one Romanian, one Russian, three Slovakian, two Spanish, one Swedish, six Swiss and one Turk.
French President Nicolas Sarkozy just met with families at Charles De Gaulle airport in Paris, and was straight with them, saying that the possibility for finding survivors was “very low”.
As the story develops, multiple theories are swirling, among them that the plane met with foul weather and was brought down by a lightning strike, by turbulence or a combination of both, given that the aircraft was flying through rough conditions as it sent out an automatic message notifying Air France maintenance of faulty mechanical equipment.
Via / CNN
8:35 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Brazil|france|travel|World · 2 Comments
1 Jun 2009An AirFrance jetliner went missing last night about an hour and a half after takeoff from Rio De Janeiro International Airport. AF 447 was bound for Paris’ Charles De Gaulle airport and was carrying 228 passengers and crew when, at about 8:30 p.m. local time, the plane reported mechanical problems and disappeared from radar screens. While there are little details to report, Air France is preparing for the worst. CNN reports:
“I can say without doubt that this is a catastrophe,” Gourgeon said, adding “the entire Air France company and its staff are very moved and affected by this.”A crisis center was being set up at Charles de Gaulle to deal with anxious relatives and friends waiting for news of passengers. Air France has also set up a hotline: 0800 800 812 in France, or +33 157021055 for international callers..
Airbus has opened a crisis room and their flight safety team is in place, a company spokesperson told CNN. Airbus is working closely with authorities and Air France, he said, declining to comment further.
Brazil has just launched search teams to recover the aircraft, an Airbus A330-200, around where it was last seen, 365 kilometers off the Brazilian coast in the Atlantic Ocean.
We’ll tell you more as the story develops.
Via / CNN
12:59 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · france · Comments Off
16 Dec 2008
It looks as if this war against terrorism thing has far reaching implications for more countries than just the U.S. The latest news out of France is that an upper-class mall in Paris was the target of an organization that calls itself the Revolutionary Afghan Front:
Detectives were alerted to the package by a note sent to Agence France-Presse, police spokeswoman Celine Diguignard said by telephone. French President Nicolas Sarkozy said the explosives couldn’t be set off as they didn’t have detonators. Sarkozy, speaking at the European Parliament in Strasbourg, told reporters he was “vigilant” and wouldn’t compromise with terrorists.
Responsibility was claimed by a previously unknown group calling itself the Afghan Revolutionary Front which sent the note to AFP. The group is demanding the withdrawal of French troops from Afghanistan before the end of February, according to a copy of the note obtained by Bloomberg.
“Pass this message to your president and tell him to withdraw his troops from our country, otherwise we will take direct action in your capitalist department stores, and this time without warning you first,” the group said in the note.
Although this organization is calling for a withdrawal of troops, the news on CNN this afternoon is that as of April of this year, Sarkozy was actually planning on increasing French troop presence. We’ll see if that actually pans out.
7:18 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Celebrities|Colombia|france · Comments Off
20 Jul 2006
The man who a lot of women consider their ideal knight in shining armor has been knighted in the true sense. Colombian rockero Juanes received earlier this week one of France’s highest honors, becoming “Knight of the French Order of Arts and Letters”, awarded him by the Ministry of Culture and Art.
He may be a knight, but he’s not getting all big-headed about it:
True to his humble nature, Juanes shared that he was surprised to be getting the decoration. “I am just a musician who enjoys what he does, and a Colombian who dreams and fights for peace in his country, nothing more,” the star said.
France has bestowed this award upon Juanes because of his “significant contributions to the arts.”
I think it’s pretty amazing that an artist receive this decoration so (relatively) early in his career, and this goes to show that you don’t have to sing in English to “cross over”.
Via / Sofia News Agency
12:40 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Culture|history|mexico · 4 Comments
5 May 2006
If el día de los muertos is the hipster’s excuse to get drunk, Cinco de mayo is everyone else’s good enough day to get hammered. Today sports bars, Tex-Mex restaurants and “casual dining” establishments across the country will fill up with hordes of people out to celebrate the holiday the way they know how: by getting unbelievably loaded.
Anyone that knows me knows that I’ve got nothing against imbibing. All I ask is that people actually know what the holiday is before making it their own personal mardi gras (ask anyone what that holiday is about and prepare for some blank stares as well).
For once and for all, Cinco de mayo is not Mexican independence day. Not from Spain or from (gulp!) the United States. People, Spain got out of Mexico in 1810 and if you ever happen to pay attention on the days of September 15-16, you’ll see a heck of a lot of Mexican people partying. Those days commemorate Mexican independence.
Now you know what Cinco de Mayo isn’t. While most probably don’t care, we’ll tell you what it is.
They are not Latinos like us, but they are the children of immigrants like many of us. They are the young people in France setting cars ablaze. They have moved from targeting just their own neighborhoods, their versions of ghettos and projects, and now are in the tourist areas and the “white” areas. That is making the government crack down and the world take notice.
So why should Latinos care that unemployment is higher among the immigrant community in France than anywhere else in that country? Why should we care that the youth are raging in the streets because there is no place else for them to be? Author Ana Castillo wrote two days ago in her blog about a time when she went to France and she was stopped by security and mistaken for the housekeeper in the home of her host. She was a Mexican here in the United States. In France she was viewed as a possible Algerian, a non-white person, a person who came to the country to work the jobs that White French people would not do. Sound familiar? It is the same story for immigrants all over the world. What is happening in France is what happens when the children of immigrants are not given the same space and access as others, when despite being born in a country they are treated like outsiders still. France’s story is our own and should serve as a warning of what happens when you allow a third world within a first world.
Via / Ana Castillo.com
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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