Back to top.

One day
the apolitical
intellectuals
of my country
will be interrogated
by the simplest
of our people.

They will be asked
what they did
when their nation died out
slowly,
like a sweet fire
small and alone.

No one will ask them
about their dress,
their long siestas
after lunch,
no one will want to know
about their sterile combats
with “the idea
of the nothing”
no one will care about
their higher financial learning.

They won’t be questioned
on Greek mythology,
or regarding their self-disgust
when someone within them
begins to die
the coward’s death.

They’ll be asked nothing
about their absurd
justifications,
born in the shadow
of the total lie.

On that day
the simple men will come.

Those who had no place
in the books and poems
of the apolitical intellectuals,
but daily delivered
their bread and milk,
their tortillas and eggs,
those who drove their cars,
who cared for their dogs and gardens
and worked for them,
and they’ll ask:

“What did you do when the poor
suffered, when tenderness
and life
burned out of them?”

Apolitical intellectuals
of my sweet country,
you will not be able to answer.

A vulture of silence
will eat your gut.

Your own misery
will pick at your soul.

And you will be mute in your shame.

Otto Rene Castillo, Apolitical Intellectuals (via chopsueycinema)

05.15.12 1
Participatory Action Research 101

Two Wednesdays, May 16 & 23
Evenings Starting at 6:30PM

What is Participatory Action Research? How can it be used to make organizing truly liberatory and build capacity for long term movement building rooted in community based knowledge for reflective and strategic action?

These are some of the questions we will be exploring through dialogue and participatory activities with a focus on principles and tools that organizers and educators can apply directly to what you are already doing.

Participatory Action Research or PAR brings people together to define for themselves what problems they face in their community, find solutions through talking with and gathering data from their peers, and then implementing those solutions through strategic and informed actions. It’s a model of community organizing that builds the capacity of people on the front-line of a problem to take leadership in creating the change they want.

PAR builds on the critical pedagogy put forward by Paulo Freire, author of Pedagogy of the Oppressed and an educator from Brazil. He created a framework for working with education as a practice of freedom, and criticized modern education as a practice of domination. He was exiled by the Brazilian dictatorship for the work he was teaching adults how to read the word, and their world.

PAR Class Facilitator Bios

Levana Saxon, M.Ed is an organizer and educator with Practicing Freedom, using participatory action research, popular education and creative action to generate collaborative community-led change. Over the last 17 years she has trained and facilitated thousands of children, youth and adults. Some of the groups she has worked with include the Paulo Freire Institute, Rainforest Action Network, Center for Political Education, Ella Baker Center for Human Rights, Youth In Focus, El Teatro Campesino and multiple Oakland Public Schools. She currently co-coordinates the Ruckus Society’s Arts Core and facilitates trainings and dialogues with the White Noise Collective, which she co-founded.

Tele’Jon Quinn is an activist and a spoken word artist. He dedicates his time to using his creative talents to raise consciousness in his community and supporting the Heal the Streets program, BAY-Peace, and Youth Speaks. For the past two years participatory action research and spoken word have helped Tele’Jon express his emotions and feelings. He finds pleasure in using these tools to liberate, educate, and inspire members of his community.

To register for this class, fill out the registration form (link below) and email to center@politicaleducation.org. 

Click here to download form: http://www.politicaleducation.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/PAR_May_2012_registration_form.doc

Participation in both days of classes is required. We will have a limit on the number of participants and cannot promise a space. These classes will likely fill up fast so get on it! 

Suggested Donation for each class in the Popular Education Series: $50-$150 Sliding Scale. No one turned away for lack of funds.

518 Valencia IS wheelchair accessible

05.14.12 0
Zoom 
Event: http://www.facebook.com/events/213113562127898/Your’re cordially invited to an inspiring night of Salud Y Arte with 67 Suenos, our summer Mural Fundraiser.Come to enjoy some delicious food, youth voice, spoken word, popular theater and penetrating short videos. We will also have guest speakers and performances by local artists / activist and Univision14’s star news anchor Maria Leticia Gomez.We were recently awarded a “Seed Grant” of one thousand dollars from Ashoka’s Youth Ventures but this is just a start. Our goal for our mural project is to fundraise a total of $10,000.00 to pay our youth stipends, pay local artists, buy materials and put on a health fair. This event is the lead of 4 efforts before the summer to raise our goal.With your support a powerful mural will go up in the Fruitvale district of Oakland, CA. This area, as many of our youth know, has a high population of undocumented people that are not only affected by failed immigration policies but also health inequilities such as the lack of proper and affortable health care, access to affortable local and healthy food, safe and well paid working environments and health education and resources.Salud y Arte with 67 Sueños is a group of migrant youth and allies that will design and create a mural that educates the community about health issues that affect undocumented womyn. By collaborating with local artist and community members, we will inspire and begin to liberate the undocumented community by building a safe and sacred space which nurtures them to share their collective stories of struggles and accomplishments.Join us for a night of youth power.Salud Y Arte,67 SueñosContact Info event/tickets: Pablopare@gmail.com and (510)-967-1357

Event: http://www.facebook.com/events/213113562127898/

Your’re cordially invited to an inspiring night of Salud Y Arte with 67 Suenos, our summer Mural Fundraiser.

Come to enjoy some delicious food, youth voice, spoken word, popular theater and penetrating short videos. We will also have guest speakers and performances by local artists / activist and Univision14’s star news anchor Maria Leticia Gomez.

We were recently awarded a “Seed Grant” of one thousand dollars from Ashoka’s Youth Ventures but this is just a start. Our goal for our mural project is to fundraise a total of $10,000.00 to pay our youth stipends, pay local artists, buy materials and put on a health fair. This event is the lead of 4 efforts before the summer to raise our goal.

With your support a powerful mural will go up in the Fruitvale district of Oakland, CA. This area, as many of our youth know, has a high population of undocumented people that are not only affected by failed immigration policies but also health inequilities such as the lack of proper and affortable health care, access to affortable local and healthy food, safe and well paid working environments and health education and resources.

Salud y Arte with 67 Sueños is a group of migrant youth and allies that will design and create a mural that educates the community about health issues that affect undocumented womyn. By collaborating with local artist and community members, we will inspire and begin to liberate the undocumented community by building a safe and sacred space which nurtures them to share their collective stories of struggles and accomplishments.

Join us for a night of youth power.

Salud Y Arte,
67 Sueños
Contact Info event/tickets: Pablopare@gmail.com and (510)-967-1357

05.14.12 1

undocumentary:

Alicia Torres Don knows how to fight. In the ring she is known as La Aguila Dorada, or the Golden Eagle, a luchadora character she developed around her fight for justice. However, outside the ring, she is best known for another fight: for the rights of undocumented youth living in fear and uncertainty inside the U.S.

Backstory

The story of Alicia Torres Don is one of struggle. It is about her fight to be equal in a society that treats her as something less. She came to the United States at the age of six, clutched in the arms of her parents who left Mexico for a better life. Despite not knowing English, Alicia quickly acclimated to a new culture in Austin, Texas, earned high marks throughout school, and went to college to study nursing. “I was privileged,” she says, pointing out that most states do not offer in-state tuition to undocumented students. She had yet to experience such limitations.

Her final semester in college, however, Alicia was forced to confront her status when a Social Security number requirement prevented her from completing required clinical exams. “It was one of the worst days of my life, she said. “I felt like I had failed.”

Refusing to accept this reality, Alicia searched and found a community college where she could complete her degree. But despite having earned her high school diploma and college degree in the United States, she could not work as a nurse. She did not have a Social Security number.

Alicia remained in Austin with her family, earning money translating and babysitting. But everything changed when her mother was diagnosed with kidney failure. Alicia panicked. Doctors in Austin were unable to treat her mother because of her status, forcing Alicia to confront her undocumented identity again.

Alicia searched across the country for a hospital or clinic that would treat her mother. A U.S. citizen with health insurance in this situation would receive treatment in an outpatient dialysis clinic, paying a standard deductible and co-pay. But for undocumented immigrants, who typically work in low-wage jobs with no benefits, there is not system for treatment. Alicia and her family report their earnings and pay taxes, though they are ineligible for most benefits, including Social Security. Emergency Medicare funds helps pay for a significant portion of the dialysis treatment, however these funds are generally not accepted in outpatient clinics, resulting in thousands of dollars in additional costs every week.

When Alicia found a hospital in North Carolina with funding available to cover the ER costs, she dropped everything. She and her brother immediately moved their mother to North Carolina, leaving behind the family and the home they had known since they were children.

Alicia’s mother continues to receive treatment in North Carolina, though her health slowly deteriorates. Being apart from her family, Alicia says, is the most difficult part of her life right now. “My mom shouldn’t have to live through this situation,” she said.

05.11.12 21
Anastasio Hernandez-Rojas Death: Border Patrol Tasing Incident Complicated By New Footage (VIDEO)

The death of Anastasio Hernandez-Rojas, which garnered national media attention in 2010, has re-entered the limelight after PBS unearthed new footage of the incident between the Mexican citizen and border patrol agents.

05.10.12 0
Zoom
05.10.12 3594
We Are Not Slaves! Protect Our Rights!

SIGN PETITION: Tell Governor Brown, “Domestic Workers are Not Slaves! Support, Sign the California Domestic Workers Bill of Rights!”

California’s approximately 200,000 domestic workers do the work that makes other work possible and ensure a thriving economy.

Rights are past due! [WATCH AND SIGN!]

Sign petition! Tell Governor Brown, “Domestic Workers are Not Slaves! Support, Sign the California Domestic Workers Bill of Rights!”

Throughout California, domestic workers and allies will be celebrating Mother’s Day by honoring moms and recognizing the role of domestic workers in the American household.

California’s approximately 200,000 domestic workers do the work that makes other work possible and ensure a thriving economy. They perform the fundamental duties of the home, including childcare, house cleaning and cooking, as well as caring for people with disabilities, the sick and the elderly. The vast majority of California’s domestic workers are women, minorities, and immigrants.

Sign Petition: http://mycuentame.org/wearenotslaves
Learn More: http://cadomesticworkers.org

05.10.12 0
Zoom
05.10.12 6579

sinidentidades:

tsotchke:

thinkmexican:

Charter School Teaching Nahuatl & Danza Faces New Criticism

The LA Times ran a story Sunday on Academia Semillas del Pueblo, a Los Angeles charter school teaching Nahuatl and Danza Azteca as part of its curriculum titled “LAUSD charter elementary with low test scores gets a reprieve.” The article mainly focused on how the school has narrowly avoided closure while setting the goal of making language and culture accessible to its students. However, towards the end, the Times quotes Judicial Watch, an organization that calls itself a “public interest group that investigates and prosecutes government corruption.”

Here’s the quote: “The school ‘is not much more than a training ground for the Mexican reconquista movement, which seeks to conquer the American Southwest — by force or by ballot box — and return it to Mexico,’ concluded Judicial Watch…”

Why give such a misinformed group legitimacy, LA Times? Not only is there no such thing as a “Mexican reconquista movement,” but as pointed out in the article, such rhetoric has led to actual death threats.

Image: Juana de la Cruz Farias, a teacher at Academia Semillas del Pueblo, teaches Nahuatl, an indigenous language of Mexico, to Anthony Rayo.

Photo Credit: Gary Friedman, Los Angeles Times

Yes how dare we attempt to reclaim the language and culture stolen from us
Not bowing down to white imperialism is dangerous resistance 

“The most effective way to destroy people is to deny and obliterate their own understanding of their history.” - George Orwell 

05.10.12 417