11:46 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Culture| Latin America| Spain| history · 3 Comments
16 Nov 2006
Due to an incident in history known as la conquista, most of the last names in Latin America, the Philippines and a few other regions are Spanish in origin. It’s hard to believe that relatively small country such as Spain has had so much influence on culture, language and that so many of us still wear the last name of whatever Spaniard was spreading his seed around our ancestors’ homeland back in the day.
If you are curious about where your last name comes from and how it’s spread throughout the Iberian peninsula, the Spanish National Statistics Institute has a gadget for you. By entering your last name in their application, you can see where the highest concentration of people who share your apellido in Spain are located, which normally points to its region of origin. Not surprisingly, many Latino last names common in the U.S. are linked to Andalucia, the southern region of Spain that was home to many conquistadores.
You can see the popularity of your last name distributed geographically on a map, and a chart also tells you exactly how many people with your last name live in Spain (including whether or not they have your last name as a primer apellido, segundo apellido or both), and where they live. You can also see how many of these people were born there and how many are immigrants. Perhaps totally useless information, but if you are nerd like me it’s fun for a few minutes.
Pictured: Map of the geographic density of the last name Rodriguez, the 6th most common last name in Spain and the 22nd most common in the U.S.
Related: About.com’s list of most common Latino last names and their origins
Via / 20 Minutos
1:54 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Education| Florida| history · Comments Off
6 Jun 2006
The Miami Herald has an article today about how, despite the very strong Latin American and Spanish origins of the state of Florida (and it’s huge Latino population), the state’s educational system is flunking out on teaching kids about Latin American history — and any other history:
Despite the state’s burgeoning Hispanic population, an education think tank gives Florida an F when it comes to teaching students about the history of Latin America — or any other civilization.The failing grade comes because the state’s standards for teaching world history are so vague, concludes the study by the Thomas B. Fordham Foundation, which didn’t hesitate to castigate the state.
”Florida’s approach is so superficial that it is, for all intents and purposes, worthless,” said the report, which was released Monday. “There’s nothing glowing in the Sunshine State’s standards, and little worth redeeming.”
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.
3:30 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Activism| Movies · Comments Off
9 Mar 2006
“Walkout” is the first major film to tell the story of the Chicano civil rights movement:
Esparza joined HBO Films and actor/director Edward James Olmos to produce a dramatic, historical film based on the true story of the Chicano student uprising in East Los Angeles in 1968, where he was among 10,000 high school students who staged walkouts to protest academic prejudice and dire school conditions.
The Los Angeles protests, widely regarded as the birth of the urban Chicano civil rights movement, spawned a generation of activists and reverberated across the United States, inspiring similar demands for change in public schools in El Paso, across Texas and New Mexico and wherever Hispanics lived.
The film, produced by Moctesuma Esparza and directed by Edward James Olmos will star Alex Vega (Spy Kids) and will air on HBO on March 18th.
Catch previews and in-depth info on HBO’s Walkout page
Via / Borderland News and HispanicTips

Today marks the 20th anniversary of a tremendous earthquake that shook Mexico City and took over 9,500 lives and 250,000 homes. It was one of those horrible events that you remember. One of those few days in history that anyone from Mexico City can tell you where they were, who they were with, and what they were doing.
I live in Miami, and although many people may not realize it, we were the first recipients of Hurricane Katrina. I’ve never seen so many downed trees in my life. Trees big and small completely uprooted. And although some time has passed, I can still see one of these trees from my window.
I lost power for 5 days. I never understood what that was like before. It’s not fun. Now I’m not comparing my experience to the tragedy that occurred in the Gulf Coast…but through the days and weeks following the storm, I couldn’t help but think about Mexico, a country that I lived in just a few months ago.
I saw the amount of work that went into the clean up here. It still continues, as a matter of fact. But here we have plenty of chainsaws, big cranes and dump trucks, and basically any kind of machinery you can think of that makes lots of these jobs a lot easier.
In Mexico, most work is done manually. Houses are built brick by brick. And if those bricks need to be brought up to a 2nd story, they are usually brought up one by one. Trees are cut down with regular handsaws. Why? I guess because people are less expensive than machines.
Through this thought process, I had to wonder, how would Mexico be able to handle this kind of damage? It’s one of those things that you wish you never find out the answer. Twenty years ago Mexico experienced a horrible earthquake. As with Hurricane Katrina, it is sad to see that the poor were the most badly affected. Today we remember the lives that were lost, and hope that everyone is better prepared for the future.
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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