Skip to content

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)

Memorial de Tlatelolco

January 28, 2009

La oscuridad engendra la violencia
y la violencia pide oscuridad
para cuajar el crimen.

Por eso el dos de octubre aguardó hasta la noche
Para que nadie viera la mano que empuñaba
El arma, sino sólo su efecto de relámpago.

¿Y a esa luz, breve y lívida, quién? ¿Quién es el que mata?
¿Quiénes los que agonizan, los que mueren?
¿Los que huyen sin zapatos?
¿Los que van a caer al pozo de una cárcel?
¿Los que se pudren en el hospital?
¿Los que se quedan mudos, para siempre, de espanto?

¿Quién? ¿Quiénes? Nadie. Al día siguiente, nadie.

La plaza amaneció barrida; los periódicos
dieron como noticia principal
el estado del tiempo.
Y en la televisión, en el radio, en el cine
no hubo ningún cambio de programa,
ningún anuncio intercalado ni un
minuto de silencio en el banquete.
(Pues prosiguió el banquete.)

No busques lo que no hay: huellas, cadáveres
que todo se le ha dado como ofrenda a una diosa,
a la Devoradora de Excrementos.

No hurgues en los archivos pues nada consta en actas.
Mas he aquí que toco una llaga: es mi memoria.
Duele, luego es verdad. Sangre con sangre
y si la llamo mía traiciono a todos.

Recuerdo, recordamos.

Ésta es nuestra manera de ayudar a que amanezca
sobre tantas conciencias mancilladas,
sobre un texto iracundo sobre una reja abierta,
sobre el rostro amparado tras la máscara.

Recuerdo, recordamos
hasta que la justicia se siente entre nosotros.


[From De la tierra de en medio, in Poesia no eres tu, 1972. Originally published in Siempre! in 1968 to commemorate the death of hundreds of students killed by government troops in Mexico City’s Tlatelolco Plaza just before the opening of the Olympics.]

Rosario Castellanos

Castellanos (25 May 1925 – 7 August 1974) was a Mexican poet and author. She was one of Mexico’s most important literary voices in the last century, along with the other members of the Generation of 1950 (the poets who wrote following the Second World War, influenced by Cesar Vallejo and others). Throughout her life, she wrote eloquently about issues of cultural and gender oppression, and her work has influenced feminist theory and cultural studies. Though she died young, she opened the door of Mexican literature to women and left a legacy that still resonates today. [Source: Wikipedia]

UT Press: Chicana Matters Series

January 19, 2009

Click on the image to follow the link.

picture-11

My father, Roberto…

January 18, 2009

Read Barbara Renaud Gonzalez’s post on her father turning 90 on Inauguration Day. She blogs at Las True Stories of San Antonio.


The solitude has been good for me, I’m a writer. But it’s made me very poor, and I’ve struggled to visit him, especially now that he can’t drive his like-new truck, sold years ago. Daddy misses his old five dogs rusted with mange on the day he left the country. He misses the good smell of dirt, the whispers of animals feathering, chasing, hiding from each other. He misses the moon that seems to talk to him as if he was the most important man in the world.

Barbara Renaud Gonzalez is a published writer, MSW, University of Michigan, post-grad, Harvard. Her novel, Golondrina, why did you leave me? is due to be published in April 09, first Chicana novel to be published by UT Press. Her essays/articles have appeared in diverse anthologies and magazines, including The Nation; The Progressive; Ms. Magazine; The Los Angeles Times, and many others. Her commentaries have aired on NPR’s Morning Edition and LatinoUSA. In 2000, she received the Inter-American Press Association Opinion prize in Santiago de Chile.



West Side Story: The short, dynamic life of San Anto founder Manny Castillo

January 17, 2009

Gilbert Garcia wrote a beautiful piece in memory of Manny Castillo in The San Antonio Current this week: West Side Story:The short, dynamic life of San Anto founder Manny Castillo

(Image credit: Juan Miguel Ramos)

Through it all he seemed indestructible; a goateed super-vato in a gray fedora who exuded supreme confidence. In San Antonio, he was the archetypal guy at the bar that everyone seems to know or wants to know…

Call for art entries

January 8, 2009

Attention all artists:

The Guadalupe Cultural Arts Center is looking for the best poster design for the 28th Annual Tejano Conjunto Festival to be held May 2009. Submit your entry by Friday, February 20, 2009 for a chance to have your design featured on the official poster and t-shirt. Categories include junior high, high school, college and open. Top selection in each category will receive $100 and the overall winner will be awarded $1,000.

For more information, call 210-271-3151.

Visit The Guadalupe Cultural Arts Center for guidelines.