2:54 pm By Maegan la Mamita Mala · dance|Haiti|New York City|Peru · 2 Comments
23 Jan 2010
The subject of the film Yo Soy Andina, Cynthia Paniagua, leads an Afro-Peruvian dance workshop with live music by an all-star lineup of Peruvian drummers and musicians.
“Peruvian musicians and dance teachers are coming together to
share our culture for Haiti” said Paniagua. “The movements are earthy, groovy,
undulating prepare to work it out!”
The workshop — for all levels, including beginners — will cost $20, and all proceeds will go to to Oxfam for Haiti.
WHEN: Sunday, Jan 24, 3-5 pm
WHERE: 30-01 Northern Blvd, Long Island City
One subway stop from Manhattan!
R/V/G to Queens Plaza (walk 1 block east to 40th St)
Google map directions here
Reserve: cholitaperu25@yahoo.com or 917-378-4965
3:01 pm By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Events|Haiti|New York City · 2 Comments
13 Jan 2010Fellow NY’ers, I just read about two local events being organized to collect funds for Haiti.
Skippy from the Bell House in Brooklyn tells us he’s organizing a big one, set for January 27th. There will be bands, comedians, a raffle, and lots of extras — with 100% of the box office and raffle proceeds going to the people of Haiti. If you can donate something towards the raffle, or can help in another way, please email him at: parksloper (at) gmail (dot) com.
Meanwhile, we just got word of a small benefit tonight at Lolita bar (266 Broome St). The Haitian Earthquake Benefit will run from 6 p.m. to 12 a.m., costs $5, and will include $3 drafts and $5 margaritas. The entry fee, and $1 from each drink (until 8 p.m.) will be split between Doctor’s Without Borders (for immediate aid) and Konbit Pou Ayiti (a Haiti based non-profit focused on longer term solutions).
Mind you these are hipster joints, so if peeps know of any more grassroots events hit us up in the comments below or email us at info@VivirLatino.com
Via / Gothamist
4:46 pm By Maegan la Mamita Mala · GLBT|Immigration|Justice|New York City|Violence · Comments Off
8 Dec 200910:48 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · GLBT|New York City|Puerto Rico · 2 Comments
19 Nov 2009This just came into VL’s email, sorry for the late notice pero this is especially important given how Latino clergy and religious leaders in the New York area have been actively speaking against equal rights for all. I am a firm believer that the rhetoric put out there, be it about immigration or marriage equity, has a direct impact on how people treat each other. When people in positions of power speak hate, hate manifests.
Puerto Rican, Latino Clergy, Theology Professors, Community Members
To Condemn Brutal Hate Killing of Gay Puerto Rican ManOn Thursday, November 19, 2009 at 12 pm, Puerto Rican and Latino pastors, professors
of theology and concerned members of the community will gather in front of the
Puerto Rico Federal Affairs Office, 135 West 50th Street, between 6th and 7th
Avenues, to condemn the brutal, hateful killing of Jorge Steven Lopez Mercado and
pray for him and his family.Jorge Steven Lopez Mercado, a 19 year old gay man, was found on the side of a road
in Puerto Rico on Friday. He was decapitated, dismembered and partially burned.
While a suspect has been arrested in the slaying, many disturbing and homophobic
comments from police officers and local clergy have been reported.“The purpose of this gathering is to pray for his family and also to denounce the
bigotry and homophobia that would lead some people of faith to condone such a
crime,” said Rev. Dr. Samuel Cruz, a professor at Union Theological Seminary. “We
are also going to call on other people of good faith to stand up to such hate crimes
regardless of their beliefs in terms of the LGBT community.”The religious leaders also want to make it clear that there are many Latino people
of faith who condemn violence against anyone regardless of their religion, political
ideology and sexual orientation and will be calling on all people of faith to stand
up and denounce this horrible crime.WHAT: Puerto Rican and Latino clergy, theological professors
and community members to denounce hate crime and pray for victim and his familyWHEN: Thursday, November 19, 2009
12 pmWHERE: Puerto Rican Federal Affairs Office
135 West 50th Street, between 6th and 7th
Avenues
11:00 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Justice|New York City|Politics|Violence|Women · 4 Comments
30 Oct 2009
How do we deal with men in our communities who hurt the women in our community? And I’m not just talking about our physical communities like our neighbors or relatives. What of those who claim to represent us in public office.
I wrote about my discomfort surrounding the NYC State Senator Hiram Monserrate case when charges first surfaced against him, accusing him of attacking his girlfriend. It feels complicated for me on multiple levels. Monserratte was my local council person and he is my local state senator. That never has stopped me before. That wasn’t it. I had dealings with Monserrate before he was involved in electoral politics, when he worked with the Latino Police Officers Association here in NYC and he and his organization stood with the Latino families of those killed by police brutality and us organizers. As a Latina who has dealt with domestic violence both personally, politically, and professionally, how did this man whom I identified as a defender of the community suddenly become an attacker?
Read more…
7:34 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Labor|Media|New York City · Comments Off
21 Oct 2009Local NYC PBS station Channel 13 is highlighting how the city that never sleeps does it through videos featuring those that keep it moving.
New York on the Clock: Carlos, Coffee Man from Thirteen.org on Vimeo.
On the clock is a euphemism for on the job, working. Pero isn’t this how so many see Latino faces already in NYC and around the country? Immigrants who work? I guess I’m a little tired of what I see as the work personal divide. I want to know is Carlos making ends meet? Is he sending money back to Mexico? He works in a busy section of NYC catering to business types pero where does he live? Most likely in a community like where I live and that is the side that most people don’t see.
Via / NY On the Clock
11:37 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Arts|Culture|Events|New York City · Comments Off
1 Jul 2009
A friend of mine is behind this. If it doesn’t rain and if my children cooperate I may show up…you should show up if you’re in the NYC area regardless.
GALLERY OPENING EVENT
Ravel Hotel celebrates the opening of its gallery’s 1st international exhibit, with a rooftop party from 7:30 – 10:30 pm on Wednesday, July 1, 2009, featuring live music, half-priced drinks, and an opportunity for LIC art collectors, gallery directors, artists and art lovers in general to network while enjoying the visual work of 13 established artists from South America. Admission to the Ravel’s rooftop party and exhibit is free to the public.
Located at: 8-08 Queens Plaza South, LIC, NY, the Ravel Hotel opens its doors to the first exhibition, with a progressive concept where each of its 5 floors will have the hallways (and some of the rooms) double as a gallery and showcase one hundred original paintings by renowned artists from all over the world, all available for purchase.
The exhibition will be up until November 1, 2009. The gallery is directed by Elizabeth Torres, professional artist, and internationally recognized speaker.
The artists participating in this international exhibition are: Jorge Posada, Alvaro Daza, Juan Carlos Palacios, Rocar, Juan Carlos Vasco, Rafael Ordoñez, Alfredo Vivero Paniza, Carlos Orrea, Martha Guzman, Nico Daza, Elizabeth Torres, Camilo Pinto and Margarita Isaza.
For this opening night, the Ravel hotel has the honor to announce a special live performance by the band Los Neuronautas, which will be presenting its new album “Las Horas sin Tiempo”. Formed in 2006 in New York City, by singer/guitarist David Vanegas, drummer Jeff Ortiz, and bassist Gabriel Gutierrez, the band set out to combine sounds of hard rock and psychedelia into an evolving entity that stands apart from other bands of the latin rock circuit in the US.
For more information, please write to:
info@ravelgallery.com
8:32 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Activism|Events|Puerto Rico · 28 Comments
22 May 2009
This was in my inbox this morning, about how to support the Ricans that were arrested earlier this month for their civil disobedience in Congress and how their personal struggle is linked to the issue of the colonial status of Puerto Rico.
“Puerto Rico has been a colony of the United States for 111 years: a disgraceful colonial condition in the 21st century. It is time to resolve this crime against our people.” This is the demand of the six pro-independence protesters who interrupted the U.S. Congress and who hope their actions will produce more acts of civil disobedience regarding the colonial status of the island.
The protesters, who have been summoned to court on May 26, are the artists Luis Enrique Romero, María “Chabela” Rodríguez y José Rivera (Tony Mapeyé), mechanic designer Luis Suárez, nurse Eugenia Pérez-Martijo, and retired laborer Ramón Díaz.
The six interrupted a U.S. Congress session by singing “Oubao Moin” and carrying Puerto Rican flags and signs that read “111 years of colonization is a disgrace.” The protesters could face sentences of up to six months in jail and fines.
The struggle for Puerto Rican independence is the result of many battles that have not ceased. In 1954, five Puerto Rican conducted a shooting attack against member of the U.S. Congress to demand the independence of the island. The 1954 attackers have served more than 25 years in U.S. federal prisons. To date, thousands of pro-independence activists have been persecuted and incarcerated by the U.S. government for their actions. Now is time to decolonize Puerto Rico and put an end to the lies and deceit used by the U.S. government for the past 111 years.
Freedom for Puerto Rico and its political prisoners.
NYC PROTEST IN SUPPORT OF THE 6 PRO-INDEPENDENCE ACTIVISTS
Where: 26 Federal Plaza, Manhattan
When: May 26 at 5:30 pm
Directions: 4, 6, R, W to City HallSupport by making a monetary contribution for the activists at any Banco Popular and make a deposit to bank account #760060177 to María I. Rodríguez and specify that it is for a Banco Popular (BPPR) account in Puerto Rico.
GO TO WASHINGTON DC AND SUPPORT
Solidarity groups will go to Washington DC on the day of the hearing. For more information contact decolonizeprnow@gmail.com¡Free Puerto Rico! ¡Freedom for our political prisoners!
7:49 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Activism|GLBT|Linking Latinos|New York City · Comments Off
19 May 2009Andrés Duque from Blabbeando has some great video and pictures from two very different rallies that took place this past Sunday here in NYC. Both rallies dealt with the lives of GLBT people and both had Latinos speaking on the issues.
First here’s Ugly Betty‘s Ana Ortiz (no relation), speaking at a rally organized by Broadway Impact and co-sponsored by the Human Rights Campaign, the Empire State Pride Agenda, Marriage Equality New York, the Civil Rights Front and Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS
11:38 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Bizarro|Controversia|Education|Labor|New York|New York City|radio · 3 Comments
11 Mar 2009I was dumbstruck after listening to last week’s episode of Chicago Public Radio’s This American Life program this morning. The episode featured a story so Kafkaesque I first doubted its veracity and then just sat shocked. It’s simple enough to sum up in just a few words: the New York City Public School system sends teachers who “misbehave” or are suspected of having done something wrong to what amounts to detention hall for teachers. Teachers are told they will be going to a “reassignment center” and when they arrive, wait to meet with district authorities.
But there will never be a meeting. The teachers sit in rooms for hours doing nothing. Those hours turn in to weeks. Weeks into months for most. And for some into a year or more than one year. Doing nothing.
A culture emerges within this confinement. It is reported by those who have been in what is called “the rubber room” – the informal name for the facility — that the overwhelming boredom and depression felt by the teachers translates into childlike behavior, violent fights and territorial squabbles. In effect, they become a lot like children in detention.
Teachers awaiting their fate — a decision by the NYC school system on whether they will be reinstated and return to teaching or terminated — continue to earn their full salary, even though they are doing absolutely nothing in the rubber room day in and day out. The estimated cost to NYC taxpayers? Some 35 million dollars per year. Read more…
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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