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Posts Tagged ‘parenting

VL Padres: Día De Los Muertos for the Children

8:42 am By Maegan La Mala · children · Comments Off

1 Nov 2005

22933312.3girls.jpg VL Padres features information of special interest to Latino parents looking retain and teach their children their cultural and historical roots.

Halloween may have come and gone but for many Latino families, especially those with their roots in Mexico, the celebrations continue via Día de los Muertos. Some parents may find it difficult to retain their traditional cultural celebrations in the face of mass marketing campaigns promoting the North American holiday of candy and character costumes. There may be a level of fear even that children experience with the images of Día de los Muertos because they may be unfamiliar with the history and background of the observance. Thankfully stateside there are many opportunities for children of all backgrounds to gain an understanding of remembering people who have died and how it is linked to a larger history and culture. Just check out the latest Lo Que Hay for a small sampling of such events.

There are books that padres can turn to with their children to explore the origins and practices surrounding Día de los Muertos.
Some examples are Linda Lowery’s Day of the Dead and Luis San Vicente’s The Festival of Bones. Look for these books in your local bookstores and libraries.

Via / LatinoLA

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Latinos: One Big Happy Family?

4:11 pm By Maegan La Mala · children · 2 Comments

27 Oct 2005

na_flores_pic.jpg An article in today’s HispanicAd.com basically feeds into the stereotype that there is one type of Latino family. According to the article:

Parent-child relationships are a unique element of the Hispanic family.

Yeah because parent-child relationships don’t exist in other cultures. Using such respected sociological sources (like MTV), the writer from Florida State University helps prop an argument that’s been floating in the internet lately, that Latinos are failing in school because Latino parents place more importance on the family than on academic success. Yes Latino culture makes us do poorly in school Pay no attention to unequal distribution of resources or ::gasp:: dare I say it, institutional racism.

Throughout the article there is an assumption that Latino families are two parent families, with mami worrying about the kids being too skinny and papi bringing home the tocino. Girl children are to help with chores and take care of the other children. Working mothers are given lip service and single mothers, like the one that raised this Latina, are non-existent.

If this is the information being used to market to modern Latinos, no wonder I mute the commercials during my novelas.

Via/ HispanicTips and HispanicAd.com

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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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