Story Archives 2013

Justice For The Rapada Family

09/24/2021 - 08:54 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
PNNscholar1
Original Body

(Editor's note: The graphic photo showing the aftermath of the violence perpetrated on the Rapada family is courtesy SFCHRP.COM.  Although the pictures show the scars and bruises of the beating the Rapada's received on new years 2011, the photos were taken after the family had received medical attention.  Their appearance prior to the photos were even more graphic)

Ephraim Rapada does not say much. He is a quiet, working man whose eyes speak what is written in his heart. His skin is shaded by the dark landscape of years working the fields of Delano with other Filipino workers, a part of the legacy of workers who fought for justice and survived police attacks in their struggle for workers rights. In Ephraim Rapada's skin is the story of the struggle of Filipinos in America, a story that includes police terror and assault and brutality—meted out by that occupying force that we are told to trust, that is supposed to serve and protect. That occupying force—the police—that ominous presence that stretches from the fields of Delano to the Rapada's home of San Bruno where the American nightmare of police terror was brutally and painfully beaten into the skin of Ephraim Rapada and his family on the July 4, 2011.

 

It was the 4th of July, a holiday. The family, which included Ephraim, his daughter Crystal, son Ervin and nephew Wendell, were enjoying the holiday together. What ensued, according to the family was an all-out ambush. People were congregated, out and about in their San Bruno neighborhood. An M-1000 firework was allegedly thrown, the sound catching the attention of a nearby fireworks abatement patrol car. Another was thrown and the car drove into it. Upon stopping, the unexploded M-1000 lay underneath the car where it lie silent. The officers from the abatement team are made up of officers from San Bruno, Daly City, Redwood City and San Mateo--summoned specifically for the 4th of July. The Rapada's didn't realize they were officers at first, as they were outfitted in BDU—battle dress uniform. The family didn't know they were officers because of “their actions”

 

A crowd teeming with people was nearby, which included Wendell Rapada. He was walking towards his home just a short distance from the scene. The officers accosted him and proceeded to choke him. Wendell was unarmed and turning blue. Ephraim Rapada witnessed what was happening, asking the officers why they were harming Wendell. The officers viciously turned on the elder Rapada. His daughter Crystal, who had been in the house, came out. Seeing what was happening to her father, she was frantic and tried to get between her father and the officer. She was taken to the ground, held down by an officer's foot on her neck. Ervin Rapada witnesses the scene and pleads for the officers to stop. He is attacked by 3 officers, one of whom tazed him 4 times. Crystal Rapada is frantic, calling out for her father who is injured. She is mocked by the officers on the way to the hospital.

 

The limited media coverage of this case is disturbing. The stories that have come out have characterized the family as violent and out of control. Cephus “Uncle Bobby” Johnson, the uncle of Oscar Grant, who was murdered by BART police on New Years day 2009, says that the coverage by the mass media in these cases is biased. “Mass media is not our friend. It will repeat what the cops are doing and not the defense. “The system constantly demoralizes us and takes away our humanity” says Johnson, recalling his experiences in the case of nephew Oscar Grant. Johnson says that community support in these cases is vital in a system that is pro law enforcement. “The defense can show if an officer has a bad history but the jury will not be privy to it. It is important that the community support the Rapada family at this time”.

 

Poor Magazine has stood by the families of Oscar Grant, Shaleem Tindle, Kenneth Harding, Idriss Stelley and others who have suffered the American Injustice system of brutality and death. La Mesha Irizarry of the Idress Stelley Foundation, named after her son who was murdered by San Francisco police, says that poor people and people of color are portrayed as less than human. “Whenever poor people or people of color are being brutalized, they are accused of resisting arrest of inciting a riot. They always believe these folks are monsters. These people deserve to be treated like human beings, not animals.”. NAFCON, the National Alliance for Filipino Concerns has supported the family as well as the Manilatown Heritage Foundation, both organizations calling for all charges in the case to be dropped.

 

The elder Rapada has been charged with battery on an officer. It is alleged that he tried to disarm an officer, attempting to throw him off a balcony. The family maintains that Ephraim Rapada could not have done such a thing, weighing a mere 120 pounds and possessing physical limitations as a result of an accident in 1991 in which he was run over by a motorcycle.

 

Witnesses have moved or been intimidated from speaking out. A witness was even seen having dinner with one of the officers involved in the assault on the families. The Rapada family has suffered much trauma, incarceration, emotional and physical stress and the exhaustion of much financial resources. Ephraim Rapada cannot work due to the injuries he suffered, as well as his son Ervin. Crystal's future livelihood as a bank employee rests on the outcome of the trial currently underway involving her family. Wendell Rapada missed the birth of his child due to his incarceration.

 

The Rapada family needs your support. The media has portrayed the family as criminals but the family is anything but. They are hard working and not guilty of the charges against them. Please support the Rapadas.

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Black Deaf/hard of Hearing Poet, Joy Elan, Shares What Writing, Music & Poetry Means To Her

09/24/2021 - 08:54 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Leroy
Original Body

 


 

I grew up loving to read and write. I have always loved to write stories growing up. Music was my other favorite thing. My mom bought me my first record player when I was four years old and I would play her records. Then she bought me my first Walkman when I was six. With the combination of reading, writing and music, I learned how to write poetry. As I took English classes in middle school and high school, I learned how to perfect my poetry. It was not until I was in college and I would write poems in a forum with other Teena Marie fans. I never saw myself as a Black hard of hearing woman. I saw myself as Joy Elan, a force that was unstoppable. Being Black, Deaf/hard of hearing and a woman were my blessings in disguise and my "triple tax." My "triple tax" or should I say "quadruple tax," if I include being educated, was my motivation to speak up and show the world who I am. My family taught me never to be afraid of whom I am and my teachers taught me that my pen and paper were my weapons. They gave me the tools to break any barriers that I encountered. I am a writer first and poet second. Poetry just happens to be a way for me to express who I am and share my stories. I have written about the struggle of being a Black woman in America, using what I learned in African American Studies. Also, I wrote about being a prisoner of having too much education and working at a job where they thought I was some dumb disabled employee and I fired back at them when they thought they could intimidate me. I am a single mother and it is important for me to bring my dreams to life so I can show my daughter that she can do anything she puts her mind to. If I am using the talent that God gave me to show the world that there can be an educated Black Deaf/hard of hearing woman who is willing to fight for what she believes in, then I know that I am fulfilling my purpose and what God has planned for me.

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Even after all this, I still refuse to hate you

09/24/2021 - 08:54 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Bad News Bruce
Original Body

I am writing this story because I still have hope through tears. After you read it you may wonder why and how I come about this hope. I am reaching out my hand, one of the only things I have left to offer you, to ask you to come close and join me. We people living in poverty, we houseless people, we people who have struggled with addiction, been locked up in cages, and rested our heads on the streets to sleep at night must come together and love each other. We are being pitted against each other in hatred, for other peoples’ profit. We must stop this. We must refuse to turn our backs on each other.

 

I have been living in a domestic war on poor bodies for decades. I did not ask for this war, I got dumped into it.  I am the harmed, thrown away, trampled upon relic of a war against people, but I am still here.  My name is “Trouble,” and it suits me, as people around me have never seen someone get in so much trouble for things they haven’t done. I am an elder living in a wheelchair in your city. I have been houseless for twenty years, spread out over decades, in San Francisco. Add another eight years if you count prison, programs, and my years living in a dingy SRO.  Now I am living in my first housing in a very long time, and I am the daily survivor of slander and betrayal at the hands of other poor folks like me.

 

I am living all alone, isolated, in this scary world. My friends turned on me. I have been the victim of hateful slander, isolation and blaming for 6.5 years. Every day I wake up and sit alone in my home. This isn’t funny. People I loved, my friends, and other poor people are being offered major monetary rewards to weave stories about me running dogs over in my wheelchair, about me killing babies, about me harming puppies and kitties. They are telling the stories to the police, to the children in my housing complex, and to each other. All the while I look out the window and see that I am being watched, being talked about, and see the fear that has taken over the people around me. I am alone and terrified in a wheelchair with near nothing. And for what? So that there will be someone to blame.

 

This strategy of dividing and conquering poor folks is being used much more than the corporate media will ever show us. I am a former addict and have been in and out of prison, and so my poor body is the perfect target for the perpetuation of hatred and distrust in my community. People with money, police families, and business families are using me, and people like me, to separate us from each other. They are telling you stories about how I am scary and violent to keep you away from me. They are paying you to tell stories about me and even to come to believe them, to blame bank robberies on me so that they can gain the cash rewards associated with locating the “criminal.” And in doing so we are being used to perpetrate and perpetuate hatred and violence against each other. Ever since 2006 I have been a walking target, or a rolling target, for the creation of hatred and mistrust because I fit the agenda. I am an easy person to blame. I am the obvious protagonist of street rumors and it is not hard to put my name in the blank spaces of fraudulent police reports. But on my back is being created a river of hatred with increasing velocity, and it will catch you if it serves the people in power.

 

I have reached out for help, but people that were once my comrades in poverty are working against me as agents being paid by the wealthy for their profit. I wheeled myself to a legal aid clinic in the Bayview but there was no ramp to get in. I waited outside for the lawyers to come out and help me, but in the meanwhile other poor people who are buying into the plan to make me a scapegoat went into the clinic and slandered me to the lawyer. I was left alone and afraid outside the building. I did not give up. I went to the public defenders office, to the hospital, to the clinic, but the people I want to rely on went in and bred fear about me. Meanwhile, I went to the police office, but they won’t listen to a poor person in a wheelchair. They sent me to a social worker, and then threw a loophole at me that means I will never be heard out or cared for.

 

Brothers and sisters wake up and join arms. My hand is still here, outstretched to you, even after six years of terror, hardship, separation, and isolation from you in my time of need. The police do not protect us, and the hatred and stories being spread about us by people who are profiting off of our poor bodies put us all at risk. Today the stories are about me but another day they might be about you, or your mother. I have children, do you? I have a heart, and I need connection, do you? Do not give in. I know it is hard. I am still here, a poor disabled elder in your city. Come close despite the stories. Let’s reach out to each other through fear. I need you, and even though you may not yet know it, you need me too. Let's refuse to participate in the destruction of our own communities for the sake of someone else’s profit.

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Urban Wake-Up Call

09/24/2021 - 08:54 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Bad News Bruce
Original Body

 

Urban Wake-up Call

By Jenny Weston and Menelik/PoorNewsNetwork

 

“Urban Renewal” is massive displacement and not relocation for residents who are in the extremely low and very low income categories of this community,” Menelik starts out, to the many people joined together in a circle for Poor Magazine’s monthly Newsroom event.

“Urban Renewal” is another name for gentrification- Developers trying to maximize their profit, while leaving countless low-income San Francisco residents homeless due to unaffordability.  Commercial businesses gain hundreds of millions of dollars in profit from retail space.  Meanwhile, these spaces that should be providing affordable housing for low-income San Francisco residents.

Menelik, a lifelong resident to the rapidly gentrifying community of Bayview Hunters Point in San Francisco, works fiercely to hold the city and developers accountable for irresponsible actions that result in lack of affordable housing.  Menelik and other community members created a “Watch Dog Group” to hold developers, low-income unit property managers and the city and county of San Francisco accountable for their actions. 

Through extensive research of San Francisco legislations, Menelik and many others know that there is money available for low-income housing in San Francisco.

For example,

Senate Bill 2113- a special legislation enacted in 2001, authored by then senator John Burton “authorizes San Francisco to receive tax increments and incurring indebtedness to replace the destroyed affordable housing in San Francisco.”

This legislation has been passed to guarantee that the affordable housing units that have been torn down for “redevelopment” must be replaced.

 The California Department of Housing and Community Development certified in 2003 that the agency destroyed 6,709 affordable housing units prior to 1977 in San Francisco, but as of today, only 900 units has been replaced over the past 10 years.  This leaves approximately 5,800 affordable housing units to be replaced. 

 

 Menelik has countless reports on how people with wealth in this city has broken and continue to break laws. Yet, poor people of color are the ones criminalized for being poor, arrested for sitting outside for “violating” racist laws such as the sit/lie law.

 “This is happening all over the city in SF-Mission Bay, Bay View Hunters Point, all over CA, all over the nation. Everything is being privatized” Menelik explains.

 Privatization is not a new concept.  In fact, it has been used as a systematic way to oppress low-income people of color, particularly the black community.

Dr. Frances Cress Welsing, a world-renowned black psychiatrist states:

“This is a wake-up call for black people in this community and in the nation.

For 500 years in this part of the world, black people have experienced one form or another of racism- white supremacy.  This is not anything new.  This has been our consistent history.”

 The Watch Dog committee has been formed to challenge the displacement of low income and people of color from their communities.  As readers, what can we do? As people who are pushed out of our own homes or have friends and family who are displaced or even as people who may be benefiting from gentrification right now. 

 Menelik answered, “We need support for these issues.  It needs to be in the public eye because most ordinary people are not aware of the laws.  If not, the city is in the pocket of the developers.”

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Why Russell ‘Maroon’ Shoatz Must Be Released From Solitary Confinement --An interview with Theresa Shoatz and Matt Meyer

09/24/2021 - 08:54 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Phillip Standing Bear
Original Body
This month, a 30-day action campaign was launched demanding the release of Russell ‘Maroon’ Shoatz from solitary confinement, where he has been held for over 23 consecutive years, and 28 of the last 30 years, in Pennsylvania prisons. On April 8, when the campaign began, Maroon’s legal team sent a letter to the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections (PA DOC), demanding his release from solitary confinement and promising litigation against the PA DOC if he is not transferred to general population by May 8.
 
The action campaign describes Maroon as “a former leader of the Black Panthers and the Black freedom movement, born in Philadelphia in 1943 and originally imprisoned in January 1972 for actions relating to his political involvement. With an extraordinary thirty-plus years spent in solitary confinement…Maroon’s case is one of the most shocking examples of U.S. torture of political prisoners, and one of the most egregious examples of human rights violations regarding prison conditions anywhere in the world. His ‘Maroon’ nickname is, in part, due to his continued resistance—which twice led him to escape confinement; it is also based on his continued clear analysis, including recent writings on ecology and matriarchy.”
 
Writing that Maroon “has not had a serious rule violation for more than two decades,” the campaign argues that he has actually been “targeted because of his work as an educator and because of his political ideas; his time in solitary began just after he was elected president of an officially-sanctioned prison-based support group. This targeting is in violation of his basic human and constitutional rights.”
 
On March 28, just before the campaign was launched, Maroon was transferred from SCI-Greene to SCI-Mahanoy  An update released by the campaign on April 15 reported that Maroon had been told by officials at SCI-Mahanoy that he had been transferred there with intent to move him into general population. Responding to the news, campaign co-coordinator Matt Meyer (also interviewed below) said: “We are encouraged by the words of the officials at Mahanoy, but we cannot rest until those words are followed by deeds: by the ultimate action which will end the current torture of Maroon.” Bret Grote, from the Pittsburgh Human Rights Coalition, who is himself a longtime legal and political supporter of Shoatz, added that, “while we are pleased that some of the concerns raised by the demand letter have been met,” including Maroon’s “access to his anti-embolism stockings and to a typewriter, we remain concerned that the timeline for release from solitary has been left vague.”
 
The April 15 update also reports that “the assistants at the office of PA DOC Secretary John Wetzel have confirmed that the Secretary personally ordered Maroon’s recent transfer from SCI Greene to SCI Mahanoy for the purpose of placing him in the general prison population. In conversations with some of the many people who have called in to the DOC central office on the first week of the 30-day pressure campaign, DOC personnel have suggested that Maroon supporters be patient as the process to get him into general population work its course. But Maroon and his family have been misled in the past about these issues.” While the campaign began by asking supporters to contact both Secretary Wetzel and SCI Mahanoy Supt. John Kerestes, it is now asking supporters to just focus on Secretary Wetzel, since he is the “ultimate decision-maker.”
 
This month also marked the release of the new book, entitled Maroon the Implacable: The Collected Writings of Russell Maroon Shoatz (PM Press), co-edited by Fred Ho and Quincy Saul, with a foreword by Chuck D. The collected essays examine a wide range of topics that are perhaps most striking for their honest self-criticism and for his commitment to confronting male supremacy and misogyny in all its forms. For example, in one essay entitled, “The Question of Violence,” after Maroon criticizes “the worldwide misogynist ‘gangsta’ genre of the hip hop culture” for being “a male, macho parody of exhibitionist violence,” Maroon writes:
 
“More troubling is the fact that this male exhibitionist violence has also permeated the minds, practices, and circles of otherwise brilliant and well-meaning revolutionary thinkers. Such theorists as the renowned Frantz Fanon, icons like Malcolm X and Kwane Ture (formerly Stokely Carmichael) and others have unconsciously conflated the necessary utilization of defensive revolutionary violence, in seeking meaningful revolutionary socioeconomic and cultural change, with what they believed was a need for males to use ‘revolutionary violence’ to also ‘liberate their minds and spirits’ from the subservience imposed on them by the vestiges of slavery and the colonialism /neocolonialism of their times. These individuals failed to recognize that their ‘revolutionary’ worldview would still leave in place the entire male-supremacist /patriarchal framework, an edifice that we can term the ‘father of oppression.’ The destruction of this edifice will signal the true liberation they sought. Otherwise, the ‘revolutionary violence’ they formulated must also be recognized for what it is: exhibitionist, ego-based male violence.”
 
Featured below is our interview with Theresa Shoatz and Matt Meyer. Theresa Shoatz is the daughter of Russell ‘Maroon’ Shoatz. Theresa has worked for decades as a public advocate for her father and through the Human Rights Coalition, she fights for all prisoners in Pennsylvania and beyond. This month, Theresa has been traveling around the US as part of a book tour promoting Maroon the Implacable, and this week she is in the SF Bay Area.
 
Matt Meyer, a native New York City-based educator, activist, and author, is the War Resisters International Africa Support Network Coordinator, and a United Nations/ECOSOC representative of the International Peace Research Association. Now the co-coordinator of the Campaign to Free Russell Maroon Shoatz, Meyer also has a long history in solidarity with the people of Puerto Rico. In 2009, Meyer edited Let Freedom Ring: A Collection of Documents from the Movements to Free U.S. Political Prisoners (PM Press), and in 2012, co-edited another book entitled,We Have Not Been Moved: Resisting Racism and Militarism in 21st Century America (PM Press).
 

Please keep an eye out for part two our report on the 30-day action campaign, which will further examine the legality of Maroon’s placement in solitary confinement and take a closer look at his recently published book, Maroon the Implacable. In the meantime, you can stay updated on the campaign for his release from solitary here. Below is a video interview with Theresa Shoatz, released by Solitary Watch in 2011.

Angola 3 News:         Political prisoners are often seen as symbolic of what is wrong with the US government, but we don’t usually hear about the actual person and how their imprisonment has affected their families. As fellow Pennsylvania political prisoner Mumia Abu-Jamal has commented, “I am a man, not a symbol.” To begin our interview, can you please describe your father, Maroon, for us, so we can better understand who he is as a person?
 
Theresa Shoatz:         Honestly, I can only define part of the man that Maroon is because I only know the man from which I engage with from behind the bullet proof glass. He is the man who pleads with me to save his life when he is not getting proper medical attention, and to fight for him when his living conditions are unbearable and his grievances aren't addressed.
 
However, there's so much more to Maroon. He loves his people. It’s what's keeps him going. His wisdom protects our family. Even while in solitary confinement today, he is still putting others first by denying any support for his freedom until his comrades are freed throughout the United States.
 
Maroon is extremely concerned with issues affecting single mothers and their children. He is drafting ways to not only put food on the table, but also to grow and prepare meals for the community. He's the man. Even when he's in no position to help, he connects to the outside with his attempts to heal the Black communities.
 
A3N:   How old were you when he was first forced underground?
 
TS:      I was about nine years of age when my dad was forced underground.
 
A3N:   What do you remember about Maroon from your early childhood?
 
TS:      My sister and I lived with him until I was five years old. I remember that back when my sister and I were only three and four years old, there was a black board hanging in the living room. Every morning, Daddy used that black board to teach us political education alongside physical education classes. Man, I love and miss those classes.
 
Daddy was cultivating young minds. With anything he did, I was right behind him. He was preparing us to be future leaders, but this preparation was halted when at the age five we were separated, and I stopped living with him.
 
A3N:   What has your relationship with Maroon has been like as you’ve grown older?
 
Ever since the age of nine, I have honored and admired my Dad. Today, he is still my hero. Maroon is a leader, educator, and father to many young black males behind bars. At his core, he is about peace and love for his people.
 
As Maroon approaches 70 years of age, he's a grandfather of ten. Since I can remember, he has tried to educate his biological children from behind bars. I can remember a prison contact visit from some thirty years ago, when I sat on my dad's lap, comparing our physical similarities, and him using the opportunity to update me on present-day issues.
 
After those few years of contact visits, I grew into womanhood and was forced to visit him from behind a thick bullet-proof glass. During one of our visits, I pointed this out, and through the thick glass while chained at the wrist and ankles, he said: "I had to step away from my family to protect my family and my community. I stepped away to secure a better future for you and the youth coming behind me. I couldn't allow you to be brutalized like those who came before and will come after you. I stepped away from my family for the love of my people.”
 
A3N:   How did that visit influence you?
 
TS:      Wow! That was so powerful. It hit me like a ton of bricks. Ever since that visit with Maroon, I’ve been motivated by the love of my people to do everything in my power to help us move forward, including my work with the Human Rights Coalition (HRC) in Philadelphia, and the HRC FedUp! chapter in Pittsburgh, which Maroon started from behind bars.
 
I am also the Director of a free after-school program for youth with a loved one in prison.  Last year, I became a foster parent and I have since fostered eight kids in my home, caring for two seventeen-year-old teenagers, a thirteen-year-old, a three-month-old, a two-year-old, a six-year-old, a four-day-old, and a pregnant teen. This is all for the love of my people.
 
Some think I’m crazy, but they're crazier than I am when they pretend not to see how so many youth in our community are lost and headed towards the prison system. If they pretend not to see what the system is doing to our youth, shame on them. I love my people. I'm just like my daddy Maroon--it’s in my blood.
 
A3N:   A key feature of your father’s being held in solitary confinement at, until recently, SCI Greene, a supermax prison, is to not allow contact visits with family and friends. If Maroon is transferred to general population, he will then be able to have contact visits once again. How long has it been since you had a contact visit with him?
 
TS:      It’s been almost thirty years since I've been able to touch my father.
 
A3N:   How has this aspect of his imprisonment affected you personally?
 
TS:      It is extremely painful and mentally challenging. I am still that little girl who craves hugs, and reassurance from her daddy.
 
A3N:   How has the policy of no contacted visits affected the rest of your family?
 
TS:      The no-contact visits cause stress, leading to emotional and physical breakdowns.  The fear this creates often paralyzes family members, and is so debilitating that it prevents some from visiting him.
 
A3N:   What is a no-contact visit with him like?
 
To reach the solitary no-contact visiting room, there’s a tunnel spanning two city blocks, and a barbed-wired fence surrounds this ‘prison inside of a prison.’ The visiting room is cold and 99 percent of the time there are no other family members visiting prisoners.
 
It is mind blowing to think of this 69-year-old man with both ankles shackled, both wrists shackled, all attached by a chained waist belt. This contraption forces him to walk hunched over, and appear older than his real age.
 
A3N:   To underscore the importance of the new campaign to have Maroon transferred to general population, how significant will it be, if he’s transferred, to have contact visits with him after all these years?
 
TS:      After so many years of no-contact visits, I could really use some contact with my daddy. It’s well overdue. Contact visits would be nourishing. My soul is constantly in an uproar and the pain runs deep, yet I continue straight ahead, keeping my eye on freedom.
 
Outside of my daddy, there’s no man on this earth who could turn this pain around. The remedy is an end to all control units, the present day prison system, and freedom for Maroon and all my extended family: the political prisoners who stood on the front lines for our freedom.
 
A3N:   Thank you, Theresa, for sharing such a personal story with us.
 
The second part of this article now begins by interviewing longtime activist Matt Meyer. Matt, the afterword for Maroon the Implacablethat you co-wrote with Nozizwe Madlala-Routledge asserts: “We believe that all people who believe in peace and nonviolence must work for justice, especially in these most grievous cases of injustice and especially at times when oppressive forces would have us distanced from colleagues and comrades such as Maroon, who are cast as ‘violent criminals’ unworthy of our support...Russell Maroon Shoatz must be freed now. His release must become a priority for all human rights activists, peace activists, pro-democracy advocates, environmentalists, anti-imperialists, students, churchgoers, and even progressive Parlimentarians.”
 
Building on the quote above, why is it that you are going beyond the immediate call for Maroon’s transfer to general population, and also calling for his release from prison?
 
Matt Meyer:   For me, the position for peace activists working in the context of restorative justice is clear: there can be no reconciliation without release. 
 
Nozizwe and I also say in our afterword that “we must face the truth about the uprisings of forty years ago.” As you know, Nozizwe herself was a chief negotiator in the process which ended legal apartheid in South Africa, and the two of us respect the work of Archbishop Desmond Tutu, whose commitment to truth and reconciliation has always been coupled with a commitment to ‘heal’ by working for people’s power and the rights of the most oppressed.
 
Here in the US, we must face the truth that the legacy of the 1960s and 1970s remain an open wound so long as key leaders such as Maroon are invisible to the majority of us, tortured in dungeons for decades upon decades.
 
Even one day of the type of treatment Maroon has faced would be wrong in any human rights framework that is not centered on simplistic revenge, hatred, and a cycle of murder and violence. The US criminal justice system, filled with the injustices of centuries passed--based as it is on land theft, slavery, and greed--cannot be understood as ‘democratic’ in any sense of that word so long as Maroon remains behind bars.
 
Aside from many questions which could be raised about the political context of the initial charges and court case against him, the length and nature of his sentence and the way it has been carried out signal grave injustices which make a mockery of any attempt to characterize US jurisprudence as fair or color-blind.
 
A3N:   What is the significance of Maroon’s identification of himself as a ‘prisoner of war’ (POW)? How is this different than simply identifying as a political prisoner?
 
MM:   The United Nations outlines the specific legal definition of the prisoner of war position, definitions which are generally accepted by most participating nation-states, including the US. This definition is rooted in history which goes back as far as 1660, when international military protocol accepted thatanyone who is held in custody by an enemy power during or immediately after an armed conflict, whether combatant or non-combatant, should be classified as a POW. After World War Two, with the Geneva Convention of 1949 to which the US is a signatory, conditions were clearly outlined which require that POWs be treated humanely.
 
For those who lived through the tremendous upsurge of the Black liberation movement of the late 1960s, the position underscores a clear analysis of the relationship between “the Black nation” and the US empire. That relationship, simply put, is one AT WAR. Though the battles may appear to many as covert, and the military powers deeply imbalanced, the position of extreme conflict is nonetheless expressed. This includes the position taken by some people of African descent (i.e., “Black folk, New Afrikans, African-Americans, etc.) that the political status of US citizenship was never chosen by them, but rather, was imposed.
 
In any case, by using the international legal term ‘prisoner of war,’ the question of humane treatment and appropriate jurisdiction in a case of extreme conflict must be squarely faced.
A3N:   You edited the book Let Freedom Ring: A Collection of Documents from the Movements to Free U.S. Political Prisonersand co-editedWe Have Not Been Moved: Resisting Racism and Militarism in 21st Century America. In your opinion how do popular movements resisting US military aggression abroad relate to movements at home seeking the release of COINTELPRO-era political prisoners & opposing the rise of the police state and mass imprisonment since COINTELPRO’s official end in the 1970s?
 
MM:   We must connect the dots between the military-industrial-complex and the prison- industrial-complex. We must begin with the fact that, on the one hand, the military has for too many become the job of choice in an era of vast economic depression and crisis. On the other hand, the ever-increasing rates of incarceration--where now there are more men of African descent behind bars than there were enslaved in the years leading up to the Civil War--suggest that cheap labor is being replaced by forced free labor as authorized by the 13th Amendment, which abolished slavery, except for prisoners.
 
We must do more than understand that an empire in decline requires ever-cheaper means of producing whatever it can still produce and an ever-stretched military to police its dwindling holdings.
 
We must act, in ways faithful to the vision of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., who called for a “true revolution” in the American practices of racism, militarism, and materialism. We must be moved to go beyond the false dichotomies of race, and the false splits of tactical difference which seek to make Martin and Malcolm into irreconcilable opposites.
 
We must build coalitions and united fronts against empire, ones which understand that the many US political prisoners represent not only acts of repression from past generations but reminders to current and future movements that we must never stray beyond the confines of polite protest, OR ELSE.
 
Freeing all US political prisoners is both a just and basic human rights demand, but it is also a necessary step in building future movements which can act with militancy, creativity, soul, and a free spirit which we need to envision the ‘beloved communities’ which will build just and peaceful tomorrows.
 
A3N:   How does Maroon’s case fit into this? What is the broader political significance of Maroon’s imprisonment and his contributions to radical political movements since?
 
MM:   One should not be reading this interview for the answer to that question. Maroon’s broader political significance, and his contributions to current movements, is well revealed through a careful reading of the essential new essay collection Maroon the Implacable.
 

His writings on his own reflections on the Black Panthers, on the nature of sexism and matriarchy, on the environment and the need for eco-socialism, on the Occupy movement and how to build effective new movements, go far beyond the current discourse which we find in blogs and what passes for the left press. It is a challenging course in building for lasting social change.

 

--Angola 3 News is a project of the International Coalition to Free the Angola 3. Our website is www.angola3news.com where we provide the latest news about the Angola 3. We are also creating our own media projects, which spotlight the issues central to the story of the Angola 3, like racism, repression, prisons, human rights, solitary confinement as torture, and more.

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PNN-TV-BLACK RIDERS LIBERATION PARTY

09/24/2021 - 08:54 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Phillip Standing Bear
Original Body

The Black Riders Liberation Party (BRLP) started in 1996 in a YTS gang prison in Los Angeles when the bloods, crips and other members of street tribes who were incarcerated began to take college courses and forming their spiritual bond of unity. While locked up, those who took part of this revolutionary transition made a vow to work hard towards correcting the destruction that the men have inflicted upon their communities.

We at poor magazine embraced and welcomed our revolutionary brother who stopped by to enlighten fellow comrades on the origin of the Black Riders Liberation Party. At poor we believe in the ideal of collaborating with other souljahz in the struggle because it brings us all together, connecting the dots and ridding ourselves of the “crabs in a barrel” and the “my organization is better than yours” stigma that keeps many of us separated and defeated before we even progress. Bay Area native Shango is the founder of the Black Riders Liberation Party of northern California.

Having learned that the blood and crip gangs spawned from the infiltration of cointelpro to destroy community souljahs such as the Black Panther Party for self-defense, Shango  resided in Los Angeles for a year to learn more about the BRLP and it’s ideaology and principles. Shango also was a student at Humboldt State, and went on to be a representative of the commemoration committee for the Black Panther Party for self-defense in Berkeley, Ca and covered the Oscar Grant trial. While in LA, Shango met up with folks who knew members of the BRLP, and eventually connected with T.A.C.O, the general of the Black Riders (LA), and began building with the organization. He also began working with the Chico justice center and other advocacy groups while living in Watts and in South Central. Shango then took the skolarship he had learned in LA and collaborated with a group of activists involved in the movement and started a BRLP chapter here in the bay area here in 2010 in West Oakland.

It was here that Shango, along with other comrades began to follow in the footsteps of the foremothers and forefathers of the Black Panther Party by having consistent programs such as “feed the people” and the “watch a pig” program where the conduct of the police were being monitored. These programs even began to capture the imaginations of those who participated in  “illegitimate capitalism” and other activities that contributed to the destruction of our communities. The Black Riders Liberation Party also have a awesome newspaper circulating that talks about what is going on in the community and enlightens readers on issues such as po’lice brutality, forums on education and health, feed the people programs and the black commune program. For more information on how you can support the BRLP you can send a email to blackriderslp@yahoo.com.

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A Rose Is Still A Rose: Adeke Rose Shares Her Poetic/Political Roots

09/24/2021 - 08:54 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Leroy
Original Body

Krip-Hop Nation (KHN): Adeke Rose, tell us your history writing poetry and how do you connect your poetry to your identities?

Adeke Rose: I wrote my first poem in the 4th grade. My mother read poetry to us as far back as I can remember.  I read poetry so often I could recite it verbatim, especially Ntozake Shange's For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide When The Rainbow Wasn't Enough. My mother would have me perform poetry for friends, relatives, anyone who came to visit.  I traveled extensively since my father was military. Poetry became my best friend, my confidant,  my lifeboat, my promise of survival.  By the time I started college, performance poetry consumed me.  I chose Adeke as my new identity to reflect my sense of freedom, my connection to my African roots and my desire to write honestly without censoring myself or hurting my family.  I grew as a poet as I rose out of my despair as a result of trauma and healed through my writing. To this day I move back and forth through my multiple identities.

KHN:  I know when I was younger and in school I hated poetry until my parents shared poetry that wasn’t taught in the classrooms back then hint hint.  Did you have that same experience in school but if not how did you find poetry that look and spoke to you?

Adeke Rose: I was very fortunate that my mother had a love for all types of poetry, including poets like Gwendolyn Brooks, Sonia Sanchez, Nikki Giovanni and Amiri Baraka.  As a result I developed a strong love very early. My father turned me onto Gil Scott Heron in high school. I was sort of a chameleon; traditional poetry by day, black poetry at home.  My teacher found me "a little militant" but I was so soft spoken they did not try to dissuade me.

KHN:  Give us some subjects you touched on in your poetry.

Adeke Rose: Homelessness, federal budget, depression, love and relationships, military, sexual assault, disability, self image, domestic violence, suicide, treatment of males in the criminal justice system, poverty, spirituality are some of the topics in my writing. My writing is pretty diverse.  A lot of it is motivational like the poems "success" and "The Solution".  My goal is to enlighten, inspire, and aid in healing.  Even my humorous pieces have a message.

KHN:  Tell us about  all of your books, your first poetry CD, "Autobiography of a Rose”
 and what are you writing about these days?

Adeke Rose:  I have one bound book and three chapbooks, all with a specific themes.  Autobiography of a Rose was written when I developed my progressive illness so my family and friends would have something to remember me. My condition stabilized so  I later selected poems from it for the CD. It is my autobiography in poetic form.

My second chapbook is She Walks In Faith.  It is special as it is my "coming out" as a poet with a disability putting myself on the cover with my crutches. It has a spiritual focus though it is not "preachy".

My bound book Wounded Kings and Warrior Women is a book of poems on love, culture and community.  It includes poems on social issues, black men, self image etc.  This book is special to me as the cover art is amazing.  It was done by my daughter who is a professional artist.

My final Chapbook Football and Desire has some of my best work.  It is a book of love poems; romantic and familial.

 Currently I'm finishing the Wounded Kings CD, a video and my first Novel called The Morning After.  My next project will be a new CD with a strong Social Cultural focus.  It will show the activist part of me in a strong way, tempered with raw, honest introspection.

KHN:  You are also a therapist for people dealing with trauma please explain and how that connects to your cultural work:

Adeke Rose: I became a therapist while I was working at Juvenile Services, with teens charged with a crime. I was concerned with the lack of therapists willing and competent to work with them, especially those that were poor and Black. The disproportional representation of African American males in my opinion stems in part from a general bias that white males need counseling while black males need incarceration; and a resistance toward mental heath services in our communities despite high levels of trauma in some high risk areas. It is my mission to provide services to those who need it in a flexible, ethical, competent yet culturally sensitive fashion.

KHN:  As a Black disabled poet and in my 40’s I’m seeing more and more Black disabled poets on the scene today.  What do you  say to young Black disabled poets who don’t see themselves in societal mirrors?

Adeke Rose: "Mirrors Lie". (Comes from one of my poems).  I strongly encourage young disabled poets to claim their space on the stage and that doing things in a different manner is okay.  We often feel that we have to be the same to be good at what we do. If I need a stool so be it.   If I can't get on the stage, I perform in front of it.  It is also vital to take care of yourself.

Finally connect with other poets with disabilities.  That networking can be life enriching.  I remember once I was in Houston performing and I was really down.   I called my friend 13 of Nazareth who also has a disability and I felt so validated. He knew exactly what I was going through and gave me great suggestions on how to take care of myself on the road.

KHN:  I love music and you have a poem about music.  There is this deep relationship between music and poetry from Blues to Hip-Hop.  Can you share you thoughts about this relationship?

Adeke Rose:  My favorite memories from childhood are all related to listening to jazz, blues and soul with my father and poetry with my mother.   In addition poetry and music can release emotion, and soothe the soul. I believe in music and poetry are siblings. Each with their own identity, yet very closely related. I have several pieces with a music theme.  Poetry keeps me sane, but music has always been my escape.

KHN:  You’re an advocate for victims of violence, have you wrote a poem about the violence against people with disabilities?

Adeke Rose: Yes I have a poem called broken pieces that deals with violence and physical disabilities.  I have another poem that deals with harassment and psychological disabilities.

KHN:  What is the role of story tellers in this computer age we live in today?

Adeke Rose: We restore a sense of humanness and connection.  The computer age has us interacting in a forum where we can't see faces, hear tone of voice or otherwise gauge emotion.   Poetry by its very nature elicits emotion.  We tell stories in our writing that grants permission to feel, grow and heal.

KHN:  I love your poem, "Look The Other Way" at Across Words 2 where you speak about homelessness please tell us about that poem and share some lines of the poem.

Adeke Rose:  The poem "Look The Other Way" was performed at Across Words 2.  I wanted people to see the men and women who are homeless as family.    Any of us could be there in a heart beat. I start off the poem addressing stereotypical views in a non confrontational way, then take the reader on a journey ending with a very personal revelation.

"I stopped and stared completely unaware I was defying common convention. When approached by the homeless tradition dictates that we look the other way, don't encourage him to stay, close our eyes, let the unfortunate be invisible..."

Later it states "Why does homeless mean human-less? somebody loved him, how does this fade out from family begin?"

KHN:  You are a mother, did your poetry help rise your child/children?

Adeke Rose:  My children are one of the best parts of my life.  I was so blessed to have them.
I read poetry with them as my mother did with my.   All three write, and my oldest daughter Bren's poetry is amazing. I wrote about my twins premature birth three months early, my son's disabilities, and other issues with my children.  Writing allowed me to contain my emotions and be totally present for my children.   I struggled knowing that my physical issues resulted in their premature birth and my son's dependence on life supporting equipment and nursing at home.

KHN:  From some of your poetry, there is a sense that you’re an activist tell us about your activism and political education and do you think political poetry like The Last Poets, Sonia Sanchez and more is still needed today.  If so how have you build on this tradition and please share one of your political poems.

Adeke Rose:  In college I was mentored by Dr Acklyn Lynch, a professor in the African American studies Department at UMBC.   His classes really broadened my thinking and sparked my activism. My books are dedicated to him as he made me promise I would publish my poetry.

I became very frustrated when I began to understand the inequalities in our society.    In fact I almost got thrown out of school for participating in a sit in to protest financial aid practices during the period. Fifteen student leaders were identified and went through administrative hearings.  Our attorney Billy Murphy Jr was able to resolve the complaints.

Now my focus is on many inequalities: cultural, gender, disability, economic, sexual orientation... The sad part is there is so much to address.  Political poetry will always be necessary.  The issues may change but the need remains.  Here is one of my poems:

Balancing Acts

I wonder
if the reason we aren't frightened
enough to tighten our belts
and take a reflective pause,
is that we don't understand the cause
and benefits of poverty.
If there were no poor there would be no wealthy
Many believe its healthy
to have an imbalance of assets
I don't recall being asked for my consent
over the way tax payers money is spent
I regularly use my vote
Candidates consistently build up my hopes
Only for them to be dashed
as the political factions clash
and progress gets blocked up
My brothers disproportionally locked up
poverty increasingly stocked up
And we are blinded to the reality
that we may be the next casualty
In this war of survival
They say that to succeed you must
"Pull yourself up by your own bootstraps"
But what if you don't have shoes...
or feet?
It's like Marie Antoinette who indicated that "if the poor don't have bread, let them eat cake..."
It is a mistake
to allow the rich
to determine how to help the poor
Most have never been there before
Never made the journey
From poverty to solvency in one generation
And many cannot avoid the temptation
to blame the poor for their condition
Yet the politicians use ammunition
Like wealth tax breaks
Cuts in health care
medicaid, medicare
And Cutbacks and layoffs
to keep them there.
Yes, most of the poor work. 
Budget cuts eliminating jobs affect people
Usually those who need their job the most
And those cutting them don't care
that many more
are falling down the stairs
From success, to struggle for survival
It's tough when our largest rival
are not terrorists from select groups
But our own politicians who create loops
For some to climb through
And for others to fall from.
I've learned in the end
I cannot depend
on the government
To stabilize my present
nor secure my future
They are prone to forget
reject or neglect
programs that help or uplift
And Social security is neither sociable
Nor secure
So I'm building my own safety net
And I encourage you and yours
To do the same.

            Adeke Rose

KHN:  Check out Adeke Rose's website at http://www.adekerose.com/fr_home.cfm

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A Women's Resource at City College that we ALL NEED!

09/24/2021 - 08:54 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Lex
Original Body

As a woman of color I Leontyne Smith am a part of the Women’s Resource Center in San Francisco and it helped me gain a knowledge of myself and the history of other women. I as a human believe feeding into the positive energy this program offers has tremendously impacted my life. Now im not ashamed of being disabled and a woman of color that has difficulties in school because of the lack of academics from high school. From this resource center comes a lot of good people, a library of all women’s books, free food and coffee, free access to Internet, support groups, and movies. This program was basically my backbone in college because of the opportunities and the initiatives that took place. The woman’s resource center is the best thing on campus but as we know City College is being attacked. I and a lot of other people will be distraught if this program gets cut off. City College of San Francisco is one of the largest community and junior colleges in the United States and an extremely important resource for poor women of color like myself. The Women’s Resource Center is known to be the most effective organization for black women. It is an initiated and student run organization and their funding comes from the Women's Studies Program. The Woman of Color Gathering was one of the annual events coming from the Women’s Resource Center. Its purpose is to bridge the gap between Black History Month and Women’s Herstory Month. This year the Women’s Resource Center is focusing the gathering on education, with guest speakers Shanell Williams, Associated Student Council President at CCSF, and Sekani Moyenda, teacher and co-author of TAKING IT PERSONALLY: Racism in the classroom from kindergarten to College. The first speaker, Shanell Williams, who is the president of student council and the student chair for the Black Student Union, is fighting for City College students and she is an example of excellence from the background she has. As education was the focus Shanelle talked about how from the first experience as an African American woman being in school disinterested her because she wasn’t gaining a knowledge of self. Shanelle got kicked out of three high schools prior to her graduation. She excelled in school after attending Wallenberg and finally graduated. Though she received her high school diploma she didn’t want to go to College. She expressed the anger she had from living in Hunters Point and because all she saw was violence and self destruction. Coming against all odds to fight for the community she attended City College of San Francisco, because she wanted a positive outlet. Other than doing drugs, black on black crime, and the misconduct of women in the neighborhood. As she spoke about her entry into school at the age of twenty five, people in the audience literally cried when they heard her story of being that at risk youth in the black community yet now she is graduating this semester of 2013 and continuing in an Ivy League College. Women in the audience talked about cancer, asthma, dust, and health care in Bay View as well. One woman had lung cancer from living in hunters Point all her life. There are so many stories out there that people do not know about but as Shanelle expressed her relief of living in the black community became a gift to her dreams. This is to go back into the community and help others go to college and start a non profit organization working for the black community. She left a key note on asking people are they in College to get money or fulfill a purpose? She said if you do what you love and work at it the money will always come. The beauty of the program was destined to be because the other keynote speaker for the event works at the elementary school Shanelle went to when she was a kid. When Sekani Moyenda, an African American elementary school teacher, accepted an invitation to speak at a graduate education class, neither the students nor Ann Berlak, their professor, could guess that her presentation would spark an outpouring of emotion and a reexamination of race from everyone involved. The "encounter” as it was called was an expression of Moyenda's anger at the institutionalized racism of our educational system, a system whose foundations are reinforced and whose assumptions about race are reproduced in the graduate school classroom. Forcing everyone involved to rethink their own race consciousness, Taking it Personally is a chronicle of two teachers and their own educational progress. In processing their own responses to the encounter, along with their students', Berlak and Moyenda meditate not only on their own ideas on teaching and learning, but also redefine the obligation a teacher has to his or her students. Personal in its approach, yet grounded in significant currents of educational thought, Taking it Personally will be a must-read for any educator or educator-to-be who is committed to teaching in our diverse classrooms. I sat down with her after the presentation of this scenario she put together and talked about, and she expressed that everyone has racism in their lives. Her approach to me was so warming, because not only was she a good teacher she is a good person who wants to help the community. As an outcome everybody wants to purchase this book, because it is not just black and white anymore she deals with diversity and the environment she works in is of all different nationalities. At the end of her presentation her main point was to come to the students who are black and fighting for their education so they can help themselves. They are cutting so many things with education that teachers are being laid off left and right. She said she keeps on fighting and when people knock her down she stands up even stronger. She said if people aren’t talking about you something is wrong. The whole audience loved both speakers and there was an announcement for people of color to do a walk out and march. This will help our education and the future’s education. I am proud to be a black woman especially after analyzing these strong women in the community and the stories they shared.

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Calpulli Coatlicue- Danza AZTECA MEXIHCA

09/24/2021 - 08:54 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Tiny
Original Body

 

Scroll down for English

 

    Los tambores tienen una manera hermosa de hablar y cantar; nos pueden llevar a un punto ecstático con mucha energía e inmediatamente después, arrullarnos a tal punto de tranquilidad, que se podría dormir en el mismo momento. Yo creo que los tambores nos pueden conectar y reconectar con la Tierra, sincronizarnos a los ritmos de su corazón latiente, y guiarnos de regreso a las maneras de vivir naturales y tradicionales. Yo estaba pasando por muchos cambios, internos y externos. Había estado lejos de mi hogar, México, alrededor de 6 meses y extrañaba mi casa,mi país. Me sentía desconectada de la Tierra, alejada de mi familia y me hacía falta una comunidad con la que me pudiera sentir como en casa. En mi búsqueda por un nuevo hogar, me topé con el área de Fruitvale, una pequeña versión de América Latina en Oakland. Tomé repentinamente la decisión de mudarme allí y en menos de un mes, me estaba mudando a un pequeño estudio en el corazón del área. Era mi segunda noche en mi nueva casa y había pasado casi todo el tiempo desempacando y acomodando mis cosas, así que decidí salir y respirar un poco de aire fresco, mirar la Luna y las estrellas y darme una vuelta. Caminaba en parte sin buscar nada en específico, parcialmente admirando mis alrededores y parcial e incondicionalmente, buscandome a misma.

Repentinamente, el sonido de tambores se comenzó a escuchar. Me encantan los tambores, siempre lo han hecho, desde que era pequeñita... pero éstos tambores eran distintos; su vibracióñ se sentía más fuerte, me sentí fuertemente atraída hacia ellos, sentí que algo me llamaba desde el fondo de mi alma. Persiguiendo el sonido, simplemente dejé que mis pies se movieran hacia un destino incierto. El aroma de Copal ardiendo y humeando comenzó a acompañar el retumbar de los tambores y simultáneamente, mientras uno se tornaba más intenso, también lo hacía el otro. El sonido parecía venir de la Hacienda Peralta; un parque, un museo y un centro comunitario a media cuadra de mi casa. Me acerqué más y más, hasta que me encontré frente a un círculo de personas danzando alrededor de unos tambores, con plumas en sus cabezas y con semillas que hacían hermosos sonidos al moverse, abrazándoles los tobillos. Sentí la necesidad de conocer más, de unirme a su círculo y danzar, pero al mismo tiempo me sentía nerviosa y un poco confundida, así que simplemente me quedé donde estaba, congelada. Un hombre se me acercó portando una sonrisa enorme y se presentó como Ernesto, e inmediatamente después exclamó de manera firme y sincera: “!Bienvenida!” Un jovencito que no podría haber tenido más de 13 años se dió cuenta de nuestra plática y también se acercó. Extendió su brazo hacia y firmemente me dió la mano; su nombre era Frank, aunque se aseguró de que yo supiera que su nombre espiritual era Chicome Malinalli. “Chicome significa 7 y Malinalli significa hierba medicinal,” me dijo. Supongo que el dicho de que las mejores cosas vienen en 3 es real, porque mientras él terminaba de hablar, una mujer se le acercó y se presentó conmigo como Tere, su madre. Frank la interrumpió y me dijo que los nombres de Ernesto y de Tere eran Yei Cipactli ( 3 cocodrilo) y Coaltyotl Olllin (mujer en movimiento). Con un poco de prisa, como quien quiere evitar detalles minúsculos e innecesarios,  me invitaron a que me uniera al círculo, pues la ceremonia estaba a punto de comenzar. Me prestaron una maraca, una cinta para amarrarme en la cabeza y una bifanda para amarrarme en el estómago; para la protección, dijeron.

Sin clase previa o instrucción alguna, comenzó todo. Sonaron los caracoles y llamaron a las cuatro direcciones; sin pausa, comenzaron a danzar. Yo intenté frenéticamente seguir sus pasos, traté de seguir los pasos de los permisos y de comprender un poquito de lo que estaba sucediendo. Aunque me sentia perdida la mayoría del tiempo, tuve la sensación repentina de haberme encontrado a misma. Tuve la visión de que con cada paso, cada vez que marcábamos uno de nuestros pies en el suelo, estábamos practicando acupuntura o mandándole mensajes telegráficos a nuestra Madre Tierra. Me sentí en paz, bienvenida... como si estuviera en el lugar y momento adecuado, en todo sentido de la palabra. Me sentí nutrida, alimentada, entera.

Después de dos cansadas pero muy satisfactorias horas de danza, honramos a las cuatro direcciones una vez más al unísono de los caracoles, nos acercamos más en un círculo y la “palabra” fue otorgada a todos y cada uno de los que estaban presentes para que compartieran sus sentimientos, sus necesidades, su agradecimiento o sus pedidos. Nos abrazamos cálidamente, nos saludamos los unos a los otros y nos presentamos; muchos comenzaron a acomodar mesas y sillas, mientras Tere colocaba comida con aromas de amor y de hogar en ellas. Mientras Tere acomodaba la comida, se aseguraba de decirle a todos (casi obligarlos) a que se sentaran a comer y a que probaran todo. Tere me recordó mucho al arquetipo de madre mexicana, la que nutre, la que cuida, la que protege, la que siempre está tratando de alimentar a los niños, asegurándose de que todos estén bien nutridos, fuertes y saludables. Tere me recordó tanto a mi propia madre... me sentí nostálgica y comencé a extrañar a mi propia familia, aunque estrañamente, por la primera vez desde que había llegado a Oakland, por alguna razón me sentí como en casa.

Comimos y nos contamos historias mientras cenábamos; historias acerca de dónde soy, de cómo de manera casi mágica llegué a la danza ésa noche y finalmente, acerca de ése Calli, de ése hogar, de la familia de danzantes frente a la que me encontraba. Tere y Ernesto señalaron a Frank, indicándole que contara la historia. Así que ahí me encontraba, junto con la familia. Escuchábamos atentos a un niño a quien muchos probablemente ignorarían. El nos contó una historia que, aunque simple en esencia, llevaba con ella sabiduría infinita, así como él. Resulta que él mismo es el jefe y fundador del grupo, Calpulli Coatlicue, un grupo de danza mexica. Todo comenzó hace un par de años, cuando -siendo aún más joven de lo que es ahora-, Frank sintió repentinamente la necesidad de comenzar un grupo propio, un nuevo grupo. Un día durante uno de los muchos eventos comunitaros a los que él y su familia frecuentemente asisten, se acercó a la directora de la Hacienda Peralta en Oakland. Se presentó frente a ella con la integridad y confianza de un hombre sabio, manteniendo la inocencia de un niño, y le preguntó si les permitiría usar el espacio para practicar con su grupo de danza. La directora quedó cautivada con la propuesta de éste niño y quería más información, así que él corrió y le contó rápidamente a su mamá. “Frank, cómo vamos a comenzar un grupo si no tenemos a nadie para un grupo?” -dijo Tere. “Ay mamá, que no ves? Yo llevo el huehuetl (tambor), papá lleva el atecocolli (caracol) y tú llevas el popoxcomitl (el fuego, el humo); ésos son tres de los elementos sagrados. Es como un tripié: Si sólo tuviéramos dos elementos, perdería el balance y se caería, pero con los tres, tenemos igualdad, balance y somos sólidos.” El sonrió y dijo: “Mamá, sí tenemos un grupo!”

Así que, muchas veces siendo sólamente un tripié los que veníán a danzar, comenzaron el grupo Coatlicue cuando la Hacienda les dió permiso para utilizar el espacio y ahí se han seguido reuniendo cada Lunes a las 6 de la tarde.

Es increíble pensar que cuando Coatlicue comenzó, era muchas veces sólamente madre, padre y Frank y que ahora, hay veces que llega tanta gente, que no hay ni espacio suficiente para danzar. Aunque la manera en que el grupo ha crecido desde que se formó ha sido rápida, no es difícil de creer; si todas las personas que llegan a la danza se sienten tan bienvenidas, aceptadas, cómodas y como en casa como yo me sentí, sería difícil creer que alguien no querría regresar. El calpulli Coatlicue es un ejemplo perfecto  del concepto de comunidad llevado a la práctica. Coatlicue comenzó como una familia y sigue creciendo como una. El calpulli nos brinda un hermoso espacio con muy buena energía para que muchos podamos venir y hacer nuestro rezo, conectar con nosotros mismos, con la madre Tierra y con nuestros ancestros; ellos sacrifican mucho de su trabajo y de su energía para que todos podamos generar más energía y sanarnos a nosotros mismos y a todas nuestras relaciones. Todos en el calpulli comparten el conocimiento que tienen, con la única intención de que regresemos a nuestras maneras originales y tradicionales, así como ayudarnos a reconectar con la Tierra y con nuestras raíces, ayudándonos a recordar el conocimiento que no sabíamos que llevábamos dentro.

Así como ha pasado el tiempo he visto a muchas personas que, así  como yo, se han sentido atraídas hacia el grupo por los tambores; sin ninguna explicación real, más que el hecho de que algo les dijo que caminaran en ésa dirección. Yo he sentido a mi corazón sincronizarse al retumbar de los tambores, he sentido mi energía convertirse en una sola con la energía de las personas dentro del círculo y he sentido la sanación, poco a poco tocándo cada rinconcito de mi cuerpo y alma. Ernesto dice que a través de la danza, estamos plantando y cultivando cambio, tanto interno como externo en el mundo y en nuestros alrededores. Muchas de las personas que forman parte de la familia de Coatlicue están profundamente involucrados en la restauración y el crecimiento de nuestra comunidad, en hacer éste mundo un lugar mejor y en conseguir igualdad, justicia y un aumento de conciencia. Tere cree que ésta manera de vida en la que compartimos el conocimiento es la única manera en la que conseguiremos los cambios y mejoras que queremos ver en nuestras comunidades.

El calpulli Coatlicue no es sólamente un bello grupo de personas donde uno puede aprender danza e historia, pero también un lugar donde podemos aprender e inspirarnos al estar rodeados por todos los guerreros dedicados e incansables, conscientes, que viven en pie de lucha y en resistencia, de los artistas, activistas, sanadores, maestros, poetas, cocineros, abuelas, abuelos, madres, padres, niños y amigos que forman ésta familia de danzantes tan diversa, colorida y llena de amor; al final de cuentas, todo es un mismo rezo, una misma nación, un mismo corazón y un mismo pueblo y todos deberíamos compartirlo. Coatlicue, de la mano de nuestro abuelo el huehuetl, nos ayuda a encontrar todas ésas piezas que nos hacen falta de nosotros mismos, coatlicue está constuyendo y aumentando la comunidad, formando y manteniendo a la familia fuerte y estable, unida, como el tripié, como el cantar,  frenéticamente tranquilo de la vibración de los tambores que nos ayuda a encontrarnos y unirnos como úno sólo.

                                                     English Version

                                                             Coatlicue

           Drums have a beautiful way of talking and singing, they can drive us to an ecstatic point of high energy and almost right after that, lull you to such a state of calmness, that you could sleep on the spot. I believe drums can ground us back to Earth, synchronize us to the rhythms of her beating heart, bring us back to the old, natural ways. I was going through many changes, both internal and external. I had been away from home, Mexico for about 6 months and was feeling very home sick; quite ungrounded, detached from my family, I lacked a community to feel at home with. In my search for a place I could call home, I stumbled upon Fruitvale, the “little Latin America” section of Oakland. I made the decision to move there and within a month, I moved into a little studio in the heart of Fruitvale.   It was my second night at my new place; I had spent pretty much all my time unpacking and arranging things around, so I decided to step outside and take a breath, gaze at the moon and the stars and just wonder around... I was partially looking for nothing, partially looking at my surroundings and  partially and unknowingly looking for my self.

            Suddenly, the sound of drums became noticeable. I love drums, I have since I was a child... but these drums were different; their vibration felt stronger, I felt deeply drawn to them, I felt called from the bottom of my soul. Chasing the sound, I let my inner guide get me there. I simply allowed my feet to move toward an unknown destination. The smell of burning Copal incense began to accompany the beating of the drums and as one became more intense, so did the other. The sounds seemed to be coming from the Peralta Hacienda, a park, museum and community center half a block away from my house. I got closer and found myself in front of a circle of people dancing around drums, wearing feathers on their heads and sets of beautiful sounding seeds hugging their ankles. I felt the need to know more, I felt the urge to join them and dance but I also felt nervous and slightly confused, so I just stood there, sort of frozen. A man approached me with a giant smile and introduced himself as Ernesto, immediately followed by a strong and honest Welcome! A young little man who couldn't have been older than 13 noticed we were talking and approached me as well. He extended his arm towards me and firmly shook my hand; his name was Frank, although he made it a point for me to know that his spiritual name was Chicome Malinalli. “Chicome means seven and Malinalli means medicinal herb” -he said. I guess the saying that great things come in 3's must be true, because as he was saying that, a woman came near him and introduced herself as Tere, his mother. They immediately asked me to join them, as the ceremony was about to start. They let me borrow a maraca, a scarf to tie around my belly and a scarf to tie around my forehead; protection, they said.

            Without a previous lesson or instructions whatsoever, they called the 4 directions and right after that, they began to dance. I kept frantically attempting to follow their steps, to do the permission dances and to get some sort of clue of what was going on; although I felt lost for the most part, I had the simultaneous feeling of finding myself. I had the vision that with every step, with every foot we marked on the ground, we were performing acupuncture or sending telegraphic messages to the core of mother Earth. I felt at peace, welcome and like I was meant to be there in every sense of the word. I felt nourished, whole.

            After an exhausting but fulfilling two hours of dancing, the 4 directions were honored again and the “word” or palabra was given to every single one who was there, so they could share their feelings, needs, gratitude or requests. We hugged, greeted each other and introduced ourselves; people started setting up tables and chairs, as Tere sat deliciously smelling dishes on them encouraged (almost pushing) people to start eating and try it all. She reminded me so much of the archetypal mexican mother, the nurturer, the one that is always trying to feed the children, making sure they are all well nourished, healthy and strong. She reminded me so much of my mother, it made me feel nostalgic and miss my family, even though, for the first time since I  had moved to Oakland, I somehow felt at home.

            We ate and told stories over dinner; where I was from, how I magically stumbled upon danza that night and finally, stories about the Calli, the home, the family of danzantes before my eyes. Tere and Ernesto pointed at Frank, signaling him to tell the story. There I was, along with the family. We were listening attentively to a child who many would possibly ignore. He told us a story that although simple in its essence, carried infinite wisdom, just as himself.  Turns out that he is the head and founder of the group, Calpulli Coatlicue, a Mexica danza group. It all started a couple of years ago, when being even younger than he is now, Frank had the urge to start a group of his own. One day at one of the many community events that him and his family frequently attends, he approached the director for the Peralta Hacienda in Oakland. He presented himself with the integrity and confidence of a wise man and with the innocence of a child, and asked her if they could use their space  to practice with the group. The director was captivated by this child's proposition and wanted to know more, so he ran and called his mom. “Frank, how are we gonna start a group, if we have no people?!” -she said, surprised and almost scared. “But mom, we do! Don't you see? I carry the huehuetl (drum), dad the atecocolli (conch shell) and you the popoxcomitl (copal, incense burner); that's the three basic sacred elements. We are like a tripod: If we only had 2 elements, we would be out of balance and fall, but with 3 we have equality and are solid.” He smiled and said: “We have a group!” The other legs of what he calls the tripod are his mother, known by her spiritual name of Coaltyotl ollin- and his uncle (who he calls dad) , Yei Cipactli. So, with manytimes only a tripod showing up, they began the group when the Hacienda gave them permission to use their space and they have been meeting since then every Monday at 6 pm.

            It's amazing to think that when Coatlicue first started, it was a lot of times jut mom, dad and Frank and now there are times when there isn't even enough room for all the people who show up. Although the way the family has grown since it's formation has been fast, it isn't that hard to understand; if everyone who ever shows up feels as welcome and at home as myself, it would be hard to believe that anybody would not want to keep coming back. Calpulli Coatlicue is a true example of community. It began as a family and it has continued to grow as one. They provide the beautiful, welcoming space for many of us to come and pray, to connect with ourselves, with the Earth and our ancestors; they sacrifice so much work and energy so that we can all generate energy and heal ourselves and all our relations. Everybody in the calpulli shares the knowledge that they carry, with the intention of bringing back our traditional ways and helping us ground down back to our roots, helping us remember knowledge that we hadn't realized we had in us.

            As time has gone by, I have seen multiple people who, like myself, were drawn to the group by the drums; no real explanation behind it, other than something telling them to walk in that direction. I have felt my heart synchronize to the beat of the drums, felt my feet move to the beat of Pachamama's heart, felt my energy become one with the energy of all the people within the circle and I have felt the healing, little by little touching every corner of my body and soul. Ernesto says that through danza, we are planting and cultivating change; both inner change and change in the world and our surroundings. Many of the people who form Coatlicue's family are deeply involved in restoring and growing our community, in making this world a better place and in achieving fairness and increased consciousness. Tere believes that this way of living and sharing of knowledge  is the only way in which we will get the changes and improvements we want to see in our communities.

            Calpulli Coatlicue isn't only a beautiful group of people to learn danza and history from, but it is a place where we learn and inspire ourselves surrounded by all the conscious, dedicated fighters, people in struggle and in resistance, artists, activists, healers, teachers, poets, cooks, grandmothers, grandfathers, mothers, fathers, children and friends that make up this diverse, colorful, loving and open to all family of mexica danzantes; in the end, it is all one prayer, one nation, one heart and one people and we should all share it. Coatlicue, along our grandfather the huehuetl, is facilitating for so many of us to find the little pieces of ourselves that we were missing, it is building and growing the community, making and keeping the familia strong and stable, like the tripod, like the humming, excitingly calming vibration of the drums that helps us come together as one.

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Starter Gentrifyers & the Roots of GentriFUKation

09/24/2021 - 08:54 by Anonymous (not verified)
Original Author
Tiny
Original Body

Mama used to say, “when us po’ folks get evicted, we don’t leave, we just go live in the “sidewalk motels”. GentriFUKation Tours “R” US wasn’t started as an “edgy” piece of performance art, or a protest, or an installation at a gallery, but rather as a non-violent act of art-in-desperation to the violence of removal, colonization and displacement.

 

My poor body, daughter of another poor woman-body of color has been evicted over 28 times throughout my childhood as a houseless, chyle in Amerikkka. Most of the time we were committing poverty crimes, evicted because we didn’t have the money for rent in a capitalist society that values money over all things, even the housing security of a disabled single parent woman and her children. But so often when we had raised enough money in our mother-daughter led street-based business to pay the rent on a tiny place like the one we had in West Oakland, we were evicted, due the forces of gentrification, rampant re-development and real estate snakkking or what we at POOR Magazine called in another Art-Action circa 1999: Gerrification -so named after Jerry Brown who came to Oakland with the plan to “clean-up” aka evict poor folks out of Oakland and get rid of any trace of rent control being promoted at the time.

 

GentriFUkation didn’t stop there for me and my mama, as a poor family, we were always at-risk of removal, from scamlords to speculators, eviction, substandard housing, and lack of stability were a constant. Fast forward another 13 years, this time I was facing houselessness again, but this time as the single parent of an infant son taking care of my mother who was now very ill, and as an act of resistance, I had started a small collective house for low-income single parent women like myself,  we called it Mamahouse. It was located in the already gentrified streets of the “Mission” and we were lucky enough to find a severely substandard 3 bedroom available at a mere $1800 a month. Never mind that there were subtenants with wings & whiskers, (roaches, pigeons and mice), never mind that almost nothing worked, ever. We had each other, single parents and children, together, helping and working together, inter-dependently.

 

We stayed there throughout all the wrong-ness until that landlord from hell burned us out, literally, setting a fire instead of fixing any of the glaring habitability issues.

 

We found a second home for Mamahouse in the “Mission”, and while it was very nice, it was too nice, and after 2 beautiful years, the 2nd Mamahouse ended up gentriFUKed again, by a whopping $700 rent increase imposed on us. None of us mamaz could afford that. We tried to re-group, but it was the final blow. I and my fellow poor mamaz were houseless, again.

 

This last eviction was the final little murder of the soul as my mama used to call it, and this was when GentriFUKation Tours R US was born. Not meant to act as ambassadors, politricksters or non-profiteers with agendas and grant-guidelines, the gentriFUKation Tours R US tour-guides, are displaced, evicted, indigenous and/or houseless peoples who move through the post-gentriFUKed streets with maps of where we used to be, what hipster bar, over-priced restaurant, Tenants In Common takeover of rental housing or condominium was put in our place and the multitude of stories about our forced diasporas, out-migrations and where we are now.

 

We are instigators and art-in-action uncomfortable-makers. We speak on wite-supremacy, real estate snakkking and the endless attack on our poor bodies of color still trying to stay in our communities of origin.

 

The Roots of GentriFUKation

At the root of gentriFUKation is colonization. The original act of removal was the lie of discovery by Christopher Columbus, etc, the illegal migration of pilgrims and missionaries and the subsequent theft of land, resources and people of all indigenous nations across Pachamama. The first gentriFUKed peoples in this part of Turtle Island were the Ohlone Nation, still unrecognized by the colonizer government as a tribe. The other root of gentriFUKation is capitalism itself. How it encourages, promotes and arguably mandates the lie of separation and individualism, all rooted in Western, Euro-centric therapeutic crafted norms of sanity and normalcy. How droves of middle-class and working –class white peoples (and Western taught peoples of color) are taught through the multitude of societal messages, corporate media and factory school education to leave their family homes, their cities of origin and their elders so they can live alone and be good, productive consumers, purchasing an endless amount of Ikea furniture, brooms, silverware, towels, blankets, apartments, and so much more. Paying for Euro-centric therapy so they can “get over” their loss of their families and mamaz and cultures and spirits. And in the end, trying to build “community” in places where their sheer act of communing means that the existent community is forced to leave to make space for them.

 

These are the things that no one wants to say, or maybe don’t even think of. These are some of the issues brought up by the Tour Guides on the GentriFUKation Tours.

 

The tragic thing is the confusion and shock of what I call the starter gentrifyers or gentrifyer-enablers, when they too get gentrified. Their belief that somehow they are inherently different, that they had nothing to do with gentrification, that it’s the policy-makers and the politricksters, the corporate interests and the Twitter executives that are “the cause of all this gentrification”.

 

But what they don’t realize is although the hearts and souls of the starter-gentrifyers is in no way like the self-centered hearts of the Face-Book, Google and Twitter hearts or the evil-alien hearts of the Lennar, John Stuart, Chase Bank and Wells Fargo executives, they too are here, caught up in the away-nation, ghetto-izing their elders, forgetting their ancestors and believing, above all, in the lie of independence from their families of origin. And how their presence, if even by default, adds to the sheer numbers of people census-ed in this City,  enables the rampant re-devil-opment of neighborhood after neighborhood, fuels the greed of the landlords and lays the ground-work for the insane level of evictions attacking literally thousands of poor and working-class elders who have lived here for decades if not their whole lives.

 

To be extremely clear, when I say all these people leaving their families I am not including peoples who leave their families of origin due to the fact that their lives were in danger if they stayed at home, or peoples like my mama who was an orphan and a foster home survivor who literally had no-one, no family to go to, and was all alone raising me, which is why we ended up on the street and living in our car when we couldn’t afford the rent in LA, Oakland and Frisco. No, I am talking about the billions of people who have perfectly good rooms and homes and elders and families who love them and will always love them, whose presence is always welcome and who themselves have bought into that same lie of independence and are now alone in their homes, with no more children and lots of rooms with no-one in them, waiting to no longer be seen as productive in a capitalist, ageist society.

In this way the non-profiteers, volunteers, social workers and activists graduating from endless institutions teaching them how to “help” us poor folks, are in fact the 21st century missionaries, coming to our communities with “good intentions” to save us, help us, revolutionze us, heal us, without realizing that in this process, they are displacing us. Perhaps, they could take that learning, helping, activating and revolutionizing home, to their own families and homes, communities and neighborhoods and help un-pack the lie of wite-supremacy, capitalist separation and the hoarding of stolen wealth and resources and the endless cycle of displacement.

 

So yes, the starter gentrifyers will end up being gentrified as well. And then where will they go? Maybe if they listen to the tour guides, on the next GentriFUKation Tours R US tour, humbly teaching, as us poverty and indigenous skolaz always do, they could consider, while they work on legislations, walk in marches and continue to fight gentriFUKation, leaving this city entirely, like many of our conscious “mentees” who graduate from POOR Magazine’s PEopleSkool do, giving their apartment or room to a houseless or evicted elder or family, and then going home to begin re-communing with their own families, their own mamaz, daddys, uncles and aunties, and in so doing, work on their own decolonization, their own embedded capitalist values, their own “inconvenience”.

This would be the ultimate act of revolution as then they would in fact be un-gentriFUKing this stolen Ohlone territory, one person at a time.

This story is an excerpt from Tiny’s upcoming book: Poverty Skolaship 101: A PEoplesTeXt.  For more decolonizing education, art and consciousness led by poverty and indigenous skolaz in resistance consider enrolling in a semester of PeopleSkool/Escuela de la gente at POOR Magazine. To find out about upcoming semesters or on-line classes go to click here To read more POOR Magazine narratives on gentriFUKation click here

 

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