Lots going on regarding Latino Heritage Month, and Meagan, as usual, did a fab job of reminding readers of the complexity of this month’s celebrations. I wanted to highlight a few things for VL readers:
30 Days of Latino Heritage Tumblr page which Maegan created in 2009 is still up and running! You may submit something that represents Latino heritage to you and see what others have posted and shared.
LatiNegr@s Tumblr page is also still up and running! This was something I co-created after being inspired by Maegan’s 30 Days of Latino Heritage Tumblr and highlights/centers the experiences, realities, narratives, testimonies, and representations of LatiNegr@s/Afr@Latin@s/BlakTin@s/etc. You may also submit something to this Tumblr page as well. There is also a Twitter account that you may follow @BeingAfroLatino.
October 15 is National Latino AIDS Awareness Day and we encourage you to get tested for HIV to know your status! There are many was to find FREE and quick testing sites all over the US. Place your zip code at this site and it will give you locations in that area.
And a shameless plug, over at RH Reality Check, I’m focusing on Latin@s whose work impacts the reproductive justice movement. I did this last year as well and highlighted 5 folks and I plan to do the same this year as well. Posting is not on a specific schedule so check back for any updates.
Hispanic Heritage Month has officially started (September 15 to October 15). The month, which is not really a proper month if you think about it, was built/invented around the independence (from Spain) days of some Latin American countries (i.e. Costa Rica, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua – 9/15, Mexico 9/16, Chile 9/18). For those countries/nationalities whose independence days fall outside this range, or for those, like my own Puerto Rico, who have yet to have an independence day, we are expected to rest easy knowing that within this invented month is included October 12 – Columbus Day/Dia de la Raza/Discovery Day/genocide day so that we are all included via our “creation” as an identity if you will.
The issue of naming the 30 days set aside to acknowledge the existence of Latinos complicates things further. Originally called Hispanic Heritage Week and later turned into the month we now know , the government label of “Hispanic” makes the role of the Spanish/European conquest central to the “celebration”. Some people, who reject the label “Hispanic”, prefer to call the month “Latino Heritage Month” in an attempt to deemphasize the conquista and focus on the survival and growth of the diaspora/mestisaje.
Clearly I’m somewhat comfortable with the label Latino – defined by me as including the diaspora of those colonized in Latin America, the Hispanic/Latin@ identity is complex and controversial and certainly not universally accepted. The idea of Latinidad is sometimes – and rightfully to some extent – accused of erasing certain aspects of what have made Latinos who we are today. The mixing of the indigenous with the European and the European with the African was not based on mutual consent but conquest, rape, violence, and war. All other variations were based on survival. This not a matter of ancient history, this is a matter of looking at how right now across Latin American governments are actively committing acts of theft and violence against indigenous communities. It is not a matter of ancient history the way many among “us” claim/re-claim our Indigenous identities to the exclusion of our African roots or vice-versa or claim none of the above at all.
Read more…
9:46 am By Maegan La Mala · Arts|Culture|Events|Linking Latinos|Lo Que Hay|New Jersey · 1 Comment
9 Oct 2010
While we here at VivirLatino and in our respective communities and circles may debate the merits of Hispanic/Latino Heritage Month, we must support our artists and cultural activists who represent and reflect our realities through words, theater, performance and art.
I wanted to draw your attention to an event happening next weekend at the Newark Public Library in New Jersey. Check it out and if you are in the area support if you can. Note that it features friend to VivirLatino, Adele Nieves.
2010 Hispanic Heritage Celebration: LatinaVoices and Visions
Latinas Out Loud: Epistles
Saturday, October 16, 2010, 2:00 pm
Main Library, Centennial Hall, Second Floor
SPECIAL FEATURED GUEST: Sandra Maria EstevezTHIS IS A KID FRIENDLY EVENT!
Latino Flavored Productions brings to New Jersey a dynamic and compelling new show that features Latina performers—as well as regular, everyday, non-performers—exploring personal, social, or political issues through the art of letter writing. This ensemble production presents twenty Latinas reading their own short, funny, dramatic, evocative, and/or often poetic letters to their addressee of choice.
Directions and more info after the jump
6:11 am By Maegan La Mala · Chile|Linking Latinos|Music · 1 Comment
20 Sep 2010During this Latino Heritage Month, we are marketed to, studied, talked about and analyzed. During this month many of our homelands, ancestral and actual celebrate their independence days but also within these countries we struggle onward seeking true freedom.
The following video comes from us gracias a Rebel Diaz. Filmed on the streets of Santiago de Chile and produced Chilean team, Artefacto Visual, the video features Villa Grimaldi, which was a concentration camp site during the Pinochet dictatorship ushered in by the United States and where two of the Rebel Diaz crew members, RodStarz and G1′s, parents were tortured.
For me, this video is what this month and every other month of the year is about.
Enjoy
8:17 am By Maegan La Mala · history|Latin America · 5 Comments
16 Sep 2010
Yesterday marked the official start of Latino (of Hispanic) Heritage Month, 30 days or so of corporate cafeterias serving tacos. Ok so I’m being cynical. The marketing is so over the top some time (see picture). The political pandering so offensive, especially at a time like this with the mid-term elections, it feels like all fluff and no substance.
It’s not that I don’t love being a Latina, it’s my primary identity above all others. I think in large part because of my political awaking when I was a teenager, whenever someone asks that tired old question and I am forced to limit myself to one answer, I’ll go with Latina over mujer. It’s just it is who I am, how I live. I don’t wake up in the morning thinking about how can I be more Latino and don’t try extra hard to be extra Latina during this month. But that, that not trying so hard to prove myself, is a shift for myself so maybe in that there is value in this month as a kind of “new year” of sorts for our multiple communities.
Read more…
PBS has been surprisingly good the past few weeks. It has highlighted Latino heritage month in a way that is relevent and interesting–usually it feels more like you get a month worth of stories about music. Not saying I have a problem with that, and I’ve really enjoyed PBS’s Latino Music series. But it’s nice to know that Latinos are beginning to be recognized in complex interesting ways that reach past ‘typical’ Latino fair (i.e. we’re all Mexicans, immigration is the only political issue on our landscape, we all like tejano music, etc). Read more…
9:37 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Culture|Events|GLBT|Linking Latinos|Lo Que Hay|New York City|Women · 1 Comment
23 Sep 2009
As featured on our 30 Days of Latino Heritage Tumblr :
Erika Lopez’s The Welfare Queen at BAAD!
Friday, October 2, 8pm/$15
The time has finally come for the unabashed, chick crazy, cartoonist, writer, performer, one-woman art sweatshop ERIKA LOPEZ to bring her fun, daring, sexy and irreverent show for the first time to her native New York providing comfort and cheeky glances to the recession-struck Bronx.“When you’re on welfare and pushing your latest art project in an attempt to pay the rent, what it means to ‘have it all’ obviously require some redefinition.” – Eryn Loeb, blogger.
Click to reserve your seat or call 718-842-5223About Us
Crowned “a funky and welcoming performance space” by The New York Times, BAAD! is an art, performance and cultural workshop space that presents cutting-edge and challenging works by established, evolving and emerging choreographers, playwrights, poets, musicians and visual and performing artists. BAAD! presents four annual festivals, BAAD! ASS WOMEN, THE BOOGIE DOWN DANCE SERIES, OUT LIKE THAT! and the BlakTino Performance Series. BAAD! celebrates the arts created by and featuring women, people of all colors and/or the Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender community.COME TO BAAD! WHERE IT’S ALL GOOD.
email: crg_bx@yahoo.com
phone: 718-842-5223
Via / Latino Sexuality
8:54 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Culture|history|holidays|Internet|Latin America|Linking Latinos|Politics · Comments Off
16 Sep 2009As part of the 30 Days of Latino Heritage Series that I announced yesterday, I started a tumblr site of the same name.
There I will collect images, quotes, audio, video etc related to Latinidad and I invite you to do that same! If you would like to submit something, please visit the submission page or email latinoheritagemonth@tumblr.com to submit posts. All submissions are subject to my approval.
Gracias!!!
11:44 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Culture|history|holidays|Internet|language|Latin America|Media|Politics|VivirLatino · 2 Comments
15 Sep 2009
30 Days of Latino Heritage : Introduction from VivirLatino on Vimeo.
An introduction to the 30 Days of Latino Heritage Series on VivirLatino.com featured Maegan “la Mamita Mala” Ortiz.
I don’t know about you, but I can name scores of community members, family members, and random Latino celebrities that are dealing with or have died from diabetes. That’s why, although I am very critical of major organizations (namely, they are so disconnected from communities, most donations go to pay salaries rather than helping community members), I am very pleased to see that the American Diabetes Association is targeting Latino populations with it’s new diabetes awareness toolkit.
To celebrate the beginning of National Hispanic Heritage Month and to recognize those in the Hispanic/Latino American population who have, or are at risk for, diabetes, the American Diabetes Association, through a grant from the Abbott Fund, is introducing its new Adult Prevention Toolkit designed specifically for community-based and faith-based organizations in Hispanic/Latino communities. The toolkit provides organizations with comprehensive and culturally relevant information on diabetes and healthy living. Throughout Hispanic Heritage Month, the American Diabetes Association will also be hosting Feria de Salud Por Tu Familia, an outdoor Latino health festival in cities across the United States.
Tell your loved ones about this, if you’re a community organizer, spread the information around. This is so important–I’m tired of seeing loved ones die because of something that is manageable. Let’s love ourselves enough to take care of ourselves and each other.
via CSR Wire
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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