Author: mopress

  • Inside Raymondville

    KGBT 4-TV gets a camera inside the Raymondville detention center.

    “Action 4 News had the opportunity to tour a federal detention center in Raymondville. Basically undocumented immigrants are taken here for breaking the immigration laws either they were caught by the border patrol as they entered the country illegally or were caught in the country without legal documentation. . . .”

  • Don't Mess with Anzaldua: Tell Schwarzenegger to Stand up for Art

    It was bad enough that Gov. Schwarzenegger resurrected the headline status of Arizona Minutemen who had gone fairly quietly into the night. His decision to single them out for praise has set off an ugly trend in commentary. But when Schwarzenegger then scorned a Clear Channel billboard that celebrated Mexican heritage in California, he inflated his error beyond any reasonable pressure gauge. Suddenly pro-Mexican has become anti-American.

    Into this stirred up climate of anti-Mexican sentiment we have a group in California called Save Our State that has declared a “Battle for Los Angeles” to censor the writings of Texas philosopher Gloria Anzaldua and remove her words from a public monument at Baldwin Park. But we wonder if they have any idea that Anzaldua was the great philosopher of borderland consciousness who warned us that we need not choose between beautiful dreams? We wonder if they know where the name Los Angeles came from?

    The 1993 monument entitled Danza Indigenas by artist Judy Baca includes this inscription:

    “This land was Mexican once,
    was Indian always
    and is,
    And will be again.”

    The monument looks like an archway left over from a neglected or bombed out mission. It is part of the design for a mass transit rail station that in the words of the L.A. County MTA “traces the historical importance of the California Mission period to contemporary Baldwin Park.”

    The inscription is placed in quotes and attributed to Anzaldua. But thanks to the hysteria that Schwarzenegger has stirred up, this 12-year-old monument has now become lightning rod for the anti-Mexican movement in California. Because these symbolic wars have been overtly fueled by Schwarzenegger, it is time for him to draw a line against artistic suppression in California. Bad enough that he got his Republican buddies at Clear Channel to back down on the Mexico theme. He should not make things worse by watching abstractly the protest at Baldwin Park.

    Of course, we would ask this so-called artist to stand up for artistic freedom even if the offended philosopher were not Tejana. But we are especially proud to speak up in this case. During this cultural crisis we recommend more exposure to the words of Anzaldua, not less. She taught us — based on her Texas experience — that we could flourish in the so-called culture wars so long as we have the courage to carve ourselves into borderland individuals, choosing freely between neither or both. Her verse above gives voice to a dream of beauty and reconciliation, the return of land to los Indios. Dress it up as a fine Hollywood ending, and you could jerk a tear from a fossil.

    So what kind of conflict do the art vigilantes at Save Our State intend to provoke when they claim that the expression of that dream, when placed even into quote marks and verse, cannot be displayed? And what nonsense do they think they have the right to reclaim in their battle for a city long ago named Los Angeles? Had they been first to arrive would they have been able to see those angels in the first place?

    “IT WAS BETTER BEFORE THEY CAME” claims the monument. If the citizens of Los Angeles have had twelve years to think about that riddle, why would they choose to prove it all over again out loud? How do they recognize themselves so clearly as the ones who always make things worse? They want to tear down a bombed out mission? When will they learn that ya basta is enough?

  • The Inadvisable Beauty of Aztlan: Ramsey Muniz on the Minutemen

    Introduction: "Inadvisable" is the word that
    answers me when I think about posting the latest prison writings of
    Ramsey Muniz. Isn’t there a populist vigilante movement rising against
    Mexican immigration to the USA, sparked by the Minuteman Project and
    fanned by a Governor of California and a would-be governor from Texas?
    Are the Yankee border-watchers not out to personally hold the color
    line in a kind of Alamo witness against ethnic invasion? And doesn’t
    Ramsey simply taunt that movement with its Alamo futility, provoking
    from the Minutemen a predictable crescendo of strident justifications
    to remember the Alamo? And then doesn’t all hell break loose?

    And what does Ramsey’s nationalism have to do with Civil Rights in
    Texas? Is the Aztlan homeland not simply the mirror image of Homeland
    Security? How can you malign the nationalism of the Minutemen while
    aiding and abetting the nationalism of Aztlan? And why in the world
    would you knowingly contribute to a polarization that is likely to
    shake down some fence sitters onto the wrong side?

    Let’s look at the problem in its utter generality. Five hundred
    years ago an invasion of immigration began upon Turtle Island.
    Beginning in 1492 the peoples of the North American continent were
    purged and replaced. Today the First Nations of the continent still
    live, but under stress. The Aztlan nationalism of Ramsey Muniz
    celebrates the rebirth of a people, an historical and cultural
    resurrection of los Indios upon land they belong to.

    From a Minuteman point of view, however, the scenario of Aztlan
    resurrected is a violence in the making, a submergence of culture and
    people. And if there are fence sitters between camps, don’t these
    competing nationalist visions of Mexican immigration shake people down
    into predictable blocs–just in time for the 2006 elections?

    Yet, in the general vision of Aztlan, how can one not see the
    beauty? Don’t we tend to favor the underdog hero, the return of the
    vanquished, the emergence of life upon death, and redemption? In order
    to resist the beauty of Aztlan, one must assume a vested interest
    against the vision. And this is what the Minutemen have done.

    But the explicit, armed, and bodily intervention of the Minutemen
    against the Mexican people’s return to Aztlan draws upon implicit
    anxieties of English speaking peoples who find themselves increasingly
    immersed in a Spanish speaking world. Where Mexican people are rising,
    the English speaking world finds it all too difficult to say, well good
    for them. It’s good to see people rising.

    So the challenge to the fence sitter is this: will your vested
    interests prevent you from seeing the beauty of Aztlan? Then go ahead
    and fall where you must. But you don’t have to live without beauty. In
    the beauty of others, you just might find something new in the beauty
    of yourself.

    Are the words of Ramsey Muniz inadvisable? We have to be careful
    what we’re saying whenever we warn beauty to put a cover over her head:

    * * *

    Ya Basta with the American Minutemen
    at the Borders

    On or about 1920, in the Leavenworth Penitentiary, near
    the end of his life, Ricardo Flores Magon, one of the
    intellectual architects of the Mexican Revolution of 1910,
    wrote a friend, stating that his comrades from the glory days
    "are now generals, governors, secretaries of state, and
    some have been presidents of Mexico."

    "They are rich, famous, and powerful," Flores Magon
    complained. "While I am poor, unknown, sick, almost
    blind. With a number for a name, marked as a felon,
    rotting in this human herd whose crime has been to be
    so ignorant and so stupid as to have stolen a piece of
    bread when it is a virtue to steal millions. But my
    old comrades are practical men, while I’m only a dreamer,
    and that is my fault. They have been the ant and I the
    fly; while they have counted dollars, I have wasted
    time counting the stars. I wanted to make a man of
    each human animal. They, more practical, have made an
    animal of each man, and they have made themselves the
    shepherds of the flock. Nevertheless, I prefer to be
    a dreamer than a practical man."

    Ricardo Flores Magon
    Died in the U.S.P. Leavenworth, 1922

    As I have shared with nuestra gente in the past,
    the borders between our Holy Land of Mexico and the
    Southwest part of the United States will continue to be
    a most decisive and profound issue of the 21st century.

    For the record and for the purpose of sharing
    with Hispanics, Latinos, Chicanos and Mexicanos, we
    of the Sixth Sun and El Partido Raza Unida maintain a
    strong opposition to the formation of the minutemen
    vigilantes who have gathered at the borders. We oppose
    citizens hunting down our people, our families, and
    our friends like animals. We must not permit this
    type of action to exist against humanity. We will
    personally submit a letter to President Fox , so that
    he convey our sentiments to the president of this
    country, sharing that those types of actions by
    citizens are illegal, unlawful, and extremely
    prejudice. We will recommend that the United States
    government, by law, grant amnesty to all our people
    who at one time or another crossed the borders. At
    this point, we are not addressing legal actions that
    the United States can take, simply because we are
    more concerned about the value of lives at our borders.

    In reality it doesn’t matter how many agents,
    vigilantes (minutemen) they will station at the borders,
    because nuestra gente will continue to come across
    into Aztlan.

    We ARE here. The United States finally took count
    and found out that within the last ten (10) years our
    people have crossed the borders into American not
    only fulfilling the American dream, but more importantly
    fulfilling the destiny of our becoming the entire
    majority in the Southwest (Aztlan). There is nothing
    on this earth that can stop a movement of people whose
    history revealed that they would once more govern not
    only their lives, but their land.

    We must have the heart, courage, and concern for
    the well-being of our people. We must never forget that
    in some fashion or another we are related. "We are all
    Mexicanos — different names, different placed, different
    native languages, but at the end we are Mexicanos. The
    states within the borders know that it is a matter of
    time before we become the majority. Those who doubt
    this may study the U.S. census of people at the borders.
    It was written in our ancient history, and the battle
    cry for many centuries has been about life and death
    for justice, liberation, and land. As a people and
    race, we have returned to those times once again.
    The land (Aztlan) itself cries for us. Before the
    conquest by the invaders of 1521, our civilization was
    one of the greatest in the history of the world.

    This country has no business in the Middle East.
    The issue represents the same method that was used in
    taking possession of our land. Many refuse to address
    the issue pertaining to Aztlan. They prefer to pat
    "good deeds" on the back with words of praise for
    taking one’s God-given land. This issue will never
    end until atrocities committed are acknowledged. All
    countries, including France and Spain, were defeated
    in the Southwest of America — our Aztlan.

    It is our responsibility to undo the mental brain
    conditioning imposed, making us believe that we who
    reside in the United States of America are different
    from Mexicanos who reside in Mexico. We are one.
    "Nosotros somos uno." The same Mexicanos/Mexicanas that
    at times we see at the borders — barefooted, hungry,
    and chained — are our sisters and brothers. These
    Mexicanos are related to all of us. We are one, and
    there is no river, no border, no agents or minutemen
    that can ever stop the process of evolution. For
    hundreds of years the invaders led us to believe that
    we are different. Their history, how

    ever, is wrong
    and nature calls for the wrong to be corrected.

    We request that Hispanic and Latino organizations
    take a strong political position against citizen groups
    at the borders. We ask that Hispanic/Latino Democratic
    and Republicans take a strong political position against
    the actions of citizens and groups in America taken
    against us as a people.

    Even though I find myself confined in these
    penitentiaries of America, my soul is free with calm
    rest because I know our history, and I know that our
    time has come.

    Let the world know. Let all Hispanic, Latino,
    and Chicano groups know that our time has come. Do
    we dare to scale the heights of heaven and our land
    in Aztlan? Yes, I dare – y que!!!

    In exile,
    Tezcatlipoca (R. Muniz)
    http://www.freeramsey.com

    Note: received via email from Irma L. Muniz, May 10, 2005.–gm

  • Ayman Suleiman Discounts Suicide Theory of Riad Hamad's Death

    The star reporter on the death of Riad Hamad is Ann Fowler. Her reports at the Oak Hill Gazette appear on Fridays. In this week’s report she talks to Ayman Suleiman.–gm

    “Ayman Suleiman is one of the Palestinian youths helped by Hamad. He told the Gazette, ‘I first met Riad when I was in Hutto.’ Suleiman and his family were picked up by authorities and spent months in detention, awaiting deportation. ‘I was 16 at the time and I was about a month away from graduating early from high school, and going either Baylor med or SMU the next semester. That was what most bothered Riad and he had promised me that he will not only help get admittance to a medical university but will pay for my studies all the way through. I was brought to tears when I heard these words from him, for I was sure all the hard work and dreams of going to medical school had been shattered.’

    “Remembered Suleiman, ‘[Hamad] got me a laptop to help me with finishing high school (which was from his organization) and he would call a lot here to check out how the family was doing and if there was anything we needed. Words could never describe Riad and his actions–he was a true hero.’

    “Suleiman is one of those who will never accept the ruling of suicide. He said, ‘If there’s anything I do know it’s that Riad would never commit suicide. Why not? Because Riad was a very religious person. In Islam, suicide is something huge. Anyone who commits suicide in the Qur’an goes straight to hell. Why would a very religious man, who helps many children and people all over the world–with a very loving family and people all over the world that admire him–commit suicide?’ ”

    Read the full story: “Memorial for Riad Hamad
    Riad Hamad
    .” By Ann Fowler. Oak Hill Gazette (09.MAY.08).