Your daily dose of Chicano poetry
"I write poems on walls that crumble and fall
I talk to shadows that sleep and go away crying.”
Luis Omar Salinas (1937–2008)
Revisiting: El Corrido de Esequiel Hernández
From: Heyoka Pictures <news@heyokapictures.com>Date: May 26, 2010 7:56:07 PM CDTSubject: UPDATE: ‘The Ballad of Esequiel Hernández’
Dear Friends,
Yesterday it was announced that 1,200 National Guard troops will be deployed to the US-Mexico border:Since its release, our documentary, THE BALLAD OF ESEQUIEL HERNÁNDEZ, has become widely used as a teaching tool with regard to the dangers of a militarized border.We urge you all to please forward this email to friends, family members, educational institutions, and organizations who may not have seen the film, which is now available as:“Video on Demand” at Amazon.com (Click HERE)and as a DVD at:Many thanks,
Kieran, Brendan & Shane
The Narciso Martinez Cultural Arts Center Presents Strawberry Fields -a book of short stories by Chuy Ramirez
The Narciso Martinez Cultural Arts Center
Presents
Strawberry Fields
-a book of-
short stories
by
Chuy Ramirez
Wednesday, June 9, 2010
7:00 p.m.
225 E. Stenger
San Benito, Texas
Admission: $5.00
The intriguing novel, “Strawberry Fields,” features the migrant journeys, experiences, and memories of Joaquin, as an adolescent farm worker from South Texas . Similar to the migrant stories of Tomas Rivera, Chuy Ramirez entwines different aspects of Mexican American migrant history with a variety of fictional elements in the telling of his story. For instance, the author attempts to unravel the mystery of the strawberry fields’ murder by meticulously building suspense in the novel with a series of short stories.
The jingle “Grandfather Tree, grandfather tree, why don’t you tell your secrets to me” foreshadows the mystery behind the murder of Joaquin’s first intimate acquaintance (a blond migrant girl) and Joaquin’s upcoming self-reflective journey toward transformation into mainstream society and enlightenment about his own identity. Through a hero’s quests, Joaquin accepts the challenge to depart from his familiar surroundings of the courtroom and revisit the trials and tribulations of his past.
Chuy Ramirez ignites Joaquin’s passion to revisit his past and embrace his own heritage through his childhood memories, while creatively featuring them independently throughout the novel’s chapters. The novel opens with Joaquin nostalgically reflecting on his past and upcoming vacation to Michigan and Indiana . In its entirety, the novel reveals pivotal moments of Joaquin’s life in short stories, such as his first communion, his experiences salvaging and riding a tricycle, and his non chalaunt attitude toward burying his estranged father. In closing, the novel maintains suspense with the unsolved murder mystery. So, stay tune for a possible sequel!
Like Tomas Rivera, Chuy Ramirez uses his experiences and talents to honor the cultural heritage of Mexican American migrants and the American Dream with “Strawberry Fields.” Chuy Ramirez grew up in San Juan , Texas and is presently an attorney in McAllen Texas . He attended Pan American University in Edinburg Texas and the University of Texas Law School.
Reception/book signing to follow presentation. Info: 956-425-9552; nrogelio@hushmail.com.
| El Mundo Zurdo: Congreso Internacional Anzaldúa en el contexto de arte y “performance” Organizado por November 5-7, 2010 Convocatoria La Sociedad de Estudios sobre Gloria E. Anzaldúa convoca a la comunidad internacional a enviar sus propuestas de ponencias, mesas de 3-4 participantes, talleres, o performances para su Segundo Congreso Internacional. Se aceptan propuestas sobre cualquier aspecto de la vida y trabajo de Gloria Anzaldúa que traten sobre su influencia en las artes dramáticas, plásticas y literarias. Las siguientes temáticas sugieren, más no limitan, los temas y marcos de participación: · FRONTERAS—exploración de teoría de la frontera, estos y otros conceptos anzalduanos sobre este tema. Normas de envío de propuestas
NUEVA FECHA LIMITE: JUNIO 1, 2010 NOTIFICACION DE LAS PROPUESTAS ACEPTADAS: JULIO 1, 2010 Para preguntas y más información enviar un correo electrónico a: gloria.anzaldua.society@gmail.com o a norma.cantu@utsa.edu. AVISO IMPORTANTE: serán aceptadas ponencias en inglés y en español pero no habrá traducción oficial de un idioma a otro. |
“If I am alien, where is my spaceship?”
This is how we feel right now in Tucson.
It’s a line in a poem from Cantos Al Sexto Sol (Wings Press, 2002). This is how we feel right now in Arizona. It is insane here.
First they have come for our bodies (to deport those of they can); now they come for our souls.
No matter what they do, they will never have our spirits. The last part, I believe, is a line from Aztlan Underground.
With Arizona in the spotlight, most of the nation has focused on the draconian anti-immigrant law: SB 1070. But what has to be clear is that this is the culmination of a 518-year ongoing and relentless war. Nothing less. The mood here is not anti-immigrant. It is anti-Mexican. The racial profiling law has little to do with legalities; it is about the expressed targeting of red-brown Indigenous peoples.
Law officers do not or will not target generic Hispanics or even Mexicans. Their profile is 100% Indigenous. That’s why American Indians in Arizona too understand precisely what this law is all about (Navajo Times, May 13); they are subject to this profile because the similarities are obvious: short, dark hair, dark eyes and red-brown skin. Spaniards or other Europeans are not at risk.
How do we know this? Look to the historic practices of the migra. Or let’s look at the practices of Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio. They have been racial profiling for years, and now, the governor has authorized all law enforcement to be able to do the same, under the threat of lawsuits, etc. For years, those of us with red-brown skin have lived this reality anywhere along the U.S./Mexico border. Nowadays, this anti-Mexicanism, under the veneer of anti-illegal immigrant fervor, is nationwide.
That is about our bodies. And I repeat, the targets are Indigenous.
In past years, they’ve gone after our tongues. In Arizona, in the year 2000, it was proposition 203 – a measure that virtually gutted bilingual education, on the belief that it is better to be monolingual, than to be bilingual. To this day, the question remains: what does language have to do with legalities and illegalities? (And truthfully, on these matters, Arizona is simply following California’s footsteps from the 1990s).
The latest salvo is HB 2281; this one is about our souls.
This new law is an attempt by Superintendent Tom Horne to eliminate Ethnic Studies. Specifically, Horne has targeted Tucson Unified School District’s Mexican American Studies program, arguing that what is taught there, is outside of Western Civilization and should not be taught in Arizona schools.
This law has nothing to do with “illegal immigration.” If anything, it closely resembles the practices of the early European friars who deemed Indigenous knowledge to be Godless and attempted to both demonize it and destroy it completely. The burning of the books of our ancestors – Indigenous peoples of this continent – resides deep within our psyche. The philosophical foundation for Mexican American Studies in general is Maya-Nahuatl knowledge – derived from thousands of years of maize culture. Anthropologists refer to it as Mesoamerican knowledge. One part of it is: In Lak Ech – Tu eres mi otro yo – you are my other self (me). It is an ethic that teaches us that we are all part of each other and connected to each other. It is a human rights ethos connected to social justice and love of humanity and of all things living and non-living.
This is what Horne wants to ban, what he wants to eliminate. Could book-burnings and an Inquisitorial auto-de-fe be next? Of course. This is what he wants. This is what he demands. He has singled out Rodolfo Acuña’s book, Occupied America and Paolo Freire’s Pedagogy of the Oppressed as examples of books that preach hate, promote segregation, anti-Americanism and the violent overthrow of the U.S. government.
After the law was signed by Gov. Jan Brewer, metaphorically, an auto-de-fe was precisely what Horne came to conduct at TUSD the very next day. Hundreds upon hundreds of middle and high school students laid siege to the TUSD headquarters. When he failed to show his face, he then scheduled a press conference at the nearby state building a couple of miles away. The same students marched to the state building laying siege to that building. Eventually, 15 arrests were made (I was one of them).
Why are students willing to be arrested? Because the two books singled out are but the beginning. The new law – despite being in compliance per the TUSD legal counsel – authorizes the monitoring and censorship of books and curriculums to ensure they are in compliance with the law. Only non-educators could have come up with this one.
And so here we are again; welcome to apartheid arizona, u.s.a..
Rodriguez, a professor at the University of Arizona, can be reached at: XColumn@gmail.com
Column of the Americas
PO BOX 85476
Tucson, AZ 85754
ARCHIVED COLUMN OF THE AMERICAS
You change my way of writing, you change my way of thinking. You change my way of thinking, you change who I am.
National Day of Action Against Arizona SB 1070
NATIONAL DAY OF ACTION AGAINST ARIZONA SB1070
Introduction: The Mexican American Political Association (MAPA) makes a call to support with your presence the National Day of Action Against Arizona SB1070 as called for by the organizations Tonatierra, Puente, and the National Day Labor Organizing Network (NDLON), and the National Latino Congreso and its affiliate conveners and organizations. I encourage you to follow the links on this page from the organization Tonatierra, which is on the frontlines (for many years), local grassroots community workers, immigrants, migrants, organizers, youth, teachers – just good common people who refuse to be bowed by the forces of evil and political extremism in Arizona or from Washington, D.C.
These organizations have been in the forefront opposing all of the worst enforcement policies of the Obama administration and the previous Bush administration, and those of the former Arizona governor, Janet Napolitano, now Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, and those policies and practices implemented by Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio.
We join Tonatierra, Puente, NDLON, and the Coalition for Human Rights (Tucson, AZ) in calling on President Barack Obama and his administration to immediately put an end to the following enforcement programs; 287g (federal immigration and local police collaboration), Secure Communities (requires ALL local and state police agencies to work with the federal immigration enforcement), and Operation Streamline (expedited judicial processing of all migrant detainees without adequate legal defense or advocacy, and prolonged imprisonment in private immigration prisons).
Lastly, join us in the LIBERTY RIDE TO ARIZONA for the May 29th mobilization. Sign-up for the bus caravan at the MAPA Convention on Saturday, May 22, 2010 at the Methodist Church in the Placita Olvera, Los Angeles from 9:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Also, join us for the PROTEST ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS AT DODGER STADIUM on May 31st. No to the Diamondbacks in Los Angeles. Sign-up at the MAPA Convention to participate in these actions.
Come and speak directly with Salvador Reza from Tonatierra based in Phoenix, Arizona and Pablo Alvarado of NDLON at the MAPA Convention on Saturday, May 22, 2010.
The Eventuality of the Phoenix Pozole Pachanga Saturday May 29, 2010
National Day of Action Against Arizona SB1070
From Selma to Phoenix, from Civil Rights to Human Rights and, the Rights of Mother Earth!
A report back from OLMECA upon return from Tucson, Arizona and the fight by the youth of the Tucson High School against intellectual apartheid and the violation of Human Rights in the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo Territories.
Phoenix Union High School District Parents, Students and Community Demand Policy of Non-Compliance with Arizona SB 1070
Origins of Racial Profiling in the State of Arizona
NAHUACALLI Embassy of the Indigenous Peoples www.nahuacalli.org
Links: www.tonatierra.org
Join us in this prolonged campaign for driver’s licenses and visas for our families. The first step in making change is to join an organization that pursues the change we desire. We welcome you to our ranks.
Other organizations leading this movement include: Hermandad Mexicana Latinoamericana, Mexican American Political Association (MAPA), MAPA Youth Leadership, Southern California Immigration Coalition, Liberty and Justice for Immigrants Movement, National Alliance for Immigrant’s Rights, and immigrant’s rights coalitions throughout the U.S..
CONTACT:
Nativo V. Lopez, National President of MAPA (323) 269-1575
Sincerely,