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Day of the Dead has been a cultural tradition in Mexico, Central and South America for centuries. It is now a Cross Cultural Celebration for all, honoring the lives of lost loved ones, causes, histories and a reminder that we will all die.  Click

Somos Primos

 OCTOBER 2010 
130th Online Issue

Editor: Mimi Lozano �2000-2010

Dedicated to Hispanic Heritage and Diversity Issues
 
Society of Hispanic Historical and Ancestral Research




The Pablo Armenta Family � 1929 -- Los Angeles, California
Seated: Oscar, VICTORIA OROS ARMENTA, PABLO ARMENTA, Estela�
Standing: Aurelia, Antonio, Jesus, Pablo, Alberto, Enrique, Ramon and Victoria�
Click for more on the Armenta family, and the Orange County, CA Register.

Society of Hispanic Historical 
and Ancestral Research   

P.O. 490
Midway City, CA 
92655-0490

mimilozano@aol.com
714-894-8161

Board Members:
Bea Armenta Dever
Gloria C. Oliver
Mimi Lozano
Pat Lozano
Cathy Trejo Luijt 
Viola R. Sadler
Tom Saenz
John P. Schmal


Resources:
SHHAR
Networking
Calendar
www.SHHAR.net
www.SomosPrimos.com 

Somos Primos Staff 
Mimi Lozano, Editor
Mercy Bautista Olvera
Bill Carmena
Lila Guzman
John Inclan
Kim Holtzman
Galal Kernahan
Juan Marinez
J.V. Martinez
Dorinda Moreno
Rafael Ojeda
�ngel Custodio Rebollo
Tony Santiago
John P. Schmal

Submitters to the October Issue
Belinda Acosta
Shelomo Alfassa
Dan Arellano
Bea Dever Armenta
Tomas Ascensio
Elaine Ayala 
Cristina Balli
Maribeth Bandas
Teresa Barnett
Francisco Barragan
Mercy Bautista Olvera
Roy Betts
Bill Carmena
Juan Castillo 
Bonnie Chapa
Gus Chavez
A. Edward Cota
Tim Crump
Charlie Erickson
Angelo Falcon
Ben Figueroa
Glen Frost
Luan Gaines
James E. Garcia
Margarita Garza
Daisy Wanda Garcia
Val Gibbons
Albert S. Gonzales
Rafael Jesus Gonzalez
Ron Gonzales

Reyna Grande
Joaquin Gracida
Don Harris
Sylvia Ichar
Bernadette Inclan
John Inclan
Alex King
Mar�a Elena Laborde y    
     P�rez Trevi�o
Bernadette E. Lopez
Christian Lozano
Arturo Lozano Monfort
Jan Mallet
Juan Marinez
Ruben Martinez
Tom Miles
Dorinda Moreno
Carlos Munoz, Jr. Ph.D.
Kandace Ojeda
Pedro Olivares
Felipe de Ortego y Gasca
Rudy Padilla
Ricardo Ra�l Palmer�n Cordero
David Perez
Elisa Perez
Richard Perry
Denise H. Richmond

Maggie Rivas-Rodriguez
Jos� Le�n Robles de la Torre
Rudi R. Rodriguez
Ben Romero
Norman Rozeff
Lorri Ruiz Frain
Rogelio Saenz

Richard G. Santos
Robert Smith
Susannah Taylor
Ivo Tirado
Allan Torres
Ana Torres
Sandra Tumerlinson
Cesar Vela-M�zquiz
Roland Vela-M�zquiz 
John J. Valadez
Anne Marie Weiss
Kirk Whisler
Theresa Ynzunza
jcastillo@statesman.com
salfassa@asf.cjh.org

FERNANAGUIL7@aol.com

info@maldef.org
mnhwmas@aol.com

 

"There are more instances of the abridgment of the 
freedom of the people 
by gradual and silent encroachments of those in power, 
than by violent and sudden usurpation."  
James Madison

 


UNITED STATES


"We contend that for a nation to try to tax itself into prosperity, is like a man standing in a bucket and trying to lift himself up the the handle."
Winston Churchill

Thomas Jefferson, 1802
Hispanic Link Online
Soledad O'Brien Reports 
The Longoria Affair documentary
National Archives Experience
Captured: America in Color from 1939-1943
Oscar De La Hoya Lifetime of Achievement
�When Worlds Collide� PBS Documentary
National Museum of the American Latino Commission
Puerto Rican Poet Julia de Burgos Honored with US Stamp
Lucia "Chita" Rede Madrid and her Private Loan Library
Hispanics Breaking Barriers, Part XXI by Mercy Bautista-Olvera

Polly Baca, A Wise Latina, Nominated by Sylvia Trujillo  by Mercy Bautista-Olvera
Joseph Machado,
Biking for America by Mercy Bautista-Olvera
Joseph Machado Biking for America
Enrique Torres, Professional wrestling career  
Comments on Laus Deo
Department of Defense Hispanic Heritage Kickoff Highlights Women
Hispanic Reflections on American Landscape: Identifying & Interpreting Hispanic Heritage

 

Thomas Jefferson said in 1802: 

'I believe that Banking institutions are more dangerous to our liberties than standing armies. If the American people ever allow private banks to control the issue of their Currency, first by inflation, then by deflation, the banks and corporations that will grow up around the banks will deprive the people of all property - until their children wake-up homeless on the continent their fathers conquered.'

 

"Help me to be, to think, to teach what is right because it is right; make me truthful, honest and honorable in all 
things ; make me intellectually honest for the sake of right and honor and without thought of reward to me." 
This prayer of Robt. E. Lees' was memorized by Harry S. Truman and used throughout his life.
Sent by  Paula       ropawa@msn.com

HISPANIC LINK
Vol. 28, No. 26 Sept. 17, 2010


Hispanic News Source Since 1983


Regular updates on events happening throughout Hispanic Heritage Month, as well as analyses and commentaries, can be found on www.Hispaniclink.org.

Hispanic Link
1420 N St. NW
Washington, DC 20005
(202) 234-0280


SOLEDAD O'BRIEN REPORTS
By 2050, the U.S. Latino population is expected to nearly triple. CNN's Soledad O'Brien explores how Latinos are reshaping our communities and culture and forcing a nation of immigrants to rediscover what it means to be an American.

Garcia" is now the 8th most popular last name in the U.S. 
Seven Garcias are featured in "Latino in America" They share their stories, and make a wonderful point of the diversity of the Hispanic presence.  Stories represent Garcias in Miami, FL; Charlotte, NC; Los Angeles, CA; Tucson, AZ; Lancing, MI, and St. Louis, MO.

http://www.cnn.com/SPECIALS/2009/latino.in.america/?hpt=tv 

Sent by Rafael Ojeda 


THE LONGORIA AFFAIR, a documentary, will be included in the  award winning PBS series INDEPENDENT LENS on Nov. 9th.   THE LONGORIA AFFAIR tell the story of Dr. Garcia and the birth of the Mexican American civil rights movement in 1949.  

The Independent Television Service (ITVS) funds, presents, and promotes award-winning documentaries and dramas on public television and cable, innovative new media projects on the Web, and the Emmy Award-winning weekly series Independent Lens Tuesday nights at 10:00 PM on PBS.

ITVS International is a division of the Independent Television Service that runs the Global Perspectives Project (GPP), an international exchange of documentary films made by independent producers, bringing international voices to U.S. audiences and American stories to audiences abroad.
http://www.itvs.org/about

If you would like to see it aired in your community, please contact producer, John J. Valadez. 
johnjvaladez@aol.com
 
516-810-7238
www.itvs.org/films/longoria-affair 
www.TheLongoriaAffair.com   

 

National Archives Experience
http://www.digitalvaults.org/#

I don't know if this is new, but it quite stunning.  The effort is to facilitate searching the National Archives, and it surely looks like it might do that.  Do check it out. 
Sent by Bill Carmena

Captured: America in Color from 1939-1943

These images, by photographers of the Farm Security Administration/Office of War Information, are some of the only color photographs taken of the effects of the Depression on America�s rural and small town populations. The photographs are the property of the Library of Congress and were included in a 2006 exhibit Bound for Glory: America in Color.

Posted Jul 26, 2010 Share This Gallery
http://extras.denverpost.com/archive/captured.html 
Sent by Bonnie Chapa  thechapas@yahoo.com


Oscar De La Hoya received a Lifetime of Achievement in Hispanic Television on Wednesday 29 at the 8th Annual Hispanic Hispanic Television Summit, Oscar De La Hoya is president of Golden Boy Promotions Inc. 


90-minute PBS television documentary, �When Worlds Collide.� It is about the century after Columbus� first contact with a whole new, previously unknown continent and what it meant to Europe and to New World people after 1492. The program is co-written and narrated by journalist, author and performer Rub�n Mart�nez.

Jos� de la Isla summarizes the theme: "Too often, interpretations of history are not intended to instruct but to rationalize for one side or the other. Unfortunately, historical accounts are often used, like propaganda, to advance ideas about an inevitable dominance or superiority. The days of those notions are over. The objective truth is starting to prevail. It shows that the story behind the history is one about how different ethnicities (meaning people from differing histories and traditions) share their knowledge's exchange and trade goods, and blend through bloodliness."

Source: Hispanic Link  Vol.28no.26pdf

 

I invite you to join me in a historic effort to memorialize the role of Latinos in the U.S. by supporting the work of the National Museum of the American Latino Commission.  

We'll be submitting a report to Congress and the President on our efforts and we need to hear your voices. Tell us if you support this museum and its placement on the National Mall.

 

The National Museum of the American Latino Commission has heard from thousands of Americans. Now we want to hear from you. Here are three things you can do right now to show your support:

 

1. Become a Fan on Facebook. It's easy, all you have to do is click here and go to our Facebook page and click the like button.

 

2. Tell 5 friends. It is important this message gets out to as many people as possible. Forward this email to 5 friends today or click here to send them an email just like this one from me.

 

3. Tell Us What You Think. Fill out the simple 5 question survey and tell us why you think this is so critically important to you.

 

Thank you for signing up and spreading the word to your friends and loved ones.

 http://myamericanlatinomuseum.org/get_involved/input/

 

Eva Longoria-Parker, Commissioner
Sent by candrade@balseracommunications.com

On September 14, Friends of the National Museum of the American Latino held a special reception on the National Museum of the American Latino initiative.   If you would like to become a Friend, please contact Jonathan Kent at 202-587-2860.

 

 


Puerto Rican Poet Julia de Burgos Honored with US Stamp

Sept 14 Launch in Puerto Rico 

 

 

United States Postal Service (Release No. 09-118) (December 29, 2009)

 

With this 26th stamp in the Literary Arts series, the U.S Postal Service honors Julia de Burgos, one of Puerto Rico's most celebrated poets. The stamp goes on sale in September. A revolutionary writer, thinker, and activist, de Burgos wrote more than 200 poems that probe issues of love, feminism, and political and personal freedom. Her groundbreaking works combine the intimate with the universal. They speak powerfully to women, minorities, the poor, and the dispossessed, urging them to defy constricting social conventions and find their own true selves. The stamp features a portrait of de Burgos created by artist Jody Hewgill.

 

For further information: 
Media Contact: Roy Betts 
roy.a.betts@usps.gov
202-268-3207 (Office) 202-256-4174 (Cell)

 

My Desert Flower

By La Prima Elisa

I first learned about Lucia (Chita) Rede Madrid�s accomplishments when my mother handed me a couple of National Geographic magazines.  The first, a May 1980 issue, featured an article entitled �The Mexican Americans � A People On The Move�.  The article made reference to Lucia�s grandfather, �Secundino Lujan� (brother of my mother�s grandfather) and the land grant that he received in El Polvo, Texas in 1870.

Later, in February 1984, National Geographic published an article entitled �West of Pecos�.  It covered the family more in depth and graced a photo of Lucia Chita Rede Madrid sitting in her living room.  By this time Chita, who taught school for twenty-seven years in remote Redford, Texas,  had retired and had begun to establish a private Book Lending Library in the family General store.

Sometime later I received an early morning call from my excited mother telling me that Chita was being featured on the NBC Today Show!  I rushed to my TV, and caught the show already in progress.  The scene was the Madrid General Store, a �last chance� stop before heading east to The Big Bend National Park.  I watched in amazement as cameras swung around to film Lucia�s private Book Lending Library. There, housed among shirts and trousers, were the library cards that she had fashioned on the backs of cereal boxes and other cartons.

The NBC reporter covering the story of the family history spoke about Chita�s mother, Antonia Lujan Rede.   Antonia grew up in the mining community called Shafter, Texas.  It was there that the ambitious young lady traded goat�s milk 
in return for English lessons.  Taking advantage of every                                   Lucia "Chita" Rede Madrid 
opportunity to further her education, she went on to teach                         in "The Blue Room" of the White House
English to the locals, thus becoming one of the first Bi-Lingual                                         1990
teachers of the area.  Antonia�s legacy is exemplified by her 
children of whom seven went on to become teachers.  Another
of her daughters, Delfina, is the mother of the author, Denise 
Chavez.

In preparation for this piece I called Chita�s son, Enrique Madrid Jr., who was a gentleman scholar and a walking encyclopedia of the area. He told  of his mother�s weekly trips to Marfa, one hour away, to check out sorely needed books for her school.  She collected Sears & Roebuck catalogs that served as valuable teaching aides.   The catalog contents opened up vistas not seen before in this remote frontier. The children learned math, copied pictures, and learned about far away places.  After she retired, Chita continued her quest for books.  Pleas for donations went out to every passerby and tourist who stopped at the Madrid Store. Boxes donated by a local milkman went up as shelves.  As news of the project spread, Chita happily spent all her time cataloging and installing the Dewey Decimal System.

In 1989 Chita was inducted into the Texas Women�s Hall of Fame by the Texas Women�s University based in Denton, Texas.  She was inducted along with Barbara Bush and six other distinguished Texas women.

The following year (1990) Chita was invited to the White House in Washington DC. where President George W. Bush awarded her the President�s Volunteer Action Award designating her as one of the �Thousand Points of Lights�, and the Ronald Reagan Award for Volunteer Excellence.  This was a moment of crowning glory for a most magnificent lady.

Chita lived to age ninety.   Like her mother, she left behind  a legacy.  It can be safely said that, per-capita, Redford has produced more professionals, educators and scholars than any comparable desolate frontier hamlet. And the legacy lives on.

Shared by Elisa Perez from her blog and David Perez
Extracted from http://primaelisa.wordpress.com/2010/04/02/my-desert-flower/#comment-58 



HISPANICS BREAKING
BARRIERS

Part XXI

 By

Mercy Bautista-Olvera

 

The 21st article in the series �Hispanics Breaking Barriers� focuses on contributions         of Hispanic leadership in United States government. Their contributions have improved not only the local community but the country as well. Their struggles, stories, and accomplishments will by example; illustrate to our youth and to future generations that everything and anything is possible.

 Stephen N. Zack:  President of the American Bar Association  

Ricardo Zwaig:  Maryland Judge in Howard District County  

Judith Ann Canales:  Administrator for Business, and Cooperative Programs 
                                  at Rural Development in the Agriculture Department

Cesar L. Alvarez:  Executive Chairman of Greenberg Traurig      

Conrad Candelaria:  U.S. Marshal for New Mexico  

 

 Stephen N. Zack

Stephen N. Zack is the President-Elect of the American Bar Association 2010-2011. He is the first Hispanic American to assume the ABA Presidency in the 132-year history of the American Bar Association.  

Stephen Zack was born in Detroit , Michigan . He is the son of an American father and a Cuban mother.  His parents met while his Cuban mother was attending

college in Detroit . When Zack was two months old his family moved back to Cuba . He attended bilingual schools on the island. His family spoke both English and Spanish on the island until the Castro regime prohibited speaking English. The family emigrated from Cuba in 1961 when he was 14 years old. He is married to Marguerite; they have two grown children; Jason and Tracy, and two grandchildren; Madison and Sasha.  

In 1969, Stephen Zack received his Bachelor�s of Arts Degree in Political Science from the University of Florida , where he was elected to its Hall of Fame, and he received his Jurist Degree in 1971 from the University of Florida Law School, where he served as President of the Florida Blue Key Honorary Society.  

Zack was the first Hispanic American and the youngest President of the Florida bar. He also served as President of the National Conference of Bar Presidents and as the Chair of the American Bar Association�s House of Delegates.  

Zack served as special counsel to Governor Bob Graham. He also chaired the City of Miami Beach Charter Review Commission and the Environmental Commission for the City of Miami .  He is a former legislative aide to U.S. Representative Claude Pepper and a former member of the Orange Bowl Committee, and of the Public Health Trust.  

In 2001, Zack represented former Vice President Al Gore in the trial of Bush v. Gore; when the Democrat contested the results of the presidential election that went to George W. Bush. He also served as General Counsel to Florida 's former Governor and U.S. Senator Bob Graham.  

Zack was also appointed by Florida �s Governor Lawton Chiles to serve on the Florida Constitution Revision Commission. He worked with the other members of the commission reading, reviewing, and making recommendations for revising Florida �s constitution, which were adopted by the citizens in a State-wide vote. �All constitutions are only words unless there is a commitment by the citizens to accept and defend those rights,� stated Zack.  

In 2009, he received the distinguished Alumnus Award from the University of Florida , an award given to those who have excelled in their chosen field. He is also a Lifetime Fellow of the American Bar Association.  

The Miami lawyer was recently a partner in the national law firm Boies, Schiller & Flexner LLP.  

In 2010, �Hispanic Business� magazine included Zack on its list of the �100 Top Influential Hispanics,� the �Florida Trend� magazine named him as a Florida Legal Elite Attorney; and the �Miami Herald� daily newspaper recognized Zack in its Super Lawyers section as a �Top Florida Lawyer,� among many other recognitions.  

Zack has four presidential initiatives: access to justice and the underfunding of the judiciary; the need for increased civic education in our schools and for all Americans; Hispanic legal rights and responsibilities; and the ABA �s work in the area of disaster response and preparedness.  Zack is organizing several working groups for these initiatives.  

Zack has practiced law for more than 35 years, with focus on issues of civic education, civil rights, and multiculturalism. He has been admitted to practice in Florida, New York, and Washington, D.C.; the Supreme Court of the United States; the Supreme Court of Florida; the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit, and the U.S. District Courts for the Northern, Middle, and Southern Districts of Florida.

 

 

 Ricardo Zwaig  

Ricardo D. Zwaig, a Federal Public Defender Judge has been appointed by Maryland �s Governor Martin O�Malley to serve as judge in Howard County District in Maryland . He is the first Hispanic male, its first male representative in judicial robes. He replaces retiring Judge Alice P. Clark.  

Ricardo Zwaig was born in Argentina .  He is the son of Joseph (1926-2007) and Raquel Zwaig.   His family fled from Argentina to United States when he was 10 years old, during what is known as the country�s �Black Year,� when rebels seized control of the government. He has one brother, Miguel. He is divorced and the father of three grown children.  

He attended what was then Milford Mill High School in Baltimore County . In 1977, he graduated from the University of Maryland , Baltimore County , and in 1982, he graduated from the University of Maryland School of Law, passing the Bar Exam the following year.  

Zwaig worked as a State Public Defender until 1990, and then became a Federal Public Defender before taking an administrative federal court job. Zwaig�s practice is mostly criminal defense, personal injury, immigration, and some civil work. Zwaig stated an interest in constitutional law drew him to the field.  

During his investiture in Howard County in Maryland Judge Zwaig emphasized his commitment to justice and invoked Martin Luther King's famous phrase that "Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.� He promised to give everyone the same treatment and help the cause of justice in Howard County .  

He also served as an Assistant Branch Chief with the Administrative Office of the United States Courts. Zwaig has served on the Board of Governors of the Federal Bar Association, and on the Judicial Selections Committee of the Maryland Hispanic Bar Association.  

In 2002, he returned to the courtroom in private practice with his brother, Michael at the law firm of Zwaig and Zwaig.
 

Lawyer, Jason Shapiro, who headed the Howard County judicial selection panel stated, Zwaig �has fantastic experience and a wonderful demeanor and would make an outstanding judge."  

Howard District judge, Neil David Axel, one of four current Howard district judges and a veteran of more than 13 years in the job, said he has known Zwaig for years as a defense attorney. He is confident of Zwaig's ability to bring his life experiences to the bench, but also, to adapt to his new role. �He's going to be a wonderful addition to this bench," stated Axel.  

Zwaig said the appointment is slightly �bittersweet,� because he must stop practicing law with his brother, but he believes his Hispanic background gives a perspective needed on the court. �The fact that I�m Latino, that gives me a different viewpoint,� he said. �It�s not better or worse, just different. �I will treat people with total respect,� stated Zwaig. �I will apply the law. I will continue to learn and research the law. I will be on top of issues with the law. I�m going to be fair.� 

Zwaig devoted 19 years of his career to public service in both State and Federal public defenders� offices.  He also served as an Assistant Branch Chief with the Administrative Office of the United States Courts. Zwaig has served on the Board of Governors of the Federal Bar Association, and on the Judicial Selections Committee of the Maryland Hispanic Bar Association.  

 

 Judith Ann Canales  

Judith Ann Canales is the new Administrator for Business and Cooperative Programs at Rural Development, under the USDA Secretary in the Agriculture Department.  

Judith Ann Canales was born in the city of Uvalde , Texas . She is the daughter of Alfonso Aviles Canales (1925-2001) and Susana Maldonado-Canales. 

Judith Ann Canales earned an Associate of Arts Degree from Southwest Texas Junior College , a Bachelor of Journalism Degree from the University of Texas , and a Master of Arts degree in Urban Studies from Trinity University in San Antonio .  Canales also received a Master of Public Administration Degree from Harvard University John F. Kennedy School of Government. She is also a graduate of the National Hispana Leadership Institute.  

She is responsible for overseeing the national rural business and cooperative programs portfolio for USDA with a budget of over $1 billion.  

Canales previously served as the Executive Director for the Maverick County Development Corporation facilitating economic development for Eagle Pass and Maverick County , Texas .  

Canales also served as an adjunct faculty member of Southwest Texas Junior College , where she taught U.S. and Texas Government. She is also a consultant

in government relations, grant writing, and leadership training for nonprofit organizations.  

Canales served as the first Executive Director of the International Hispanic Network, an organization of city managers and professionals. She served as Director of Human Resources for the Kickapoo Lucky Eagle Casino, Special Projects Director for Sul Ross State University-Rio Grande College, and served as the Assistant City Manager for the City of Eagle Pass.

During President Bill Clinton�s Administration, Canales was appointed as Acting Associate Administrator for the U.S. Department of Agriculture Rural Business-Cooperative Service in Washington , D.C.  

Canales was the Deputy State Director for the USDA Rural Development Texas Office. The Texas State Office administers the rural housing, utilities, business, and community development programs.  

Canales served in Washington , D.C. as the Legislative Officer in the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development Office of Legislation. She served as Legislative Representative in the Washington , D.C. office for New York City Mayor, David N. Dinkins. She also served for the Low Income Housing Information Service and the National Council of La Raza.        

Canales is the past national president of MANA, a non-profit national Latina organization established with a goal to eliminate social and economic challenges.  

Judith A. Canales has over twenty years of experience serving at the national and local levels in federal and local government administration and nonprofit management. Her expertise is in rural and urban development, housing, community development, and economic development. She is also experienced in U.S. - Mexico border public policy issues and development.

 

Attorney Photo

 Cesar L. Alvarez  

Cesar L. Alvarez, CEO of Greenberg Traurig is now the Executive Chairman of Greenberg Traurig.  

Cesar L. Alvarez was born in 1947; he was born in Cuba , his family, immigrated to Miami , Florida when he was 13 years old. He is married to Kathleen Rayan-Alvarez.    

In 1967, he received his AA, from Miami-Dade Community College , in 1969, his Bachelor�s of Science Degree, in 1970, his Master�s Degree in Business Administration, and his Jurist Doctorate Degree with highest honors in 1972, all three from the University of Florida .  

Prior to working as a CEO of Greenberg Traurig, Alvarez practiced securities, corporate, and international law for more than 25 years. He has represented numerous public companies and serves on the board of directors of several publicly traded corporations, and charitable organizations.  

Since 1997, Alvarez has been the CEO of Greenberg Traurig. The firm has more than 1,800 attorneys and government professionals in 33 offices across the globe. Greenberg Traurig is one of the fastest growing law firms, with more than 30 locations in the United States , Europe, and Asia; including strategic alliances in Zurich , Switzerland , and Italy . The firm is the seventh largest in the country.  

Chambers and Partners, world leaders in client-led intelligence on the legal profession, through a panel of independent judges, selected Greenberg Traurig as �2007 U.S. Law Firm of the year.�  

In 2008, Alvarez was honored with a �Lifetime Achievement� award from Chambers and Partners, and a �Spirit of Excellence� from the American Bar Association. He has also been recognized in such journal as in the �National Law Journal� as one of the �100 Most Influential Lawyers in America,� (1997, 2000, and 2008), one of the top �Most Powerful Hispanics,� by the Black Book of Poder, 2008 Special Edition, and the "25 Best Latinos in Business," both in 2008.     

 

cc_20100715112316_JPG

 Conrad Candelaria  

Conrad Candelaria, the 44-year-old Estancia, New Mexico native has been selected by the U.S. Senate Judiciary committee to serve as U.S. Marshal for the district of New Mexico. He fills out the unexpired term of Sheriff Darren White who resigned to become public safety director for Albuquerque , New Mexico .

Conrad Candelaria graduated from Rio Grande High School . Candelaria earned an Associate�s Degree, a Bachelor�s Degree, and a Master�s Degree in Public Administration from the University of New Mexico .  

In 1985, Conrad Candelaria began his career as a Public Safety Aide with the Albuquerque Police Department. In 2003, Candelaria rose to the position of Commander of the Southwest Area Command, a position he held for nearly seven years.  

Candelaria retired early this year after serving the Albuquerque Police Department for 25 years and holding the position of Commander. Candelaria also served as a Criminal Justice Instructor at the University of New Mexico .    

"Conrad Candelaria has spent his entire career in law enforcement, and has developed all the right credentials for this important position," stated U.S. Senator Bingaman.  

Furthermore, former U.S. Senator Tom Udall stated, "Conrad Candelaria has had an extensive and vibrant career in New Mexico law enforcement. He is extremely qualified for this position and I look forward to seeing him confirmed as the United States Marshal for the District of New Mexico."     

�I am very honored the President gave me this nomination and to have the endorsement of Senators Bingaman and Udall. I want to build on a great tradition. Among the primary tasks is keeping a safe environment for our judiciary and making sure they can keep the criminal justice system operating smoothly,� stated Candelaria.

 

 
 
Polly Baca


Polly Baca

 A Wise Latina

  Nominated by Sylvia Trujillo    

By

Mercy Bautista-Olvera

 


Polly Baca is a former President and CEO of Latin American Research and Service Agency (LARASA) in Denver , Colorado .  

Polly Baca was born in 1941, in Greeley , Colorado . Polly is the oldest of four children; she is the daughter of Jos� Manuel Baca, a former migrant farm worker of Spanish descent and Leda Sierra-Baca (1920-2008), a strong and fiercely independent woman. A descendant of the Spanish colonists of New Mexico ; she stated that her family has been in Colorado since the 1600�s. Polly Baca�s parents taught her from a very young age to be proud of her Spanish lineage. She is a fourth generation Coloradan.  

Polly Baca was married to Miguel Barrag�n, a Chicano activist and former Priest; they met at the National Council of La Raza in Phoenix , Arizona . The marriage produced two children, Monica and Miguel. The marriage ended in divorce, she has two grandchildren: Eduardo Manuel Perez Jr. and Elicia Monica Perez.  

Baca recounts that as a child, she wanted to sit with �Anglos� at her church, but that her family was ushered to the side aisles. "They   assumed we were Mexican

Americans from the other side of the tracks.� Due to the prejudice, the family experienced, her mother Leda, decided to move the Baca family to a �low income, racially mixed neighborhood� in Northern Colorado . Baca recalled that, �we called it the Spanish American colony, because we were from Colorado and from the old Spanish families.�  

Baca wanted to attend Colorado State University ; however, her chemistry teacher told her that she would not succeed in public life because she was Mexican American.  For that reason, she decided to become a physics student.   Baca began university studies with a major in physics, but she was soon drawn back to her ninth-grade desire to enter law and politics.  

In 1960, Polly Baca was a sophomore when she became involved in campus politics, becoming the vice president, and later President, of the university�s Young Democrats. She became active as a volunteer for congressional campaigns. Baca was a student volunteer of the �Viva Kennedy Club�s� for John F. Kennedy, and worked as an intern for the Colorado Democratic Party.  

Polly Baca earned a Bachelor�s Degree in Political Science from Colorado State University . A Master�s of Arts in Education from Colorado State University , and a Master�s of Arts in Public Relations at the American University , Washington D.C.  

In 1962, Baca was recruited to work as an Editorial Assistant, for a trade union newspaper in Washington , DC . Shortly after, she was recruited to work for President Lyndon Johnson�s Administration as a Public Information Officer for a White House agency.  In 1968, Baca joined the National Campaign Staff of the late Senator Robert F. Kennedy in his bid for President of the United States . That same year she served as the Director of Research and Information for the National Council of La Raza in Phoenix , Arizona .  

A few years later, adding to a long list of "firsts," she became an Assistant to the Chairman of the Democratic National Committee. Shortly after, she opened a public relations business in Adams County after returning to Colorado , where she started her political career.    

In 1974, Polly Baca won Colorado 's 34th district seat in the state's House of Representatives. In the 1975 session of the Colorado legislature, she introduced nine House bills and carried six Senate bills in the House. Two of these House bills and three of Senate bills were passed by both houses, in later years Baca had many other bills passed by both houses.  

In an interview Baca recalled a personal note Senator Edward Kennedy sent  her with his best personal wishes during her Legislative campaign, saying, "We need more representation of the Chicano community in public office as we need more women, and Polly's the best of both..�She will represent a progressive, bright,

and effective addition to the state legislature, one who will speak for all the people of her district." 

In 1977, Polly Baca was elected the first woman chair of the House Democratic Caucus. In 1978, she became the first Hispanic woman to be elected to the Colorado Senate, the same year; she chaired the Colorado delegation to the Democratic Mid-term Conference. In 1985, she was elected chair of the Senate Democratic Caucus.  Baca was the first Hispanic woman to serve in leadership in any State Senate in the United States .  

In 1988, she was honored as one of the original 14 members to be inducted into the National Hispanic Hall of Fame and was entered in the World Who's Who of Women. In 1989, she received an honorary Doctor of Laws degree from Wartburg College , Waverly, Iowa .    

In December 1993, Baca was appointed Special Assistant to President Bill Clinton and Director of the United States Office of Consumer Affairs in Washington , D.C.   Baca served as a Vice Chair of the Democratic National Committee (DNC) from 1981 to 1989, and was a member of the DNC from 1973 to 1989.  Other national Democratic Party positions held by Baca include serving as Co-Chair of the 1980 and 1984 National Democratic Presidential Nominating Conventions, Vice President of the 1988 National Democratic Presidential Nominating Convention, and Co-Chair of the 1985 National Democratic Fairness Commission.    

Baca also shared her extensive foreign affairs experience as a participant and panelist to major international conferences in Colombia , Mexico , the USSR , Israel , Egypt , Lebanon , Canada , Belgium , and West Germany .  

Baca was the first Hispanic woman to head a 6-state federal agency in the Rocky Mountain Region VIII Government Services Administration (GSA) 1994-1999. Here 48,000 government employees developed a statewide multicultural leadership program aiming to assist community leaders from different ethnic and racial groups.  

Baca retired from public office and became President of Sierra Baca Systems, a consulting firm specializing in program development and evaluation, leadership training, and motivational presentations.  

Baca also served as President and CEO of Latin American Research and Service Agency (LARASA) a non-profit organization founded in 1964, to improve

the quality of life for Latinos throughout Colorado with the belief that when you improve the lives of Latinos in Colorado , you improve the lives of all Coloradoans. In addition, she has frequently appeared as a political commentator on both television and radio.




Joseph Machado  

Joseph Machado

Biking for America

 

By

Mercy Bautista-Olvera

 

Joseph Machado is 13 years old; he was born on December 22, 1996, in Upland , California . He is the son of Robert Machado, and Elvira Quezada-Machado; he has one brother, Robert, and one sister, Mercedes. Joseph�s paternal grandparents are Richard Machado, a first generation Mexican American, and June Fagin, whose roots are Russian and Swedish. His maternal grandmother is Vera Hernandez, a first generation Mexican American.  

When Joseph Machado returns to school and is asked what he did over the summer, he will simply smile, shrug, and say he pedaled 3,000 miles across the country to shake President Barack Obama�s hand on the White House lawn. (However, President Obama was not available).  

Joseph was 8 years old, when he first had his first accident. While playing soccer, a player stepped on his right ankle as he pivoted to kick. The bone broke in two places, almost turning the foot in the opposite direction. Pins were inserted into the flesh, and he missed several summers while confined to a wheelchair.  Just months after his ankle had fully healed, Joseph was thrown from his wheelchair, pushing the pins in and resulting in a serious infection, he had another surgery, and remained in the wheelchair to further recover from his injuries. At the age of 10, Joseph learned to walk again; but soon thereafter had a skateboard accident, broke his ankle, and returned to using a wheelchair. Joseph was 11 years old, when he had a biking accident; he smashed head first into a concrete wall, shattering his helmet, cracking his skull, breaking ribs, and he sustained injuries to his neck, ankle, and wrists, he returned to the wheelchair. 

Joseph got a taste of being "different,� through his experiences in the wheelchair, he found people did not treat him the same. He was inspired to help others after spending more than a year in a wheelchair.    

Joseph Machado, recovered, healed, and found himself doing the types of things kids his age normally do, such as playing soccer and making jumps on his BMX

bike. Joseph has a variety of other interests, ranging from playing guitar and surfing to skim boarding, skateboarding, and snowboarding. Joseph was thinking about a way to help when he decided to do a cross-country trip to raise funds to help kids with disabilities. �I wanted to give back to the less fortunate people that maybe weren't able to get out of the wheelchair, and I just want people to know that they are regular people, they're, just like the rest of us, and they deserve to be treated like everyone else,� stated Joseph.  

Joseph�s decision to ride his bike to Washington D. C., was not an idea that he thought up at the spur of the moment. He has seen more than his fair share of pain. His family coined the phrase that is across the sides of their SUV and trailer   �Making a difference one mile at a time.�  

On June 5, 2010, he left Rancho Cucamonga , California , and headed towards Washington DC . He decided to bike 3,000 miles across the country.  �I was one of the lucky ones who got out of my wheelchair and wanted to do something to help disadvantaged kids.  Since I am only 13 yrs old, I decided the one thing I could do is bike across America to raise money for kids who can�t afford the treatment they need.�  

The most difficult part of the trip was going from a 120-degree desert to pedaling    up a 7,000 foot mountain in Flagstaff, Arizona, However, the most enjoyable part has been the variety of people he has met along the way while staying overnight in shelters, police and fire stations, and even a bomb shelter.  

He traveled more than 1,400 miles through Arizona , New Mexico , Texas , and Oklahoma , Joseph was about halfway to his goal when he arrived in Joplin , Missouri , via Interstate 44.  

The family even weathered a thunderstorm in Oklahoma . He has dealt with speeding cars and convoys of 18-wheelers blurring past him. There have been straight roads, curved roads and a dirt road or two. He and his family have stayed overnight at churches and dined with the homeless at shelters along the way.  

The highlight of his trip so far was a proclamation from Oklahoma Governor Brad Henry that June 24, will forever be known throughout the state as Joseph Machado Day. �That was really nice,� Joseph stated with a grin.  

Joseph and his family were invited to a firehouse chow, courtesy of the Joplin Fire Department. The generosity from the Joplin community continued when the Hampton Inn gave the weary California family a free night�s stay.

�It�s very beautiful,� he said of the area, and very flat, which is what a biker prefers, however, temperatures often reached the triple digits, and Joseph had to hit the road as early as 4 a.m. The teen said he loved his time in the Midwest . Before this trip, the only place he had visited outside California was Florida , so the bits and pieces of the Midwest he had glimpsed were through clouds from a window seat.  

The most interesting or memorable experience that happened during his journey   was to be able to meet with various groups such as kids at Camp Quality (a camp for kids with cancer) and the Cincinnati Aquatic Program (a swimming program for disabled kids). �I enjoyed meeting people in different states that were so kind and hospitable,� Joseph also stated that he was �attacked by a swarm of bees and one flew in my mouth and stung me.�   



Joseph's family has been supporting him along the way, like a miniature, on-road pit crew. Sometimes, his older siblings, Mercedes and Robert, accompanied him on their bikes for a few miles. The whole family enjoyed different aspects of the trip, especially being together and watching Joseph's endurance.  

                                                                       Joseph Machado, reaching the White House  

On July 13, 2010, Machado arrived at the gates of the White House. His goal was to raise $500,000 to be donated to children with illness. So far, he�s raised $15,000 to be donated toward treating ill children, including those with congenital illnesses, like spinal bifida.  

Joseph�s father, Robert, has been impressed by the impact his son has on other children. �While in Cincinnati , Joseph had the chance to ride in an event with some of the children he hopes his trip will help.  The inspiration that the kids gain from this event is huge.  I know this is touching many lives. I am proud of him; it gives them something to think about, that no matter what their disabilities are, they can make a difference. I have great joy in watching him. When you think he can't go anymore, he keeps going and going,� stated his father Robert Machado.  

Joseph�s mom also stated, �God is riding on his shoulders, and that's how he's able to do it.  I am very proud of his selfless spirit and willingness to help others.  He has inspired me to be a more giving person. While watching Joseph daily, it amazed me how each day he continued to ride his bike with more and more focus, drive, ambition, and strength.  Never, not even once, did he complain or even suggest that the trip was too much for him! He never complained that it was too hot, or that he was too sore, or that he might need an extra days rest.�   


"Joseph put his whole heart into riding; it's in his heart to do it. Part of the passion comes in his desire to help those who are less fortunate or have special needs,� stated his sister, Mercedes.  
  

Joseph in the House of Representatives  

 

Congressman David Dreier with Joseph Machado and his Machado   

While in Washington D.C. , Congressman David Dreier (R-San Dimas, California ) welcomed the Upland native, Joseph Machado and his family.  Dreier stated that Joseph and his family serve as an inspiration to people in the Foothills and across the country. �In these difficult times, Joseph and the entire Machado family have spent their summer traveling across our great country to raise awareness and help others. They are a real inspiration and living proof that one person, and one family, can make a difference.  It was an honor to welcome Joseph and his parents, Robert and Elvira, his brother Robert, and sister Mercedes, to Washington and to congratulate them on their exciting journey.� Congressman Dreier presented Joseph Machado with a certificate of recognition from the U.S. House of Representatives stating: �In special recognition of Joseph Machado for bicycling across our country to inspire others and improve our community.�   

Josephs parents, Robert and Elvira, created the nonprofit organization �Kids in Christ,� the funds will be distributed to at least three charities: Child Evangelism Fellowship, Together in His Arms, and Hope International.  

Joseph�s mentors are his parents, sister, brother, police officers, firefighters, Fred and Rita Nelsen, San Bernardino County Supervisor, Paul Biane, and Fire Captain, Jim Townsend.

 

Other accomplishments

On July 28, 2010, at the Honda Center in Anaheim , California , the Ringling Bros and Barnum & Bailey Circus organization awarded Joseph Machado with the �Gold Barnum Award,� The award, a $1,000 grant, honors the spirit of P.T. Barnum and his contributions to society; it recognizes children who are making a difference in their community. (Joseph was honored during the Barnum's FUNundrum).

  The advice he would give kids who want to make a difference would be to �Encourage them to go forward with their dreams.  Ask your parents, teachers, pastors, etc., for advice on how to reach your goals.  Remembering, that no matter what problems you are having in your life that, you can still make a difference. There is no greater feeling than helping someone else and your community.�  

Joseph plans are to continue to raise money for disadvantaged kids, and to encourage other kids to support their communities.  

Kids for Christ Presents Biking for America   

http://www.bikingforamerica.com/  

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=krv5ZFzId7Y

http://www.squibler.com/Media/jeff/josephbikingmovie/josephbikingmovie.swf

http://www.wlwt.com/video/24148779/detail.html

http://www.wcpo.com/dpp/news/california-teen-bikes-across-the-united-states

http://www.wlwt.com/family/24169117/detail.html?taf=cin 

The video below is the one with Joseph�s brother, Robert and his comments.
http://www.wdtv.com/index.php/home/local-news/2249-cycling-for-a-cause
  

Sent by Mercy Bautista Olvera

 



Enrique Torres, Professional wrestling career  



Enrique Torres, standing on the top step
(July 25, 1922�September 10, 2007) was a Mexican-American professional wrestler, the oldest of  three Torres brothers in wrestling, and a major heavy weight wrestling star in the late 1940s and 1950s.[1]  



Enrique Torres, Professional wrestling career was written by his daughter-law Ana Torres and her brother-in-law Allan Torres, who prepared a wikipedia version and provided highlighted links for the sources.  For more information, please contact anatorres@sbcglobal.net.   

Torres was born to Mexican parents in Santa Ana, California and after a long amateur career entered professional wrestling in 1946 debuting at the Olympic Auditorium and was very successful in the nascent and booming televised wrestling market in the California. He had no gimmicks, however his signature move was a deftly executed Flying Scissors. He used no stage name though a Mexican-market newspaper billed him as �La Pantera Negro de Sonora�, the "Black Panther from Sonora, Mexico� due to his smooth and lightening fast moves.  In his first year he won the California version of the world heavyweight championship before losing it Gorgeous George, only to win it back the following year.[1]

In 1952 Torres and then-rival Barron Leone were involved in a case that went all the way to the Santa Monica Superior Court due to two fans claiming they were injured when Leone threw Torres into the crowd.  Leone claimed if he was capable of the feat he'd leave wrestling to play for the Southern Cal football team, and the two were exonerated. [1] One of Torres' greatest matches was in February 1953 while he was the reigning Pacific Coast Heavy Weight Champion, and he wrestled world heavyweight champion Lou Thesz to a one-hour draw. The gate was a then-record $5000 in Sacramento.  He also claimed the Central States championship in 1952 and 1963.[1]

Due to his success Torres' brothers Alberto and Ramon wanted to join him in wrestling.  Enrique worked with Alberto and Rachel, Enrique�s second wife, worked to help train Ramon in the various wrestling holds and tactics.  In time, with work and practice in Oakland, CA they received Enrique's blessing and later went on the road.  The three went on to be involved in a 'Vachon-Torres brother war' in Georgia against the Vachon wrestling family.  In 1971 Alberto would be the first to die, as a result of a ruptured pancreas, a injury suffered in the ring. Ramon would later die August 25, 2000 of heart failure.[1]

In addition to his singles titles, Torres also held various tag team championships teamed with Bobo Brazil, Leo Nomellini, Ronnie Etchison, Johnny Barend, Jess Ortega, and his brothers in the 1950�s and 1960�s, ranging from Texas to the Central States territory.[1]

Torres retired in 1968 after one last run as a headline star, spending time in California and Nevada .  In 1969 Enrique was asked to make a cameo appearance with Jimmy Lennon, a much loved sports announcer at the Olympic Auditorium in Los Angles for a celebration of twenty years of televised wrestling.   Enrique moved with his third wife Kata to Calgary, Alberta, Canada in 1986.

In 2006, Japanese reported came to Calgary, Canada to meet and interview Enrique one last time.  Enrique was highly respected and revered as part of the Japan Wrestling Association where he wrestled the Japanese Sumobasho circuit in 1960. 

Enrique was wrestling in Havana, Cuba the night the Batista regime fell to Castro�s rebel army in 1959.  
Youtube video of  Enrique wrestling -
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iCi8MyUA8RE
Youtube video of Alberto Torres wrestling �
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hpeGolWBlIE

Personal Background

Enquire was married to Maria Escalera in 1938
Childen: Helen December 1939 and Enrique (Tony) November  1940

Later married to Rachel Rodela in 1950
Children: Allan Enrique April 1952 and Jim  June 1956

Enrique married Kata in 1963 and they had 44 wonderful years together

In his later years he had suffered a stroke and was on kidney dialysis in additional to receiving a kidney transplant in 2006. On September 10, 2007 he died as a resident of the Carewest George Boyack Nursing Home in Calgary.[1]

 


Comments on Laus Deo

Dear Mimi,

I appreciate the work you do in producing Somos Primos and look forward to reading it every month. Laus Deo turned this month's issue (September) a little sour for me. The blend of religion and patriotic fervor was a bit too feverish for me, and reminded me of the call to Allah in the middle East "God is Great." Not only that it was filled with inaccurate information.  

A quick google search on Laus Deo yielded the following from Snopes:
http://www.snopes.com/politics/religion/monument.asp 

I am awed by Washington's prayer for America. Have you never read it? Well now is your opportunity ... read on!
The words quoted in the example above are inscribed on a bronze tablet adjoining the Washington pew in St. Paul's chapel in New York City, but they are not "Washington's prayer for America." They are taken from the last paragraph of a circular letter dated 8 June 1783, addressed to the governors of the thirteen states by General Washington upon his disbanding of the Continental Army at the end of the Revolutionary War. There are three significant problems with the version of the words presented in the example cited at the head of this page, however: They weren't written by Washington, they weren't a prayer, and they have been substantially modified from the original. 

And finally, the wording has been altered to make the passage appear to be a prayer addressed to Almighty God, when in fact was a direct statement from Washington to a governor." There is more on the Snope's design refuting major elements of this piece (including the wild claim that the plan was laid out in the shape of a cross), which has been circulating on the web since 2002.

I've taken the time to write to you because you seem like a reasonable person. The current climate in America is one of fear and phobia. Religious fundamentalism of any ilk, be it Christian or Muslim, is not what this country was built on, and certainly not what we need right now.

With respect,  
Sandra Ramos O'Briant  obriantleg@aol.com 


 


Department of Defense Hispanic Heritage Kickoff Highlights Women

by Rudi Williams
American Forces Press Service


WASHINGTON, Sept. 29, 1998 � Department of Defense kicked off Hispanic Heritage Month Sept. 15. 
Keynote speaker Maria C. Fernandez-Greczmiel, deputy assistant secretary of defense for inter-American affairs stated that "Recognition of Hispanic contributions to the nation shouldn't be limited to accomplishments by generals and politicians, she emphasized. It should include accomplishments "by our mothers and fathers, sisters and brothers, children and all of us who proudly comprise the Hispanic-American community," she said.

"I hope, as we celebrate this Hispanic Heritage Month, we're looking forward to a time when our society will not need to be reminded of the extensive and extraordinary accomplishments of Hispanics, especially Hispanic women," she said. She praised DoD's record of hiring Hispanic women, military and civilian employees, but said there is still work to do.

"We must do a better job of increasing the number of Hispanic American women in leadership roles in the Department of Defense," Fernandez-Greczmiel said. According to her statistics, DoD employs about 44,000 Hispanic civilian employees; some 15,800 are women, of which six are in the Senior Executive Service and 330 are in GS-13 to GS-15 positions.

She said about 13,000 of the 200,000 women on active military duty are Hispanic. Another 8,000 Hispanic women are members of the reserve components. "Hispanic women are concentrated within the enlisted ranks and, therefore, serve as the backbone of our armed services," Fernandez-Greczmiel noted. "They also serve in the officers corps as doctors, nurses, lawyers and many other specialties."

The military takes pride in showing others that tenacity, determination and teamwork can overcome any obstacle, no matter how difficult, she said. "As a result," she said, "women in the military have the ability to not only defend our country, but also to blaze a new path for women in the rest of our society.  "That's because Hispanic women -- all women -- in the armed services don't seek special status or treatment," she said. "Rather, they seek equal and fair treatment. The military has historically served as a proving ground for women -- for women who don't believe in life's barriers."  

Fernandez-Greczmiel said she hopes the day will come in her lifetime when stories of Hispanic Americans' accomplishments and heroism are passed from teacher to student and parent to child with no one saying, "Gee, how unusual." "These success stories should be accepted as the rule and not as exceptions, as routine and not unusual," she said. And the day also will come, she added, when women are recognized as individuals, not stereotyped or expected to assume certain "traditional roles for women."

Sent by Rafael Ojeda 



Hispanic Reflections on the American Landscape: 
Identifying and Interpreting Hispanic Heritage.

The Cultural Resources Diversity Program, part of Cultural Resources, National Park Service, has published Hispanic Reflections on the American Landscape: Identifying and Interpreting Hispanic Heritage. The guide addresses Hispanic heritage, as it relates to the built environment, using examples either found within the National Park System or documented by the National Park Service. 

Hispanic Reflections includes:

- An introductory essay that summarizes Hispanic American cultural heritage in the United States;

- An annotated list of historic properties related to Hispanic cultural heritage that are listed in the National Register of Historic Places, designated as National Historic Landmarks, and documented by the Historic American Building 
Survey and Historic American Engineering Record, all programs of the National Park Service;

- Examples of historic sites that interpret aspects of Hispanic heritage for the public benefit;
- A list of historic properties that are documented and/or recognized by National Park Service cultural resources programs, arranged by program and state; and

- A list of bibliographic resources of well-known and accessible publications on the topic.

Hispanic Reflections is the third publication in the Reflections on the American Landscape series using this methodology to highlight the imprint of diverse groups on the built environment of the United States.

Hispanic Reflections is printed in both Spanish and English and is also available as a PDF online at: www.nps.gov/history/crdi/publications/NPS_HispanicReflections_Spanish.pdf<http://www.nps.gov
/history/crdi/publications/NPS_HispanicReflections_Spanish.pdf
 

Contact Information
Name: Brian D. Joyner, National Historic Landmark Survey
Phone Number: 202.354.2276
Email: brian_joyner@nps.gov 
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]



 


Commemorating
Both Mexico�s 
Bicentennial Independence and Centennial Revolution

Mexican Presidents  

Compiled By

Mercy Bautista-Olvera  

HONORING THE RESEARCH OF JOS� LE�N ROBLES DE LA TORRE 

Jos� Le�n Robles de la Torre is a writer, journalist, poet, and historian of Juanchorrey, Zacatecas. . He has written history books on his family and other people from his hometown; He has written a series "La Indepencencia y los Presidentes de Mexico. He spent 42 years investigating the history of Mexican presidents and two Emperors in order to write their biographies. He compiled 79 documents and maps in 69 booklets in 13 chapters, describing the turmoil in Mexico, from 1810 to 2000.

At a young age, Robles de la Torre, made his home in Torre�n, Coahuila where he discovered his love for history and geneology. A journalist for most of his career, he writes for �El Siglo de Torre�n� (a newspaper, in Torre�n, Coahuila , Mexico ). His newspaper series �Personajes en la historia de Mexico ,� has been published for many years. He has also published many books, to name a few such as �Filigranas Fundaciones y Genealogias: Tepetongo, Zacatecas,� (1999). �Filigranas Fundaciones y Genealogias; Jerez , Susticacan y Monte Escobedo, Zacatecas,� (2006), and �Historia de Juanchorrey y Tepetongo, Zacatecas,� (2008).  

In June 2009, Jos� Le�n Robles de la Torre began writing a biographical series on Mexican Presidents and its two Emperors. This series is to commemorate the Bicentennial Independence and the Centennial Revolution. (However, not included are Presidents Vicente Fox and Felipe Calder�n).  

His niece, our own Mercy Bautista-Olvera has been sharing Robles de la Torre's research and articles on the presidents in Somos Primos.   Below,  in alphabetical order are the names of the presidents and the issues in which their stories were included.  To read  Jos� Le�n Robles de la Torre series of articles �Personajes en la historia de Mexico ,� published in Somos Primos, click on the Mexico section.  The series started with a map of lost territory. 

Mercy
has also compiled the Mexican presidents from 1821 to 2010 and the time periods during which they served. That listing follows the alphabetical list of published bios. 

President's Name:                     Dates Served:                 Somos Primos Issue:  
Pedro Mar�a Anaya                     1847                                 July 2010
Mariano Arista                             1851 - 1853                      August 2010  
Miguel Barrag�n                          1835 - 1836                      January 2010
Jos� Mar�a Bocanegra                1829                                 October 2009
Nicol�s Bravo                              1839                                 February 2010
Anastasio Bustamante                 1830 - 1832                       November 2009 
Valent�n Canalizo                        1843 - 1944                       March 2010 
Mart�n Carrera                            1855                                 October 2009
Juan Bautista Ceballos                1853                                 September 2010  
Jos� Justo Corro                         1836 - 1837                      February 2010 
R�mulo D�az de la Vega              1855                                 October 2010
Francisco Echeverr�a                   1841                                 March 2010 
Manuel G�mez Far�as                 1833 - 1834                      December 2009  
Vicente Guerrero                         1829                                 August 2009
Jos� Joaqu�n de Herrera             1844                                 June 2010  
Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla              1810 - 1815                      July 2009  
Agust�n de It�rbide                      1821 - 1823                      September 2009 
Benito Ju�rez                              1867 - 1872                       July 2009  

Manuel Mar�a Lombardini             1853                                September 2010

Antonio L�pez de Santa Ana      1833 - 1835                      January 2010
Jos� Mar�a Morelos Y Pav�n       1812                                 July 2009
Melchor M�zqu�z                         1832                                 November 2009
Mariano Paredes                         1846                                 June 2010
Manuel Pedraza                          1832 - 1833                        December 2009  
Manuel de la Pe�a y Pe�a            1847 - 1848                     August 2010 
Jos� Mariano Salas                     1846                                   July 2010
Guadalupe Victoria                      1824 - 1829                      August 2009
Pedro Velez Y Zu�iga                  1829                                 October 2009

 

Mexico Revolution for Independence from Spain

Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla
Initiated the Rebellion on 16 of September 1810 for Independence against Spain. Jos� Mar�a Morelos y Pav�n a leader, who fought with Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla against Spain . 


Regency of the First Mexican Empire 1821-1822  

Agust�n de It�rbide                                28 September 1821 - 8 May 1822          
Juan O�Donoj� O�Rian                           28 September 1822 - 8 October 1821
Manuel de la Barcena                            28 September 1821 - 11 April 1821
Manuel V�lazquez de Le�n y P�rez        28 September 1821 - 11 April 1821
Manuel Valent�n y Tamayo                    11 April 1822 - 18 May 1822
Manuel de Heras y Soto                        11 April 1822 - 18 May 1822
Nicol�s Bravo                                        11 April 1822 - 18 May 1822

First Mexican Empire Reign 1822- 1823

Emperor Agust�n de It�rbide                19 May 1822 -19 March 1823
Royal House It�rbide
Constitutional Emperor of Mexico

Presidents of Mexico 1824-1864                                                                  

Guadalupe Victoria                                  10 October 1824 - April 1829
Vicente Guerrero                                     1 April 1829 - 17 December 1829
Agust�n de It�rbide                                28 September 1821 - 8 May 1822
Jos� Mar�a Bocanegra                          18 December 1829 - 31 December 1829
Pedro V�lez y Zu�iga                            23 December 1829 - December 311829 
Anastasio Bustamante                           1 January 1830 - 13 August 1832
Melchor M�zquiz                                   14 August 1832 - 26 December 1832
Manuel G�mez Pedraza                        24 December 1832 - 1 April 1833
Valent�n G�mez Far�as                          1 April 1833 - 16 May 1833
Antonio L�pez de Santa Ana                   16 May 1833 - 3 June 1833
Valent�n G�mez Far�as                          3 June 1833 - 18 June 1833
Antonio L�pez de Santa Ana                   18 June 1833 - 5 July 1833
Valent�n G�mez Far�as                          5 July 1833 - October 27 1833
Antonio L�pez de Santa Ana                   27 October 1833 - 15 December 1833
Valent�n G�mez Far�as                          16 December 1833 - 24 April 1834
Antonio L�pez de Santa Ana                   24 April 1834 - 27 January 1835
Miguel Barrag�n Ortiz                            28 January 1835 - 27 February 1836
Jos� Justo Corro                                   2 March 1836 - 19 April 1837
Anastasio Bustamante                           19 April 1837 - 20 March 1839
Antonio L�pez de Santa Ana                   20 March 1939 - 10 July 1839
Nic�las Bravo                                        10 July 1839 - 19 July 1839
Anastasio Bustamante                           19 July 1839 - 22 September 1841
Francisco Xavier Echeverr�a                  22 September 1841 - 10 October 1841
Antonio L�pez de Santa Ana                   10 October 1841 - 26 October 1842
Nic�las Bravo                                        26 October 1842 - 4 March 1843
Antonio L�pez de Santa Ana                   4 March 1843 - 4 October 1843
Valent�n Canalizo                                  4 October 1843 - 4 June 1844
Antonio L�pez de Santa Ana                   4 June 1844 - 12 September 1844
Jos� Joaqu�n de Herrera                       12 September 1844 - 21Sept. 1844
Valent�n Canalizo                                  21 September 1844 - 6 December 1844
Jos� Joaqu�n de Herrera                       7 December 1844 - 30 December 1845
Gabriel Valencia                                    30 December 1845- 2 January 1846
Mariano Paredes                                   4 January 1846 - 28 July 1846
Jos� Mariano Salas                               5 august 1846 - 23 December 1846
Valent�n G�mez Far�as                          24 December 1846 - 21 March 1847
Antonio L�pez de Santa Ana                   21 March 1847 - 2 April 1847
Pedro Mar�a Anaya                               2 April 1847 - 20 May 1847
Antonio L�pez de Santa Ana                   20 May 1847 - 15 September 1847
Manuel de la Pe�a y Pe�a                     26 September 1847 -13 November 1847
Pedro Mar�a Anaya                               13 November 1847 - 8 January 1848
Manuel de la Pe�a y Pe�a                     8 January 1847 - 3 June 1848
Jos� Joaqu�n de Herrera                       3 June 1848 - 15 January 1851
Mariano Arista                                       15 January 1851 - 6 January 1853
Juan Bautista Ceballos                          6 January 1853 - February 1853
Manuel Mar�a Lombardini                      8 February 1853 - 20 April 1853
Antonio L�pez de Santana                     20 April 1853 - 9 August 1855
Mart�n Carrera Sabat                            15 August 1855 - 12 September 1855
R�mulo D�az de la Vega                          12 September 1855 - 3 October 1855
Juan Nepomuceno �lvarez                      4 October 1855 - 1 December 1855 
Ignacio Comonfort de los Rios               15 September 1855 - 21 January 1858
Benito Ju�rez                                        19 January 1858 � 10 April 1864

                                       

Presidents during Reform War 1857-1861  

F�lix Mar�a Zuloaga                               21 January 1858 - 24 December 1858 
Manuel Robles Penzuela                       24 December 1858 - January 21 1859
Jos� Mariano Salas                               21 January 1859 - 1 February 1859
F�lix Mar�a Zuloaga                               24 January 1859 - 1 February 1859
Miguel Miram�n                                    2 February 1859 - 12 August 1860
Jos� Ignacio Pav�n                               13 August 1880 - 15 August 1860
Miguel Miram�n                                    15 August 1860 - 28 December 1852
F�lix Mar�a Zuloaga                               28 December1860 - 28 December 1862

 

Regency of Second Mexican Empire 1863-1864

Juan Nepomuceno Almonte                    21 June 1863 - 10 April 1864 
Jos� Mar�a Salas                                  21 June 1863 - 10 April 1864
Juan Bautista de Ormaechea Emaiz       21 June 1863 - 10 April 1864 
Pelagio de Labastida y D�valos              21 June 1863 - 10 April 1864
Jos� Ignacio Pav�n                               21 June 1863 - 10 April 1864

 

Second Mexican Empire

Regency of Second Mexican Empire 1864-1867

Emperor Ferdinand Maximilian             10 April 1864 - 15 May 1872     
Of Austria , Royal House Habsburg
Spouse: Charlotte of Belgium , also known as Empress Carlota

 

Presidents of Mexico 1867 to 2010                                                             

Benito Ju�rez                                          15 May 1867 - 18 July 1872
Sebasti�n Lerdo de Tejada                    19 July 1872 - 20 November 1873
Jos� Mar�a Iglesias                               31 October 1876 - 15 November 1876
Porfirio D�az                                          28 November 1876 - 6 December 1876  
Juan Nepomuseno Mendez                   6 December 1876 - 17 February 1877
Porfirio D�az                                          17 February 1877 - 30 November 1880
Jos� Manuel Gonz�lez                          1 December 1880 - 30 November 1884
Porfirio D�az                                          1 December 1884 - 25 May 1911 
Francisco Le�n de la Barra                    25 may 1911 - 6 November 1911
Francisco Madero                                 8 November 1911 - 18 February 1913
Pedro Lazcur�in                                    18 February 1913 - 18 February 1913
Victoriano Huerta                                  18 February 1913 - 15 July 1914  
Venustiano Carranza                             10 August 1914 - 21 May 1917
Francisco Carvajal                                 15 July 1914 - 13 August 1914
Eulalio Guti�rrez Ortiz                           6 November 1914 - 16 July 1915
Roque Gonz�lez Garza                         16 January 1915 - 10 June 1915
Francisco Lagos Ch�zaro                      10 June 1915 - 10 October 1915
Venustiano Carranza                             20 August 1915 - 21 May 1920
Adolfo de la Huerta                                1 June - 30 November 1920 
�lvaro Obreg�n                                     1 December 1924 - 30 November 1928
Elias Calles                                           1 December 1928 - November 30 1928
Emilio Portes Gil                                    1 December 1928 - 5 February 1930
Pascual Ortiz Rubio                               5 February 1930 - 2 September 1932
Abelardo Rodr�guez                               2 September 1932 - 30 November 1934
Manuel �vila Camacho                          1 December 1940 - 30 November 1946
Miguel Alem�n                                      1 December 1946 � 30 November 1952
L�zaro C�rdenas                                   1 December 1952 - 31 November 1958
Adolfo Luis Cortines                              1 December 1958 - 30 November 1964
Adolfo L�pez Mateos                             1 December 1958 - 30 November 1964
Gustavo D�az Ordaz                              1 December 1964 - 30 November 1970
Luis Echeverr�a                                     1 December 1970 - 30 November 1976 
Jos� L�pez Portillo                                1 December 1976 - 30 December 1982 
Miguel de la Madrid                               1 December 1982 - 30 November 1988
Carlos Salinas de Gortari                       1 December 1988 - 30 November 1994
Ernesto Zedillo                                      1 December 1994 - 30 November 2000 
Vicente Fox                                           1 December 2000 - 30 November 2006
Felipe Calderon                                     1 December 2006 - term expires 2012

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Presidents_of_Mexico
Source:  �List of heads of state of Mexico

 

For information on commemorative events of the Mexican Revolution taking place in Washington, DC at the Smithsonian and the National Museum of American History, go to the following two sites: 
http://www.latino.si.edu/newsevents/index.htm?trumbaEmbed=view%3Devent%26eventid%3D90570433#/?i=1 
http://www.americanhistory.si.edu/MexicanRevolution/symposium.html 

Sent by Roberto Calderon, Ph.D.  beto@unt.edu 

 

 


CELEBRATING HISPANIC HERITAGE MONTH

SEPTEMBER 15 TO OCTOBER 15


Proclamation by the Orange County Board of Supervisors, Orange County, California
Link to the US Presidential Proclamation
The Tejanos: Where We Came From by Ben Figueroa

 


Hispanic Heritage Month

September 15th � October 15th 2010

 

By the authority of the Orange County Board of Supervisors, the following resolution is hereby issued:  

WHEREAS, Congress, by Public Law 100-402, has authorized and requested the President to issue annually a proclamation designating September 15 through October 15, as "National Hispanic Heritage Month" and called upon the people of the United States, especially the educational community, to observe the month with appropriate ceremonies and activities; and

WHEREAS, American society today embraces a remarkable breadth of cultures, and Hispanics are an integral part of this diversity; and 

WHEREAS, Americans of Hispanic descent have served in every war since our founding and continue to serve in our Armed Forces with courage and honor, and their efforts help make America more secure and bring freedom to people around the world; and

WHEREAS, there are approximately 1.1 million Hispanic veterans of the United States armed forces; 43 Hispanics have earned our Nation's highest military decoration, the Medal of Honor; and

WHEREAS, the contributions of Hispanic Americans have made a positive impact on every part of our society. Americans of Hispanic descent are astronauts and athletes, doctors and teachers, lawyers and scientists; and

WHEREAS, the number of Hispanic-owned businesses is growing at three times the national rate, creating jobs, and increasing numbers of Hispanic Americans own their own homes; and 

WHEREAS, today Hispanic Americans are the youngest and fastest-growing minority community in our Nation; with an estimated population of 48.4 million, 16% of the nation�s total population, people of Hispanic origin make up the nation�s largest ethnic or race minority; in addition there are approximately 4 million residents of Puerto Rico and U.S. Caribbean territories; and

WHEREAS, we continue to benefit from a rich Hispanic culture and are a stronger country because of the talent and creativity of the many Hispanic Americans who have shaped our society;

NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED, that the Orange County Board of Supervisors in Santa Ana , California does hereby proclaim September 15th though October 15th in the year 2010, as Hispanic Heritage Month.

September 21, 2010  

Janet Nguyen, Chair of the Board of Supervisors, Supervisor, First District
Bill Campbell, Vice Chairman, Board of Supervisors, Third District
John M.W. Moorlach, Supervisor, Second District
Shawn Nelson, Supervisor, Fourth District
Patricia C. Bates, Supervisor, Fifth District

 To view the presidential proclamation, go to: http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2010/09/15/presidential-proclamation-national-hispanic-heritage-month 

This is the Proclamation that President Obama gave at their Hispanic Heritage Event , September 15th. Please remind our folks that they can write to the White House and request an official copy with the President/White House seal.

Rafael Ojeda, Tacoma WA

 

 


The Tejanos: Where We Came From

In Celebration of Hispanic Heritage Month

By Ben Figueroa

 


In celebration of Hispanic month in America it needs to be said that as we celebrate many ethnic commemorations throughout each year we must remember that America has always been a melting pot of people who have adopted a way of life that defined freedom as its priority. As Hispanics, meaning those of us with Hispanic origins be they Mexican, Central American, South American, Puerto Rican, Cuban, or Spanish, we came to America seeking the same freedoms that the Pilgrims did as well as the many Europeans who came through Ellis Island during the greatest of immigrations to America. Some came to escape famine and poverty, but still in search of freedom not theirs in Europe and beyond.

My first ancestor came to America circa 1622, landing in the port of Vera Cruz, Mexico, with the annual fleet from Spain. Around forty Spanish galleons usually came into the Vera Cruz harbor around mid-August, taking their turn to deliver goods and passengers coming to the New World. It had been 130 years since America had been discovered by �Cristobal Colon,� or Columbus as he is known in America, when he landed on what he called San Salvador on October 12, 1492.

The �descrubimiento� (discovery) of the Americas set the stage for the beginning of the modern world.

�The age of Columbus is almost without a parallel, presenting perhaps the most striking appearances since the star shone upon Bethlehem. It saw Martin Luther burn the Pope�s bull, and assert a new kind of Independence. It added Erasmus to the broadness of life. Modern art stood confessed in Da Vinci, Michael Angelo, Titian, and Raphael. Copernicus found in the skies a wonderful development without the great telescopic help. The route of the Portuguese by the African cape and the voyage of Columbus opened new worlds to thought and commerce. They made the earth seem to man, north and south, east and west, as man never before had imagined it. It looked as if mercantile endeavor was to be constrained by no bounds. Articles of trade were multiplied amazingly. Each adventure and voyage was not only new and broad, but it was unique for the time and profitable as well. This was the age that brought my first ancestor to America.�

It was only 91 years since the great explorer Hernan Cortez (1531) had conquered the highly innovative Aztec Empire. It was only 82 years since the intrepid Coronado (1540) had explored the vast regions of the American Southwest. It had been only 87 years since Alvar Nunez De Cabeza De Vaca had explored the Texas coast. By 1600, the age of conquest was coming to an end and the period of exploration, settlement, and development was unfolding.

The Spaniards would carry their zeal for new land, precious metals, hardwoods, spices, and salt, into the 19th century. It was not an easy task to explore the regions of the Southwestern United States. It was a time of adventure for the explorers, but it was also a hardship to face the unknown.

It was 1978 during my graduate studies in history that I came across the great historian Carlos E. Castaneda that basically introduced me to Spanish Colonialism and inspired me to pursue my genealogy. I started my search at the Texas Land Office looking for what was known then as the �Porciones� or Spanish Land grants provided early colonizers by the King of Spain. It was there that I first ran across a file in the Richardson library called the Seabury Papers. Since then much has been written about the Seabury papers. Seabury was an attorney that specialized in land grants and did extensive research into lineage for many reasons. Nevertheless, it was there that I discovered the Guerra lineage that belonged to my grandmother on my father�s side.

Captain Antonio Guerra y Canamar was born in 1602, in the mountains of Old Castile (Canamar, 1623). It is assumed from general history that he was like every young man in Spain at the time. Knowing that a new world had been discovered by Columbus and knowing about the explorations of Cabeza De Vaca, Coronado, De Soto, Pineda, and Cortez, Antonio pursued service in the King of Spain�s army that allowed him to literally see the new world. When Antonio came to Mexico circa 1622, he was about twenty years old, and records show he was a Captain in the Spanish Army. He married Luisa Fernandez Del Rio Frio on December 22, 1624, in the Cathedral of Mexico City (Canamar, 1623). Luisa Fernandez Del Rio Frio was a Mestiza of both Indian and Spanish descent. Her lineage could have been Olmec, Aztec, Tlascalan, Haustec, Mixtec, or of any other combination that lived in Mexico City by 1624. By this time most of the Indians were of mixed lineages. The Spaniards had fully integrated with the Aztecs while disease such as smallpox had claimed a great number of them. I soon realized that many of us are the embodiment of what Corky Cortez called �I am Joaquin� in his epic poem.

Mexico City was already a sprawling metropolis by 1622. Hernando Cortez, the conqueror of the Aztecs, had established a hospital in Mexico City, in 1540, to care for the needy. The first University in the Americas was established in Mexico City in 1589. The first library was also built in Mexico City prior to 1600. Captain Antonio Guerra y Canamar arrived in Mexico near the beginning of the European Renaissance.

By 1740, my ancestors had come to what is now Mier, Mexico, and occupied �Porcion 66� on the northern border of the Rio Grande granted by the King of Spain made up of several thousand acres that looked like a triangle touching the Rio Grande. All of the families settled in the famous �Porciones� along the northern border of the Rio Grande came to colonize what is now Texas beginning in the 1730�s. To draw a parallel, the American colonies in the East by the 1730�s were populated and still under English rule. The following is a list of the first families that came to the colony of Mier circa 1730 and for the most part identify the ancestral make up of the Southwest. My ancestors come from �Porciones 66, 67, and 68 as listed.

Francisco Guerra of �Porcion 66� is a great-grandfather of mine that colonized Mier, Mexico or what we now know as Texas. Sometime later in the late 1600�s two of my ancestors Juan and Vicente Guerra traveled with the explorer Alonzo de Leon into Texas in search of the French explorer La Salle. They found La Salle�s Fort St. Louis on Garcita�s Creek near Matagorda Bay where La Salle and company had been slain by Indians. It was General and later Governor Alonzo de Leon who was the first to see and identify Baffin Bay here in Kleberg County.

The Mexicans, those of Spanish and Aztec lineage, have contributed greatly to the colonization of the American Southwest bringing with them many ethnic foods; names of rivers like the Nueces, Brazos, and Colorado; the structure of city government as we know it today; land and water laws that were established early in their occupation of the Southwest; ranching as we know it today began with the early �vaqueros� of Mexico; architecture that can be seen here in Kingsville; and the first cattle and horses to roam the coastal bend all came from Spain and then Mexico.

The celebration of the Independence of Mexico from Spain on September 16 is more about a people seeking the same freedom from tyranny that the American colonists did in 1776. Today it is a celebration of a people who colonized the American Southwest and became Americans by virtue of Texas Independence from Mexico in 1836 and then becoming a part of the United States in 1845.

Nevertheless, knowing your roots is part of establishing a healthy locus of control versus being marginal in a society made of many folkways, some good and some bad. [To that end, the public was invited to a genealogical survey workshop on Spanish Colonialism at the Institute of Rural Development, 915 S 9th, sponsored by speakers Ben Figueroa and Juan Escobar, who are both accomplished genealogists and well versed in Spanish Colonial history. It will be an evening of learning about your past and how to find your ancestors. The workshop was held Sept. 23.

The First Families to Colonize Mier Circa 1730

Porcion Number, 1-80, followed by the name of the Grantee 
1. Gaspar Garcia 2. Santiago Barrera 3. Lucio Lopez 4. Manuel Hinojosa 5. Manuel Hinojosa 6. Ramon Guerra 
7. Juan Francisco Saenz 8. Gervacio de Hinojosa 9. Francisco Pena 10. Teodoro Pena 11. Rosa Garcia 
12. Jose Vera 13. Bartolo Flores 14. Francisco de la Garza 15. Joe Hinojosa 16. Manuel Sandoval 
17. Jose Antonio Olivarez 18. Santiago Olivarez 19. Jose Olivarez 20. Nicolas Gonzales 21. Nicolas Gonzales 
22. Jose Lorenzo de la Garza 23. Juan de la Garza 24. Javier Saenz 25. Marcelino Saenz 26. Ignacio Garcia 
27. Diego Flores 28. Juan Garcia 29. Javier Salinas 30. Marcelino Hinojosa 31. Dionicio Resenda (Resendez) 
32. Francisco Gil 33. Jose Pena 34. Joaquin Bazan 35. Andres Lugo 36. Cleto Gonzales 37. Manuel Adame 
38. Vicente Garcia 39. Unassigned  40. Jose Bazan
 
41. Luis de Lema  42. Juan Antonio Ramos 43. Ignacio Salinas 44. Diego Garcia 45. Unassigned 46. Unassigned
47. Bernardo Vela  48. Ana Maria Guajardo 49. Antonio Resendez  50. Miguel Ramirez  51. Regalado Hinojosa
52. Pablo Zarate  53. Juan Gonzales  54. Antonio Montalvo  55. Juan Antonio Leal  56. Juan Pantaleon  
57. Lazaro Vela  58. Joaquin Chapa  59. Juan de Dios Garcia  60. Blas Farias  61.  Maria Bartola  62. Joaquin Garcia
63. Ignacio Guiterrez  64. Jose Cruz  65. Antonio Garcia 66. Francisco Guerra  67. Antonio Ramirez  
68. Diego Hinojosa  69. Antonio Sanchez  70. Joaquin Salinas  71. Juan Salinas  72. Juan Angel Salinas  
73. Miguel Saenz  74. Geronimo Saenz  75. Florencio Gonzales  76. Miguel Antonio Ramirez  77. Juan Benavides
78. Francisco de la Garcia  79. Tierras de Mision  80. Tracts, four leagues unassigned

Published in the The Kingsville Record, September 16, 2009
http://www.kr-bn.com/news/2009-09-16/Front_Page/The_Tejanos_Where_We_Came_From_003.html

For more information call Ben Figueroa at 522-2666.
Sent by Margarita Garza

 

 


WITNESS TO HERITAGE

Protecting The Felix Longoria Story 
"A lie told often enough becomes the truth" is often attributed to Goebbels, Hitler�s minister of propaganda when in fact the quote is attributed to Lenin.  

The group below is fighting against the efforts of some who are attempting to deny the truths of the Felix Longoria Story.

 

The Felix Longoria Story 

From Left to right:
Dr Mariano Miranda-Diaz , 
Santiago Hernandez, 
Wanda Garcia, 
Dr. Pat Carroll, 
Angel Zuniga, 
Dan Arellano 
In the Tejano Genealogy Society October Newsletter, Dan Arellano reports that The Felix Longoria Story event held on Saturday, September 18 at the Austin Community College Riverside Campus was well attended and many organizations were well represented. Dr Pat Carroll did a wonderful job describing the Felix Longoria Affair and we all came away with a better understanding of the conditions and discrimination that existed in Three Rivers in those days.

Dr Mariano Miranda-Diaz welcomed the crowd to the campus and introduced our guest speaker, Dr Pat Carroll from Texas A & M Corpus Christi. Wanda Daisy Garcia, daughter of Dr Hector P. Garcia, founder of the American G.I Forum delivered a passionate speech about her father and the American GI Forum

Angel Zuniga, National Vice Commander of the American GI Forum drove up from Robstown Texas to deliver a message from the National office of the American GI Forum. Santiago Hernandez also drove up from Corpus to report on the installation of the historical marker installed in front of the funeral home where the incident took place and the struggle with the city and its racist past.

For those not aware of the Felix Longoria Story, Felix Longoria was a World War II soldier who sacrificed his life so that others could be free yet those same freedoms he died fighting for were denied him in his home town of Three Rivers Texas. Felix Longoria was killed in the Philippines, after the war his body was shipped to his home town of Three Rivers and the only funeral home in Three Rivers refused his widow the right to have him admitted because the �whites would not like it.� Then Senator Lyndon B. Johnston intervened and had his body buried at Arlington National Cemetery with full military honors.

Wanda Garcia who has been actively promoting full awareness of the incident, which propelled her father Dr. Hector P. Garcia to an intense and life-long dedication to seeking justice for minorities, shared these photos and some additional comments:

"Mimi, Everyone was very attentive and really enjoyed themselves. Several people came from Corpus Christi including Alicia Gallegos Gomez. Angel Zuniga came from Robstown to talk about Dr. Hector's involvement in the American GI Forum. Santiago Hernandez brought his books of letters and research about the Felix Longoria incident. He pointed out that all these writing protesting the renaming of the post office were descendants of the original people involved in the incident. Santiago says he will work on helping to obtain for Dr. Hector P. Garcia, the Congressional Medal of Honor. 

Dr. Carroll's slide show and speech was in direct rebuttal to the Hudson book-point by point. He said that John Valadez ordered Hudson to take off inaccurate statement on Hudson's web site that he (Hudson) was the narrator of Valadez's documentary. 

Dan Arellano put together a slide show about the Hispanic soldiers and their valor. I found out that a man from my past Jose Urigas received the Medal of honor from France for his valor. WOW. After the event was over, we dispersed and went our separate ways to our separate lives.  Wanda "

                                                                                                              Dr Mariano Miranda-Diaz and Wanda Garcia

For involvement and support of Tejano Genealogy and History, please contact Dan Arellano, President, Tejano Genealogy Society of Austin 512-826-7569 darellano@austin.rr.com

 


HONORING HISPANIC LEADERSHIP

Judge Alfred Hernandez, Longtime Community Activist, 1917 to 2010 at 93 years
Dr. Mario Guerra Obledo, Civil Rights Icon  April 9, 1932-August 18, 2010 at 78 years
Virginia Avila, Education and Anti-Gang Activist . . .  .  at 77 years
Richard 'Scar' Lopez, Musician  May 18, 1945 to July 30, 2010 at 65 years 
Judge Alfred Hernandez, Longtime Community Activist  

1917 to 2010 at 93 years

Mexican-American community 'beacon' dies
by Paige Hewitt, Houston Chronicle, Sept. 5, 2010

Former Judge Alfred J. Hernandez was a longtime community activist and a three-time president of the national LULAC organization.  A native of Mexico, Judge Alfred J. Hernandez political voice and influence spanned some 50 years and stretched from Houston's near north-side to the White House, died Saturday. He was 93.

 

Hernandez � the first Hispanic to take the bench in Houston - was a driven activist determined to improve life for others, namely those of Mexican and Latino heritage, said longtime friend Dorothy Caram.

"He was a quiet man with a forceful voice, who represented Mexican-Americans well," Caram said. "He was a great model who understood that change required work, determination, planning and education."

Where there was an issue, march or strike devoted to Mexican-Americans - in Houston or elsewhere in the nation - Hernandez was likely involved, Caram said.  Hernandez, a World War II veteran who earned U.S. citizenship while serving the country, was a leader in virtually every organization focusing on issues important to Hispanics.

'LULAC 60' member

A three-time president of the national League of United Latin American Citizens, Hernandez has been celebrated as one of the group's strongest activists. He was among the so-called "LULAC 60," accompanying the Houston Police Department's first Latino officer to apply for work in 1950.

"Judge Alfred Hernandez was a true beacon for the Mexican-American community in Houston," Harris County Precinct 2 Commissioner Sylvia Garcia said. "He was truly a man who set the standard for service. From his humble beginnings as a child of migrant farm workers from Mexico, the fact that he rose to become an esteemed attorney, judge and civic leader is testament to the type of man he was."

Hernandez was born in Monterrey, Mexico, in 1917. When he was 4, his family moved to a tiny house just north of downtown Houston. He spoke only Spanish - perhaps an impetus behind his literacy program endorsed by President Lyndon B. Johnson that years later evolved into Head Start.

Hernandez's motivation for change in the community came from his personal experiences as the subject of discrimination, said his son, Alfred J. Hernandez Jr. He trusted education as the key to his future, the way to fight for fairness for himself and others - earning a degree from the University of Houston on the GI Bill, and a law degree from South Texas College of Law.

Hernandez started practicing law in 1953, continuing into his 80s. In the 1960s and 1970s, Hernandez served as an alternate judge in district and municipal courts.

Precinct 6 Constable Victor Trevi�o remembers interviewing Hernandez about 20 years ago for a college paper on a local community leader.

"He was just a very humble guy. He never acted as important as we saw him," Trevio said. "He's definitely a role model whose memory will, in my opinion, live forever."

High work ethic

Hernandez was a devoted husband and father who taught the value of hard work, and expected his teenagers to obey a midnight curfew -down to the moment, Alfred Jr. recalled. "It served me well," said his son, now a Houston physician. Hernandez had a signature phrase, which his son remembers him citing in Spanish: "El flojo trabaja doble" or "The lazy man works twice as hard."

"My father had a very high work ethic," he said. "He thought it was important for everyone to be productive. He was not one to lounge around."

In addition to his son, Hernandez is survived by his wife, Minnie Casas; daughter, Anna Juarez; and five grandchildren.

paige.hewitt@chron.com



Civil Rights Icon, International Latino Leader and Community Servant,

Dr. Mario Guerra Obledo Will Be Mourned

(April 9, 1932-August 18, 2010)

Dr. Mario Obledo, 
�Godfather of the Latino Movement� Dies at 78  
By Francisco Barragan� August 20, 2010

The nation has lost a great leader in the passing of Dr. Mario G. Obledo, who died yesterday afternoon in Sacramento, California, with his wife, Keda Alcala-Obledo, by his side.

Respectfully known as the �Godfather of the Latino Movement�, Dr. Mario G. Obledo, founder and President of the National Coalition of Hispanic Organizations, was a leader in Hispanic affairs for more than fifty years.  Dr. Obledo applied science, law, business, and public service to advance the broad cause of civil rights and humanitarian causes, specifically concerns of Hispanics in our Nation. 

His accomplishments in law, advocacy and civil rights were recognized in 
1998 when he received the Presidential Medal of Freedom Award, this country�s highest civilian award, from then � President William J. Clinton.  Dr. Obledo�s leadership was recognized throughout the world.  As co-founder of the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund (MALDEF) and the Hispanic National Bar Association, he was responsible in gaining national attention to civil rights issues affecting the Hispanic and other communities. He held local, district, state and national offices in the 
League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC)
.


Dr. Obledo served on the board of the Martin Luther King, Jr., Federal Holiday Commission, and several legal and pharmaceutical organizations, and was a faculty member of the Harvard School of Law.  As California Secretary of Health and Welfare, Dr. Obledo was instrumental in bringing thousands of Hispanics into state government, and declaring it �my greatest accomplishment in life.�  With quiet dignity and uncommon wisdom, Dr. Obledo opened the doors of employment, freedom, challenge, and opportunity for all Americans and at each point Dr. Obledo worked toward a stronger and more perfect union.  As National President of LULAC, he extended the influence of the organization into the international arena.  As past Chairman of the National Rainbow Coalition, he sought to unify the various ethnic, racial and religious groups into a progressive political force in order to change the character and condition of America.

Dr. Obledo is the recipient of the OHTLI award, the highest award bestowed by Mexico on a foreigner.  He held a Bachelor�s degree in Pharmacy from the University of Texas at Austin, and a Doctorate of Law degree (J.D.) from St. Mary�s University in San Antonio.  Dr. Obledo received the honorary degree of Doctor of Laws from the California State University, Sacramento in May 2010.

Dr. Mario G. Obledo was married to Keda Alcala-Obledo and resided in Sacramento, California.
Posted on http://www.orangejuiceblog.com/2010/08/dr-mario-obledo-godfather-of-the-latino-movement-dies-at-78/ 

Additional information posted by Elaine Ayala, Express-News http://fwix.com/sanantonio/share/0be8f9e571/obledo_memorial_service_set_for_friday

Obledo, who died Aug. 18 in Sacramento, Calif., co-founded the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund and the Southwest Voter Registration Education Project. Called the godfather of the Chicano movement, Obledo ran unsuccessfully for governor of California and led numerous civil rights organizations.  He was born in San Antonio and was a trained pharmacist and lawyer. At the time of his death, he was president of the National Coalition of Hispanic Organizations in Sacramento.

Obledo was California secretary of health and welfare under Gov. Jerry Brown and was a former president of the League of United Latin American Citizens. He received the Presidential Medal of Freedom from President Bill Clinton in 1998 and the Ohtli Award, presented to U.S. citizens of Mexican descent for their public service, from Mexico in 1985.

A Mass and his memorial service was held at the San Fernando Cathedral in San Antonio, Texas.


Article Tab : santa-one-community-virgi

Virginia Avila, Education and Anti-Gang Activist 
Dies at 77

SANTA ANA � Virginia Avila, a kind-hearted great-grandmother who stood up when her neighborhood needed a leader and helped chase away drug dealers and gang-bangers, has died. She was 77.

Avila went door to door in her Flower Park neighborhood in a tireless effort to rally her neighbors against the blight and crime that had seized their part of Santa Ana. She helped transform a neighborhood park from an open-air drug market littered with needles to a place where children could once again play.

Virginia Avila is shown in her neighborhood along 2nd St. in Santa Ana in this 2001 file photo. She was one of the residents who helped police and the community clean up the gang problem. Orange County Register, Paul E. Rodriguez

She died last week of cardiac arrest, still waiting for the heart surgery she needed. She was buried at Fairhaven Memorial Park on Wednesday.

Her neighborhood in north-central Santa Ana "was not a place that you wanted to travel," said Julie Melcher, who worked with Avila on a neighborhood-watch program. "You wouldn't be able to go down that neighborhood now if it weren't for her."

Avila grew up in Santa Ana and raised seven children, including a daughter with a paralyzing spinal disorder and a son who died of AIDS. She had six grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren.

Her friends and neighbors remember her as a neighborhood fixture who always invited them in for coffee and sweetbread and who handed out home-baked cookies for Halloween. They describe her as warm and welcoming, always willing to share advice or a few dollars with those in need � and as tough as any fighter.

Her neighborhood in the 1990s was a place where even police were hesitant to go. She sometimes talked about hearing gunshots in the night and seeing armed hooligans race past her window. She occasionally slept on the floor, figuring she was safer from wayward bullets there.

Police and FBI agents swept through the neighborhood in 1994, arresting nearly 120 people on suspicion of selling drugs to undercover officers. Afterward, police looked for a leader who could organize the neighborhood to keep out the drugs and gangs. They found Virginia Avila.

"I'll do what I can do," Police Service Officer Gloria Perez, who worked closely with Avila, remembers her saying at the time.

Avila knocked on doors, telling her neighbors not to be afraid to report even small crimes to police. She talked local bakers into donating food for neighborhood meetings, badgered the city to take care of graffiti, organized a neighborhood Christmas party, complete with a tree.

But nowhere was the transformation of Flower Park more apparent than in the park itself, once a notorious hangout for druggies and dealers. Neighbors and local businesses cleaned it up in the late 1990s and installed new playground equipment with help from a $100,000 donation from the Anaheim Angels.

The neighborhood still has its share of problems. "But it's not the same as it was before," said Michelle Salgado, 33, who lives there and who considered Avila almost a second mother. "You can walk at night."

Avila was on her way to a community meeting last year when she suddenly lost her breath. Doctors said she needed a heart bypass and surgery to repair one of her heart valves.

But that surgery was postponed when they discovered bacteria in her blood, and again when one of her daughters died late last year. She was still trying to schedule that surgery when, on April 28, she woke up short of breath and then went into cardiac arrest.

When her family went through her old photos and documents, they found a Congressional commendation that she had received years ago and just left in a box. "It wasn't about recognition," said her grandson, Jason Avila. "It was about the cause."

"There was just a part of her that wanted to give back," he said. "She was just a 100-percent giver. That's what she did her whole life."

Avila is survived by her husband, Arthur; her children, Arthur, Fred, Frank, Phillip and Toni; and her six grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren.

Contact the writer: 714-704-3777 or dirving@ocregister.com


September 22,2010
Park bench to be dedicated to Virgina Avila on Wednesday.


Community Leader to be honored
-Does anyone remember McKinley Elementary School? It was on the corner of 2nd and Flower streets in Santa Ana. For years McKinley stood tall as an educational icon for the city. 

That is were I met Virgina Avila. I was in the same class with her son Philip. She was our noontime/playground supervisor as well as Mrs. Esqueda (Manuel's wife). It took the Sylmar earthquake in 1971 to send McKinley crumbling down. A lot of other Santa Ana schools were condemned too. 

A bunch of schools must all have been made by the same contractor or used the same blueprints and materials because there were closures everywhere. If you went to school during that time there was a scurry of children being sent to different schools. In the middle of all of this uncertainty was Virginia and my parents who stood up for McKinley. The District sent all of the students to walk to Willard to be taught in tents. What the community fought for was to get buses for the students to be taken to school. Sure enough we got the buses because of a hard fought battle with the District. Virginia continued to be active in the community and lead many other battles including taking back the neighborhood. One of her proudest moments she shared with me was when she was named to the LATINO OC 100 List. She was honored in the second year. For me it was giving my thanks to a great leader and recognition long due. My father ran into her at Stater Brothers a few days before she died. She told my dad that she was scared about the operation she was going to have. She never made it to the operation. You could hear all of our family's shock when we learned of her passing.

And now, Virginia will be a park bench at the little park that once had a school and that now holds thousands of memories. The neighborhood has been invited and WestEnd COP, the Assistance league and the City of Santa Ana will dedicate a bench to her tonight at 6:00 PM. Life is so transitory...

Stay Connected,  RUBEN Martinez


  Richard 'Scar' Lopez

      Born May 18, 1945 to July 30, 2010 at 65 years old

Richard 'Scar' Lopez dies at 65; founder of East L.A. vocal band Cannibal & the Headhunters.

He and three other high school students scored a national hit in the mid-1960s with 'Land of 1000 Dances.' In 1965, they opened for the Rolling Stones, the Righteous Brothers and the Beatles.


Frankie �Cannibal� Garcia, left, Richard �Scar� Lopez and brothers Bobby and Joe Jaramillo burst upon the music scene in 1965 with �Land of 1000 Dances.�




By Dennis McLellan, Los Angeles Times, August 19, 2010

 Richard "Scar" Lopez, a founding member of Cannibal & the Headhunters, the East Los Angeles vocal group that scored a national hit in the mid-1960s with "Land of 1000 Dances," has died. He was 65.  Lopez died of lung cancer July 30 in a convalescent hospital in Garden Grove, said Gene Aguilera, who managed the group a decade ago during its local comeback.

They were four high school students in East L.A. � Frankie "Cannibal" Garcia, Lopez, Robert "Rabbit" Jaramillo and his brother, Joe "Yo Yo" Jaramillo � when they emerged on the national music scene in 1965.

The Cannibal & the Headhunters version of "Land of 1000 Dances" -- with Cannibal's signature "Naa na na na naa" phrase�spent 14 weeks on Billboard's Top 100, where it peaked at No. 30.

"I remember we were cruising Whittier Boulevard in Bobby's '49 Chevy and [DJ] Huggy Boy plays our song," Lopez recalled in a 2005 interview with LA Weekly. "And we were going crazy, going ballistic on Whittier telling everyone to put their radio on."

Hector A. Gonzalez, the current owner of Rampart Records, whose late founder, Eddie Davis, discovered and recorded the group, said, "They were basically a one-hit wonder, but that record left an indelible mark in the history of American rock 'n' roll.

"They gave pride and dignity to the Mexican American community because of their contribution to not only rock 'n' roll but the success they achieved."

In 1965, Cannibal & the Headhunters appeared on "American Bandstand," "Hullabaloo," "Shebang" and other TV shows, and they opened for the Rolling Stones, the Righteous Brothers and other acts, including the Beatles during their U.S. tour that year.

After the Headhunters opened for the Beatles at Shea Stadium in New York, Mick Jagger and Keith Richards "came backstage to tell us how good we were," Lopez told LA Weekly.

Lopez, however, did not participate in the Beatles' concerts in California.  Davis, who served as Cannibal & the Headhunters' producer and manager, had told the group that he didn't want any of them gambling with the Beatles and others in the back of the plane.  But while Davis was napping as they headed to Los Angeles, Lopez told LA Weekly, "I was determined to get in that game."

When Davis woke up, Lopez recalled, "he stormed back there and started yelling at me in front of everyone. I'm from East L.A., and I don't take that from nobody. So we never spoke to each other ever again. I was so angry at him for embarrassing me in front of the Beatles that I made up my mind right then and there that I would not continue on the tour."

Gonzalez, who interviewed Lopez for an upcoming documentary on the history of Rampart Records, said Lopez "never came back" to the group after the incident with Davis, despite reports that he left over a money dispute.  Cannibal & the Headhunters continued as a trio after Lopez left and broke up in 1967.

Lopez, who Gonzalez said later overcame a drug problem, held a number of jobs after leaving the group, including landscaping parks in the city of Los Angeles.

In 1996, the year Garcia died, Lopez and the Jaramillo brothers reunited for a performance at the Chicano Music Awards in Pasadena, where they were inducted into the Chicano Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

Gonzalez said the group continued to perform occasionally in Southern California until 2004, with replacements for Garcia and Joe Jaramillo, who died in 2000.

Born May 18, 1945, in Los Angeles, Lopez grew up in the Ramona Gardens housing project. He earned the nickname "Scar" at 13 when he received stitches on his head after a gymnastics accident at the Boys Club.

Inspired in part by a black doo-wop group at Lincoln High School, Lopez and Robert Jaramillo decided to start their own singing ensemble. Joe Jaramillo soon joined the group, which called itself Bobby and the Classics and practiced in a converted chicken coop in the Jaramillos' backyard.

After Garcia joined and was made lead singer of what later became known as Cannibal & the Headhunters, they auditioned for Davis.  "He was an inspiration to the group, as far as getting me started," Robert Jaramillo said of Lopez on Wednesday. "I owe him that."

As Lopez said in his LA Weekly interview: "We were four Mexican kids from East L.A., coming from the projects. Your dreams can be fulfilled if you work at it."

He is survived by his children, Peter Lopez and Lisa Lopez; his father, Carlos Lopez; his sister, Bonnie Resendez; and two granddaughters. Another son, Richard Jr., died in 2006.  A memorial service is pending.

dennis.mclellan@latimes.com

latimes.com/news/obituaries/la-me-richard-lopez-20100819,0,7133208.story     

 


NATIONAL ISSUES

MALDEF's Truth in Immigration Education Concert
Pakistan receives $1.5 Billion a year from the U.S.
How illegal immigrants are helping Social Security
Effort to reverse childhood obesity  in African-Americans and Latino communities 
Comparison of the health of Latinas with non-Hispanic white women
Two Recommendations on immigration issues
Shariah Law: Trying to Make Sense of What I Don't Understand
�The Frontera List� Tallies numbers killed in Mexico
Call for Contributors to Encyclopedia of Latino Issues Today
Mexican Community Theater: A Different View of Immigration by David L. Wilson
MALDEF's Truth in Immigration Education Concert
was held at Gibson Amphitheatre at City Walk, Universal City, CA 90068 on September 28th, featuring Los Lobos. 


"Politics ought to be the part-time profession of every citizen who would protect the rights and privileges 
of free people and who would preserve what is good and fruitful in our national heritage."
President Dwight D. Eisenhower


Pew survey report: 6 in 10 Pakistanis described the U.S. as an enemy and only one in 10 called it a partner.  Pakistan's government receives $1.5 BILLION annually in non-military assistance. OCRegister 9/29/10

How illegal immigrants are helping Social Security
By Edward Schumacher-Matos, Washington Post 9-3-10

Stephen C. Goss, the chief actuary of the Social Security Administration said that by 2007, the Social Security trust fund had received a net benefit of somewhere between $120 billion and $240 billion from unauthorized immigrants. That represented an astounding 5.4 percent to 10.7 percent of the trust fund's total assets of $2.24 trillion that year. The cumulative contribution is surely higher now. Unauthorized immigrants paid a net contribution of $12 billion in 2007 alone, Goss said. 
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/
article/2010/09/02/AR2010090202673.html
 
Sent by Roberto Calderon, Ph.D.

 

PRINCETON, N.J., Sept. 7 /PRNewswire/ -- A $2 million initiative of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) is bringing together five civil rights organizations with the prominence and strength to help reverse childhood obesity, especially in African-American and Latino communities where the epidemic continues to hit hardest.

Source: Angelo Falcon www.latinopolicy.org Sept 6, 2010


Latinas have lower rates of heart disease and stroke, live longer than non-Hispanic white women, but have higher rates of  diabetes, auto immune diseases, cervical cancer, and depression.

"An estimated 45% of America's 12 million illegal immigrants came here legally 
on various visas or border crossing cards and remained after their legal stays expired." 
 
by Jacaues Billeaud, The Associated Press, Orange County Register May 30, 2010


Editor recommendation to the U.S. Government: 
Stop issuing visas to people coming from countries whose government or citizens 
(via print, television, internet, book, public rallies, etc.) have stated that their 
goal is to destroy the United States. 

"The government announced Thursday (Aug 5, 2010) that it has charged 14 people as participants in 'a deadly pipeline' to Somalia that routed money and fighters from the U.S. to the terrorist group al-Shabab.  Eric Holder states that there is a "disturbing trend" of recruitment efforts targeting U.S. residents to become terrorists.  At least seven of the 14 people charged are U.S. citizens . .  they left the U.S. to join al-Shabab, a Somali insurgent faction embracing a radical form of Islam." by Pete Yost and Amy Forliti, the Association Press, Orange County Register, Aug 6, 2010.


Editor recommendation to the U.S. Government:
A U.S. citizen who engages in any action of /or in support of terrorism for any country whose government or citizens have stated (via print, television, internet, book, public rallies, etc.) that  their goal is to destroy the United States should be convicted of treason, and punished accordingly.

SHARIAH LAW



TRYING TO MAKE SENSE OF WHAT I DON'T UNDERSTAND

 

Editor: Those who have been reading Somos Primos over the years, must have concluded that I am a patriotic American, proud of my Mexican heritage, believe in the sanctity of marriage, protector of children, opponent of injustice, lover of the animal world, and a dedicated Christian. 

Not receiving any religious training or influences in my own childhood, I searched through many, many religions, seeking to find a system that would help me to live my life in a righteous manner. I have a firmly rooted sense of personal responsibility and respect for work. I believe that it is the opportunity to choose which is critical to the development of character which allows us the ultimate reality of eternal life. 
I believe that only through complete freedom of thought can an individual come to the grateful acceptance of a supreme God, with loving adoration. 

I view life and all its ramifications (social, political, educational, economic, the arts, cultural, racial, ethnic, and religious traditions and beliefs) with that perspective. I often ask, 'What helps the individual reach his highest potential, his most noble character?' I believe that when something does not make sense, something is missing. Where is truth and freedom of thought being thwarted, twisted, hidden, distorted, and confused?

When I started investigating my personal family history, I realized that many of my conclusions about life and my family were erroneous. My conclusions were based on what I observed, read and was told. But through life and study, I've learned that my conclusions were actually based on a lack of historic knowledge and understanding. 

I learned that as a Mexican born in Texas, many misconceptions of my heritage were formed by a purposeful distortions of historic facts. But also, some were simply neglect of facts- exclusion, instead of inclusion of pertinent imformation. I began to put the pieces of imforation together and the historic actions of all groups began to make sense.
It is with this same over-view that I approach trying to understanding Shariah Law and its application within our borders. What is going on? What is happening? Why doesn't this make sense? Again, something must be missing. 

This morning, September 16, I received an IBD Editorials daily report, which commented on a wide variety of issues, but primarily it focused on business. The 177-page report by the Center for Security Policy entitled, "Shariah: The New Threat To America," objectively analyzes the assault on the West by Islamofascism and warns of the grave threat posed by those who seek to use Shariah law to undermine America's legal system, constitution, national security and way of life. It challenges the prevailing political correctness regarding tolerance, outreach and endless apologies to the Muslim world for defending ourselves against terrorism, and the way this political correctness is being used to undermine the security of the United States.

The report was released Wednesday [9-15-2010] at a Capitol Hill press conference. The authors included "former defense, law enforcement and intelligence officials such as Clinton administration CIA Director R. James Woolsey and Andrew C. McCarthy, a former assistant U.S. Attorney from New York, and a career counter-terrorism prosecutor during the Clinton administration." The report concludes, "The Shariah system is 'totalitarian' and incompatible with the U.S. Constitution, our system of democratic lawmaking and the constitutional guarantees of freedom of conscience, individual liberty and freedom of expression, including the right to criticize Shariah law itself."

I high-lighted objectively analyzes above because I have not read the report and are just including the comments from the editorial itself. However, I personally have concluded that individual liberty and freedom of expression surely is not practiced under Shariah law, most certainly not for women. Consequently within my personal philosophy, Shariah law does not produce the most precious of character traits, that of mercy, forgiveness, and love, which allows an individual to reach their highest potential. 

The depth of the commitment to Shariah law by ordinary Muslims continues to shock me. The following is what first opened my awareness to HONOR KILLINGS. The Orange County Register carried the story of a Muslim father and mother who killed their two teenage daughters because their daughters were becoming too Americanized. I could not imagine a religious philosophy that would condone killing your own precious children. Anciently, children were sacrificed to pagan gods, but in these modern times of world-wide acceptance of inherent human rights, it was hard to grasp what had taken place- murders condoned by a religious philosophy HERE in the United States.
Below is another recent example of a case in Iran:

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Iran Woman Who Faced Stoning to Be Lashed, Son Says, 
September 06, 2010, Associated Press

AP/Amnesty International: This undated image is made available by Amnesty International in London shows Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani, a mother of two who had faced stoning to death in Iran on charges of adultery. 

An Iranian woman who was sentenced to death by stoning for adultery is now facing a new punishment of 99 lashes because a British newspaper ran a picture of an unveiled woman mistakenly identified as her, the woman's son said Monday.

There was no official confirmation of the new sentence. The son, Sajjad Qaderzadeh, 22, said he did not know whether the new lashing sentence had been carried out yet, but heard about it from a prisoner who had recently left the Tabriz prison where his mother is being held.

The lawyer who once represented Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani in Iran said from Paris that the situation was not clear. "Publishing the photo provided a judge an excuse to sentence my poor mother to 99 lashes on the charge of taking a picture unveiled," Qaderzadeh told The Associated Press. The Times of London said in its Monday edition it had apologized for the photo, but added that the new sentence "is simply a pretext."

"The regime's purpose is to make Ms. Ashtiani suffer for an international campaign to save her that has exposed so much iniquity," said the piece. Ashtiani was convicted in 2006 of having an "illicit relationship" with two men after the death of her husband a year earlier and was sentenced by a court back then to 99 lashes. Later that year, she was also convicted of adultery and sentenced to be stoned to death, even though she retracted a confession that she claims was made under duress.

Iran suspended that sentence in July, but now says she has been convicted of involvement in her husband's killing and she could still be executed by hanging. Her former lawyer, Mohammad Mostafaei, said in a news conference in Paris that he said it was not at all certain if there really had been a new conviction and sentence over the photograph.

"I have contacted my former colleagues at the court who told me nothing was clear on this situation," he said following a news conference with French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner. "There isn't any punishment for this act in our law."

Kouchner called the sentence to death by stoning "the height of barbarism" and said her case has become a "personal cause," and he was "ready to do anything to save her. If I must go to Tehran to save her, I'll go to Tehran."
Ashtiani's two children remain in Iran and her son is a ticket seller for a bus company in the northern Iranian city of Tabriz. He said he and his younger sister Farideh, 18, have not seen their mother since early August.
"We have really missed her," he said. "We expect all influential bodies to help to save her."
The stoning sentence for Ashtiani has prompted international outcry over the past months with both Brazil and Italy asking Iran to show flexibility in the case.

The Vatican on Sunday raised the possibility of using behind-the-scenes diplomacy to try to save her life as well.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

But the Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani case is not an isolated one. I received a sickening video segment of a young girl who was in the process of being stoned to death. She was sentenced to death by an ISLAMIC Court because she did not want to marry an old man the family arranged for her! The stoning took place in the street. There were Muslim men of all ages surrounding her, throwing rocks, kicking her. She was trying to cover her face and one man actually pulled her over on her back, so he could drop a huge rock directly down on her face. 

This is was not the action of Muslim extremist groups, such as Al Qaeda or the Taliban, these were ordinary Muslims carrying out SHARIA LAW! I do not know how the video was able to be shared outside of the country. There were glimpses of people with small cameras, recording the incidence. Gratefully, someone had the courage to alert the non-Muslim world to the workings of Sharia Law, which includes stoning women and children to death for not adhering to the demands of Shariah Law. 

(I noted that one of the individuals to whom the video segment was also sent was Sandra Redmon of Free Battered Women, www.freebatteredwomen.org/alerts_sandra.html . Hopefully, national groups will promote more awareness of this horrible practice.) 

In preparing this piece, I also came across a CNN video segment online of a Kurdish HONOR KILLING. 
The speaker stated that about 1,000 Honor Killings take place every year in that area..
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2rgSH0h45Eo&feature=related 

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

This video is about the changes taking place in France due to the Muslim presence. http://downloads.cbn.com/cbnnewsplayer/cbnplayer.swf?aid=17933 

We need to be aware of our own constitution and adhere to our laws for own protection, and for the strength of our nation. Our men are dying in foreign lands, let us not lose our country within our own borders.
 
"All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men [and women] do nothing." Edmund Burke

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

This video is about the changes taking place in France due to the Muslim presence.   http://downloads.cbn.com/cbnnewsplayer/cbnplayer.swf?aid=17933 

We need to be aware of our own constitution and adhere to our laws for own protection, and for the strength of our nation.   Our men are dying in foreign lands for the freedom of others, let us not erode our own freedoms by accepting traditions that do not recognize the civil rights of women and children.   


�The Frontera List� tallies numbers killed in Mexico
20 questions with ... Molly Molloy Intro

In 2009, more than twice as many people were killed in Mexico�s Ciudad Ju�rez (population 1.3 million) than in New York City, Los Angeles or Chicago (total population 15 million) combined. The violence, much of which is related to the drug trade, is hard to fathom�but not impossible to count.

Since 2008, Molly Molloy has done this macabre accounting on her Google Newsgroup �The Frontera List.� Working from reports in Ju�rez�s daily newspapers, Molloy, a reference librarian at New Mexico State University in Los Cruces, tallies the number of people killed each day, and then translates and transmits the grim news to the listserv. 

Molloy also provides important context and analysis to patterns in the violence, both of which are often missing in Ju�rez new reports because journalists working in the border city are often the targets of violence from cartels themselves. Last week, the United Nations named Mexico the most dangerous country in the Americas for journalists.

In addition to maintaining the Frontera List, to which more than 500 people now subscribe, Molloy has collaborated with Charles Bowden (who was interviewed in In These Times� September issue) to challenge the Mexican government�s official explanation of the country�s violence epidemic and provide research assistance for his latest book, Murder City: Ciudad Ju�rez and the Global Economy�s New Killing Fields. She and Bowden are co-editing an autobiography of a Mexican drug cartel sicario, or assassin, to be published in the spring of 2011.

In These Times interviewed Molloy via e-mail in August 2010.
http://www.inthesetimes.com/community/20questions/6379/molly_molloy/
 Associate Publisher Dan Dineen

Call for Contributors to
Encyclopedia of Latino Issues Today
Greenwood Press/ABC-CLIO


To be Edited by Felipe de Ortego y Gasca, Magdaleno Manzanarez, 
Gilda Baeza Ortego, Alexandra Neves, and J.J. Wilson

Editorial Advisory Board

Mario Garcia, UC Santa Barbara; Carlos Vasquez, National Hispanic Cultural Institute; Maria Caminero Santangelo, University of Kansas; Jose Gonzalez, Coast Guard Academy; Roberto Calderon, University of North Texas

Greenwood Press/ABC--CLIO call for submissions for the Greenwood/ABC-CLIO Encyclopedia of Latino Issues Today, a 2 volume set scheduled for publication in September 2011. The Encyclopedia will cover 100 of the most pressing Latino issues today organized alphabetically. Targeting high school and university students and the general public, this valuable resource will focus on different aspects of the Latino experience in the U.S. such as: education, health, lifestyles, history, politics, immigration, literature, and the arts. Numerous sidebars will also appear with bios, profiles, documents, snippets and the like. 

The Encyclopedia will feature short articles (1,000-1,500 words) authored by experts and emerging scholars offering an in-depth description of key issues, concepts, terms and trends facing Latinos today. In addition, the encyclopedia will provide a compendium of terms, definitions and explanations of concepts, models, and acronyms. 

If you are interested in writing an entry for the Encyclopedia of Latino Issues Today, please email Felipe de Ortego y Gasca at ortegop@wnmu.edu or Magdaleno Manzanarez at manzanarezm@wnmu.edu or Gilda Baeza Ortego at ortegog@wnmu.edu, or Alexandra Neves at nevesa@wnmu.edu for a list of entries available and entry guidelines. Include �Encyclopedia of Latino Issues Today� in the subject line. Once you�ve chosen an entry email Felipe de Ortego y Gasca and include your name, contact information and the entry you would like to submit. 

Gracias, Felipe de Ortego y Gasca, Ph.D. (English), Scholar in Residence 
Chair, Department of Chicana/Chicano and Hemispheric Studies
Western New Mexico University
Editor-in-Chief, Encyclopedia of Latino Issues Today

Mexican Community Theater:
A Different View of Immigration
by David L. Wilson

Monthly Review Magazine, 9 March 2010
URL: http://mrzine.monthlyreview.org/2010/wilson030910.html


In a small, crowded theater in New York's West Village the night of August 8, a group of thirty indigenous women from central Mexico finally got a chance to perform their play before a U.S. audience.

The cast, members of the community group Soame Citlalime ("Women of the Star" in N�huatl), had spent the past year creating "La Casa Rosa," a 90-minute drama about the impact of immigration on their village, San Francisco Tetlanohcan, east of Mexico City in the state of Tlaxcala. An April tour in New York and New Haven, sponsored by the New Haven-based Institute for Social and Cultural Practice and Research in Mexico (IIPSOCULTA U.S.), had to be cancelled at the last minute when the U.S. embassy in Mexico City denied the group's application for visas.

But the women were determined to get their message to people in the United States, and the State Department relented in July, after the intervention of New Haven mayor John Destefano and Congress member Rosa DeLauro.

Asked shortly before the performance what their message was, cast member Yolanda Mendieta gave an answer that would surprise many people here: "No m�s migraci�n." No more migration.

Open It Up or Shut It Down

While many people in the United States think of immigration from Latin America as a "silent invasion" by people desperately eager to live in El Norte, the view from Tetlanohcan is very different.

"La Casa Rosa" uses tensions between two sisters over inherited land to dramatize the realities of immigration for those left behind: the disruption of family ties, the erosion of local culture, and the fears for friends and relatives crossing a border region where at least 5,000 people have died in the last 15 years. According to Mendieta, 30 percent or more of the villagers have taken the dangerous journey to the north.

But why do so many people leave? Tetlanohcan residents have learned the reality behind promises of a better life through "free trade" and "globalization." Trade pacts like NAFTA have devastated rural villages in Mexico by forcing local farmers into an unequal competition with tax-subsidized U.S. agribusiness giants like Cargill. With no way to make a living at home, the campesinos go to the North, where anti-immigrant legislation leaves them defenseless against super-exploitation by U.S. employers.

One of the sisters, Juana, forms a women's group -- very much like Soame Citlilame itself -- to organize around these issues. Near the end of the play the group holds a demonstration. Either close the border for real, the protesters say, directly addressing the audience, or open it up. Either end immigration completely, or let immigrant workers enjoy full labor rights when they come here.

Tamales and "Social Change"

Despite its strong political message, "La Casa Rosa" is more than simple agit-prop. Using improvisation techniques under the guidance of actor-writer Daniel Carlton, the cast members created their drama out of their own experiences. They really feel the emotions they portray, and they're not afraid to show the difficulties, and occasional comedy, of political organizing. Juana's group suffers from the problems activists encounter everywhere: gossip, backbiting, demoralization, and people who think "social change" means throwing better parties.

What may be the most moving moment -- although still with a touch of humor -- comes when Juana tries to teach her "modern" nieces how to make tamales.

Community theater has become an important part of political organizing in Latin America, where every group, including Mexico City street sweepers, seems to use street theater to advance its cause. This phenomenon is spreading here as well, partly as a result of immigration. In 2008 and 2009, "La Casa Rosa" director Carlton worked with a group of immigrant youths, mostly Latinos, in New York City to produce a play drawn from their own experiences coming to the city.

After the performance on August 8, Carlton told the hot but enthusiastic audience that the group's tour would continue to the end of September. The women and their sponsors were still booking performances, he said, trying to bring their story to as many people as they could, especially the ones who needed a fresh perspective on immigration. Carlton added that there was some possibility of an engagement in Arizona.

"La Casa Rosa" is in Spanish, with English super-titles.
For a schedule of performances, go to www.lacasarosausa.blogspot.com 
For bookings, email iipsoculta@yahoo.com or carlton.daniel@gmail.com 
For a documentary on the creation of "La Casa Rosa," see: vimeo.com/13606290 or mrzine.monthlyreview.org/2010/tetlanohcan100810.html 
For coverage (in Spanish) of a performance of "La Casa Rosa" at the Universidad Iberoamericana (UIA) in Puebla, see: V�ctor Hugo Varela Loyola, "Conciencian mujeres sobre la migraci�n"
For more on the right not to migrate, see: David Bacon, "The Right to Stay Home"

David L. Wilson is co-author, with Jane Guskin, of The Politics of Immigration: Questions and Answers, Monthly Review Press, July 2007. 

Sent by Dorinda Moreno fuerzamundial@gmail.com 

 


ACTION ITEM

A Moving Reminder, a Rolling Memorial
What is the Defend the Honor Campaign?
Cesar' Last Fast, documentary seeks support


A Moving Reminder, a Rolling Memorial

Have you heard about the trucker who has painted his cab and trailer with the names of all those who lost their lives on 9/11? The trucker's name is John Holmgren from Shafer, Minn. He has been 'pulled over' numerous times just so the troopers can get their picture taken with the truck.


John has honored the memories of from all aspects of the attack, those who lost their lives in the towers, those on the planes that were high-jacked, those firefighters and rescue team members, and those at the pentagon.


Sent by FERNANAGUIL7@aol.com

What is the Defend the Honor Campaign?
http://defendthehonor.org
 

The Defend the Honor campaign is a grassroots effort representing thousands of individuals and members of dozens of organizations working for a more fair and accurate inclusion of Latinos and Latinas in our nation�s consciousness. The issue is serious and the implications are substantial not only for today, but for our future, as the country�s Latino population continues to grow. We�re streamlined and we want to stay that way: no staff, all-volunteer, just a website and periodic emails about important issues, exhorting Defenders of the Honor to write letters, watch a documentary or movie, create a dialogue. Our only loyalty is to the truth about our greater Latino community.

The 2007 Ken Burns/PBS documentary is only one in many other examples of Latinos being excluded or stereotyped negatively in the entertainment and news media. If one is to look at our history books, one will find a staggering number of omissions of Latino contributions as well as inaccurate references to several issues and events related to Latinos. To counter that exclusion and misrepresentation, Defend the Honor continues to send out emails to its lists to address specific issues concerning the inclusion and respectful treatment of Latinos and Latinas. We not only will tell you about them; we�ll give you a plan of action, who you can write to, a petition you can sign, a protest march you may take part in. We are not victims if we are taking action. We invite you to stand up and be heard�exercise your First Amendment rights in the cause of justice.

Other Issues
Since 2007, DTH has addressed several other issues, including:

The 2009 decision by Humanity in Action and the Washington D.C. Sixth and I Historic Synagogue have Ken Burns to speak about a topic on which he is an anti-authority. His speech, before President Barack Obama�s inauguration, was entitled: �Vision of Race.� Neither Humanity in Action nor the Sixth and I Historic Synagogue responded to requests to address the issue. 

The creation of a �Civil Rights Oral History Project,� a joint effort between the Smithsonian Institution and the Library of Congress to collect oral histories of those involved in the Civil Rights Movement. Latino civil rights efforts were NOT part of that oral history plan. 

Burns� 2009 speech at the Chamizal, a national park in El Paso, of all things, to tout his public parks documentary. But the tone-deaf Burns talk was entitled: �Public History and the Hispanic Heritage.�
 
The successful campaign to get Lou Dobbs, a rabid anti-immigrant commentator, off CNN, in 2009. 
The slap on the wrist given to the murderers of Luis Ramirez, a 25-year-old Mexican immigrant residing in Shenandoah, Pennsylvania. Ramirez was beaten and stomped to death by a group of teens as he walked through the town on July 12, 2008. Witnesses overheard anti-Mexican and ethnic epithets shouted by his assailants during the violent attack. On Friday, May 1, 2009, a jury in Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania, found two defendants not guilty of third degree murder and ethnic intimidation. 

If your organization would like to be involved, or if you as an individual would like show your support, please Contact Us.

The Organizers
Lead organizers of the DTH include Gus Ch�vez, a veteran, and a volunteer with the U.S. Latino & Latina WWII Oral History Project. Chavez served as director of the Office of Educational Opportunity/Ethnic Affairs at San Diego State University, for 28 years, before retiring in 2003. He has served in a number of professional and community organizations, including the Moviemento Estudiantil Chicano de Aztlan (MEChA), MEC hA Central de San Diego County, the Brown Berets of San Diego, and the American G.I. Forum, to name a few. Ch�vez is a U.S. Navy veteran who served as a hospital corpsman from 1962 to 1966. He has received numerous awards, including the Outstanding MEChA Faculty/Staff Award, California Educational Opportunity Program Directors Service Award, and the Cesar E. Chavez Social Justice Service Award.

Maggie Rivas-Rodriguez, project director, and an associate professor of journalism at the University of Texas at Austin. Rivas-Rodriguez has a Ph.D. in communication from the University of North Carolina, a masters in journalism from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, and a bachelors in journalism from the University of Texas at Austin. She was a journalist for over 17 years (UPI, Boston Globe, WFAA-TV, and the Dallas Morning News).

Other Organizers:
NATIONAL HISPANIC MEDIA COALITION (NHMC) (From the organization website)

The Defend the Honor Campaign is also led by representatives of the NHMC, a non-profit organization established in 1986 in Los Angeles, California. The organization has grown to have statewide chapters in New York, NY; Chicago, IL; Phoenix, AZ; Sacramento and San Diego, CA; Atlanta, GA; and Detroit, MI.

Our mission is to 1) improve the image of American Latinos as portrayed by the media; 2) increase the number of American Latinos employed in all facets of the media industry; and 3) advocate for media and telecommunications policies that benefit the Latino community.

Another organizer of the Defend the Honor Campaign is Angelo Falc�n, president of the National Institute for Latino Policy, and co-chair of the New York Chapter of the National Hispanic Media Coalition. The NILP is a nonprofit and nonpartisan policy center that focuses on Latino issues in the United States. Falc�n established the Institute for Puerto Rican Policy (IPR) in New York City in the early 1980s. The IPR is now the National Institute for Latino Policy, and Falc�n serves as president. He is also an Adjunct Assistant Professor at the Columbia University School of International and Public Affairs (SIPA). Falc�n, between 1986-1990, was one of the co-principal researchers (along with Rodolfo O. de la Garza of the University of Texas at Austin, F. Chris Garcia of the University of New Mexico, and John Garcia of the University of Arizona) of the Latino National Political Survey (LNPS), one of the largest privately funded social surveys of Latino political attitudes and behavior ever conducted in the United States. In the mid-1990s he was one of the key organizers of the Boricua First! march on Washington, DC and in the early 2000s of the Encuentro Boricua Conference in New York City, among other national initiatives.

Other Issues

Since 2007, DTH has addressed several other issues, including:

1. The 2009 decision by Humanity in Action and the Washington D.C. Sixth and I Historic Synagogue have Ken Burns to speak about a topic on which he is an anti-authority. His speech, before President Barack Obama�s inauguration, was entitled: �Vision of Race.� Neither Humanity in Action nor the Sixth and I Historic Synagogue responded to requests to address the issue.

2. the creation of a �Civil Rights Oral History Project,� a joint effort between the Smithsonian Institution and the Library of Congress to collect oral histories of those involved in the Civil Rights Movement. Latino civil rights efforts were NOT part of that oral history plan. 

3. Burns� 2009 speech at the Chamizal, a national park in El Paso, of all things, to tout his public parks documentary. But the tone-deaf Burns talk was entitled: �Public History and the Hispanic Heritage.� 

4. The successful campaign to get Lou Dobbs, a rabid anti-immigrant commentator, off CNN, in 2009. 

5. The slap on the wrist given to the murderers of Luis Ramirez, a 25-year-old Mexican immigrant residing in Shenandoah, Pennsylvania. Ramirez was beaten and stomped to death by a group of teens as he walked through the town on July 12, 2008. Witnesses overheard anti-Mexican and ethnic epithets shouted by his assailants during the violent attack. On Friday, May 1, 2009, a jury in Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania, found two defendants not guilty of third degree murder and ethnic intimidation. 

If your organization would like to be involved, or if you as an individual would like show your support, please contact organizers at defendthehonor@gmail.com   November 12 is the date for the Valor y Honor Dinner to be held in Austin. 
 
Kick-off! Hispanic Heritage Month Challenge

Cesar�s Last Fast

Dear Mimi

Today we�re kicking off our Hispanic Heritage Month Challenge by launching a national campaign to support the completion of the documentary film, Cesar�s Last Fast, a film about Cesar E. Chavez�s intense commitment to our nation�s farm workers and his inspiring legacy that motivates a new generation of activists to fight for the rights of people working in the fields today. The film is structured around powerful never-before-seen footage of Cesar's 1988 "Fast for Life," a spiritual endeavor where Cesar refused all food for 36 days.

In the same way that Cesar built a movement to fight for the rights for our brethren who worked in the fields, I am encouraging you to join a movement to make a film about a man who impacted our lives like no other Latino leader.

We are at a critical point in the production of this film.  To maintain the momentum of the project and meet our deadlines, we have to raise $100,000 by November 1, 2010.  So we have come to you as a member of the community for whom Cesar Chavez was a concrete example of our individual strength and collective power. If 100 community leaders like you contribute just $1000 each, we will reach our goal. Here�s a link to a one-minute video clip that illustrates the power of the project.

The challenge runs until November 1, 2010.  You will be invited to take part in the grand finale. We'll be releasing regular video clips, accounts, and event information and special announcements in the coming weeks. Click here to learn more about our Hispanic Heritage Month Challenge and join us on the journey.

Kindest Regards,
Richard Ray Perez & Molly O'Brien Cesar�s Last Fast
rick@cesarslastfast.com

 


BUSINESS


Rosa Mar�a Hinojosa de Ball�, A Modern Woman Before Modern Times

Norman Rozeff
nrozeff@sbcglobal.net 
Pertinent illustrations by Frederic Remington

Throughout history there have been those individuals who stand out among their contemporaries because they exhibit traits and actions extraordinary for their time and place. So it is for Rosa Hinojosa de Balli who lived 1752 to 1803. Hers is a special story well worth relating.

She was born in what is now Camargo, Tamaulipas, Mexico as the sixth of nine children of Capt. Juan Jose Hinojosa de la Garza and his wife Maria Antonia Ines Balli de Benavides (elsewhere Antonia Baez Benevides). They were Spanish aristocrats, though not wealthy, and, like many who chose New Spain (later Mexico) as their home, were given rights to land grants and public offices. The family was to move to the frontier town of Reynosa in 1767 where Hinojosa was appointed alcade (mayor). As such he was among the relatively well-off of the area who controlled the jurisdiction. It is likely that Maria was educated there by the parish priest, and well too, as indicated by the literate records that she later produced. She grew up to marry Jose Maria Balli Guerra, who was a captain of the militia in the area and chief justice of Reynosa. He had already been granted a double porcion of land south of the river that added to his grant east of Camargo. All were used for cattle raising. Oldest of their three sons was Jose Nicolas Balli, a missionary priest and developer of the island which would take its name from his title of "Padre" (father).

The Hinojosas resided in Reynosa Viejo, a flood-prone area about 15 miles north of the present-day Reynosa. In 1776 Captain Balli and his father-in-law jointly applied for a large land grant that would be named the La Feria grant. Both had died before the king of Spain granted the land to them. Balli's will had specified that Rosa Maria was to in-herit his share of twelve leagues (53,140 acres). A lengthy delay in clearing the heritance was due to a suit entered by 
Domingo Guerra who had claimed to occupy the La Feria land since 1770. On May 11, 1790 the Chief Justice of the Intendencia of the Province of San Luis Potosi issued a final decree conveying the Llano Grande grant to Juan Jose de Hinojosa and the La Feria one to Rosa Maria, who also inherited three leagues in the former grant.

Over the next 13 years of her life Do�a Hinojosa de Balli was to exhibit her business acumen and common sense skills. For years she maintained meticulous, detailed records. For a start, she ably surveyed and documented her inheritance that encompassed water frontage on the Rio Grande. She then continued to clear the debts on the property and enlarge her landholdings.

Recognizing the importance of land holdings she financed an application for her brother Vicente. This was for thirty-five leagues in what would be named the Las Mestenas, Pitita y La Abra Land grant. In return for soliciting and obtaining this grant and surveying it, Vicente transferred twelve leagues of it to his sister. This became the Ojo de Agua Tract that runs east-west just north of Harlingen. It was so named because of its flowing spring.

In 1794 Do�a Rosa Maria's petition for the sizeable San Salvador del Tule grant was awarded on behalf of her son Juan Jose Balli Hinojosa. It consisted of seventy-two lea-gues or 320,000 acres. This area had within its boundaries the valuable Sal de Rey, the great salt lake. For her youngest son Jose Maria Balli Hinojosa Jr., who was nicknamed Chico, she purchased the Las Caste�as tract part of the Concepcion de Carricitos grant from its original grantees, the Fernandez brothers, Eugenio and Bartolome. This grant at the time encompassed what is now south of Harlingen and the Arroyo Colorado all the away to the river. It was with her oldest son Padre Jose Nicolas, who became her business associate, that she applied for an eleven league grant on what is now Padre Island. Delays in granting it led to her withdrawal in 1800 in favor of her grandson. A clear title was re-quested in 1827 but was only granted posthumously in December 1829.  A nephew Juan Jose became heir to half the island and lived there from 1829 to 
his death in 1853.

Dona Rosa Maria established her La Feria grant ranch headquarters at La Florida. This location is now near the La Gloria Main Canal west of Las Rucias and north of the Mili-tary Highway. She, of course, ran livestock on her numerous other properties too. The animals included herds of cattle, sheep, goats, mules, and horses. This how she earned the unofficial title of the first "cattle queen " of Texas. It was from the Spanish word vaquero, or one that cares for vacas (cows), that we derive the modern word cowboy. Strangely enough Rosa Maria never resided on the ranch nor in Texas. She lived in Old Reynosa which was on the Rio Grande about 45 miles northwest of her La Feria ranch. A road going southeast paralleled the river. She would have taken this south, then crossed the  river on a boat to reach her ranch.

By the time of her death she had amassed over a million acres of land in the Lower Rio Grande Valley and in what are the present-day counties of Cameron, Hidalgo, Starr, Willacy, and Kenedy. The La Feria (the fair in Spanish) area 
takes its name from the annual fairs that were conducted for ranch families of the area. Upon Padre Nicolas' return from Spain, where he had studied, his mother threw a three-day fiesta on the ranch for her workers and their families. 
It cost a whooping 4,000 pesos.

A devout Catholic, she used her wealth generously in support of her faith. She set aside the equivalent of $4,000 as a church endowment upon her death. Fearing that it might be lost she placed it into her estate. Upon her death then, her 
business partner, son Nicolas, first paid off all expenses and legacies, including this gift to the church, and withdrew his capital. The redeemed residual estate was then divided into two parts. He received one-half and his two brothers split the remaining half.

In addition to maintaining a family chapel she endowed churches in Reynosa, Camargo, and Matamoros. The latter was the first chapel for the town. Her will bequeathed silver plates, a silver service, and jewelry to Padre Balli for use at the La Feria Chapel. She de-servedly earned the sobriquet "La Patrona" and was godmother to a good many who were christened in Our Lady of Guadalupe Church in Reynosa Viejo. 

Upon her death she was interred in a cemetery adjacent to a chapel where her son conducted mass. This capilla (chapel) is believed to be in Ciudad Victoria. Nicolas, whom she fondly referred to as "My son, the priest", was buried in the same cemetery upon his death. Around 1953 a new large church, Sagrado Corizon de Jesus, was built around the original capilla that was used until 1911. Upon completion of the new structure that entombed the capilla in its middle, the bodies of both were then re-interred in coffins in the basement of the church. Padre Nicolas' artifacts are stored in an upstairs room.

In her lifetime she had tread the fine line of being a powerful woman, yet one who led wisely and strengthened her family without arousing rancor in others. She was both proud of and protective of her children. She was indeed a modern woman well before her time.

 


EDUCATION

Center for Applied Linguistics
October 4-6, 2010: MANA,  Annual National Education and Training Conference 

The Arc  of Triumph and the Agony of Defeat:  Mexican Americans and the Law 
     by Michael A. Olivas
Center for Applied Linguistics
Sharing information and updates relating to language and culture: books, videos, training workshops/materials.
Information on research studies & exemplary programs.  www.CAL.org


MANA, A National Latina Organization's Annual 
Education and Training Conference 
Date: October 4-6, 2010
Location: Washington, DC
Time: To be Announced


The conference will cover issues impacting Latinas of all ages today. By providing workshops discussing leadership training, child safety and nutrition, the lack of Latinas electorate, and the effects of redistricting, we hope to bring public awareness and educate the community on important issues affecting our Latinas. 

Event will feature: 
Educational activities 
Cultural activities 
Interactive workshops 
Presentations by motivational Latina guest speakers



About MANA: Founded by Mexican-American Women in 1974.  A National Latina Organization, MANA, is a nonprofit advocacy organization headquartered in Washington, DC. with chapters across the country; it is the oldest national Latina membership organization in the United States. MANA, whose mission is to empower Latinas through leadership development, community service, and advocacy, envisions a national community of informed Latina activists working to improve the quality of life for all Hispanics. MANA also has the only national Latina mentoring program for girls 11 to 18, known as Hermanitas�.

This email was sent to mimilozano@aol.com by manaceo@aol.com.
A National Latina Organization | 1146 19th St., NW, Suite 700 | Washington | DC | 20036 
Details to be announced by e-mail and on MANA's Website: manaevents@aol.com   www.hermana.com



Review Essay

The Arc of Triumph and the Agony of Defeat:

Mexican Americans and the Law

 

Michael A. Olivas*
Historia Chicana ~ 17 August 2010

 


 

 

 

&

 

Richard R. Valencia, Chicano Students and the Courts: The Mexican American Legal Struggle for Educational Equality, New York: New York: NYU Press, 2008, pp. 480, $25.00.

Philippa Strum, Mendez v. Westminster: School Desegregation and Mexican-American Rights, Lawrence: Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 2010, pp. 192, Cloth $34.95. Paper $16.95.

Ignacio M. Garcia, White But Not Equal: Mexican Americans, Jury Discrimination, and the Supreme Court, Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 2008, pp. 248, Cloth $55.00, Paper $24.95.

Cynthia E. Orozco, No Mexicans, Women, or Dogs Allowed: The Rise of the Mexican American Civil Rights Movement, Austin: University of Texas Press, 2009, pp. 330, $24.95.

 

&

 

These are salad days for Mexican American scholarship, both by Mexican Americans and by other scholars. The small numbers but persistent growth of Mexican American researchers, combined with improved access to important archival materials and increased collaborative projects, and the rich territory yet-to-be-explored have led to these and other important books about an understudied and fascinating topic: the litigation for Mexican American educational and civil rights following WWI and WWII. Indeed, some of the work has reached back even farther, discovering obscure cases and small case studies, all of which give lie to the suggestion that persons of Mexican origin are fatalistic, unambitious, and docile. As one of many examples, consider the work of the late Harvard political scientist Samuel P. Huntington, who wrote in 2004:

 

[Author Jorge] Castaneda cited differences in social and economic equality, the unpredictability of events, concepts of time epitomized in the manana syndrome, the ability to achieve results quickly, and attitudes toward history, expressed in the �cliche that Mexicans are obsessed with history, Americans with the future.� [Author Lionel] Sosa identifies several Hispanic traits (very different from Anglo-Protestant ones) that �hold us Latinos back�: mistrust of people outside the family; lack of initiative, self-reliance, and ambition; little use for education; and acceptance of poverty as a virtue necessary for entrance into heaven. Author Robert Kaplan quotes Alex Villa, a third-generation Mexican American in Tucson, Arizona, as saying that he knows almost no one in the Mexican community of South Tucson who believes in �education and hard work� as the way to material prosperity and is thus willing to �buy into America.� Profound cultural differences clearly separate Mexicans and Americans, and the high level of immigration from Mexico sustains and reinforces the prevalence of Mexican values among Mexican Americans.1

 

            In this article in Foreign Policy, as well as his nativist 2004 book, Who Are We? The Challenges to America's National Identity,2 Huntington is crudely reductionist and misinformed about virtually all the negative traits with which he paints Mexicans, and he is particularly uninformed about the docility and passiveness of Mexican Americans. Extraordinarily, for a scholar of his stature, he cited secondhand remarks and a self-help book by an advertising executive to prove  his thesis. Had he read further and delved deeper into the history of Mexicans and Mexican Americans, he surely would have discovered the long history of resistance and struggle against their lot in life, especially in employing unyielding courts to press their case against racist oppression. Even when the courts were hostile and when the state went to great lengths to disenfranchise them, Mexican American plaintiffs and their lawyers have a substantial record of aggressively�and successfully�pressing claims and looking to the legal system for redress. Indeed, even if it had been true that Mexicans were a passive lot, it is an odd and cruel turn to accuse persons so substantially marginalized by the advantaged in U.S. society that they cannot be assimilated or accommodated because they had somehow failed to resist that very oppression.

Huntington died in 2008, apparently not having drunk in the deep water of Chicano and Chicana scholarship already published. But more recent works, including these four under review and others, should definitively put to rest the allegation that persons in Mexico afuera�Mexican origin persons in the United States�have simply accepted their fate.3 Although each of these texts examines different corners of the larger tapestry and uses different yarn to stitch, they reveal a stunning portrait of resistance and opposition, particularly in the areas of education, criminal justice, and civil rights. While the work of Valencia, Garcia, Orozco, and Strum draw upon different historical sources and examine different domains, they share an overarching theme: although not well-known or documented in the larger literatures, Mexican Americans following WWI and especially after WWII were better organized and, occasionally, more successful in resisting social marginalization and racial oppression than is generally appreciated. In addition, this history is not featured in the general scholarly discourse of our nation, forming an eerily-evident parallel with the present, when nativism and restrictionist discourse have reached dangerous levels and when white Long Island, NY thugs go �beaner-hunting.�4

            Given the clearly-documented and lamentable educational achievement of Mexican Americans in 2010, and the longstanding roots of this phenomenon, this long history of resistance will likely come as a surprise to many readers of educational psychologist Richard R. Valencia�s Chicano Students and the Courts: The Mexican American Legal Struggle for Educational Equality. In a revealing table  listing Mexican American school desegregation cases, he counts thirty five such cases between 1925 and 1985, beginning with Romo v. Laird,5 in which a Mexican American family sought the right for their four children to attend a comprehensive �white� school in Tempe, Arizona rather than the �Spanish-Mexican� school these children were assigned, which served as the laboratory school for the nearby Tempe State Teachers� College (later Arizona State University). While the Romo family won this battle for a single school term, they lost the war, as the school officials began to assign Mexican-origin children exclusively to �Mexican Schools,� on the asserted pedagogical assumption that Spanish-speaking children would only learn when instructed in Spanish.  As will be seen throughout all these books, the widely-employed means of segregating Mexican American children�even those who were English speakers�was to aver that their linguistic needs were best met by separating them, despite the flawed premise and segregative effect that this instructional choice had upon the children. Valencia labeled this tactic a �practice, used over and over, [that] was, at its core, racialized segregation� (15).

When used with the other common ascription, that migrant worker children required separate schools so that their farm labors would not disrupt the flow of instruction, their fates were sealed, notwithstanding the failure of school districts to assess the language capacity of the children or to account for the small number of children actually involved in migratory labor. This reasoning was particularly widespread in Texas, such as in Independent School District v. Salvatierra, 6 a 1931 case set in Del Rio. As legal scholar George A. Martinez has noted of the case, which he situates as the first Mexican American desegregation case:

                        This case is highly significant because it provided two justifications for

segregating Mexican-American children. Specifically, the district could

segregate children because of linguistic difficulties or because they were

migrant farm workers. This case also presents us with another example of   legal indeterminacy. The Salvatierra court acknowledged that no other Texas court had yet addressed the legality of segregating Mexican- Americans from other white races. Given this vacuum, the court's decision disallowing race-based segregation for Mexican-Americans was not  compelled. The court could have followed other jurisdictions that allowed  school boards to segregate children on the basis of race, even without statutory authorization. Similarly, the court's conclusion that Mexican- Americans could be segregated for "benign reasons" was not logically   compelled. Because only Mexican-Americans were segregated for linguistic difficulties and migrant farm-working patterns, the court might  have that, in effect, such segregation was race-based and therefore illegal.            Alternatively, the court might have followed the reasoning of courts in other   jurisdictions which had held that, in the absence of express legislation, segregation was illegal. As no legislation expressly authorized the specific segregation at issue in Salvatierra, the court could have held that segregation     -- even for linguistic or migrant farm worker reasons -- was illegal.

Moreover, the court allowed the segregation to stand despite clear evidence that the district practiced arbitrary segregation. For example, white children who started school late were not placed in the Mexican school. Thus, the school board's assertion that it segregated children in the Mexican school because they started school late was a mere pretext. In addition, there were no tests demonstrating that the Mexican-American children were less proficient in English, the other alleged justification for the segregation. In any event, the court did not consider the possibility that bilingual education might address any language problems better than segregation.7

 

During the early 1930s, when few Mexican American scholars were active, George I. Sanchez had already taken aim at the misuse of psychometric instruments and the failure to assess the linguistic characteristics of Spanish-speaking children.  Similarly, Texas writer Jovita Gonzalez had begun her careful folklore studies.8 Valencia comprehensively reviews these efforts at litigation and scholarship, both with an overarching theoretical section and through single chapters on the various subjects of educational litigation including, school segregation, school financing, special education, bilingual education, undocumented students, higher education financing, and high stakes testing. His novel contribution is his synthetic treatment of the elements of Mexican American activism that have historically fed the struggle for educational opportunity: �advocacy organizations, individual activists, political demonstrations, legislation, and the subject of this book�litigation. In order for the Mexican American people to optimize their campaign for equality in education, they must draw from all five forms of struggle. Each one in itself is important, but all five streams flowing simultaneously and eventually becoming one fast-moving river have the potential to create a powerful confluence for systemic change in education� (319).

One of the important cases Valencia discusses is Delgado v. Bastrop,9 a federal district court opinion from June 1948, which struck down the segregative practices in this central Texas town of Bastrop, a small town near Austin, the state capital. Because the case was never reported, and not appealed to the Fifth Circuit, it has not been widely known, even though in proximity to 1954�s Brown v. Board of Education10 and following Mendez v. Westminster,11 the April 1947 Ninth Circuit decision successfully brought by Mexican American plaintiffs against California schools, it angered officials who did not want the decision upheld or widened to other districts. At the time, before it was split into the Fifth and Eleventh Circuits, the Fifth Circuit extended all the way from Texas to Florida, and a decision by the Circuit likely upholding Delgado would have had bearing upon the Southern judges and the region�s Jim Crow schools and social practices.  Valencia carefully details the many instances of �intransigence and subterfuge� (52) by disgruntled school officials, and brings light to this most obscure steppingstone to Brown. He also usefully points out the intersections connecting the lawyers of Mendez, Delgado, and Brown, who corresponded and interacted behind the scenes. (Although he does not make the connection clearly here, he might have added Hernandez v. Texas12 lawyers to the mix as well, some of whom participated in Delgado v. Bastrop and the criminal defense/murder trial that figures in Hernandez.13) Readers familiar with the fascinating and extensive treatments of Brown by Kluger, Tushnet, and others who have chronicled this towering case would do well to re-read the case through the lens of Valencia, Martinez, and others who have filled in the parallel tracks.14

In Mendez v. Westminster: School Desegregation and Mexican-American Rights, Philippa Strum has written the first full-length book on this Ninth Circuit case, as part of  the University Press of Kansas Landmark Law Cases & American Society series, usually reserved for important cases that reached the U.S. Supreme Court. Strum earlier wrote an authoritative 2002 treatment in the same series for United States v. Virginia,15 the Supreme Court case that required Virginia Military Institute to admit women. For the same reasons that Delgado is important on the road to Brown, so is Mendez. Strum is a careful and fluid writer, with a storyteller�s facility for explaining the many strands that led to the case, including previous litigation (few California cases on point, but enough to suggest how to proceed), how the plaintiffs came to their grievance (their children were not admitted into the better school in the Westminster system, outside Los Angeles, due to their alleged lack of fluency in English), how they picked their lawyer (he had litigated a public accommodations case that led to integration of the San Bernardino public swimming pools and parks), how he strategized with other civil rights lawyers and organizations, and what came of the holding after the State of California lost (in June 1947, the state passed an anti-segregation statute, signed into law by Gov. Earl Warren).

I have read this case many times over the years, along with many of the law reviews and the historical literature about the case.  I thought I knew the details, but I learned much from Strum�s book.  The texture she reveals is an excellent example of why the backstories to important cases are so essential to understanding the full context. Strum is particularly accomplished at the telling detail; for instance,  her account of how the Mendez family took up the cause, especially with a Mexican American father and Puerto Rican mother, and at some risk to their social standing, is particularly compelling. Their daughter Sylvia, alive in 2010, has become like Linda Brown or Elena Holly, the active custodian of her family�s tale and private keeper of the public faith. By recounting many details from the fugitive press accounts, personal histories, and written records, Strum has performed a genuine service in drawing such significant attention to the case.

However, she is not as sure in her grasp of the post-Mendez matters. She mistakenly places the four school districts in the Delgado v. Bastrop case as being in �south Texas� (149), when any political and topographical map would locate the three counties and four school districts in Central Texas, including Travis County, where the case was tried in Austin federal court. The actual geography matters less than considerable political cartography between Anglo Texas and the predominantly-Mexican American South Texas and border areas. She does not dwell upon Delgado, although in many respects it was as crucial to the NAACP Legal Defense Fund�s strategy as was Mendez, and was tried in the same courts as Sweatt v. Painter,16 already begun against the University of Texas. I had not put two and two together to connect the appearance of A. L. Wirin, Mendez co-counsel and Delgado co-counsel; for that matter, I had not known he had been involved in litigation following the earlier Sleepy Lagoon violence against Mexican Americans,17 or that afterward, he had gone on to do the Lord�s work in Arizona ,18 or that he had later argued before the U.S. Supreme Court.19 (Valencia also missed this connection in his discussion of Gonzales v. Sheely, the 1951 Maricopa County, Arizona desegregation case [53-55].) Through its journey to the Ninth Circuit, Mendez drew upon white, Jewish, Asian, and African American lawyers, but not a single Latino or Mexican American attorney.

I do not think that her rendition of the founding of the Mexican American Legal Defense & Educational Fund squares with all the available facts, or that the organization  �contacted Pete Tijerina to use some of � [its Ford Foundation] money to help Mexican-American lawyers in Texas with litigation� (154-55). Remarkably, there has never been a full-length book on MALDEF or its founding, so the accurate version is still to be told. I also do not believe that it would be correct to characterize the funds that University of Texas professor George I. Sanchez had at his disposal as �LULAC� funds, the way she describes them (149). These may seem quibbles, but her telling of these details is not nearly as sure-handed as her account of the Mendez case. One last haunting connection among these books involves the demise of David Marcus, the lead Mendez lawyer, for reasons that will be apparent in the review of Ignacio M. Garcia�s book. These small details aside, I am grateful that the Kansas series apparently made an exception for this case, which did not reach the U.S. Supreme Court or achieve the iconic status of those in its other books, and grateful that Strum decided to write about it. 

Ignacio M. Garcia�s book on Hernandez v. Texas is a work long in the making, even drawing an unusual shout out in a New York Times editorial years before it appeared in print.20 The decision,  which appears in the 1954 U.S. Supreme Court Reporter just before Brown, involves a Mexican American defendant convicted of murder in a 1951 cantina shooting by an all-white jury in Edna, Texas. That verdict was subsequently  overturned on the grounds that he was not tried by a jury of his peers; Texas prosecutors had argued that since state law considered Mexican Americans  to be �white,� he had indeed been tried by a jury of his peers. 21

However, in a unanimous opinion by Justice Warren, the Court ordered the defendant be given a new trial:

The petitioner's initial burden in substantiating his charge of group discrimination was to prove that persons of Mexican descent constitute a separate class in Jackson County, distinct from "whites." One method by which this may be demonstrated is by showing the attitude of the community. Here the testimony of responsible officials and citizens contained the admission that residents of the community distinguished between "white" and "Mexican." The participation of persons of Mexican descent in business and community groups was shown to be slight. Until very recent times, children of Mexican descent were required to attend a segregated school for the first four grades. At least one restaurant in town prominently displayed a sign announcing "No Mexicans Served." On the courthouse grounds at the time of the hearing, there were two men's toilets, one unmarked, and the other marked "Colored Men" and "Hombres Aqui" ("Men Here"). No substantial evidence was offered to rebut the logical inference to be drawn from these facts, and it must be concluded that petitioner succeeded in his proof.22

 

As the author and editor of the first book on the case to appear in print, I was pleased to welcome this new work and to have the perspective of a senior Chicano historian on the case that had come to mean so much to me.23 Garcia�s use of journalism sources and his interviews with a number of observers and their families helps bring to life the alcohol-fuelled bar fight of more than half a century ago. (Inexplicably, the book cover mistakenly indicates the shooting was in 1952, when it actually occurred in 1951.) He also has ably explored the social dynamics of the case, explaining why many community members rallied behind defendant Pedro Hernandez despite the fact that he had killed another Mexican American, Joe Espinoza, who was unarmed. He is particularly helpful in sorting out some of the incongruous aspects of the case, such as why �outsider� lawyers from Houston and San Antonio took the Hernandez case in the first place, since the Espinozas were a relatively well-established family in Edna, Texas, and doing so was not entirely popular among other Mexican Americans in the small �Jaime Crow� cotton-culture town.

Gustavo Garcia, one of the four lawyers on the team, was a tragic figure; Ignacio Garcia captures his cockiness and bravado in both broad and small strokes. Nowhere is he better than his depiction of the Chicano lawyers barred from staying the night in the town�s only hotel, and of Gus drunkenly singing in the hotel parking lot in order to irritate the hoteliers (34-35). Indeed, the book is filled with references to Gus Garcia�s drinking, so much so that the author strays from his usual care to describe Gus as drunk the night before his crucial Supreme Court argument, and of the legal team�s effort to sober him up by pouring coffee down his throat. Gus Garcia then went on to deliver a brilliant argument, famously extended as the Justices gave him more time to answer their questions (140-48). The author explains that he heard this story from an Anglo historian who was a friend of John Herrera, the lead lawyer in the case.24 Because John Herrera never wrote about the case and his archived papers do not mention to this incident, and because the U.S. Supreme Court did not begin to record oral arguments until the following term, we will never know what actually happened. All the lawyers have now passed, but the last living lawyer of the four-person team, James DeAnda, who became a federal judge and a co-founder of MALDEF in 1967-68, insisted to me that this never happened. It was plausible that Gus was drunk, as he was an alcoholic and died ignominiously at the age of forty-eight, having been disbarred, hounded by creditors, and having been in and out of hospitals and treatment facilities for his drinking.25 But this story requires more careful documentation than is evident here.

 

Historian Cynthia E. Orozco has published No Mexicans, Women, or Dogs Allowed: The Rise of the Mexican American Civil Rights Movement, a towering work, and a volume of significance that transcends its actual scope�early 20th century Mexican American political development in Texas. The book builds on her Ph.D dissertation, �The Origins of the League of United Latin American Citizens and the Mexican American Civil Rights Movement in Texas, 1910-1929.� Among the materials she reviewed were the unpublished papers of Alonso Perales, who graduated from George Washington University School of Law in 1926, making him the third Mexican American lawyer to practice in Texas, following  J.T. Canales, a lawyer-politician who graduated from the University of Michigan Law School in 1899, and Manuel C. Gonzales, who attended the law school at St. Louis University and graduated from the University of Texas Law School in 1924.28 Perales not only had a successful practice, but helped found LULAC and was a prolific writer. The University of Houston acquired his papers and archives in 2009, and they are ripe pickings for scholars.

Orozco has carefully looked at the early Mexican American social and political organizations, especially LULAC and Order Sons of America (OSA), and through her careful work, advances the thesis that Mexican American organizing politics and social consciousness arose much earlier than has been generally credited in the work of earlier historians, political scientists, and other scholars. Whereas most other scholars place these origins in the late 1920s, especially with the events leading up to the 1929 founding of LULAC, in Corpus Christi, Texas, she more thoroughly traces its roots to predecessor groups and to events from the 1910 Mexican Revolution, the end of the Porfiriato, and the early 1920s. She also has done rather remarkable archival work with Perales�s private papers, and with the collection of another early activist and feminist, Adela Sloss-Vento, also previously-unavailable. These family-held papers fill out the record on  the structured role of women in these mutual societies and civic organizations, as well as the behind-the-scenes role of lawyers�in this instance, not as  litigators, but as civic leaders and elected officials.

Ironically, the case most often considered to be an early �Mexican American� case, Mendez, had no Mexican American lawyers involved in it, and because it was a California case rather than a Texas case, had no significant involvement from Mexican American political organizations or the social-cultural community. However, it did segue into, and through the connections noted here, did influence Delgado, Hernandez, and the cases that flowed eventually into the MALDEF �river� Richard Valencia has evocatively described.29 In 1982, MALDEF won Plyler v. Doe, concerning undocumented children, its most important U.S. Supreme Court victory to that point.30 In 2006, MALDEF lawyers won in LULAC v. Perry,31 a voting rights case that, for the first time, had Latinos and Latinas on both sides of a Supreme Court case, and because of the majority�s complex decision, allowed Nina Perales for MALDEF and Teodoro Cruz, the Texas Solicitor General, to each claim victory.  James DeAnda lived to see that case, and four years later, Sonia Sotomayor was confirmed to the Court. While these books and others show that much work has been done, events continue to show how much scholarly and other work remains.

Many rich nuggets are still to be mined from this period�s river. As part of my ongoing research on Hernandez, I have identified earlier trials where Mexican American defendants had claimed all-Anglo jury trials were not representative and came across the famous incident of Gregorio Cortez, among others.32 Literary scholars have begun to look at Lorenzo de Zavala,34 cultural and printing scholars at Padre Antonio Martinez,34 and legal historians at the racialization of juries in the Southwest.36These projects examine the �first important mediating figures of U.S.-Mexican democratic cultural relations and [reveal] much about the early expansionist ideologies that would affect U.S.-Mexico relations and Mexican American peoplehood in the United States for the next century.�37 The literary scholar who wrote this was referring to the �next century� as the 20th, but he could just as easily have referred to the future of the 21st century.

I end as I began this review-essay, as a reposte to Samuel P. Huntington, who was unaware that Mexican-origin and native peoples populated what is now the United States long before the Pilgrims later arrived. If there truly were a Mexican �obsession� with history, it likely exists because those who continue to ignore the history of Mexicans in the U.S. or paint them as inferior are ignorant of these stories, and willfully so. How could anyone who knew this history assert that we have �little use for education�? In the movie 1988 Stand and Deliver,38 math teacher Jaime Escalante, exasperated at his high school students, shouts at them, �You burros have math in your blood!� The rise of this developing field of legal history gives evidence that we burros also have history�and law�in our blood.

 

 

FOOTNOTES

 

* Michael A. Olivas is William B. Bates Distinguished Chair in Law, University of Houston Law Center. He gratefully acknowledges the assistance of Lauren E. Schroeder and Laura E. Gomez.

 

1. Samuel P. Huntington, The Hispanic Challenge, Foreign Pol�y, Mar.-Apr. 2004, available at cyber.law.harvard.edu/blogs/gems/culturalagency1/SamuelHuntingtonTheHispanicC.pdf. For citations from the books under review, the pagination appears in parentheses.

 

2. Samuel P. Huntington, Who Are We? The Challenges to America�s National Identity (2004).

 

3. There is a veritable library of recent works on the subject. Some of the better full-length works include those by Arnoldo De Leon, The Tejano Community, 1836-1900 (1982); Carl Allsup, The American GI Forum: Origins and Evolution (1982); Arnoldo De Leon, They Called Them Greasers (1983); David Montejano, Anglos and Mexicans in the Making of Texas, 1836-1986 (1987); Mario T. Garcia, Mexican Americans: Leadership, Ideology, and Identity (1989); Gilbert Gonzalez, Chicano Education in the Era of Segregation (1990); Benjamin Marquez, LULAC: The Evolution of a Mexican American Political Organization (1993); George J. Sanchez, Becoming Mexican American: Ethnicity, Culture and Identity in Chicano Los Angeles, 1900-1945 (1993); Guadalupe San Miguel, Jr., Let All of Them Take Heed: Mexican Americans and the Campaign for Educational Equality in Texas, 1910-1981 (1987); Angela Valenzuela, Subtractive Schooling: U.S.-Mexican Youth and the Politics of Caring (1999); Guadalupe San Miguel, Jr., Brown, Not White: School Integration and the Chicano Movement in Houston (2001); Mexican Americans and World War II (Maggie Rivas-Rodriguez ed., 2005); Marcos Pizarro, Chicanas and Chicanos in School: Racial Profiling, Identity Battles, and Empowerment (2005); Laura E. Gomez, Manifest Destinies: The Making of the Mexican American Race (2007); World War II and Mexican American Civil Rights (Richard Griswold del Castillo ed. 2008); Joseph P. S�nchez, Between Two Rivers: The Atrisco Land Grant in Albuquerque History, 1692-1968 (2008); Jose A. Ramirez, To the Line of Fire: Mexican Texans and World War I (2009); Emilio Zamora, Claiming Rights and Righting Wrongs in Texas: Mexican Workers and Job Politics during World War II (2009). These books are specifically about the Mexican-origin experience in the United States, particularly in the Southwest, and many are more particularly grounded in Texas. Far less has been written of the educational history of Puerto Ricans in the fifty states and D.C. and of other Latino groups in the U.S. For authoritative scholarship on Puerto Rico itself, see Jose Cabranes, Citizenship and the American Empire (1979); Ediberto Roman, The Other American Colonies: An International and Constitutional Examination of the United States� Overseas Conquests (2006).

 

4. See, e.g., Michael A. Olivas, Immigration-Related State Statutes and Local Ordinances: Preemption, Prejudice, and the Proper Role for Enforcement, U. Chi. Legal F. 27 (2007).

As evidence of racial violence aimed at persons perceived to be undocumented Mexicans, see, e.g., Manny Fernandez, L.I. Teenagers Hunted Latinos for �Sport,� Prosecutor Says, N.Y. Times, Mar. 19, 2010, at A18 (describing the killing of Ecuadorian permanent resident); Manny Fernandez, Verdict Is Manslaughter in L.I. Hate Crime Trial, N.Y. Times, Apr. 20, 2010, at A1.

 

5. Romo v. Laird, et al., No. 21617, Maricopa County Superior Court (1925). This case was unpublished, but all the proceedings are reprinted in Laura K. Mu�oz, Separate But Equal? A Case Study of Romo v. Laird and Mexican American Education, 15 OAH Magazine of History 28 (2001), available at www.oah.org/pubs/magazine/deseg/munoz.html. While the Valencia list ended in 1985, a number of the cases listed are still ongoing decades later. For example, United States v. Texas was reopened in 2006, after many years of failure to implement. The various documents of this Jarndyce-like case are available at

http://maldef.org/education/litigation/us_v_texasHYPERLINK "http://maldef.org/education/litigation/us_v_texas/"/.

 

6. 33 S.W.2d 790 (Tex. Civ. App. 1930), cert. denied, 284 U.S. 580 (1931).

 

7. George A. Martinez, Legal Indeterminacy, Judicial Discretion and the Mexican-American Litigation Experience: 1930-1980, 27 U.C. Davis L. Rev. 555, 576-77 (1994). Guadalupe San Miguel, Jr. examined all the original documents and came to the same conclusions in his authoritative study, �Let All of Them Take Heed�: Mexican Americans and the Campaign for Educational Equality in Texas, 1910-1981 74-86 (1987).

8. George I. Sanchez, Scores of Spanish-Speaking Children on Repeated Tests, 40 J. Genetic Psychol. 223 (1932); George I. Sanchez, The Implications of a Basal Vocabulary to the Measurement of the Abilities of Bilingual Children, 5 J. Soc. Psychol. 395 (1934). Jovita Gonzalez Mireles served as the president of the Texas Folklore Society in 1930-1932, and is credited with being the first Mexican American woman scholar in Texas. See generally Jos� E. Lim�n, Dancing with the Devil: Society and Cultural Poetics in Mexican American South Texas 60-74 (1994); Mexican Americans in Texas History, Selected Essays (Emilio Zamora, Cynthia Orozco & Rodolfo Rocha eds., 2000). Her papers and those of her activist husband Edmundo E. Mireles are archived at the Texas State University, San Marcos library at http://alkek.library.txstate.edu/swwc/archives/writers/jovita.html.

 

9. Civ. No. 388 (W.D. Tex. June 15, 1948) (unpublished opinion).

 

10. 347 U.S. 483 (1954).

 

11. 161 F.2d 774 (9th Cir. 1947).

 

12. 347 U.S. 475 (1954).

 

13.  �Colored Men� and �Hombres Aqui�: Hernandez v. Texas and the Emergence of Mexican-American Lawyering (Michael A. Olivas ed., 2006).

14. See, e.g., Richard Kluger, Simple Justice: The History of Brown v. Board of Education and Black America�s Struggle for Equality (1976); Bernard Schwartz, Super Chief: Earl Warren and His Supreme Court�A Judicial Biography (1983); Dennis J. Hutchinson, Unanimity and Desegregation: Decisionmaking in the Supreme Court, 1948-1958, 68 Geo. L. J. 1 (1986); Mark V. Tushnet, The NAACP's Legal Strategy Against Segregated Education, 1925-1950 (1987); Mark V. Tushnet, Making Civil Rights Law: Thurgood Marshall and the Supreme Court, 1956-1961 (1994); Mark V. Tushnet, Making Constitutional Law: Thurgood Marshall and the Supreme Court, 1961-1991 (1997); Mark Tushnet and Katya Lezin, What Really Happened in Brown v. Board of Education, 91 Colum. L. Rev. 1867 (1991); Kenneth W. Mack, Rethinking Civil Rights Lawyering and Politics in the Era Before Brown, 115 Yale L. J. 256 (2005).

 

15. Philippa Strum, Women in the Barracks: The VMI Case and Equal Rights (2002). See United States v. Virginia, 518 U.S. 515 (1996). See also Rosemary C. Salomone, The Story of Virginia Military Institution: Negotiating Sameness and Difference, in Education Law Stories 159 (Michael A. Olivas & Ronna Greff Schneider eds., 2006).

 

16. 339 U.S. 629 (1950). See Amilcar Shabazz, Advancing Democracy: African Americans and the Struggle for Access and Equity in Higher Education in Texas (2004).

 

17. For detailed treatments of the racial violence visited upon Mexican Americans in Los Angeles in 1943, see Richard Steele, Violence in Los Angeles: Sleepy Lagoon, the Zoot Suit Riots, and the Liberal Response, in Richard Griswold del Castillo, supra note 3, at 34-48; Maurico Mazon, The Zoot-Suit Riots: The Psychology of Symbolic Annihilation (1988).

 

18. He tried the Gonzales v. Sheely case, 96 F. Supp. 1004 (D. Ariz. 1951). Professor Martinez mistakenly lists the case throughout as Gonzalez. See Martinez, supra note 7, at 555, 578.

 

19. Rochin v. California, 342 U.S. 165 (1952). Rochin was a case about search and seizure, and at the trial court and state appellate levels, it was argued by David Marcus, who handed it off to Wirin and another lawyer for the U.S. Supreme Court argument. Wirin argued the case with co-counsel Dolly Lee Butler, who is listed in a website of early successful women lawyers from Tennessee: 50 Years of Pioneers: Early Women in the Law, http://www.tba.org/pioneers.html (last visited July 16, 2010). Although the petitioner Rochin was Latino, the case was not about race and ethnicity, but drugs seized by a coerced stomach-pumping. Rochin prevailed in the Supreme Court. Marcus also represented Mexican American homeowners sued by white homeowners to invoke racial housing covenants in 1943 Fullerton, California in Doss v. Bernal. See Gustavo Arrellano, Mi Casa Es Mi Casa, Orange County Weekly, May 6, 2010, available at

http://www.ocweekly.com/2010-05-06/news/alex-bernal-housing-discrimination.

 

20. A Quiet Victory for Civil Rights, N.Y. Times, May 15, 2004, at A16. (�Ignacio Garcia, a history professor at Brigham Young University who is writing a book about the Hernandez case, said that it marked the first time Hispanic lawyers had argued before the Supreme Court.�)

 

21. Hernandez v. Texas,252 S.W.2d 531 (1952).

 

22. Hernandez v. Texas, 347 U.S. 475, 479-80 (1954) (quotation marks and citations omitted). See also Ian Haney Lopez & Michael A. Olivas, Hernandez v. Texas: Jim Crow, Mexican Americans, and the Anti-Subordination Constitution, in Rachel Moran and Devon Carbado, Race Law Stories 269 (2008). This �whiteness thesis� is, as could be expected, a quite contested issue. See, e.g., Neil Foley, The White Scourge: Mexicans, Blacks, and Poor Whites in Texas Cotton Culture (1997); Ian Haney Lopez, White by Law: The Legal Construction of Race (1996); John Tehranian, Performing Whiteness: Naturalization Litigation and the Construction of Racial Identity in America, 109 Yale L.J. 817 (2000); Ian Haney Lopez, Racism on Trial, The Chicano Fight for Justice (2003); Ariela Gross, Texas Mexicans and the Politics of Whiteness, 21 L. & Hist. Rev. 195 (2003); Steven H. Wilson, Brown Over �Other White�: Mexican Americans� Legal Arguments and Litigation Strategy in School Desegregation, 21 L. & Hist. Rev. 145 (2003); Multiple Origins, Uncertain Destinies: Hispanics and the American Future (Marta Tienda & Faith Mitchell eds., 2006).

 

Many scholars and observers have speculated upon the �bonus of whiteness,� ranging from Toni Morrison to Derrick Bell, not always with much historical nuance or knowledge. See, e.g., Toni Morrison, On the Backs of Blacks, TIME, Dec. 2, 1993, at 57 (noting what she characterizes as newcomers� antipathy towards African Americans); Derrick Bell, The Permanence of Racism, 22 Sw. U. L. Rev. 1103, 1109 (1993) (�If immigrants from Europe who are, after all, white, have seen the need to bolster their self-esteem by denigrating blacks, then what of the immigrants who are not European: those from Asia and those from Spanish-speaking nations? Can blacks expect those groups to reject the blandishments of quasi-white status and join in coalitions with blacks to fight the economic and social rejection suffered by both?�) Among the more thoughtful writers on this complex subject are Tanya Kater� Hern�ndez, Latino Inter-Ethnic Employment Discrimination and the �Diversity� Defense, 42 Harv. C.R.-C.L. L. Rev. 259 (2007); Gomez, supra note 3 at 149-61; Anna Williams Shavers, The Invisible Others and Immigrant Rights: A Commentary, 45 Hous. L. Rev. 99 (2008). The Hernandez v. Texas case, if anything, revealed the extensive similarities between these two marginalized communities in cotton country, �Jaime-Crow� Texas in the 1950s. The putative �whiteness bonus� penalized Mexicans by keeping them off petit and grand juries, even in jurisdictions such as Jackson County, where their share of the population would have suggested at least one Mexican on each seven-person jury.

 

23. Olivas, supra note 13.

 

24. Ignacio M. Garcia, White but not Equal: Mexican Americans, Jury Discrimination, and the Supreme Court 220, n.47 (2008).

 

25. The John J. Herrera papers at the Houston Metropolitan Research Center contain many heartbreaking exchanges among the various parties, with considerable evidence of Gus Garcia�s drinking, including letters from his former wife. Olivas, supra note 13, at 220, n.64. His obituary appears in Paul Thompson, San Antonio Evening News, June 14, 1964, at 2A. A San Antonio reporter filed what I believe to be the only news story filed by a reporter who was actually present at the Supreme Court when the case was argued by Cadena and Garcia, and she gives no hint of his demeanor, except in a more positive light: �Garcia termed [Sam] Houston �that wetback from Tennessee.� . . . observers here think the court will rule in favor of the Latin-Americans. [sic] Anyway, to have reached this far on a typewritten petition and small contributions from many Texas Latin-Americans, the little group of San Antonio, Del Rio and Houston Latin-Americans could hold their heads high as they emerged from the court.�

Sarah McClendon, Jury Bias Put to High Court, San Antonio Light, Jan. 12, 1954, at 1, available at: www.law.uh.edu/hernandez50/mcclendon.pdf.

 

26. He published a short pamphlet, A Cotton Picker Finds Justice! The Saga of the Hernandez Case, which is included in its entirety in Olivas, supra note 13, at 356-72. He suggests that he was the original lawyer (�I could not resist the tearful pleadings of the defendant�s mother.�), who brought in Herrera and DeAnda (�I decided to contact the only man I knew who could possibly help me.�). Id. at 361.

 

27. DeAnda�s version, supported by the original case filing documents, was that Herrera and he took the case and elaborated upon their earlier involvement in a similar case, Sanchez v. Texas, 243 S.W.2d 700 (1951). James DeAnda, Hernandez at Fifty: A Personal History, in Olivas, supra note 13, at 202. The filmmaker Carlos Sandoval, who directed the 2009 PBS film (�A Class Apart�) based upon the Hernandez case, also paints Gus as the architect and primary lawyer. He cites the Cotton Picker pamphlet published by Garcia, and interviews John Herrera�s son on camera, who avers the version of the hungover Garcia arguing the case before the U.S. Supreme Court.

 

28. Cynthia E. Orozco, No Mexicans, Women, or Dogs Allowed: The Rise of the Mexican American Civil Rights Movement 94-96 (Canales), 104-107 (Gonzales), 111-14 (Perales). See also Lisa Lizette Barrera, Minorities and The University of Texas Law School (1950-1980), 4 Tex. Hisp. J.L. & Pol�y 99 (1998).

 

29. Richard R. Valencia, Chicano Students and the Courts: The Mexican American Legal Struggle for Educational Equality 319 (2008). These connections are also examined in Jorge C. Rangel & Carlos M. Alcala, De Jure Segregation of Chicanos in Texas Schools, 7 Harv. C.R.-C.L. L. Rev. 307 (1972); Guadalupe Salinas, Mexican-Americans and the Desegregation of Schools in the Southwest, 8 Hous. L. Rev. 929 (1971); Richard Delgado & Victoria Palacios, Mexican-Americans as a Legally Cognizable Class Under Rule 23 and the Equal Protection Clause, 50 Notre Dame L. Rev. 393 (1975); Gary A. Greenfield & Don B. Kates, Jr., Mexican Americans, Racial Discrimination, and the Civil Rights Act of 1866, 63 Cal. L. Rev. 662 (1975); Lupe S. Salinas, Gus Garcia and Thurgood Marshall: Two Legal Giants Fighting for Justice, 28 T. Marshall. L. Rev. 145 (2002-2003); Haney L�pez & Olivas, supra note 22, at 273.

 

30. Plyler v. Doe, 457 U.S. 202 (1982). See Michael A. Olivas, Plyler v. Doe, the Education of Undocumented Children, and the Polity, in Immigration Stories 197 (David A. Martin & Peter H. Schuck eds., 2005).

 

31. League of United Latin American Citizens v. Perry, 548 U.S. 399 (2006).

 

32. For the authoritative history and folklore concerning this case and the early 1900s trial, which I calculate to be the first challenge by a Mexican American to jury composition, see Am�rico Paredes, With His Pistol in His Hand: A Border Ballad and Its Hero (1958). See also Richard J. Mertz, �No One Can Arrest Me,� The Story of Gregorio Cortez, 1 J. of South Tex. 1 (1974). The Dallas news story notes: �There is perfect quiet here and everybody seems to be of the opinion that he can have a fair trial in this county.� Olivas, supra note 13, at Appendix IX, 373.

 

33. Id.

 

34. Lorenzo de Zavala, Journey to The United States of America/Viaje a Los Estados Unidos del Norte de America (John-Michael Rivera ed., Wallace Woolsey trans., 2004); John-Michael Rivera, The Emergence of Mexican America: Recovering Stories of Mexican Peoplehood in U.S. Culture 24-50 (2006) [hereinafter, The Emergence of Mexican America].

 

35. A. Gabriel Mel�ndez, So All Is Not Lost: The Poetics of Print in Nuevomexicano Communities, 1834-1958 (1997); A. Gabriel Mel�ndez, Spanish-Language Newspapers in New Mexico, 1834-1958 (2005). See also Michael A. Olivas, Reflections Upon Old Books, Reading Rooms, and Making History, 76 UMKC L. Rev. 811 (2008).

 

36. See, e.g., Laura E. Gomez, Race, Colonialism and Criminal Law: Mexicans and the American Justice System in Territorial New Mexico, 34 L. & Soc. Rev. 1129 (2000); Laura E. Gomez, Manifest Destinies: The Making of the Mexican American Race 88-89 (2007) (NM juries); Raul A. Ramos, Forging Mexican Ethnicity in San Antonio, 1821-1861 192-94 (2008) (San Antonio, TX juries).

 

37. Rivera, The Emeregence of Mexican America, supra note 34, at 21.

 

38. Warner Bros., Stand and Deliver (1988).

 

Sent by Roberto Calderon, Ph.D.   beto@unt.edu 

 

 


CULTURE

Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera by Sergio Hernandez
V�alo en Espa�ol
October activities at La Pena
19th Annual Narciso Martinez Conjunto Festival
Day of the Dead by Mary J. Andrade
Mujerismo: An Afternoon Of Strong Latina Poets
October 2, 2010: Tejano Conjunto/Norte�o Music Convening
Border Music, Paper by Bernadette E. Lopez
More by By Juan Castillo 
The Essence of "S-ness" By Carol Br�vart-Demm

Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera

by

Sergio Hernandez

V�alo en Espa�ol
Latin Music USA - 
It's Gonna Move You
Multi-media PBS event which premiering last year.
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/latinmusicusa
/en/wat/01/01.html
 

October activities at La Pena
http://www.lapena.org/calendar/2010/7


19th Annual Narciso Martinez Conjunto Festival
Where: The Narciso Martinez Cultural Arts Center
225 E. Stenger Street, San Benito, Texas 
When: October 22-24th, 2010 
This three-day event is a one of a kind event for the country attracting over 3,500 people for a celebration of live Texas Mexican Conjunto music.

Mary J. Andrade, one of the leading authorities on the celebration of Day of the Dead and author of 8 books on the Day of the Dead Traditions in Mexico, Corporations have found Mary's books to be a great promotional items
For more information visit:

www.dayofthedead.com
  www.diademuertos.com
call 408-436-7850 ext. 13
mary@dayofthedead.com

Sent by Kirk Whisler  Hispanic Marketing 101
email: kirk@whisler.com


Mujerismo: An Afternoon Of Strong Latina Poets

Sunday, September 19, 2010 from 2-4 pm
Editor:  Although the event is past, I thought you would all be interested in the poetesses.

Luivette Resto was born in Aguas Buenas, Puerto Rico, but proudly raised in the Bronx. She received her BA in English Literature with a concentration in Latino Studies from Cornell University in 1999. In 2003, she completed her MFA in Creative Writing with a focus on poetry at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. Her first book of poetry Unfinished Portrait was published in 2008 by Tia Chucha Press. Her book was named a finalist for the 2009 Paterson Poetry Prize. Currently, she lives in the Los Angeles area with her husband, Jos� and their three children. Resto is an adjunct professor at Citrus College where she teaches English Literature and composition writing.

Alicia Partnoy is a survivor from the secret detention camps where about 30,000 Argentineans �disappeared.� She is the author of The Little School. Tales of Disappearance and Survival, and of the bilingual poetry collections Little Low Flying and Revenge of the Apple. Partnoy edited You Can�t Drown the Fire: Latin American Women Writing in Exile, and from 2003 to 2006, she was the co-editor of Chicana/Latina Studies: The Journal of Mujeres Activas en Letras y Cambio Social. A former Vice-Chair of Amnesty International, Partnoy is an associate professor and former Chair of the Modern Languages and Literatures Department at Loyola Marymount University. Partnoy presides over Proyecto VOS-Voices of Survivors, an organization that brings survivors of state-sponsored violence to lecture at U.S. universities. Her work has been published in many anthologies and journals.

Ana Reyes was born at home, in what once was a Texas brothel. She has favored cowboy boots ever since. Her work has been described as "life raft poetry," which she takes as a compliment. She resides in Los Angeles and was recently featured on the World Wide Word Radio Network. 

Raquel Delgado Ruiz was born in Barcelona in 1979. She has a degree in Hispanic Philology. In 2001 she started a research as a linguist on Spanglish and then she discovered chicano poetry. She decided to focus her research on chicanos culture, history, literature and art. In 2005 she participated in El Congreso de J�venes Ling�istas in Valencia with her lecture Spanglish: �Lengua o Aberraci�n? , published in Interling��stica 15. Edit. Asociaci�n J�venes Ling�istas (Ajl), Valencia, 2005. The same year she became member in the editorial board of the literary review Paralelo Sur. In 2006 Paralelo Sur published its number 3 dedicated to chicano literature. Two of her poems were published: Miedo a morir en el olvido, a poem that defends Spanglish as a symbol of identity, and Desear�a perder el juicio. She worked in the organization of the first conference on chicanos in Casa Am�rica de Catalunya, with the participation of Rolando Hinojosa-Smith, Luis Valdez, Norma Elia Cant�, Mar�a Herrera-Sobek, Santiago Vaquera, where she presented her lecture En Busca de un Aztl�n. In 2008 she participated in the organization of the Second Conference on Chicanos in Casa Am�rica with the guests Rolando Hinojosa, Norma Elia Cant�, Santiago Vaquera, Paul Espinosa, Marta S�nchez, Guillermo G�mez-Pe�a and Roberto Sifuentes de La Pocha Nostra, Il�n Stavans, Tino Villanueva. She presented the lecture La conciencia fronteriza en el nuevo arte chicano. After this conference she decided to take a workshop with La Pocha Nostra. It was her first experience with Performance Art, but from that moment on she has been working on it presenting her first work Post-Colonial Malinches: Tongues of Fire in 2009 in El Mundo Zurdo: The First International Conference on Gloria Anzald�a in the University of Texas at San Antonio, and in the Milwaukee Avenue Arts Festival in Chicago. It is a performance where she explores her own identity reinventing it through a ritual of chicanizaci�n to become Pocha Catalana, the way she defines herself. The same year she worked in her performance Pulsiones a photo-poetic performance about fear and desire in human beings. Actually she is presenting her performance Entrails' Wail, a denunciation of the women killed in Ciudad Ju�rez, M�xico. As a poet, she remembers herself always with a notebook and a pen in her hands. When she was eighteen to write became a need, and since then she has been writing what she calls her relevant paranoids, poems about all those things that hang out around her mind. She has two series of poems, the first one is called Diario de un Absurdo, a serie of poems that navigate in loneliness, depression, love, and sex, focused in the female psyche, with an erotic feminist speech. The second serie is called En Busca de un Aztl�n, as one of her lectures. In this serie she explores her own identity being from Barcelona but feeling herself chicana.

Frankie Salinas loves writing. Her work has been published and she has performed all over the country. She is currently completing her manuscript entitled The Other Side of Pretty. By day she works at Warner Bros. and by night she writes, produces and blogs at: http://www.facebook.com/l/010ef;frankiegirl-boysontheside.blogspot.com  

H.I.P., Hollywood Institute of Poetics, established this April 2009, is committed to the perpetuation of PLC: Poetry, Literature and Community through Poetic Loving Care. Our numbers are committed to the ongoing promotion of good works, good thoughts and good people by serving the poetic muse in the form of public readings, publication and the promotion of poetry everywhere.

HOSTED BY Rafael F J Alvarado of H.I.P., Hollywood Institute of Poetics
Emperor of Hustle And Flow, Noble Swine Press
Producer The World Wide Word Radio Network
Host Of The Moe Green Poetry Hour: http://www.blogtalkradio.com/onword/page/3
14249 Victory Blvd
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AND  
Avenue 50 Studio, Inc.
131 North Avenue 50
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323-258-1435
www.avenue50studio.com
Avenue 50 Studio is supported in part by the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors through the Los Angeles County Arts Commission; the California Community Foundation; the Los Angeles Department of Cultural Affairs; NALAC Fund for the Arts, Nescafe Clasico and the Ford Foundation; and in part by the California Arts Council, a state agency, and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency.  

 

 


Tejano Conjunto/Norte�o Music Convening
October 2, 2010
WHO: Texas Folklife and South Texas College Mid-Valley Campus
WHAT: Tejano Conjunto/Norte�o Music Convening
WHERE: STC Mid-Valley Campus, Lecture Hall G191, 400 N. Border, Weslaco, TX 78596
WHEN: October 2, 2010, 10:00 am � 7:00 pm, Lectures, panels and discussions 
              8:00 pm � 11:00 pm, Gran Baile: Music Celebration
INFO: www.texasfolklife.org and (512) 441-9255
ADMISSION: FREE; $15 donation optional for lunch

Tejano Conjunto/Norte�o Music Convening to be held at South Texas College Mid-Valley Campus, 
a cross-border examination of the current relationship between the music styles 

Austin, Texas � Texas Folklife�a statewide organization dedicated to preserving and presenting the diverse cultures and living heritage of the Lone Star State�and the Border Studies Club of South Texas College, Mid-Valley Campus, will host a bi-national convening to examine the history and current state of Tejano Conjunto and Norte�o music with an engaged group of musicians, scholars, cultural workers, media professionals and the public from both sides of the border. The convening, which is free and open to the public, will review the common history of these cultural markets, the way the musical styles have influenced each other over the years and are affected by economic forces, and highlight models where enthusiasts of both styles of music have been able to co-exist in harmony.

The program includes music history lectures by renown ethnomusicologists: Dr. Manuel Pe�a (UC Fresno) on Tejano Conjunto music, Guillermo Berrones (Secretaria de Educaci�n P�blica, Monterrey) on Norte�o music, and Dr. Cecilia Ball� (UT Austin) and Dr. Catherine Ragland (UT Pan American) on the recent developments of both styles of music. Musicians, promoters, media and recording professionals, cultural workers and academics will engage in panel discussions. Participating musicians include Ramiro Cavazos, Julian Garza �El Viejo Paulino,� Cirilo Luna �El Palomo,� Grammy Award-winning Joel Guzman, and more. Other confirmed participants include Francisco Ramos (Governor�s office of the State of Tamaulipas), Elsa Sanchez Sosa (Instituto Cultural Reynosense), Dr. Victor Aureliano Zu�iga (Universidad de Monterrey), Amancio J. Chapa (La Joya ISD), and Rogelio Nu�ez (Narciso Martinez Cultural Arts Center). The program will naturally end with music by young band Conte�o of Brownsville, featuring Juan Longoria Jr., winner of the first Big Squeeze Accordion Contest, and more. The dance will be held in the Pavillion of the Mid-Valley Campus of South Texas College.

Juan Tejeda, scholar and musician (Palo Alto College, Guadalupe Cultural Arts Center�s Tejano Conjunto Festival, Conjunto Aztlan), is one of the organizers of the conference. "I am very excited about this convening of musicians, music industry experts and scholars from both sides of the border, Mexico and the U.S., because even though we have many things in common, a shared history, culture, language, land, musical influences, etc., we don't speak to each other enough.� Tejeda explains, �There are problems, misconceptions and misunderstandings on both sides of the border. This mini-conference allows us the opportunity to continue this very important bi-national dialogue which will contribute to our cross-cultural and cross-generational understanding of each other and our music, and how we can collaborate in positive ways." 

All lectures and panel discussions will be held at the Lecture Hall (G191) of the STC Mid-Valley Campus and are free and open to the public. A $15 lunch donation is optional. For reservations call (512) 441-9255 or visit www.texasfolklife.org.

The Tejano Conjunto/Norte�o Music Convening is presented and sponsored by Texas Folklife, the Border Studies Club of South Texas College Mid-Valley Campus, the Center for Mexican American Studies of the University of Texas at Austin, Humanities Texas and Texas Commission on the Arts. Additional support is provided by the College of Education and Humanities of the Universidad de Monterrey, the Instituto Reynosense para la Cultura y las Artes, the Center for Mexican American Studies and the Masters of Music in Ethnomusicology Program of UT Pan American, and the Department of History and Philosophy and Mexican American Studies Program of South Texas College.

More About Texas Folklife: For 25 years, Texas Folklife has honored the authentic cultural traditions passed down within communities and explored their importance in contemporary society. Through performances, including prestigious concerts at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C. and the wildly popular annual Accordion Kings & Queens Festival in Houston; visually arresting exhibitions on subjects such as blues clubs in Houston, memory boxes made by children of Vietnamese immigrants, and West Texas ranch gates; outreach initiatives such as the Folk Arts in Education program; and collecting and archiving stories from Texas tradition bearers; Texas Folklife has fulfilled its mission in the last quarter century with great success. The anticipated audience for Texas Folklife programs and performances in 2010 is expected to be one million.

Contact: Cristina Balli, (512) 441-9255, cballi@texasfolklife.org  


http://www.fotosearch.com/bthumb/FSD/FSD417/x21067419.jpg

BORDER MUSIC 
Paper by Bernadette E. Lopez
b_lopez0214@yahoo.com 

Dr. Staudt, POLS 4313

 

I decided to analyze music in the border and why and how certain performers use music as a tool to communicate the good and bad that they have encountered in their lives. The Mexican culture is very important to their people and traditions are handed down generation to generation. Music is the perfect antidote to counteract the effects of death such as Lupillo Rivera demonstrated in the first song he wrote for the close friend that he lost. Little Joe as well lost his brother and decided that he would pursue a career in music in his honor. Los Tigres Del Norte�s music depicts narcocorridos, immigration, and a tribute to the murders of innocent women in Ciudad, Juarez. These are just a few artists discussed in my research and the reasons they praise their music and the ability to write and sing about what they feel and have encountered.

In the words of Americo Paredes a well known Mexican American scholar and teacher of the 20th century, he defined the border region to be �a sensitized area where two cultures or two political systems come face to face.� Apparently two conflicting cultures at the border were also recognized by another well known Latino, Jose Limon who dedicated his life to modern and choreographic dancing. Little by little, individuals dedicated to the Arts such as Mexican music or Border music to be exact, allowed the conflicts they faced daily in their lives to become bearable.

Well known music such as corridos, conjuntos, and orquestas to name a few have delivered messages of both happy and sad times experienced by people living in the border.  This was a way to voice what was being felt by those experiencing life on both sides of the border.  One of the nation�s most memorable events, which contributed to the birth of the ballad or corrido, was the Mexican-American War of 1846-1848, which designated the relationship that Mexicans and Anglos would once develop. The �cultural assimilation and domain�  along the border  in addition to the adaptations Mexican-Americans had towards social, economical, and  political tribulations felt by them could be distinguished in their music.

In order to make it easier to define border music, we will identify the groups of people that benefit from and associate themselves with it.  For example, a Mexicano is considered a Mexican citizen, Chicano refers to a Mexican-American, and finally a Tejano represents a Texas Mexican.  Another thing about corridos, besides being a form of a ballad, this well known genre tells a story, an epic, one to elaborate on the popular politics that may be occurring in a certain time period such as the Mexican-American war.  Music was said to change just as the corrido did with changing themes north of the border, to include �lives of the migrant workers� and �immigrants and the drug trade� which all gave birth to the narcocorridos. These corridos have been known to stir a great deal of controversy because of their involvement with drugs.

In the 1940�s, there was another major change in immigration policy and as a result the United States came across labor shortages due to World War II.  From 1942-1964, a temporary workforce program referred to as The Bracero Program which included �4-6 million farm workers�  made the trip to the U.S. to aid in this dilemma and at the same time help themselves and their families. These workers depended on therapeutic music such as the corrido to put them through their hardworking days.

 

http://littlejoeylafamilia.homestead.com/1littlejoereal.jpg

Other commonly known border music includes tejano, norteno/a, and banda. There are many well known border music artists who have started out in the industry with empty pockets. One highly recognized Texan-Mexican or Tex-Mex singer has been entertaining fans along many borders for many years.  Jose Maria DeLeon Hernandez or better known as Little Joe, grew up in a family of 13 born to Mexican-American parents who picked cotton to survive. In addition to that, Little Joe�s father also made money on the side by selling marijuana and whiskey in counties that wouldn�t allow alcohol. Little Joe had a couple of good reasons to pursue a music career. First, his father was put in jail when he was only 15-yrs-old. All of a sudden he found himself as one of the family members that his mother would depend on to help out in a time of crisis. He took the 15 dollars that he had been saving from a previous gift and purchased his first guitar.  By joining his cousin�s band David Coronado & the Latinaires in 1953, they started making money by playing at school dances, as much as five dollars a night. His cousin decided to leave the band and Little Joe changed the band�s name to Little Joe & the Latinaires. His brother Jesse became part of the band and played bass along with helping write songs.  Things were really looking up for Little Joe, but when tragedy stroke again, this time his brother Jesse died in a car accident and that is when Little Joe decided that he owed his bother to succeed in this industry. One of his well known songs, La Onda Chicana or the Chicano Wave depicts the many tribulations of Hispanic life. It�s no secret that Little Joe who changed his band�s name to Little Joe y La Familia is still around today not only entertaining �La Raza� or �The Race,� but just making people dance and forget about their problems.  As a matter of fact he is a big advocate for getting a good education, so he contributes money from his concerts for scholarships to low income students.


Los Tigres Del Norte, imeem, inc.

 



Another well known border music group is based out of California and has been around since the 1970�s.  Lost Tigres Del Norte was another Mexican-American group that had a mission to fulfill in order to help out their family because of their father�s physical set back that prevented him from maintaining their ranch. The group is made up of the eldest child Jorge Hernandez, Hernan, Eduardo, Raul, and cousin Oscar Lara. Their group name was given to them by an immigration officer who referred to them as the �little tigers,� as they would cross the border coming from Sinaloa. They eventually ended up in San Jose, California. 

Los Tigres started writing corridos about drug trade or narcocorridos and immigration which was one of their songs that featured a moral or lesson in regards to a hero or criminal of northern Mexico. Los Tigres big break came with the song called Contrabando y Traicion in 1972 which involved a couple who were in love and engaged in trafficking marijuana in car tires across the border.

Another revolutionary hit of Los Tigres was called Corridos Prohibidos in 1989 which referred to Juala de Oro or Golden Cage.  This song is about an undocumented worker in the U.S. who made it across the border by swimming about ten years ago.  His family doesn�t really remember Mexico even though he wishes to return one day. His children think he is crazy for wanting to go back and feel that he has finally prospered by living in a great nation, but deep inside he still feels like a prisoner? Something that has helped Los Tigres, also referred to as Los Idolos del Pueblo and Los Jefes de Jefes, is that they have vouched not to associate themselves to drugs or any criminal activity. By avoiding getting photographed with even the sight of a gun, this has helped the group become popular with a variety of fans all over the globe. One final, but important song which is very controversial due to the nature of its theme for Los Tigres was included in their current album Pacto de Sangre, �Las Muertas de Juarez.� This particular corrido is already internationally known because it calls for justice due to the slaying of more than 300 innocent women in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico right across the border from El Paso, Texas.

The birth of Nortena Music or sometimes called Norteno, was a result of Musica Tejana or Tex-Mex music.  Historically, from the 1700s to the 1900s, Tejanos kept their cultural ties with northern Mexico, despite the Anglo-American political and economical control of the area in the mid to 1800s.  Tejanos decided to adopt some Anglo-American culture and maintained a Texas-Mexican way of life that can easily be detected in their musical styles. By the mid to late 1800s, Tejano musicians turned to a European style of music that came from central Mexico.  For example, in 1860 Maximilian ruled Mexico with his French army, music, and dances then included polkas, waltzes, mazurkas, and schottische. These French styles were a big hit with Mexican people.  South Texans were the ones influenced the most and also adapted the German culture for their music.  So at the turn of the century, musica nortena or conjunto music (musical group) was here to stay. Soon this type of music would become accordion music. The ability for one person to play melody and harmony on this instrument, would make it a more economical way to entertain. Soon the accordion became popular because of its buttons which was associated with working-class Tejanos.

 This breakthrough in music really stems back to the accordion music Santiago Jimenez and Narciso Martinez initiated in the 1930�s. They were responsible for promoting the nortena style of music on records and radio broadcasts.  With a combination of Jimenez�s smooth style of playing polkas and waltzes, and Martinez�s fast more decorated approach of accordion playing, both used the �two-row, two-key� model as well. By the 1940�s, song lyrics and duet harmonies were incorporated into dance music. �Lost love,� was a big subject that the working-class Tejanos associated with in the nortena style of music. In the 1950�s, Nortena music would become popular in bars or cantinas, clubs, and dance halls.  Tony de la Rosa from Sarita, Texas was one of the first to use the �three-row, three-key� approach to a new accordion style.  By the 1950�s and 60�s, Rosa was one of the first to support the �migrant trail.�  This was a time when many poor Tejanos moved from Texas to jobs in agriculture and industry from California to the Midwest, hoping to find financial success. Flaco Jimenez, son of Santiago, kept the tradition of nortena music going by performing concerts all over the United States and Europe.  

What would a study of border music be without mentioning Selena Quintanilla Perez. Selena was the queen of Tex-Mex music who was born in Lake Jackson, Texas to Mexican American parents on April 16, 1971.  She grew up in Corpus Christi, Texas where her musical career would blossom.  Inheriting her music talent from her father, Abraham Quintanilla Jr., who was a singer with the original group Los Dinos, was determined to nurture all of his children�s musical talents. Selena along with her brother Abraham the III and Suzette her sister were another generation of Los Dinos. Later to be joined by Chris Perez who replaced the original guitar player and would eventually fall in love and marry Selena.  

In spite of Selena not really being able to speak Spanish, you wouldn�t know it when she sang her wonderful music that inspired and motivated both the young and old. Her music created record sold out crowds because people could relate to her Tejano genre which included songs like Si Una Vez and Dreaming of You.  Selena was able to bring joy to many fans  because of her love for them, her kindness, positive attitude, and her wonderful music. People could relate to her music, her lyrics, and compassion that will always be remembered, especially on March 31 when her life ended because of Yolanda Saldivar, president of her fan club and manager of her boutiques. Jennifer Lopez was fortunate enough to portray Selena in a movie tribute to her, which opened many successful doors for the performer.

Another legend that has gone to heaven with Selena, but is well known and never to be forgotten is �Bi-lingual country singer,� Baldemar Garza Huerta or Freddy Fender.  Freddy had fans both in country music and Tejano. He was born in San Benito, Texas to a migrant worker where he did his share of crop picking. Freddy wasn�t perfect like most of us, he ended up in jail in 1960 because of marijuana. Otherwise, Freddy possessed a musical talent that allowed him to sing about his greatest beliefs such as �Vaya Con Dios� (Go with God),  �Wasted Days and Wasted Nights,� and �Before the Next Teardrop Falls� just to name a few.  A lot doesn�t need to be said about this multi-talented artist, his lyrics say it all:

Freddy Fender Lyrics   "Freddy Fender Before The Next Teardrop Falls lyrics"

If he brings you happiness
Then i wish you all the best
It's your happiness that matters most of all
But if he ever breaks your heart
If the teardrops ever start
I'll be there before the next teardrop falls

Si te quire de verdad
Y te da felicidad
Te deseo lo mas bueno pa'los dos
Pero si te hace llorar
A mime puedes hablar
Y estare contigo cuando treste estas

I'll be there anytime
You need me by your side
To drive away every teardrop that you cried

And if he ever leaves you blue
Just remember, I love you
And I'll be there before the next teardrop falls
And I'll be there before the next teardrop falls

Lyrics.time � A.LYRICS.WEB.SITE


Unfortunately, the world lost Freddy to cancer August 3, 2006, but his music will live on.

A current family which has been known to perhaps replace or continue where the Quintanilla family left off, is the Rivera family. This family involves Jenni, Lupillo, Gustavo, and Juan. They took the opportunity given to them by their father Pedro Rivera whose business �Cintas Acuario� record label first helped establish Chalino Sanchez, who strived as a narcocorriodo artist to become a legend. Pedro was a singer himself. Apparently, Jenni joined the family business after finishing college as a business major with a successful career in real estate. Jenni was motivated by the many artists that her father�s small enterprise managed to shape into new successful career. Jenni�s father really wanted her to give singing a try and he was right. Jenni managed to succeed as a music artist just like her father and brothers.  Jenni�s mission lately as portrayed in her current album was to voice the �cries for strong independent women everywhere.� This message was initiated in her last hit song, �Se las voy a dar a otro.� Basically telling her boyfriend that �he was about to lose the best things she can give him.� The other well known Rivera is Guadalupe �Lupillo� Rivera who was once a boxer and now a very successful singer. Lupillo�s first song, was written at the age of 15 in honor of a friend that died during that time, Miguel Carlos Ortega. After high school, Lupillo worked for his father�s record company but decided to go solo.

A good way to summarize border music and the various messages it was meant to convey, is by mentioning a collection of songs called Migra Corridos. This CD was actually made at the request of the Border Patrol. With lyrics such as �Before you cross the border, remember that you can be just as much a man by chickening out and staying.� Another sample, �Because it�s better to keep your life than ending up dead,� by Viente Anos (20 Years). These Mexican folk songs are based on an idea the Border Patrol had to help discourage illegal crossings by reminding them of unfortunate border incidents. This music along with a campaign called �No Mas Cruces en la Frontera,� is something that the U.S. Customs and Border Protection implemented as part of their Border Safety Initiative. The Migra Corridos album was to be played by radio stations in Mexico so would-be illegal immigrants would give up the attempt of crossing and possibly experiencing getting robbed, raped, beaten, and even drowned to name a few. One more example of the songs in this collection is a sad but true occurrence that comes from a group called �El Respecto,� (Respect): He put me in a trailer, there I shared my sorrows with 40 illegals, they never told me that this was a trip to hell.�

In conclusion, whatever the words to the songs of the border represent, one thing is for sure they will always define what the people of two nations have experienced in their daily lives and sometimes even with a smile. Being able to write and perform music is a gift in itself. To be able to use music to demonstrate one�s culture and tell stories about heartaches, death, immigration, drugs, poverty, and just surviving day to day is a precious virtue.

 

Sources Cited

Pena, Manuel. Musica Frontera/Border Music. Aztlan: A Journal of Chicano Studies, vol. 21, nos. 1-2, pp. 191-225. UCLA Chicano Studies Research Center.  18 October 2009. http://www.lib.utexas.edu/benson/border/pena/index.html

Meier, Matt. Americo Paredes 1915-1919, Mexican American Folklorist, Teacher, Writer, Poet, Musician. 18 October 2009. http://www.lib.utexas.edu/benson/paredes/biography.html

Ilich, Tijuana.  Mexican Popular Music � Tejano, Nortena, Banda. 26 October 2009.
http://latinmusic.about.com/od/countrie1/p/PRO18BASICS.htm

Staudt, Kathleen (Dr.)   �POLS 4313 Week 2:  Immigration History.� Course notes. (2009) Southwest Border Politics.  Course home page.  Dept. of Political Science, The University of Texas at El Paso.  03 Nov.  2009

Seida, Linda. All Music Guide � Imeem. 15 November 2009.
http://www.imeem.com/artists/little_joe_y_la_familia/bio/

Birchmeier, Jason. All Music Guide �Imeem. 15 November 2009.
http://www.imeem.com/artists/los_tigres_del_norte/bio/

�MUSICA NORTENA.� The Handbook of Texas Online.
http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/articles/view/MM/xbml.html

Botton Accordion.  23 Nov. 2009

http://www.fotosearch.com/photos-images/accordion.html
Selena Forever. 23 Nov. 2009

http://www.selenaforever.com/index.htm

Little Joe Y La Familia. 24 Nov. 2009
http://littlejoeylafamilia.homestead.com/menu.html

Surdin, Ashley. Music and Culture �Border Patrol requests Mexican music encore. 26 Nov. 2009.
http://musicandculture.blogspot.com/2009/03/border-patrol-requests-mexican-music.html

Abdo, Tony. Marxism Mailing List Archive. 29 Nov. 2009
http://archives.econ.utah.edu/archives/marxism/2004w16/msg00191.htm

Sierra, Alejo. The Undisputed queen of banda music.  Jenni Rivera: La Diva. 29 Nov. 2009.
http://www.oyemag.com/jenni.html

Rivera, Lupillo.  All Music Guide�Imeem. 30 Nov. 2009.
http://www.imeem.com/artists/lupillo_rivera/

Fender, Freddy.  IMDb�The Internet Movie Database. 1 Dec. 2009.
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0271733/bio

Fender, Freddy.  lyrics.time�A.LYRICS.WEB.SITE.1 Dec. 2009.
http://www.lyricstime.com/freddy-fender-before-the-next-teardrop-falls-lyrics.html



More by By Juan Castillo 
American-Statesman Staff, Aug. 21, 2010
 http://www.statesman.com/news/local/mexican-american-trailblazers-recognized-by-austin-history-center-870768.html   

In the 1950s, musician extraordinaire Manuel "Cowboy" Donley created a signature sound and started a craze.

Donley, a singer, songwriter and arranger who could play anything, took classic Mexican musical stylings and instruments and lit a fire under them, adding rhythm sections, electric guitars and bouncy, blaring horns. "I had discovered something different," says Donley, now 83 and known by many as "the Godfather of Tejano Music."

When she was a girl, Gloria Moreno dreamed of becoming a teacher. But Moreno put off her dream so she could raise her children, and it wasn't until she was 39 that she would graduate from the University of Texas, propelling a 24-year-career with the Austin school district during the tumultuous time of desegregation. As a fifth-grade teacher, she designed a test-taking skills improvement program for minority students that was later implemented districtwide.

"I was just doing what I was compelled to do from my heart and from my training," says Moreno, 79.

Today Donley, Moreno and 30 others will be honored for their contributions as part of a groundbreaking Austin History Center exhibit, "Mexican American Firsts: Trailblazers of Austin and Travis County." The exhibit celebrates the lives of Mexican Americans who were the first to make advancements within their communities in education, politics, business, social and public services, health and medicine, communication, entertainment, science and technology, and sports.

It's the first time a history center exhibit has specifically put a spotlight on the local Mexican American community, said Gloria Espitia, a neighborhood liaison with the center who conceived of the idea as a way to educate and promote the importance of preserving the untold stories and memories of local Mexican Americans.

"I think it's time that this community gets to know that this history is as long as it is, and about the many obstacles that (Mexican Americans) encountered," Espitia said. Early Mexican American residents suffered overt discrimination that was common in Texas well into the 20th century, and in interviews recorded for the history center � including some conducted by students at Martin Middle School � many of the trailblazers talked openly about overcoming prejudice, Espitia said.

"This is an attempt to complete the story of the Mexican American community to the extent we can with this small but admirable effort," said Emilio Zamora, a history professor at the University of Texas who was an adviser on the project. The center will offer other programs related to the exhibit, including a traveling version of the display in September and a genealogy workshop in November.

Today, Mexican Americans account for a dominant share � 83 percent according to 2008 census estimates � of the booming Hispanic community in Austin, which comprises about 37 percent of the Austin population, according to estimates by City of Austin demographer Ryan Robinson. But the Mexican American experience in Austin and Central Texas dates to the early 1800s, according to Zamora, an expert on Mexican American history.

In 1900 Mexican Americans comprised just 2 percent of Austin's population, according to the book "Austin: An Illustrated History" by David Humphrey. "By 1930 Austinites of Mexican descent formed 10 percent of the inhabitants and numbered 5,000," Humphrey wrote.

Once predominantly farm workers, Mexican Americans in Austin and Central Texas over time became skilled workers, business owners and professionals, Zamora said.

A committee of five people with educational, cultural and historical areas of expertise selected the trailblazers from a total of 60 nominations. The list of honorees includes nine women and 23 men, some unheralded, such as Arturo Alem�n, a Mexican immigrant who came to Austin in 1911 and achieved his American dream, opening his own grocery store on Medina Street, and Emma Galindo, who in the 1960s was instrumental in initiating the first bilingual education program for the Austin school district. Others are more well-known � like John Trevi�o, the first Hispanic elected to the Austin City Council, and Gus Garcia, the first Hispanic to be elected mayor.

Garcia said he, Trevi�o and another trailblazer, Richard Moya, the first Mexican American elected to the Travis County Commissioners Court, were "young Turks" who sought to break free from a longstanding system in which a handful of Hispanic leaders and businessmen had access to Anglo city leaders.

"We wanted to make it more democratic," Garcia said. "None of us thought about doing this so we could be recognized. We did it because there was a need in the (Mexican American) community."

Supporters hope that showcasing the achievements and contributions of the trailblazers also will help right negative images presented in early Austin chronicles. For example, in an article in the March 1913 Bulletin of the University of Texas, William B. Hamilton wrote: "Between Congress Avenue on the east and Rio Grande Street on the west, Fourth Street on the north and the river on the south is a section which may be called the Mexican District. Bordering this section on the south is the main city dumping ground. The Mexicans have all the filthy habits described already, but you must add to them the worse filth of the dump."

jcastillo@statesman.com; 445-3635

The Essence of "S-ness"
By Carol Br�vart-Demm
Swarthmore College Bulletin (April 2010)
Anthropolitical linguist Ana Celia Zentella is a strong proponent of language diversity and respect for language rights.
 
Who of us would ever have imagined that the letter s could be of any significance in issues of social status? For Ana Celia Zentella, the Eugene M. Lang Visiting Professor for Issues of Social Change, phenomena like the "s-ness" in pronunciation of Spanish language varieties offer important linguistic pointers on how speakers of those languages perceive themselves and others whose pronunciation differs from their own.
 
Zentella cites the example of Dominicans-especially among the working class-who, because they drop the final syllable s from their speech, suffer criticism from those who espouse more conservative pronunciation.
 
"There are linguistic details that are of great importance in determining class and regional background," she says. For example, las costas (the coast) in prestigious Castilian Spanish, becomes la cota in Dominican Spanish, and because many Dominicans are poor and dark, this becomes a stigmatizing feature. (listen: Zentella's faculty lecture)
 
"S-ness, in and of itself, has no status; it's endowed with status because of attitudes about the class and racial background of speakers," says Zentella, adding that the reason for Dominicans dropping the final syllable s can be traced back to Spanish spoken by the southern Spaniards who colonized the Caribbean. Yet linguistic features such as s-ness, Zentella says, are related to ideologies of power and who has a right to be recognized and respected.
 
A professor emerita in the Department of Ethnic Studies at the University of California at San Diego, Zentella identifies herself as an anthropolitical linguist.
 
"I thought that by calling my field anthropolitical linguistics, the word 'political' would bring to the forefront the importance of social structures and political ideologies," she says. "And it's not just an interesting theoretical construct. I see the terrible fallout in schools and communities, in the increase in violence against Latinos in the last few years-a 40 percent increase since 2003."
 
Many of these attacks involve people either mimicking Spanish or yelling something insulting about the Spanish language without regard for or understanding of the particular Hispanic ethnicity they're attacking, she says, citing the November 2008 stabbing of Ecuadorean Marcelo Lucero, 37, in Long Island, N.Y., by seven teenagers because "he looked Mexican."
 
Zentella is the daughter of a Mexican father and Puerto Rican mother who grew up in the South Bronx, N.Y. She decries the process of homogenization that has taken place in the United States with respect to what is generally referred to as "the Hispanic community"-more than 45 million people with roots in more than a dozen different countries, all with their own cultures, political systems, and varieties of Spanish. The repercussions of this homogenization include threats to the survival of the various groups' distinctive linguistic traits and have created a sense of insecurity, especially among young people.
 
"This issue can divide families, with some members believing in the importance of holding on to their community's way of speaking, while others believe they should learn and speak only the standard varieties of whichever language is their heritage. Still others believe we should forget altogether about those inherited languages and just adopt English," Zentella says. "I see the repercussions in terms of increased linguistic intolerance and academic failure of students who are told they have to forget their home languages and focus on English only."
 
Zentella believes that espousing "English-only" laws and anti-bilingual education ostensibly for the benefit of immigrant groups is misguided and counterproductive if the goal is to encourage fluency in English while contributing to the cohesion of immigrant families and to linguistic diversity and tolerance in the United States.
 
In fall 2009, Zentella taught the course Language, Race, and Ethnic Identities, during which she asked the large turnout of 39 students to write term papers on topics of their choice about the languages spoken in Philadelphia. She'll seek funding to edit the students' papers and publish them as a book titled Multilingual Philadelphia: Portraits of Language and Social Change. The publication will resemble one produced while teaching at San Diego, called Multilingual San Diego: Portraits of Language Loss and Revitalization.
 
In her spring semester course, Latino Languages and Dialects in Contact in Families, Schools, and Communities, Zentella's students are investigating, among other things, the phenomenon of Spanglish-the alternation of Spanish and English, which includes the adoption of some English words that are usually either shorter than the Spanish expression or reflective of a different cultural reality. Her own position is that Spanglish deserves respect as a systematic way of speaking bilingually.
 
Referring to different points of view among linguists, she explains: "We're agreed about the vitality of this way of speaking and its linguistic correctness, the rule-governed nature of it, its social importance, and its communicative strength. And we know that in all these different groups of young bilinguals, where there is close and intense contact between groups, they will begin to alternate languages. They do it because they have to alternate between their parents on the one hand and their younger brothers and sisters on the other. So it actually begins at home, and extends to other members of the larger community," Zentella says. She explains that the alternation becomes a hallmark of bilingualism that indicates belonging in and sharing two worlds, between which and within which those who share this talent can move and communicate with ease.
 
She further points out that Latinos did not invent the practice of alternating between languages. She cites the existence of Greenglish (Greek/English), Konglish (Korean/English), and Japlish (Japanese/English).
 
The debate about Spanglish, Zentella continues, is not about the language's structure or strength but rather about whether as a label it is damaging to its speakers. Zentella's opponents consider the use of the term Spanglish derogatory, indicative of a mish-mash, sending the message that its speakers are illiterate, alingual, or semilingual, lacking fluency in either language.
 
Having grown up speaking Spanglish herself, Zentella acknowledges these assertions but approves of the label because it is undergoing a process of what she calls a "semantic inversion, like what black people in the United States did with the label 'black' or what homosexuals did with the word 'queer.'" Many are investing Spanglish with a pride and a strength that recognizes its origins in ways that the suggested alternative terms such as U.S. Spanish or Spanish of the United States do not, she says.
 
Although the label "U.S. Spanish" might acknowledge the language from a linguistic point of view as being on an equal footing with the other forms of Spanish such as Mexican or Argentinian Spanish, it fails to highlight the fact as the label "Spanglish" does from the standpoint of anthropolitical linguistics that this language was created within two communities that have been in close (yet by no means equal) contact with each other.
 
"The children who are trying to identify with both groups by creating this wonderful mesh of two languages are doing things that are not happening in Mexico or in Argentina," Zentella says.
 
In her advocacy for equality of language, Zentella has been engaged for the past five years in discussions with the U.S. Census Bureau about its discriminatory method of classifying the language abilities of immigrants. Questions on the census form inquiring about languages other than English spoken in homes categorize English proficiency levels spoken by non-native English speakers by offering four options-"not at all," "not well," "well," or "very well"-on the form.
 
In evaluating the responses, Zentella says, the Census Bureau groups all responses other than "very well" into one class called "linguistically isolated"-a categorization she abhors and is striving hard to have changed. She says that even children who speak only English at home, if living with nobody over the age of 14 who speaks "very well," are classified as "linguistically isolated.
 
"This distorts the real picture. Many people say they speak only 'well' because they believe that 'very well' is how they speak their native language. They don't put English on the same level as that," Zentella says.
 
With the backing of five national organizations, she is suggesting that the Census Bureau substitute two categories-"proficient speakers of English" and "beginning speakers of English"-for the current four and that the label "linguistically isolated" be eliminated.
 
"This effort is an example of some of the research and observations of anthropolitical linguistics actually being put into practice. These are the ways we try to help people understand that linguistic issues have serious consequences. Even though I'm looking at little things like who deletes the s and where, I'm much more interested in the attitude toward people who delete it and why they don't see that French has gone through the process and is a highly respected language, while Dominicans have been turned into pariahs."
 
In January, the Department of Ethnic Studies at the University of California at San Diego nominated Zentella for the 2010 Alice and Clifford Spendlove Prize in Social Justice, Diplomacy, and Tolerance for her four decades of activism on behalf of racial equality and linguistic diversity.
 
Note: Ana Celia can be reached at azentell@swarthmore.edu
Sent by Rafael Ojeda  rsnojeda@aol.com and Angelo Falcon info@latinopolicy.org.
National Institute for Latino Policy (NiLP) | 101 Avenue of the Americas | New York | NY | 10013-1933

 

 


LITERATURE

The First elegy (funeral poem) on Texas Soil.
Palabra, a Latino literary journal by By Marcela Landres 

The First elegy (funeral poem) on Texas Soil.

Editor: An interesting collection of poetry.  Only the first few are sympathetic to the Spanish colonizers, most of the rest of the selection is expressive of the non-Hispanic immigrants sentiments about their ownership and right to Texas.
Texian Poetry: http://www.tamu.edu/ccbn/dewitt/texianpoetry.htm 

An unidentified Spanish soldier with Alonso De Le�n upon discovering remains of the massacre and ruins of Fort St. Louis on Garcitas Creek in 1689, the remains of an abortive attempt of La Salle and the French to establish a colony on the Texas coast wrote what Carlos Casta�eda in Our Catholic Heritage in Texas, 1936  called the first elegy written on Texas soil.   He translated the first stanza as

Sad and fateful site.
Where only solitude doth reign.
Reduced to this sorry plight.
Thy settlers efforts all proved vain.

Israel Cavazos wrote in an introduction to Historia de Nuevo Leon, con noticias sobre Coahuila, Tamaulipas, Texas y Nuevo Mexico, escrita en el siglo XVII por el Cap. Alonso de Leon, Juan Bautista Chapa y el Gral. Fernando Sanchez de Zamora that the poet might be Juan Bautista Chapa, who went with de Le�n's troop to Fort St. Louis. Chapa was a literate man who was a secretary for the Monterrey Ayuntamiento in the late seventeenth century.  Robert Weddle in Wilderness Manhunt, 1973 presented his English translation of the complete elegy.

Sitio funesto y triste
donde la lobreguez sola te asiste;
porque la triste suerte
dio a tus habitadores fiera muerte.

Aqu� s�lo contemplo
que eres fatalidad y triste ejemplo
de la inconstante vida;
pues el enemigo fiero y homicida,
tan cruel y inhumano,
descarg� su crueldad con terca mano
sobre tanto inocente,
no perdonando al ni�o m�s reciente.

�Oh, francesas hermosas
que pisabais de estos prados frescas rosas;
y con manos de nieve
tocabais blanco lirio en campo breve;
y en dibujo bello
a damas griegas echabais el sello;
porque vuestros marfiles
adornaban la costura con perfiles;
como as� difuntas
os miran estas selvas todas juntas,
que no en balde ajadas
se ven por vuestra muerte, y tan trilladas!

Y t�, cad�ver fr�o,
que en un tiempo mostraste tanto br�o,
y ahora de animales
comida, seg�n muestran tus se�ales,
tierno te contemplo,
y eres de infelicidad un vivo ejemplo.
Gozas de eterna gloria,
pues fuiste de esta vida transitoria
a celestial morada;
yendo con tanta herida traspasada.
Ru�gale a Dios eterno
nos libre de las penas del infierno.

Contributed by Arturo Lozano Montfort
(Monterrey, Mexico)

Sad and fateful site
Where prevails the dark of night
Because misfortune's whim
Brought thy people death so grim,

Here alone I contemplate
Thou epitome of fate,
Of the inconstancy of life;
Since in the fierceness of the strife
The cruel enemy pressed
His heartless hand upon thy breast,
Upon thy innocence so mild,
Sparing not the smallest child.

O beautiful French maiden fair
Who pressed sweet roses to your hair
And with thy snow-white hand
Briefly touched the lily of the land
And with thy art perfection brought
Greek ladies now in profile wrought;
Thy needlework made bright
The miseries of thy plight;
And now so cold, so dead,
These woods look down upon thy head;
But thou witherest not in vain,
Art seen in death, but not in pain.

And thou, cadaver, oh, so cold,
Who for a time did make so bold
And now consumed by wildest beasts
Which upon thee made their feasts,
Tearfully I behold thee right;
Thou art example bright,
For everlasting glory won,
Transient from this life hast gone
For celestial dwelling bound
Though pierced with such a wound.
Pray thee to the God eternal,
Spare us from the hell infernal.

Translation by Robert Weddle
in Wilderness Manhunt

 

Excellent website that covers this historical episode: http://www.texasbeyondhistory.net/stlouis/life.html
Life . . . and Death in the French Settlement, Texas Beyond History maintained by the University of Texas at Austin.

This is one of the proud aspects of doing family history.  The Juan Bautista Chapa mentioned above is my direct ancestor and that of Margaret Garza who sent the selection. 


Palabra, a Latino literary journal. 
By Marcela Landres 
Showcasing the Diversity of Latino Writing 
Want to discover new Latino writers? Subscribe to Palabra, a Latino literary journal. 
By Marcela Landres 
Published on LatinoLA: February 4, 2010 

While there are hundreds of literary journals, very few are by and/or for Latinos. Palabra magazine, launched in 2006, provides a much-needed opportunity for Latino writers to publish their work and for readers to discover new voices. Support the Latino literary community by subscribing to Palabra; expand your own platform by submitting your work to Palabra. To learn more, read this month's Q&A with founding editor Elena Minor. 

Elena Minor is founding editor of Palabra: A Magazine of Chicano & Latino Literary Art. She is an award-winning writer with work published or forthcoming in RHINO, Mandorla, Hot Metal Bridge, OCHO, Quercus Review, Diner, Passager, City Works, Vox, Poetry Midwest, 26, Segue, BorderSenses, and The Big Ugly Review, among others. She is a past recipient of the University of California at Irvine's Chicano/Latino Literary Prize and she teaches creative writing to high school students. For more information, visit http://www.palabralitmag.com 

Q: What inspired you to create a literary magazine?
A: I wanted primarily to create a vehicle for Latinos who write outside the box to get their work published. Although there exist more than 800 literary magazines (online and print), most don't regularly feature Latino writing, and of those that do, it had been fairly confined to an aesthetic and an ethos that define our work through an Anglo American perception of who we are and what we should be writing. To a large degree that still exists. Latino writing that doesn't follow conventional literary form, that flows back and forth from English to Spanish to Spanglish and that doesn't speak to subject matter that is predefined for us, rarely gets to publication.

Q: You're an award-winning writer of fiction, poetry, and plays. How does your own writing background influence how you run Palabra?
A: I'm not a conventional writer, have never been truly successful at it, and don't really want to be. But I am interested in the possibilities of language--in experimenting with its form and structure without forcing it. So I'm always on the lookout for work that is out of the ordinary and that shows an understanding of the possibility of language. I enjoy a well-told story or finely crafted poem as well, but they have to show a spark, something that engages me and stays with me after I've read it.

Q: Beyond its focus on Latino writers, what makes Palabra different from all the other literary journals out there?
A: It's purposely eclectic--designed that way to showcase the diversity of Latino writing, especially unconventional writing. We don't all write in the same way or about the same things. It will take risks and publish something that isn't necessarily polished or award-worthy but which shows some real ganas.

Q: When submitting their work to Palabra for consideration, what one thing should writers do to catch your eye? What one thing do you consider a turn-off?
A: Write organically but with discipline and focus. My major peeves are sloppy work and not reading the submission guidelines.

Q: Knowing what you know now, what advice would you offer to someone who is thinking of launching a literary magazine?
A: Be clear about why you're doing it and for how long you'll commit to it. Know that it will take time away from your own writing. It will always cost something. 

About Marcela Landres : Marcela Landres is the author of the e-book How Editors Think. She is an Editorial Consultant who specializes in helping Latinos get published and was formerly an editor at Simon & Schuster. 
Source: LatinoLA


 


BOOKS

Oct 9-10: Largest Gathering of Latino Authors in U.S. History to Convene in L.A.
One Book, One Bakersfield, One Kern" community read of "Burro Genius" 
Tejano Roots, A Family Legend by Dan Arellano
The
Men Named Antonio L�pez de Santa Anna by G. Roland Vela Muzquiz
Bernardo de Galvez, Spanish Hero of American Revolution by G. Roland Vela Muzquiz  
The Noise of Infinite Longing: A Memoir of a Family--and an Island
       by
Luisita Lopez Torregrosa

LARGEST GATHERING OF LATINO AUTHORS IN U.S. HISTORY TO CONVENE AT 13TH ANNUAL LATINO BOOK & FAMILY FESTIVAL AT CAL STATE UNIVERSITY L.A. OCTOBER 9 & 10

Over 120 Celebrated and Emerging Authors Featured Including Victor Villase�or, Fr. Greg Boyle, Sonia Nazario, Josefina L�pez, Juan Felipe Herrera, Alisa Vald�s-Rodr�guez, Gustavo Arellano, Lu�s J. Rodr�guez, Michele Serros, Jose Luis Orozco, and Reyna Grande Among Many Others

Actor/Community Activist Edward James Olmos Hosts Family-Friendly Weekend Event Including Children's Reading Stages, Folkl�rico Dance Competition & More

Los Angeles, CA -- The largest gathering of Latino authors in U.S. history will take place at the 13th Annual Latino Book & Family Festival (LBFF) at Greenlee Plaza, on the campus of California State University, Los Angeles on Saturday, October 9 and Sunday, October 10 from 11:00am to 6:00pm. The event is presented by founder/actor/community activist Edward James Olmos and Latino Literacy Now, a non-profit organization Olmos founded in 1997 to promote literacy in the Latino community.

In addition to bringing together over 120 award-winning and emerging Latino authors for panel discussions, book readings and signings, the festival will mount a ballet folkl�rico competition featuring dozens of regional ensembles representing several age groups. The festival will host a children's area featuring book readings, stage performances, and arts activities. The festival grounds will also feature book vendors such as Barnes & Noble and Tia Chucha's Bookstore, and over a hundred exhibitors offering traditional and popular crafts, as well as an array of food and refreshments. 

Dr. Roberto Cant�, Distinguished Professor of English and Chicano Studies at Cal State L.A., where the festival is being hosted for the second consecutive year, asserts that the significance of the festival extends far beyond a weekend of Mariachi music, Folkl�rico dances, and educational activities for Latino families. "Not only are we promoting literacy in middle-and working-class households, we are also creating a forum for prominent and celebrated Chicana and Latino writers to meet and interact with younger writers. The festival is contributing to the enrichment of Latino literature and to the sense of being part of a larger society, integrating diverse sectors of the Latino and L.A. communities around the theme of literacy and family. During the two days of the festival, nearby Mexican and Latino communities will interact, appreciate the complex traditional and literary heritage of Latinos, and discover themselves as one living community at Cal State L.A.," explains Cant�, who also serves on the festival's planning committee alongside fellow educators, community activists, and authors.

Indeed, LBFF is by far the largest and most diverse assemblage of Latino authors to date in the country, with authors such as Victor Villase�or, Lu�s J. Rodr�guez, Josefina L�pez, Alisa Vald�s-Rodr�guez, Alex Espinoza, Kathleen de Azevedo, Rene Colato Lainez, Alicia Partnoy, Daniel Chac�n, Julia Amante, Frank Suarez, Reyna Grande, and Montserrat Lehner, representing nearly a dozen countries including Mexico, El Salvador, Cuba, Colombia, Puerto Rico, Brazil, Chile, Argentina, the Dominican Republic, Panama, and the United States and also features several award-winning Latino journalists including Sam Qui�ones, Gustavo Arellano, and Pulitzer Prize-winner, Sonia Nazario, as well as the work of Fr. Greg Boyle, SJ, founder of Homeboy Industries, whose recent memoir, Tattoos On The Heart, chronicles his advocacy on behalf of former Latino gang members in Los Angeles, a special screening of the documentary Danza Folkl�rica Esc�nica: El Sello Artistico de Rafael Zamarripa, followed by a Q & A with director Olga Najera Ramirez, and a special performance by Ric Salinas of Culture Clash. 

Among the varied offerings in the Literary Panel Program are discussions on the immigrant experience, Latino cartoonists, women's fiction and the Latina feminist tradition, the Latin American literary diaspora, and Latino poetry, as well as pragmatic, "how-to" panels on publishing, book promotion, and transforming books into films and self-help panels on weight loss, family, and empowerment, with more than 40 panels in total presented over the two-day fest. Los Angeles Universal Preschool (LAUP) will also be conducting workshops in Spanish for parents on topics related to education, reading, and child well-being.

"The Latino Book & Family Festival is pleased to have found the perfect site for our event. Last year's Festival was a definitely a turning point for us. We look forward to many years of celebrating reading and Latino authors at our new home at California State University, Los Angeles," noted Jim Sullivan, LBFF executive director.
Last year, the festival drew more than 10,000 attendees over the weekend, and organizers predict attendance at the 2010 event next month may double, given the kid-friendly fest's early word-of-mouth and steadily growing community support.

LBFF counts among its sponsors KWHY-TV Channel 22, an independent channel in Los Angeles. With a programming line-up that's produced locally and that includes news, reality, sports and variety shows, this full-power TV station offers viewers content that reflects the lifestyle of Latinos in Los Angeles. KWHY Channel 22 is commonly owned by NBC Universal one of the world's leading media and entertainment companies, and Telemundo, the fastest growing U.S. Spanish-language television network. Other sponsors include Univisi�n Radio, La Prensa, Pan American Bank, and the Pen Center USA.

The Latino Book & Family Festival was launched in 1997 in Los Angeles to promote literacy, culture, and education, as well as to provide people of all ages and backgrounds the opportunity to celebrate the diversity of the multicultural communities in the United States in a festival atmosphere. Since 1997 46 Festivals have been held with a combined attendance of 769,000. 

The event is free and open to the public from 11:00am to 6:00pm on October 9 & 10, with a special ticketed event, "An Evening With The Authors," presented on Saturday, October 9, 6:30-9:00 pm., at a cost of $30/person, $25/students and children under 12 free of charge. Proceeds benefit Latino Literacy Now, a 501 (c) (3) non-profit organization. All donations are tax-deductible. Currently the LBFF is hosted annually in Chicago and Los Angeles. In September, 2011, the Festival plans to return to Houston.

For more information and a full schedule of featured authors, festival panels and programs, please visit the website at www.lbff.us 

Sent by Kirk Whisler kirk@whisler.com.

Cal State Bakersfield and Kern County libraries will kick off the "One Book, One Bakersfield, One Kern" community read of "Burro Genius" 11 a.m. Thursday at Beale Memorial Library, 701 Truxtun Ave.

The book by Victor Villasenor is a memoir of the author's experience as the child of Mexican immigrants growing up in Southern California during the 1940s and 1950s. In celebration of National Hispanic Heritage Month, there will be at least 18 community events over two months, including cultural, historical, educational and entertainment programs.

Community members will speak at the kickoff, including Mayor Harvey Hall, CSUB President Horace Mitchell and others. With a donation from local attorney Tim Osborn, CSUB will place 15 copies of the book at each Kern High School District campus.  

texas flag

Tejano Roots
A Family Legend

Author, Dan Arellano

http://www.tejanoroots.org/

mexico flag

This is the dilapidated monument that has been dedicated to the memory of fallen Tejano heroes that died for the same reasons as the heroes of the Alamo. 180 valiant warriors sacrificed their lives for liberty and freedom at the Alamo, yet, as tragic as it was, sends the wrong message to the Hispanic community, when over 1000 of their ancestors were killed fighting for the same reasons, at the Battle of Medina. Few people know that this monument exists, or its location yet it's only 10 miles from the Alamo and it's what the State of Texas says they are entitled to. The State has no markers directing you to its site, as in other historical places. Not only is it a disgrace to the memory of these fallen heroes but it is an insult to the majority Hispanic community. 

These excerpts describe the Battle at the Medina River, the bloodiest battle that has ever occurred on Texas soil. More people were killed in this battle and its aftermath than in any of the other conflicts of the Texas Revolution, on both sides combined.


"Many Mexican-Americans have given their lives, defending freedom and democracy. A thousand Tejanos were killed in one battle alone, in defense of these causes. But this conflict wasn't on foreign soil. Not on the beaches of Normandy, not in Korea, Viet Nam or Desert Storm, although Tejanos were there, but much closer to home, in South Texas, less than twenty miles outside of San Antonio. The Battle of Medina�the forgotten history of the Tejanos, these first sons and daughters of the State of Texas, unknown and unrecognized, for their ultimate sacrifice."

Excerpts from chapter titled "Battle of Medina":

"Colonel Menchaca has been repulsed time and time again, suffering heavy casualties amongst the Tejano cavalry, yet they continue the attack. Reporting to Toledo at the rear of the line it is reported that Toledo had instructed him to withdraw his men. Whereas Menchaca responds that, "Tejanos do not withdraw," and plunged back into the foray. 

"The battle raged for four hours going one way then the other. Through the smoke and the roar of the cannon, men could be heard crying in anguish. Some men lost limbs, others had their heads blown off. There were body parts scattered all over the battlefield. The more fortunate ones died instantly, others suffered a slow and agonizing death."

...Read more about it in "Tejano Roots" A Family Legend

 To order, send $23.95 plus $3.00 for shipping and handling to:
 Dan Arellano, Author, PO Box 43012   Austin, Texas 78704


As a result of Dan Arellano testimony on the Battle of Medina.  That piece of Texas/Mexican/American history was adopted for inclusion in Texas state textbooks.  Dan will be speaking at Nuevo Leon Restaurant 1501 East 6th Street at 10 A.M. in Austin  on Saturday October 9th at 10 A.M. 
The event is free, the public and educators are welcome. 
For more information contact: Dan Arellano darellano@austin.rr.com 
512-826-7569


The Men Named Antonio L�pez de Santa Anna 
by Roland Vela M�zquiz
"Antonio L�pez de Santa Anna has not been adequately portrayed in the myriad books and films about him. He is painted as a mad, bombastic, and ruthless character committed only to mayhem and murder. To the contrary, Dr. Vela reveals a multifaceted, passionate man who yearned for a great and modern Mexico worthy of his leadership and other talents. This excellent book was overdue and will significantly improve our knowledge of "the arch villain of Texas history" and of Texas, as well . . ."    Reader

"Antonio L�pez de Santa Anna was probably not the ignorant, cowardly individual Texas history has created for us. He may have been an intelligent, very brave, and dedicated soldier who, unfortunately for Mexico, suffered from a chronic disposition for treason � this caused the dismemberment of Mexico � which converted it from the second largest nation on Earth to a smallish one destined for the third world."   Roland Vela

The men named Antonio L�pez de Santa Anna / by Roland Vela M�zquiz ; original drawings by architect Richard V. Morales.  M�zquiz, Roland Vela.  Denton, Tex. : Acacia Press, 2002.



BERNARDO DE GALVEZ, SPANISH HERO OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION
THE SPANISH COLONIAL PERIOD
Author: G. Roland Vela Muzquiz

The story of Bernardo de Galvez is one of the greatest historical omissions in the popular history of the American Revolution. France is credited with helping the United States win the war but is is doubtful that the war could have been won without Spain's support. In effect Governor Galvez commanded the southern front of the Revolution giving George Washington time to concentrate in the East and George Rogers Clark in The West. Galvez defeated the British up and down the Mississippi and the Gulf of Mexico, never losing a battle. He had fought previously in the north of New Spain and later, after his governorship of Louisiana, became viceroy of Mexico. His star and that of his uncle Jos� de Galvez shone bright in the establishment of the Americas. Dr. Vela's book is long overdue but it will help bring Galvez to the forefront of out nation's history where he can take his rightful place as a great American hero. Illustrated. Denton, TX 2006 Acacia Press 1st Ed. 260 Pgs., 5 &1/2 x 8&1/2, PB.
Available from http://www.borderlandsbooks.com  Price: $20.50
Shipping: $3.75, Item #1955


Buy *The Noise of Infinite Longing: A Memoir of a Family--and an Island* online The Noise of Infinite Longing: A Memoir of a Family--and an Island
Luisita Lopez Torregrosa

Rayo Hardcover, 304 pages, March 2004
The Torregrosa family originates on the island of Puerto Rico, �where people are confined by water, surrounded by the infinite, with nothing but dreams.� Of all the races who pass through the island, the family�s bloodlines are to Spain. The most significant and beautifully described days of family life are those spent in Puerto Rico, where the houses, the foliage and the city are perfectly rendered, almost tactile. The dramatic island identity of a family grounded in culture and learning fades like old photographs as the years go by and time bleaches the color from the pages of their personal history.

Upon the sudden death of their mother, the six siblings gather in Texas for the funeral, coming together for the first time in fifteen years. As the oldest, Luisita Lopez Torregrosa recounts the family history and their divergent roads to this meeting, an occasion of both sadness and the joy of reconnecting family ties.

Luisita is struck by the contrast of her memories to those of the younger sisters, who have known their mother in a safer, more constricted frame of reference, absent the wild passion of her youth. It is difficult to imagine her socially conscious and activist mother in a shabby little Texas town, far from the carefree days of Puerto Rico. In Texas, the mother is more ordinary, easily blending into her surroundings, but through the author�s eyes, in Puerto Rico, the mother is a hothouse flower, exotic and passionate, a woman who draws the stares of men and the jealously of women. In the end, each child owns a separate vision of her mother, one replete with particular memories and light-filled, steaming summer afternoons, the colors and smells of childhood.

In a lyrical style, journalist Torregrosa describes the source of her family�s roots, an island divided into a rigid class structure, but tinged with memories of childhood stories and love of family. The Torregrosas spend their early years in a tropical paradise, protected by privilege, while the island�s economy deteriorates.

Watching her parents struggle within the constructs of their marriage, Luisita renounces the union of woman and man, the child troubled by the quiet suffering her mother endures in this marriage. Luisita craves only the illusion, not the painful experience. This is a seminal moment, as a maturing girl experiences sudden clarity and makes a decision that will alter her future. In finding her way back into the heart of the family after their mother�s death, Torregrosa must acknowledge her own life choices and the emotional distance she herself has imposed upon the family ties.

Most significantly, this memoir portrays a vibrant Puerto Rican family�s assimilation into the bland landscape of America. As the hub of the family identity, the mother personifies this loss of identity. Yet as a journalist, Torregrosa is living in the real world, one of political upheavals and social changes, island dictatorships �where the city, like my childhood, became a festival, one very long festival.�

This remarkable memoir derives its strength from the bonds between the mother and the siblings, based on their early history, one that survives the gradual loosening of connections: there is no disappointment, no sadness that does not have its genesis in love. Clearly, this mother�s profound influence on her children has made their lives fuller, more complete. For Torregrosa, her return to her island roots reawakens an intimate self-knowledge and appreciation for �Latin America, and the noise of people who explain their lives on the street�the noise of infinite longing.�

� 2004 by Luan Gaines for Curled Up With a Good Book

 

 


MILITARY/LAW ENFORCEMENT

VA Celebrates Hispanic Heritage Month
Johnston High School Viet Nam Heroes
Nov 12: SAVE the date, The U.S. Latino & Latina Oral History Project
Montana Restaurant True Story: Do you know who I am?
Dover Castle - Hellfire Corner
U.S. Citizenship application and requirements
Veterans and Disproportionate Asbestos Exposure by Francisco Barragan
Hector M. Lopez, Newport Engineer Earns National Hispanic Achievement Award Caminos: Manuel Mejia - WWII, 82nd Airborne Division by Rudy Padilla

VA Celebrates Hispanic Heritage Month

WASHINGTON - The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) joins the Nation in saluting the country's largest ethnic group and its more than 1.1 million Veterans as it observes Hispanic Heritage Month Sept. 15 to Oct. 15, as Hispanic Americans have fought in every American war. 

"Hispanic Americans have enriched our country beyond measure-in science and technology, education, the arts, sports, business, government-and in our military," Secretary Shinseki said. 

As a major health care and benefits provider, VA recognizes that to deliver quality services it must maintain a work force that reflects the communities it serves. VA has always strived to recruit, develop and retain a diverse, high-performing workforce and was named one of the top places of employment for federal agencies when it comes to diversity in 2009. VA facilities nationwide will celebrate the month-long observance with local ceremonies, activities, and programs. 

The theme of this year's Hispanic Heritage Month is "Heritage, Diversity, and Honor: The Renewed Hope of America." The dates of the observance coincide with the anniversary dates (in different years) of the independence of seven Latin American countries: Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, Mexico and Chile. Hispanic colonists settled in Florida, Louisiana and New Mexico, and two of the oldest communities in the United States-St. Augustine, Fla. (1565) and Santa Fe, N.M. (1610) - have had Hispanic inhabitants since they were established. 

To view and download VA news releases, please visit the following Internet address:
http://www.va.gov/opa/pressrel  http://www.va.gov/opa/pressrel
Sent by Rafel Ojeda rsnojeda@aol.com  source: va.media.relations@va.gov  
Must see . . . rebuilding a JEEP in 4 minutes, shows coordination and team work in action:
http://www.youtube.com/watch_popup?v=lgwF8mdQwlw&feature=player_embedded

Sent by Bill Carmena


SAVE THE DATE:  2010 VALOR Y HONOR DINNER, NOVEMBER 12 IN AUSTIN, TEXAS
HOSTED BY  U.S. LATINO & LATINA ORAL HISTORY PROJECT TO BE HELD AT RENAISSANCE HOTEL.
    Johnston High School Viet Nam Heroes
The Legacy of Eastside Memorial High School  
Edited by Captain Marco Montoya and Dan Arellano  


The Johnston 31 High School Memorial Committee announces the publication of a 32 page color booklet in honor of the 31 men who died as a result of the war in Viet Nam. Along with the one that was killed in a fire and one in a plane crash a brief biography describes the day, time and place of each of the 17 that died in combat. It also names the twelve that have since passed away as a result of Agent Orange.   

Seventy-five young men from Austin sacrificed their lives during the war in Viet Nam. The Mexican American Community of Austin was less than ten percent of the population, at that time, yet suffered twenty five percent of the casualties. These statistics were not confined to Austin; it was happening throughout the United States and in cities such as San Antonio, El Paso and Los Angeles with a higher concentration of Mexican Americans the percentages were even higher.  

Proclamation from the State of Texas �Whereas, The passage of time can never diminish the debt this country owes to those whose lives were cut tragically short in it�s service, and it is indeed appropriate to pay homage to the immeasurable courage, commitment, and sacrifice of the young men from Albert Sydney Johnston High School who perished in the Viet Nam War.�

Our Salute to the Fallen!
Our Thanks to the Veteran!
Our Appreciation to the Families!

To order send $6.00 plus $3.00 shipping and handling to Dan Arellano
P.O. Box 43012, Austin, Texas 78704  Or call 512-826-7569

 

Montana Restaurant True Story:
This is a great story! The radio station America FM was doing one of its 'Is Anyone Listening?' bits this morning. The first question was, 'Ever have a celebrity come up with the 'Do you know who I am' routine?'

A woman called in and said that a few years ago, while visiting her cattle rancher uncle in Billings, MT, she had occasion to go to dinner at a restaurant that does not take reservations. The wait was about 45 minutes; many ranchers and their wives were waiting.

Ted Turner and his ex-wife Jane Fonda came in the restaurant and wanted a table. The hostess informed them that they'd have to wait 45 minutes. Jane Fonda asked the hostess, 'Do you know who I am?' The hostess answered, 'Yes, but you'll have to wait 45 minutes.' Then Jane asked if the manager was in. When the manager came out, he asked, 'May I help you?'

'Do you know who we are?' both Ted and Jane asked. 'Yes, but these folks have been waiting, and I can't put you ahead of them.'

Then Ted asked to speak to the owner. The owner came out, and Jane again asked, 'Do you know who I am?' The owner answered, 'Yes, I do. Do you know who I am? I am the owner of this restaurant and I am a Vietnam Veteran. Not only will you not get a table ahead of my friends and neighbors who have been waiting here, but you also will not be eating in my restaurant tonight or any other night. Good bye.'

Sent by Glen Frost  Telger6@aol.com
URL sites of military observations for Hispanic Heritage Month
http://www.deomi.org/specialobservance/presentations.cfm?catid=6
 
Dover Castle - Hellfire Corner
http://www.historic-kent.co.uk/hellfire.html

Beneath Dover's medieval castle and within its famous white cliffs lies a huge network of military tunnels which have been in use since Napoleonic times. It was from these tunnels in May 1940 that the evacuation of British and French troops from Dunkirk was directed. In the operation, over 338,000 men were saved and no fewer than 693 British ships took part. Throughout the Second World War the tunnels were used as command headquarters, controlling naval vessels in the Straits of Dover and the deployment of coastal artillery. Removed from the Secret List, the story of the Dover tunnels and the Dunkirk evacuation can now be told. The tunnels have been opened to the public and key areas such as some of the operations rooms can be viewed as they were in the war.

Editor: Fascinating geological formation that was shaped and used effectively throughout known time periods, since the 1170s and how it served England during WWII.

Sent by Margarita Garza   Mage1935@aol.com


Military Video Channel
http://military.discovery.com/videos/

Watch Military Channel video to get the meet the soldiers and hear the stories. Every weapon, every war, every soldier, every branch. Every story deserves to be heard.  Jammed packed!!  Check it out.  Sent by Bill Carmena

 
U.S. Citizenship application and requirements for non-citizens in the Military
Here in Washington State, the Attorney General has put out the word that only Immigration attorneys can assist
immigrants in applying for Permanent Residence and citizenship because of the fraud from individuals and non-profit
that did not know the law or did more wrong for the non-citizens in their applications.
The military service during any war period has always been in place as a pathway for non-citizen/undocumented aliens
to apply for their citizenship immediately or within a set time upon separation from the service.
The web sites below should be useful for immigration attorneys and our military members and their families.
I am not an attorney, but I like to stay informed being that I am on our Governor's Veterans Affairs Advisory Committee
and a USAF Vietnam retired veterans. I have been sending some of the current issues to my U.S. Senators and many
of my Congressional Reps, even if I am not in their Congressional District in speaking on behalf of all our Veterans.

I hope that we can share this info across our country. 
Thank you. Rafael Ojeda, Tacoma,WA
 

 

 


Veterans and Disproportionate Asbestos Exposure
by 
Francisco Barragan

The United States Armed Forces has a long history of asbestos use. 

Those who served in World War II, Korea War and the Vietnam War are the veterans most at risk for previous exposure to asbestos.  During these wars the Armed Forces extensively used asbestos, which was considered a great material at the time.  Asbestos was used in hundreds of military applications and products, most notably for insulation, fireproofing and various applications on Navy ships.

The health of military veterans from all divisions of is at risk due to their service-related asbestos exposure.  Even if veterans were in the military for a short period of time, they may have experienced exposure making them susceptible to developing an asbestos-related disease later in life.  Research shows that even a single occurrence of heavy asbestos exposure has the potential to cause disease.  One of the main concerns for military veterans is mesothelioma, a rare cancer that most commonly develops in the lining of the lungs. Symptoms of mesothelioma can take as long as 50 years to arise from the time someone is initially exposed to asbestos.  

The issue of military veterans exposure to Asbestos is significant because while there were 23.2 million (7.6%) military veterans in the United States in 2008, out of a population of about 305 million (per US Census), US military veterans consists of 30% (about 4 times above the population number) of Mesothelioma Cancer Patients.  

Additionally, this issue could be very significant within our military population in California, but Southern California in particular, because of our high concentration of military veterans.

Per the US Census, the number of states with 1 million or more veterans in 2008 were:  California(2.1 million); Florida (1.7 million); Texas (1.7 million); New York (1 million); and Pennsylvania (1 million).  

For information regarding VA benefits, programs and eligibility, Asbestos.com�s Veteran Assistance Department can be reached by visiting http://www.asbestos.com/va-claim.php.  Veterans wishing to learn more about the risks of asbestos exposure and the chances of developing an asbestos-related condition may visit Asbestos.com�s veteran resources page or visit the mesothelioma clinical trials page at http://www.asbestos.com/treatment/clinical-trials.php/.

 And to learn about other resources for veterans please visit UMAVA (United-Mexican American Veterans Association) page at http://umava.org.  See the sections entitled �Resources for Veterans� and �Veterans Coalition of Orange County�.  

Francisco �Paco� Barrag�n
Commander � UMAVA
Served US Marines (1987-1994) & CA ARNG (1997-1997)

http://umava.org
   
(UMAVA is a registered not-for-profit advocating for all US military veterans)

 


Hector M. Lopez
Newport Engineer Earns National Hispanic Achievement Award
NNS090810-18. Newport Engineer Earns National Hispanic Achievement Award
From Naval Undersea Warfare Center Division Newport Public Affairs

A Naval Undersea Warfare Center (NUWC) Division Newport engineer will be honored for professional achievement in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) by the Hispanic Engineer National Achievement Awards Corporation (HENAAC) at the 21st Annual HENAAC Career Conference in Long Beach, Calif., Oct. 8-10.

Hector M. Lopez, an electrical engineer, is the deputy head of the Torpedo Systems Department at NUWC Division Newport.

"I am honored to have been selected for this award," said Lopez. "There are so many people whom I consider more experienced and more deserving, but I am very excited to have been chosen for the honor."

"Mr. Lopez is devoted to providing U.S. Navy forces with the best possible advanced torpedo systems while ensuring the taxpayers receive the best value for their investment," said Capt. Michael Byman, commander of the Newport research and development facility. "He epitomizes the ideal engineer and enlightened manager. His ability to effectively supervise multiple complex projects in a demanding, fast-paced engineering environment underscores his immense value to NUWC Division Newport and to the nation."

Lopez has contributed to the Navy's torpedo program across a continuum of leadership positions since his arrival in Newport. In his 18 years at NUWC Division Newport, he has risen from engineering staff, through project lead and lead engineering assignments, through branch and division heads, to his current assignment as deputy department head.

The Torpedo Systems Department employs approximately 267 engineers, scientists, business professionals, technicians, secretaries and administrative and technical assistants. In addition to his leadership role, Lopez is responsible for the planning and execution of acquisition and lifecycle engineering activities in support of both heavyweight and lightweight torpedoes.

"His efforts have led to the transition of advanced capabilities to the U.S. Navy's torpedo systems and significantly contribute to maintaining the nation's superiority in undersea warfare," said Byman.

"Mr. Lopez is a respected leader within the technical arena here at NUWC Division Newport and among his constituents in the defense community," said Paul Lefebvre, NUWC Division Newport technical director. "He applies the same energy level and foresight to the critical area of Hispanic recruitment for NUWC. In addition to his key role in recruitment and retention of hispanic employees, he serves as a mentor and role model."

For 21 years, HENAAC has recognized the achievements of America's best and brightest engineers and scientists within the Hispanic community. Award winners were selected by the HENAAC selection committee, which is comprised of representatives from industry, government, military and academic institutions.

NUWC Division Newport provides research, development, test and evaluation, engineering and fleet support for submarines, autonomous underwater systems, undersea offensive and defensive weapons systems and countermeasures associated with undersea warfare.

Tim Crump

  Caminos: Manuel Mejia - WWII, 82nd Airborne Division
Kansas City Kansan
Posted Aug 05, 2009
 
 
 
Kansas City, Kan. � Caminos spoke with Bea Marie Mejia-Mayer a graduate of Bishop Ward High School a while back concerning her father, who passed away in 2004.  BeaMarie remembers her father, Manuel Mejia as a proud person. �Serving his country instilled in my father a great sense of pride, especially as a member of the 82nd Airborne Division.  His war service was the defining moment in his life which instilled in him a greater love for citizenship; for he understood its price.  He struggled always with the haunting memories of the war.  He was very active with the Disabled American Veterans and served in official and unofficial capacities to ensure veterans� rights.�
 
Caminos continues with the story of Manuel Mejia, written by Brooke West.  The story was produced by the U.S. Latino & Latina WWII Oral History Project at the University of Texas, School of Journalism.  The project director is Maggie Rivas-Rodriguez.  Permission given to reproduce. �Despite anti-Hispanic bias, staff sergeant led a dozen men� By Brooke West:
 
World War II interrupted Manuel Salazar Mej�a's academic endeavors, and he abandoned scholarly pursuits when he enlisted in the army in May 1942. The high school sophomore was only 18.
 
One of five children born to immigrants from Zacatecas, Mexico, Mr. Mej�a was raised in Kansas City, Kan.  His father, Fidel, a butcher, and his mother, Ignacia (Salazar), a housewife, struggled with finances. They depended on a large family-tended garden in which they grew �corn, pumpkins, tomatoes, onions, some potatoes,� Mr. Mej�a said.
 
Mr. Mej�a, born April 6, 1925, said he remembers playing in the hills around the colonia where his family lived. There was a schoolyard close to his home, but Hispanic children were not allowed access to the area.  At the time, Hispanics were segregated throughout Kansas City, as well as in many parts of the rest of the country.
 
"We had our own little school," he said. "The (elementary) school I went to was Major Hudson Annex. That's where all the Hispanics went."
 
In his youth, Mr. Mej�a was fond of reading  newspapers and kept up to date on the war, from its start in 1939.  He kept track of friends and neighbors in the service through newspaper clippings.
 
"I didn't graduate from high school," Mr. Mej�a said. "I (enlisted) in my sophomore year, so I went into the war at that time."
 
Mr. Mej�a summed up his thoughts at the time about the Germans with a simple comment:  "If them rascals get up there and get England, what's going to stop them from coming over here and jumping  in on New York?''
 
Such thoughts drove Mr. Mej�a during his Army career. He received most of his training at Fort Benning, Ga.  From there he moved to Fort Bragg, N.C., where he received his jump training before leaving for Yuma, Ariz., for maneuver training.
 
Then he went "clear across country" to the East Coast.  Pvt. Mej�a shipped out on a 14-day journey from New York to Belfast, Ireland.  He was aboard a troop carrier that held men from all divisions.  The men trained in Belfast and then were split up, Pvt. Mej�a and the rest of the 82nd Airborne Division were sent to Nottingham, England.
 
While in England, Pvt. Mej�a and his men continued their training. They went on dry runs in  C-47s, planes from which they simulated war situations, and they also performed routine practice jumps. A soldier had to have six training jumps before receiving a jumping badge. 
 
Being a jumper was an important part of his military experience.  It was a proud moment for a GI to get a badge, Mr. Mej�a said. �That meant a lot.�
 
In the military, discrimination was subtle, he said.  Although he served in an integrated unit, Pvt. Mej�a found that prospects for promotion were not readily available to him and other Hispanics.  It did not stop Mr. Mej�a, however, from becoming a squad leader; Staff Sgt. Mej�a had 12 men under his guidance.
 
Staff Sgt. Mej�a's first objective was to jump behind enemy lines and neutralize German �pillboxes,� enclosed gun emplacements of concrete and steel. The line was six miles behind Omaha Beach in Normandy.  However, the pilot overshot the zone by four miles, dropping the men in an apple orchard.  Staff Sgt. Mej�a had to quickly round up his men, using aluminum noisemakers that simulated the sound of crickets.  The troops realized that the Germans had set up realistic-looking wooden dummy guns, so Staff Sgt. Mej�a and his squad went onward to find the real pillboxes.
 
With help from men of other divisions, Staff Sgt. Mej�a said he and the other men �knocked out six guns before afternoon.�
 
"We beat the daylights out of them,� Mr. Mej�a said. "We climbed on top of that (pillbox) and started throwing grenades inside of them holes."
 
The squad was then assigned to guard two bridges of importance to the Allies.  The bridges were within two miles of Ste. Mere Eglise and it was thought that the Germans wanted to destroy the structures.  After capturing many prisoners, Staff Sgt. Mej�a and his squad spent an entire night disconnecting a slew of mines.  They set up flags to mark safe passageways for tanks and personnel.
 
Staff Sgt. Mej�a also crossed the Rhine River at Frankfurt, Germany; jumped in Belgium; and crossed into France to participate in the Battle of the Bulge in December, 1944.  During that battle, Staff Sgt. Mej�a was wounded in his left knee and was transported to England for an operation.
 
During the war, he kept in touch with his sisters and his mother. He remembers his sisters sending him cookies, news articles and fruitcakes.  His mother helped him keep in touch with Mexican traditions by sending him bu�uelos, a fried tortilla pastry, during the Battle of the Bulge.
 
Staff Sgt. Mej�a was in Munich training with the 82nd Airborne Division when he learned that the war had ended.  Mr. Mej�a is proud of the many awards he and his division earned during the war: two Presidential Citations, the Bronze Star Medal, The Belgian Valor Medal, and the Holland Military Medal of Valor.  Mr. Mej�a also received the Purple Heart with two clusters, a Jump Badge and a Good Conduct Medal.
 
Mr. Mej�a was classified as being 100 percent disabled after being wounded three times during combat. He also carried mental wounds, which he says he wanted to heal with weekly group therapy with 20 other veterans. The meetings helped him and others deal with the memories of war.
 
Upon his return from war in March 1946, Mr. Mej�a was faced with several difficulties. He needed a job and a place to live back in Kansas City.  In June he married Beatrice Marie Mu�oz Mej�a, and the couple eventually had three children: Ren�, Ronald and Bea Marie.
 
Finding a job to support his family was difficult.  Veterans such as Mr. Mej�a were being told that companies were not hiring Mexicans.
 
Locating a home also proved difficult for the couple.  Mr. Mej�a and his wife spent many months trying to find a Kansas City neighborhood that would accept Mexicans. They would make deposits, only to be told that neighbors wanted no Mexicans in the neighborhood.
 
Eventually, Mr. Mej�a got a job at the Simmons Mattress Company.  He worked there for 45 years and was chief  inspector of the box spring department.  He was also was president, at one time, of Local 173 of the Upholsterers International Union, of North America.
 
Mr. Mej�a was interviewed at the Tucson Vet Center on Jan. 5, 2003, by Joe Olague. Mr. Mejia passed away in 2004.  The children of the family BeaMarie, Ren� and Ron established the Manuel Mejia Memorial Scholarship Fund at Bishop Ward High School. Mr. Mejia is another of our heroes from Wyandotte County. BeaMarie recalls, �My father was such a good and kind man to all the kids in our neighborhood and the Blessed Sacrament Church community.  At any CYO game or tournament, he was there coaching � making sure more kids could get involved and have fun.� 
 
Rudy Padilla is a columnist for the Kansan and can be contacted at opkansas@swbell.net

 

 


PATRIOTS OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION

GALVEZ . . .Spain, Hispanics & American Liberty! Documentary, seeking support . . . 
Oct 3rd:  Sully Historic Site Hosts Spain in the American Revolution, Chantilly, VA 
Oct 9th: Experience History Firsthand: War of 1812 Muster Planned at Sully Historic Site
The History Detectives, Galvez Papers
The re-launching of the Galveztown Ship

GALVEZ . . .Spain, Hispanics & American Liberty! Documentary, seeking support . . . 


Long forgotten heroes, the Spanish, Hispanic people, who at that time occupied the Deep South of the continental United States, and a great leader, Bernardo de Galvez, who fell in love with the New World and its expanding ideas. All gave of their influence, their fortunes, and some even their lives, for American liberty!

This is a story that is timely, considering today's ongoing debate over Hispanic immigration and the continuous misconceptions too many Americans harbor about our "southern" neighbors and their supposed "disconnect" to our founding.

Now, through the latest technology of HD visual media, combined with intelligent historical re-creations and creative presentations by leading scholars, this feature documentary will tell the story of how both of these group's contributions to the American Revolution made the critical difference in the gaining of our independence, and at the same time set the whole Western Hemisphere ablaze with the spirit of liberty!

A Documentary Feature Film By
Thomas Ellingwood Fortin, Executive Producer, Director, New Albion Pictures 
newalbionpics@gmail.com
 


  Oct 3rd:  Sully Historic Site Hosts Spain in the American Revolution
Chantilly, VA 
On Sunday, October 3, 2010, from noon to 4 p.m., visit Sully Historic Site and discover some well-documented but little known facts about our country�s history. Did you know that Spanish-speaking nations made great contributions to the success of the American colonies during our struggle for independence from Great Britain? Soldiers from Spain, the Caribbean and the Americas fought against the British, and Spain provided funding, supplies and military intelligence to George Washington. 

Reenactors from the re-created Spanish Louisiana Regiment will present scenes of 18th century military life including musket and cannon firing, Spanish fencing, and camp cooking. 

Visitors will have an opportunity to �enlist� in the regiment and learn musket drill, and play games that were popular during the Revolutionary War. 

Sully was the 1794 home of Richard Bland Lee, northern Virginia�s first congressman and member of the Lee family of Virginia. During the Revolutionary War, Lees served as soldiers and statesmen. Richard�s brother, Lighthorse Harry, was a distinguished cavalry commander, and their cousin, Richard Henry Lee, was a signer of the Declaration of Independence.

A guided tour of the house is included in this program. Cost is $6 for adults and $4 for children. For information call 703-437-1794. Directions: Sully Historic Site is located on Route 28 in Chantilly, VA. From the Beltway (495) take either I66 west to Rt. 28 North or the Dulles Toll Rd. to exit 9A (Rt. 28 South). For more information contact the site at 703-437-1794 or the Public Information Office at 703-324-8662.
Sent by Maribeth Bandas Maribeth@HispanicLink.org  


Oct 9th: Experience History Firsthand: 
War of 1812 Muster Planned at Sully Historic Site

As we approach the bicentennial of the War of 1812, learn how our young nation defeated Great Britain in America�s second war for independence. On Saturday, October 9, 2010 from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sully Historic Site in Chantilly hosts the annual War of 1812 Muster. See soldiers fire their muskets, and then gather with other recruits as a veteran sergeant teaches musket drill. Watch as the Navy exercises the great gun (a six-pounder cannon!) and visit with the ship�s surgeon to find out about early medical practices on land and sea. Members of the Maryland Light Dragoons demonstrate how horses were used in battle.

Sully was the home of Richard Bland Lee, northern Virginia�s first congressman. He and his family lived at Sully from 1794 until just before the War of 1812. The Lees were friends of James and Dolley Madison and Lee offered his services to the country during the war. Afterwards, he was named a commissioner to deal with claims of people who lost property during the burning of Washington D.C.

During a tour of the house, hear about Richard Bland Lee�s role in forming the new government, and learn the role of African Americans on a Federal period gentleman�s farm and about their service in the War of 1812. 

Visit the open hearth kitchen and discover recipes used to prepare an early 19th century dinner. Outside, see the latest fashions for 1812 and play period games on the lawn.

The cost is $8 for adults and $6 for children. For information, call 703-437-1794. Sully Historic Site is located on Route 28. From the Beltway (495) take either I-66 west to Route 28 north or the Dulles Toll Road, to exit 9A (Route 28 South). For more information contact the site at 703-437-1794 or the Public Information Office at 703-324-8662.

Sent by Maribeth Bandas Maribeth@HispanicLink.org  

The History Detectives
GALVEZ PAPERS
AIRED: Season 8, Episode 10 
THE DETECTIVE: Elyse Luray
THE PLACE: New Orleans and Los Angeles
THE CASE:
In 1779 the Governor of Spanish colonial Louisiana signed a document that emancipated Agnes Mathieu from slavery. 

What was so special about Agnes that a Governor had to sign off on her release? Most freedom papers from the time bear only the signature of the former slaveholder notarized by a local clerk.  But Governor Bernardo de Galvez had a special interest in this case. 

History Detectives heads to Louisiana to trace an epic tale of politics, war, love and loyalty. In the French Quarter, at Tulane University, and on the shelves of a local archive we discovers Governor Galvez�s pivotal role in America�s fight for freedom � both in the Revolutionary War and in a romantic story of our contributor�s past.

Galvez Frees the Slave Episode ( Starts 19 min 30 seconds into the 55 minute presentation). It has very interesting with references to the Battle of Baton Rouge, plus genealogical information.

Watch this episode online now.
http://www.pbs.org/opb/historydetectives/investigations/810_galvez.html 

Photos: Spanish Influence in New Orleans
View photographic examples of Spanish influence on New Orleans� architecture.

Sent by Michael  mnhwmas@aol.com  and Bill Carmena JCarm1724@aol.com



The re-launching of the Galveztown
http://www.bernardodegalvez.com/?p=6 

The Galveztown will sail again. This news may not means much to many people, but for those who know their history, especially naval history of the 18th century, this is very good news indeed. The first planks of an exact replica of the famous brig were laid recently in a ceremony in Nereo, close to the Ba�os del Carmen, outside Malaga city. For those who do not already know this, the Galveztown was the ship commanded by Malaga hero Bernardo de G�lvez to capture the port of Pensacola in the 18th century.

In spite of scattered rain showers, the ceremony at the Nereo shipyards went off without a hitch. Present were members of the media, representatives of Malaga University, the City Hall and the Macharaviaya Town Hall (where the G�lvez family were from), naval officers and representatives of American institutions which are co-operating in the reconstruction of the ship.

Legendary battle. Construction work will take two years, but during that time, the people of Malaga can discover more about the life and times of Bernardo de G�lvez, one of their most important local heroes, through a series of exhibitions and conferences to be mounted over the coming two years. One of them actually took place recently in Malaga University.

Bernardo de G�lvez was born and brought up in the Axarqu�a, and was responsible for winning one of the key naval battle of the American War of Independence when he captured Pensacola, in Florida, in 1781. He had always been a military man, although on land, but as governor of Louisiana, he requested the assistance of the Spanish fleet in the war against the British, who were, of course, traditional enemies of the Spanish crown. The fleet was commanded by Jos� Calvo.

�Jos� Calvo kept the Spanish fleet anchored off the Bay of Pensacola after the San Ram�n, the fleet�s flag ship, had grounded on the sands off the island of Santa Rosa,� we are told by Rafael D�az, president of the Andalusian Naval League and delegate of the Royal Spanish Naval League. G�lvez disobeyed the orders of his naval superior, however, and decided to enter the bay to see if the British forces had aimed their artillery too high to cause serious damage to his ship.

He went in alone, and this caused an uproar among the Spanish sailors, who now believed Calvo for acting cowardly by not having done the same. The rest of the ships then joined G�lvez, and following a siege of the fortress, they captured it. The Spanish king, Carlos III, rewarded G�lvez with the title of count, and allowed him to inscribe the image of the Galveztown and the words �I alone� on his new coat of arms.

Samuel Turner, director of Archaeology in the St. Agustin Historical Society in Florida, pointed out at the Malaga ceremony the significance of the re-construction of the ship for both Spain and the United States. He reminded his listeners that the oak used in the building work was donated by American institutions. When built, the brig will make a voyage to all the coastal cities that the original G�lveztown visited.

 


SURNAMES

Armenta


PABLO ARMENTA
 
My �Papa Grande�
 by Granddaughter, Bea Armenta Dever
In response to a request by Ron Gonzales for stories of  families who entered the United States, fleeing the 1910 Mexican Revolution, Bea responded.  Her story started the Orange County Register's series with the story of her grandparents.  
 
 
My grandfather, Pablo Armenta, who the family affectionately called �Papa Grande�, was born in Higuera de Zaragoza, Sinaloa, Mexico in 1875.   His father died in 1876 and shortly thereafter his mother remarried,.  His stepfather disliked him and did not want him around.  His mother feared for his life, so at the age of 9 she sent him away.  With two companions he walked to the city of Guaymas, Sonora � approximately 180 miles away.  By the time he arrived, Pablo�s shoes were thread bare!  
    
The family is uncertain how he lived or supported himself during his early years, but his spirit was never defeated.  
Pablo became a surveyor of the water lines for the city of Guaymas and walked from the reservoir into town every day checking the lines.
  
At age of seventeen he married a fifteen-year-old girl from a prominent family that vehemently disapproved of this union.  He was determined to succeed on his own and refused all offers of assistance from his in-laws.  He and his wife, Victoria Oros  Armenta, had twenty children, ten of whom lived to adulthood. 
 


Pablo Armenta�s Branding Iron Rubbing � 1900�s. The original branding iron was confiscated by the Mexican government. Guaymas, Sonora, Mexico


Through his hard work and keen business sense, he became a successful rancher owning a variety of animals, including horses and cattle. His branding iron design consisted of his initials P& A.    His livestock also provided him the opportunity  to start two other businesses � a stagecoach transport business and a meat market. 
 
In those times, fruits and vegetables were delivered by train to towns using large ice blocks to keep the produce fresh.  These ice blocks sometimes fell off the railroad cars, so Pablo�s sons picked them up, placed them in their wagon and delivered them to their dad�s market.  These discarded ice blocks then provided the cooling system needed for Pablo�s meat market. Pablo Armenta had done well for himself and his family. 
 
Then in 1910, the Mexican Revolution began and the Revolutionaries confiscated his ranch, livestock and businesses.  Later when the Federales arrived, they believed that my grandfather had helped the Revolutionaries and they gave him the choice  
of leaving the country or facing a firing squad.  Needless 
to say, he fled with his wife and ten children leaving everything behind. 
 


On July 28, 1914, the Armenta family traveled by train and entered the United States through Nogales, Arizona and settled in Tucson.  Everyone was registered at the border crossing, except for one son, -- a  six year old  named Jesus.  His eyes were red and swollen due to his allergic reaction to the train smoke.  My grandfather and grandmother were fearful that the authorities would not allow him to cross into the United States, so in the commotion of  registering all the children he passed without  detection.  Of course, this later became a problem for Jesus when he applied for U.S. citizenship.  Fortunately, his school records resolved the issue and he became a citizen and  served as a member of the U.S. Army.   
1916 Border Nogales, Sonora, Mexico & Nogales, AZ, U.S.A.                                     

Beginning anew in Tucson, Pablo worked for a cement company and then learned the trade of barbering.  Later he opened a meat market & grocery store on the corner of Convent and Simpson streets, which included a barbershop and beauty shop.  
Three of Pablo�s sons became barbers and following their father�s business sense, two of them opened their own barbershops. 
 
For a short period, the family occupied the adobe home formerly belonging to the 5th governor of Arizona, John C. Fremont.  
In December 1922, three other sons ventured to Los Angeles, California.   My grandparents wanting to keep the family together followed with the rest of the family. 
 
Pablo again established a successful meat market and grocery store on North Main Street in Los Angeles and then later moved to a new and larger location on Santa Barbara Avenue (renamed Martin Luther King Blvd.).  This store was located near the  
Los Angeles Coliseum and Wrigley Field.  He retired in 1945 at the age of 71 years.   

                                                

Interior view of Meat Market & Grocery Store � 1920�s North Main Street, Los Angeles Pablo & Victorio Oros Armenta are in rear of photo behind the counter. Exterior: Pablo Armenta�s Meat Market & Grocery Store � 1920�s North Main Street, Los Angeles. Standing in front of vehicle are Victoria Oros Armenta & Pablo Armenta. Several of their children are either standing in front or inside the car. (�P. Armenta� appears below groceries.)
My grandfather, Pablo Armenta, faced many challenges during his life, but he possessed a keen business sense which resulted in his ability to succeed.  He left his many descendents a legacy of courage, determination, and strong work ethic. It is truly a legacy to be proud of! 
 
 Pablo�s story is taken from a compilation of notes I have taken from stories told  by his eldest daughter, Aurelia, who passed at the age of 100 years,  and my mother, Teresa de la Fuente Armenta.  
 
My family remained in Los Angeles until 1964 when they moved to Cypress. I followed two years later with my family and have resided in Garden Grove, California for 44 years.                             


Bea is one of the original members of the Society of Hispanic Historical and Ancestral Research, SHHAR, and serves on the Board of Directors
                                                                                  

                         

 

 


CUENTOS

My Cavazos Canales Heritage Bernadette Inclan  
Time Flies When You're Having Flan by Ben Romero
We All Lived on Romana Street, San Antonio
            by Roland Vela-M�zquiz and Cesar Vela-M�zquiz
Floating On The Border by Belinda Acosta





MY CAVAZOS CANALES HERITAGE

By Bernadette Inclan  





This year, I turned sixty-two. Since I threw myself a three-day celebration for my fiftieth, and jokingly themed my party �Bernadette�s Cincuentanera,� friends, and family were asking me when I turned sixty if I was going to do another bash. I thought about it as I started going over all the pictures and the video, which brought back so many memories of the fun and hilarious time enjoyed by all. If you look at the pictures, you see nothing but smiles, expressions of laughter, and very happy faces. 

 

Quinceaneras are historically an important traditional event for a Hispanic female turning fifteen years old. They hold the style and glamour of a wedding. The young girl being celebrated will wear a gown resembling a wedding dress and her party, usually fifteen attendants with their escorts, wear attire similar to that of bride�s maids and groomsmen. The actual party follows a religious ceremony, which many times include the Catholic Mass.

I didn�t follow the strict guidelines for my Cincuentanera. It was simply an excuse for a party and a reunion with family and friends. I sent out a newsletter three months before the event with self-addressed return envelopes to confirm the number of people attending. Since so many people were invited from the entire United States and Mexico, I had to plan events worthy of the expenses my guest would be incurring. I also had to research accommodations and things to do if someone didn�t want to attend all of the family get-togethers.

The social gatherings included a cocktail party in my home that Friday night, which was also the day of my actual birthday. I had a huge cake with all of the fifty candles, and everyone sang �Happy Birthday;� three times, from one account, I don�t remember.

Saturday, I planned a shopping expedition for my houseguests. My brother, John hauled away all of the bargain hunters and I slipped away for a makeover. That evening we danced the night away in formal attire at the church hall I rented for the occasion. I had a buffet dinner and lots and lots of liquor.

On Sunday, I had a pool party with a barbecue and that allowed all of us to recover from the booze debauchery the night before. Let me tell you, that recuperative period was badly needed. However, some of the attendees opted to take off for other adventures. Luckily, I live in Phoenix AZ, which is a hop, skip and a jump from Disneyland and Las Vegas.

The party was a huge success. Not just a family reunion, it was a celebration of friendships that I have nurtured my entire life. It would�ve been wonderful to repeat that, but, I felt, that I would not try to replicate my Cincuentanera, a truly once-in-a-lifetime magical moment.

For this milestone birthday, I decided that the time had arrived to write a book.

My grandmother, Lucia Cavazos, was a descendent of the Don Alonso de Estrada, Royal Treasurer and Governor of New Spain, (Mexico), the Onate-Zaldivar Family of Zacatecas and New Mexico, the Cavazos family of Reynosa and the Sanchez-De-La-BARRERA family of Laredo, Texas. My brother, John, the family historian is a contributor to the monthly on-line newsletter, Somos Primos, which includes a webpage on TexMex Family Trees that lists his extensive genealogical researches. He traced our family back to the first families of San Antonio Texas, New Mexico, Natchitoches, LA, as well as Monterrey Mexico.

            With such a rich family history, I wanted to give my sons, Stephen and Brian Coindreau, a visual and written record for them to impart to future generations. I never want them to forget who they are and from where they came. With Hispanics rapidly becoming the largest segment of American culture, I felt that it was time to not just relay recorded history, but to broadcast Hispanic frontier influence that began in 1513. According to the historian, Charles F. Lummis, �If Spain had not existed 400 years ago the United States would not exist today.�          

I began in April 2008, by attending the 61st Anniversary of the 1947 Texas City Disaster. I obtained oral histories from my first cousins who were survivors of this tragedy. My mother�s family, the Cavazos-Canales�, was only one of the families who suffered catastrophic losses on April 16, 1947. For most of my life, I heard about this event and its heartbreaking aftermath. While visiting the museums and talking with the relatives involved in my research, it occurred to me that the Cavazos-Canales family would be commemorating one hundred years in Texas City in 2010. Since the Cavazos-Canales� are one of the pioneer families of Texas, I thought it would be a good idea to use the Canales Reunion event in Alice Texas to introduce this manuscript.

            Writing a book has kept me focused and I finished the original book that was of primary importance to me. I gave it to a friend to proof. I am so grateful for the recommendations and edits she provided. The book is on hold at the moment as I sidetrack towards 2010.

For this occasion, my intentions were to put together a narrative with pictures on the Cavazos-Canales family and the journey that finally took them to Texas City Texas. The picture collages would show the individual family connections. Since the first and second generations are now completely gone, generations three and four, my first and second cousins, are my sources of information for individual family dynamics, although many of my first cousins are also now deceased.

I took all of the family albums, many of which were falling apart, and removed all of the pictures. Using two accordion files, I labeled the individual files with family names; for example, my grandparents, Mom, Dad, each one of my aunts, and each one of my uncles. I then placed the pictures into one of these categories. I had a file that I called �Unknown� for those old pictures whose faces I no longer remember and one labeled �Friends� for people close to my family; for example, my god-parents and their families whose parents and siblings have been life-long friends.

Some of the pictures are 100 years old or older and they show the effects of time. I scanned all of the old pictures and have files on my computer similar to my accordion file. Using the Platinum PrintMaster Version 18 software, I made a one-page collage of the Aunt or Uncle and their respective husband or wife. On another one-page collage, I did the same for the children of this family group. I wrote my own recollections, bits of historical information, or an interesting biographical fact. I then placed the original picture in envelopes and labeled with the family name. At some point, I plan to give these pictures to the appropriate family. 

Scanning these pictures was a lesson in my family history. A number of times I emailed a picture to a cousin with questions about the date, event, or the person pictured next to a relative. My cousin Lucille in San Diego, CA, was most helpful in identifying people that I have known, but couldn�t identify in early pictures. When I did my recollections on my Uncle Fortino, who died in 1922, when he was twenty-one, I remembered that my mom always said that he died of �Yellow Fever.� I did an internet search to verify a yellow fever epidemic in 1922, and I found an article entitled �A Clinical Report of the Galveston Epidemic of 1922� which states an epidemic of Dengue Fever, also frequently called Yellow Fever, which is incorrect. Since I know little about this uncle other than what was passed down from conversations, his collage includes the only picture we have of him with a note written in his handwriting in Spanish to his mother, my grandmother Lucia. I translated the note for the collage. He was never forgotten and I can only construe that the picture survived because of the deep affection and love his mother and his siblings had for him.

Drawing on recollections, the stories my mother, one of my aunts, or a first cousin told to me, took me on countless emotional conduits. On putting together a collage of my Aunt Lupe�s children, the Canales-Beltran�s, and the only aunt with eight children, I was taken aback when I realized that I have or had a profound connection with every one of these first cousins who have left an indelible imprint on my heart. I stared at the beautiful pictures looking back at me. For a long time I just felt the recollections. I had a story on each one of those cousins and I had unforgettable memories. When I finished this particular collage, I shut down my computer. I was overwhelmed with the memories of Aunt Lupe and the love that not only she imparted on my brother and me, but so did my cousins. In the purest sense of the word, these Canales-Beltran children are my Primos Hermanos.

With the collages finished, the narrative begins. After organizing the pictures and experiencing the memories of my parents, my aunts and my uncles, my cousins, and those between my brother John and me, I was ready to tackle the Cavazos-Canales journey, which began on their wedding day, March 18, 1901, in Karnes City, Karnes County, Texas, set roots in Texas City Texas in 1910, and continues today, 100 years later in Texas City.



TIME FLIES WHEN YOU�RE HAVING FLAN
My oldest son and my father shared a special friendship. It was based on fun and teasing. Although they lived a thousand miles apart, they were only a phone call from one another. By the time my son was eight, his grandpa had succeeded in convincing him that he had a horse waiting for him on his next visit.

�You can�t believe everything Grandpa Manuel tells you,� I cautioned, as we got ready for our summer vacation trip to see my parents in New Mexico. I didn�t want to see him disappointed.

�He said a horse will be waiting for me and I can ride him till my ath gets sore,� said Andy, with bulging eyes.

I squeezed another suitcase into our car�s over- stuffed trunk. �Grandpa�s just pulling your leg,� I said.

�Yeah,� chimed six-year-old Victoria, �like when he tells us to pull his finger and then farts.�

My wife shook her head. �You�d better tell your dad to quit teaching the kids to use words like a-s-s (she spelled it) and fart. These two are bad enough in public already.�

Throughout two days of driving, my son never stopped talking about the horse. I was glad we were arriving at night because it might keep Andy from running around outside looking for a non-existent horse.

After hugs and warm greetings from my parents, I tended to the chore of unloading our luggage and settling in. My wife and I had warned the children to say nothing about the horse, no matter how excited they were.

As we dug into a splendid late-night meal prepared by Mom, my father asked Andy about the trip.

�Did you get tired on the long drive?� he asked.

Andy shook his head. �No. Where�s my horse?�

�Outside,� answered my dad.

�Where?� asked Victoria. �We didn�t see a corral.�

�You couldn�t see because it�s dark,� said my father.

�I have a flashlight,� said Andy, pushing back his plate.

�Stay put and eat your dinner,� said my wife, frowning at the kids. �After you finish eating, get washed up for bed.�

Andy looked from my wife, to me, to his grandparents. �When will we see the horse, Grandpa?�

�Tomorrow. You better get a lot of rest tonight,� answered my dad.

Victoria wiped her mouth with the back of her hand. �Then Andy can ride until his ass gets sore, huh, Grandpa?�

My son has always been an early riser. In spite of travel fatigue, he was up with the roosters, rummaging outside before anyone else was up. My dad and I sat shirtless, sipping Mom�s fresh coffee in the kitchen when my son came inside looking disheveled. He wore sneakers without socks. His hair needed combing and his face needed washing.

�You lied, Grandpa! There�s no horse.�

His statement took me by surprise. I started to correct him, but the softness of my father�s words stopped me. It was out of character for him to speak softly.

�You can�t ride looking like that. You�re going to scare the horse. After breakfast, we�re all going on the car. Did you bring boots?�

It was a long drive from my parents� house in Lyden to a rural community called La Gallina. But as we drove off the main highway to a long, narrow dirt road and passed a barbed wire gate, I realized the drive had been worthwhile. Before us stood a humble adobe home nestled between two large cottonwood trees, complete with rope swings. Next to a vintage, weather-beaten Chevrolet pickup, sat an old buckboard, half-loaded with firewood. Fresh hoof prints next to it were evidence of it still being in use. In the distance, grazing, was a flock of beautiful, long-haired goats, and beyond that, a pasture with a handful of lean horses.

When my dad stopped the car, a lazy dog stood and shook the dust off its body, but didn�t bother to bark. Several hens looked up for a moment, then resumed scratching the dirt and pecking at insects.

�I feel like we�re in a time warp,� whispered my wife.

�These people really know how to live,� said my dad. �Everything is done in a style from the past. They grow their vegetables, raise their stock, and live a happy life.�

�Are they expecting us?� I asked.

�No, but we�re friends. They stop to see us when they�re near us, and we stop and see them when we�re out this way. We don�t need to make appointments.�

The man and woman of the house were past middle age, with lines of work and gentleness etched on their faces. Their family was a mixture of children, grandchildren, and nephews. I counted six kids between the ages of eight and twelve, and one fourteen-year-old girl, but the couple mentioned the names of several older daughters.

One of the boys asked my son if he wanted to go help him move the goats from one pasture to another. �Come on, I�ll saddle up a horse for you.�

Andy and Victoria�s eyes lit up at the mention of a horse, and I had to hold them back to keep them from running outside. My wife was worried for their safety, so I rode one horse with Victoria and let Andy ride alone and learn for himself by watching the other boys.

After an hour of riding and chasing goats, we returned to the house. My parents and our hosts were seated in the kitchen, talking. I was impressed by the size of the table, fashioned by hand from immense timbers. There was one captain�s chair on each end of the table and home-made benches on the sides, to accommodate a large family.

For lunch, we were served tomato slices, red chile stew, thick with goat meat, and home-baked bread. For dessert, our hostess produced a large bowl of home-made milk pudding with cinnamon.

�What is it?� asked my wife.

�It�s called Flor de Leche,� I said. �It�s a favorite treat in Northern New Mexico, made from fresh milk.�

�Hmmm, it kind of tastes like flan,� she said, referring to a Mexican dessert that reminds me of cheesecake. I could tell she really enjoyed it.

After lunch, as my parents and their friends talked and visited, I spent more time outside with my children and several of the other couple�s kids. They showed us the pen where the goat we had just eaten got it�s head stuck on the gate and broke its neck. The fresh skin was still hanging on a post. The head was still intact, with bulging eyes and its tongue sticking out.

Next, they showed us a stream at the bottom of a canyon, running at the edge of their property, and offered us a bite of tobacco (which we refused). My children and I were so caught up in the moment that we failed to notice the time. One boy called to us from the long dirt driveway, and as we looked up, noticed that my wife and parents were in the car, driving in our direction.

�Time to go,� said my dad.

I hated leaving and as I got into the car, asked my wife (whom I had ignored all day) if she had enjoyed herself. She smiled, nodding yes.

�The day really got away from us, didn�t it?� I said, trying to excuse myself for leaving her alone.

�Yes,� she said, with a hint of playfulness in her voice. �Time flies when you�re having flan.�



WE ALL LIVED ON ROMANA STREET HC, San Antonio
by Roland Vela-M�zquiz and Cesar Vela-M�zquiz

The houses were very old and had been built side by side with little or no space, or regard, for gardens, playing areas, or back yards. To be sure, it was a hard, ugly, unsafe little street with almost nothing that could be counted as a positive attribute - but we loved it, we were almost proud of it; it was our home - our barrio. La Calle de Romana lay deep in the oldest part of San Antonio, probably less than ten blocks away from the historic Spanish Cathedral built in 1731 by the ancestors of our ancestors of the family M�zquiz. Romana Street was also the site of the first public high school. Central School at Romana and Acequia (now Main) Streets was opened in 1882. By 1922, Central had evolved into San Antonio Technical and Vocational High School (Tech) and its mascot, the coyote, into the buffalo of modern times.

Romana Street was part of a grid formed by two major north-south traffic arteries named North Flores and Camaron Streets. These included Kingsbury, West Romana, Belvin, West Elmira, West Euclid, Marshall, Cadwalder, and so on all the way to Five Points. These cross streets were paved, clean, and lined with what were once elegant, expensive houses with St. Augustine grass lawns and gardens in various proportions. Through the 1930s most still maintained a semblance of late nineteenth century beauty which was purchased with loving attention and constant repairs. The streets bore the aura of a certain gentility and were certainly worth their Old Republic names.
In contrast, West Romana Street stood out from this pattern of refinement as there were no large houses, no foundations of stone or concrete, and no expanse of ground that may have at some point held an expensive building. The houses on West Romana seem to have been built on lots that were halved and halved again until only small, oddly shaped houses filled every piece of what may have been open ground in the eighteenth or nineteenth centuries. We lived at 510 West Romana in a small two-bedroom one-bath with less then 600 square feet of floor space on a lot not larger than 25 x 50 feet. A brick store and living quarters hard by our west wall and a two bedroom with no water or sewer services was immediately behind our house. On another small portion of the original lot was a one room apartment, a store room, and a storage garage. In brief, there were seven structures on a lot no more than 50 x 70 feet.

Also unlike neighboring streets, Romana Street was not paved and it bore no signs of ever having been paved. There were no rain sewers, no street curbs, and no driveway "cuts." While all the other streets maintained good asphalt surfaces and consequent clean environments, Romana was a gravel street bathed in mud to a depth of several inches when it rained and a permanent cloud of white caliche dust at all other times. It was a street very different from the others in every way. Even its origin indicated the difference. An 1889 street map of San Antonio shows that Romana Street existed at that time while the others did not. Romana Street also differed in the "density" of human beings that lived there. It seemed that each little house contained a gang of boys - and girls. Healthy, active youths ranging in age from five to twenty filled the street. The boys had long established a unique order that lasted from one generation to the next. The "Romana Rattlers" formed teams capable of besting those of other neighborhoods in fistfights, softball, baseball, football, Steam Base, and almost any other competitive event that boys could think of. There were little Romana Rattlers, middle Romana Rattlers, and big ones too. No initiations or secret words were required, if you lived on Romana you were a Romana Rattler. There was a lot of noise and motion and commotion on Romana Street that showed an American style of life but with a definite Mexican sense of respect and regard for others. 

But a sudden change in the world brought severe changes to Romana Street. On December 7, 1941 Romana Street stopped being the natural habitat of Romana Rattlers and turned into a national resource that served our country well in its time of need. It became a source of servicemen perhaps unique among neighborhoods in the United States. The number of men who served in WWII and Korea that lived in the 200 yards (wild guess) of Romana Street between Camaron and North Flores Streets should be noted - by someone - by everyone! Every substandard and misshapen little house yielded one or more boys / men to the armed forces. There was a willingness to serve and most volunteered at age 17 or 18. We, Cesar and I, were part of this cohort and we experienced the urge most of our friends felt when it came time to go to military service. In the absence of a chronicler who will tell the story of Romana Street during WWII and Korea, we have undertaken the task. We two brothers who were of Romana Street humbly assume we can do this suitably.

We use the names and other notes in the Table below to show Romana Street in time of war. We think the data are fairly reliable, our ages notwithstanding. Roland is 83 and Cesar 81 but we are still quick and alert in every respect. By necessity, however, we must warn the unwary that errors, large and small, may exist. 
It is our firm recollection that almost all the men / boys from every family, served in the armed forces. It is also our recollection that while we all went, all but two, Ram�n Ramirez and Raymond Mendez came back. Both Ram�n and Raymond enlisted in the Marine Corps and both were killed in action in Korea. All the others served their time and were discharged honorably at the end of the war. It was a war which involved our country and we were very much an important part of our country.

Seventy years later.
Romana Street was an early victim of Urban Renewal. An Interregional Highway took its place and the remnants of Romana were paved, curbed, cleaned and renamed Quincy Street. Lamentably, there is no commemorative plaque to describe the willingness of the men that rose from there in 1941 to answer the call to duty and few are left who remember that Romana Street ever existed. My brother Cesar and I wish to remind everyone that Romana Street existed and that it was, free of bravado and easy patriotism, indeed the place of the free and the home of the brave.


� by the authors   All rights reserved by Roland & Cesar Vela M�zquiz

Floating On The Border
by Belinda Acosta
The Texas Observer
Accessed: 12 September 2010
Published on: Wednesday, August 25, 2010
http://www.texasobserver.org/culture/floating-on-the-border 
photo courtesy Belinda Acosta The writer's parents as newlyweds, Eugene and Geneva Acosta, circa 1958

My father was born in Xilitla, a speck near another speck in San Luis Potosi, Mexico. To hear him talk, Xilitla is heaven on earth. The women are lovely, the men are strong, and the children always well behaved. The food may seem simple, but it was always delicious, plentiful and filling. The monkeys that gathered above the terraces where my grandfather once dried coffee beans were friendly and, gosh�so witty! Even death was beautiful in Xilitla. When it came, it was painless and clean, and the subsequent assent into heaven�because everyone in Xilitla is good and honest�only required a few gentle pulses of angel wings. Xilitla was heaven and heaven was Xilitla, my father insisted. The differences were imperceptible.

Because I am my father�s daughter, I indulge him in his gossamer nostalgia. Like a kid stealing sips of rum and Coke at a Mexican wedding reception, I like the warm feelings it brings. It�s one of the few pleasures he has left. Parkinson�s disease ambushed him six years ago, ending his dream of building a house and retiring in Xilitla. He talks less about everything now, but mention Xilitla and his eyes come alive.

I was born and raised in Lincoln, Neb., long before Mexicans were as visible as they are now. When my father�s obligation to the U.S. Air Force ended, he and my mother decided to leave the citrus groves, palm trees and cacti of South Texas for the cottonwoods, prairie grass and four seasons of Nebraska. They thought it was exotic. Though I don�t �look Nebraskan,� I�m a Midwesterner. I�ve never been there, but I�m of Xilitla, too. I know this in the way you hear yourself in your grandmother�s laugh or see yourself in the curve of your cousin�s jaw, and because I have, as they say, el nopal en la frente. Literally, I have a cactus on my forehead. Figuratively, I couldn�t deny being Mexican if I tried.

A community of Huichol Indians lives in the mountains near where my father grew up. I�ve learned this not from my father, but from a painter who lives and works there now. The painter tells me how the Huichols emerge from the mountains on their holy days, the ghost of incense in the air.

When I ask my father about the Huichols, he frowns.
�The Indios? Oh, we had nothing to do with them.�

My parents met as teenage farm workers in 1950s South Texas. My father was newly arrived and thought my Brownsville-born mother was a worldly American. She�d already been as far north as Amarillo. I have one of those colorized photos of them as newlyweds. They look happy, their cheeks and lips tinted rosy and pink. Today it�s clear that, except for two children, they have nothing in common. Before Parkinson�s, my father conversed with anyone who cared to join him. For my mother, talk is an annoying necessity. She fades into the background at will, but cross her and she�ll stab you with a declaration that disarms you with its gall or makes you laugh at its absurdity. One of her most infamous comments was about my then-new boyfriend, a Mexican-American from California. Though they hadn�t met, she clearly didn�t approve of him. I wasn�t sure why, but got a clue when she asked,

�Does he beat you?�  �What?�

�Does he beat you?�  �No!�

�Are you sure?�  �I think I would know if someone were beating me.�

She had never asked this about my previous boyfriend, a sweet-but-dull man who was wrong for me. She liked him because of his �good� American surname: �Hendricks.�

I look like my father spit me out. We share the same slope of the nose and rich, brown skin. As a child, I took great pride in our shared features, knowing intuitively that they spoke to a larger kinship.

�So, Dad, you never saw the Huichols when you were growing up?� I pressed him another time. �You never talked to them?�

�Oh no. They were Indios. We�re pure Mexican.�

He previously had insisted we were �pure Spanish.�

�You know, there�s no such thing as �pure� Mexican.�

�Well, we�re as pure as you can get,� he said.

On the phenotypic continuum, my father and I look more Indio than Spanish. So what does he see when he looks into the mirror?


The South Texas border is a concept made tangible by those in power. It�s an unavoidable way station for border-dwellers out to buy Pampers, a cheap drink, or check on relatives in el otro lado. Many Tejanos speak Spanish as well as English (I don�t). For them and other Latinos, the membranes between nations, languages and cultures are permeable. For me, the transition is labored. I�m of that generation of Mexican Americans in which parents chose to raise their children as monolingual English speakers to prove their allegiance to the flag. That the benefits of this decision fall short of the sacrifice is known only in retrospect.

Curious about the Huichols and their holy days, I tell my painter friend I would like to visit.

�Supuesto! Any time,� he says, and adds with a sad smile, �but you would confuse them. They would come up and speak to you, and when you wouldn�t understand, it would make no sense to them: you, with that face, not understanding their words.�

My indignation startles me. I try to ignore it, but it percolates.

I was taken to Mexico once when I was small. All I recall is one room, a dirt floor, a woman in shadow, and bleached sunlight from an open door near where she sat. Her humble surroundings contrasted with the offer of colorful Mexican candies so sweet they made me drool. People are often shocked when they learn I�ve never been back. The short answer is that I�ve never had the resources to make the extended, immersive trip I would like to make. The more complicated answer is that I�m afraid�not by the Mexico overrun by warring drug cartels, but something less rational.

�Golly, you�re so dramatic!� my mother often told me in her Tex-Mex accent. This was typically after I�d reacted with teenage angst to one of her declarations. Some days I was her china doll. She�d cup my face in her hands and stare into it as if she were making a wish. Mostly, as far as she was concerned, it was my misfortune to take after my father.

�You can thank your father for those thick legs,� she�d say, or, �You can thank your father for that muddy skin of yours.� She learned early the value of shielding her skin from the harsh South Texas sun. The lesson preserved more than her light complexion. It provided social mobility. Why she, a fiercely g�era-identified Texan, would marry my dark-skinned, Mexican-born father was mystifying. Other simple questions among the many I had as a girl: What was South Texas like? Why did they decide to stay in Nebraska? Do we have family in Mexico? And my most burning question: Why don�t you speak Spanish to me?

�Do you know how complicated English is?� my father said. �I had to learn on my own. But you get to learn in school the right way.�

My mother was more direct about Spanish: �You have no use for it.�

When I told my parents that the Lincoln Public School System encouraged learning a second language, even my father was at a loss for words. I took Spanish classes every semester from junior high through college, but didn�t learn much. What Spanish I do have was gleaned from adult relatives at holiday gatherings. Like many pochos of my generation, I generally understand spoken Spanish, but can�t always respond. This is offensive to some Latinos and shocking to Anglos who think it�s shameful I don�t appreciate my culture. That these Anglos often speak Spanish as well as a Univision newscaster sharpens the twin pangs of frustration and loss. Maybe I�m just not good at languages. Maybe I am as hardheaded as my mother says.


At puberty, my social capital as the �cute little Mexican girl� disappeared. I began sensing the lingering gaze of men, while women seemed to be calculating in their heads: sexual maturity plus brownness equals danger. Desperate to understand how I came to be, I demanded information about my parents� past. From my father, I heard more mythologizing. My mother ignored me. I was distressed. Wasn�t their past also mine?

When I told my mother I was moving to Texas to finish my bachelor�s degree, she surprised me by looking as though she were going to cry, something I�d only witnessed twice.

�Golly! You�re so dramatic!� I said.

�See there?� she spat. �That mouth will get you in all kinds of trouble! You talk too much. You talk too much there, and you�ll be sorry.�

When I mocked my mother�s reaction for my father, he sighed heavily.

�Be sure to take your papers with you. Your birth certificate. And take your driver�s license. Take your high school diploma, too. Carry them wherever you go.�

I stared at him blankly.

�That�s how it is over there. Be careful. Be nice.�


It was once public policy in South Texas to make sure Mexican-origin children did not attend public school past age 10. Corrupted attendance laws ensured that school districts still earned tax credits for these children. At the same time, child-labor laws were relaxed so these children could work the fields and do other manual labor. These policies were in effect during my parents� childhoods.

Many years later, my mother admitted to being slapped across the face for speaking Spanish on the school playground. Reconciling this history of second-class citizenship with my own early childhood was disconcerting. My grade-school years in Lincoln weren�t bad. I loved them. After my first week of school, I presented my mother with a folder of class work.

�So, the teacher likes you?�  �Yup.�

�Do you raise your hand in class?�  �Yup.�

�You do?�  �I�m one of the smart kids.�

�You think so, eh?�  I nodded vigorously.

�I used to be smart, too,� she said.  �You were?�

The incredulous tone in my voice made her wince.

Finally, everything came clear in an unexpected way. One Austin summer, I caused a three-car fender-bender. The Anglo couple in the last car of the pileup leapt from their vintage, banana-cream Cadillac. He was in Ropers, jeans and a chambray shirt, and topped with a bone-white Resistol hat. She had a cloud of cotton-candy hair hovering over her long face. Cotton Candy demanded to know if I had a license and complained about whiplash. Resistol asked me if I had a job. Cotton Candy wondered aloud if I �even� had insurance. I bit my tongue until she started in with the: �If only you people ...�

�Look, lady! This is difficult enough without you getting ugly about it!� I screamed in my Midwestern accent. Everything changed. Resistol told Cotton Candy to �git.� We exchanged insurance papers in starched silence. Convinced my documents were real, Resistol marched back to his car. The experience appalled me. When I got home, I called a friend.

�Are you all right?�

�I�m fine. It�s just ... I never knew what it was like to be treated like ...�  �Dirt?�

I hung up the phone and burst into tears. I realized what my parents would not cede, what my mother kept clenched in silence and my father drenched with syrupy jocularity. Scorched with anger, I carried the realization around for days, tortured at the thought of my parents being treated like dogs or worse. I understood why it took so long for white sales clerks in Austin shopping malls to wait on me�when they weren�t following my every move. I couldn�t help seeing everything through this new prism. Infected with a fever that wouldn�t break, I began to wonder: Can this kill me? If it doesn�t, what will it leave behind?

I learned to swim as an adult, forcing myself to take a class catering to �scaredy-cats.� When I finally synchronized breathing with strokes, I dared swim to the deep end. I�d start the lap, but just as the shallow end was behind me, I�d panic and flail. Terrified, I�d splash to the edge of the pool, gulping for air. It occurs to me I had a similar experience with my parents. I would wade toward them full of questions only they could answer, but they always shoved me back to the shore. I�m not as shocked by their parental, it�s-for-your-own-good response, as by the ferociousness of the wounds it left. They rise, from time to time, the way deep tissue bruises do: unexpected, ugly, slow to heal.

The first time I swam over the deep end of the pool, my heart pounded with fear. I kept at it. Then, there it was�the distant floor of the pool. For a moment my equilibrium was shaken by the sky-blue water beneath me, but before I could panic, I realized I was held aloft by my own power. Though suspended in water, I felt rooted and resilient, like the stubborn nopal. To recapture that moment, to be open to what I might learn in Mexico, is a constant craving.

I want Mexico to be mine. But I know that time, distance, and history have made me a stepchild to the nation I can only symbolically call home. As for Texas, I hate the summer heat, the non-existent fall, and the cold rains of winter. But I�m still here. It�s where I learned to throw gritos, perfected my swimming stroke, and learned about neplanteras from South Texas� own Gloria Anzald�a. She describes them as the seekers, poets and other locas capable of moving between worlds. Am I a neplantera? Pos� qui�n sabe? My instincts tell me to keep practicing until I get the strokes just right.



 


FAMILY HISTORY
RESEARCH

Researching Latino and Hispanic Family Roots
Free Classes Provide Worldwide Access to Family History Expertise
John Inclan Research
Villarreal Family Story on PBS
Rice University Forms
US Census on www.FamilySearch.org
Three URLs with an abundance of Family History Information

Researching Latino and Hispanic Family Roots

http://tikitikiblog.com/researching-latino-family-roots-your-raices/  
 
 

A second cousin has been researching the family of my maternal grandfather � good looking guy pictured above � for more than two decades. That�s before the internet, gente. He wrote letters to military, government and church offices in Spain and the Philippines. He got photocopies back.

Several years ago, he showed me the thick binder where he keeps meticulous records on our family, marking each of this generation�s marriages, births and deaths, along with the stories of those who came before us. He showed me the letter sent to the queen of Spain when my great-great grandfather, then stationed in the Philippines, requested permission to marry the daughter of a fellow Spanish military man.

                                                                             My grandmother and grandfather, with her sister (right), Banes, Cuba.

The letter stated the young woman was of Spanish blood, and only of Spanish blood. It made me a little ill to read it and I was grateful we have moved beyond that in the last hundred years. The couple was married and my great-grandfather, Raul, was born to them in 1888 on the island of Mindanao.

Eventually, Raul�s mother went to Cuba and his father to Spain, where he started a second family despite the fact he was still married to my great-great grandmother. (Scandalous!). Raul, who married and had children in Cuba, died in Miami when I was 5. I met the half-sister he never knew in Madrid 25 years ago. She looked just like him.

If my family tree had to be described, it would be a banyan tree � tall, strong and twisted around with roots going in every which way. Thanks to the colorful storytellers and tireless researchers on my mom�s side, I know a lot about where I came from.

Rare is the week that my Tia Mirtha, who comments on the Tiki Tiki a lot, doesn�t send some new picture she has unearthed, or a new document she found in an archive. The latest document: A letter that same great-grandfather Raul wrote to Fulgencio Batista. She found it in the Cuban Heritage Collection of the University of Miami. The latest pictures she has scanned were collected by a relative on a recent trip to Cuba and the people in the photos identified by yet another relative to whom she sent photocopies.

So, I asked Tia to help me write a �How to Begin the Research on Your Latino Roots�:

C: How does someone get started researching Hispanic family genealogy?
Tia: 1. They need to talk to their grandparents, parents and gather as much information as possible.
2. If they have old family pictures, ask for the name of the people in the picture, now that they
that their minds are clear and they can give you valuable information.
3. In searching family roots you need to go backwards in your search, meaning: Father/Mother; Grandparents; Great-grandparents; Great-Great-grandparents.
4. Then, you start looking for birth certificates, baptism certificates, marriage certificates, death certificates, social security records. and more.
5. There are a lot of websites to look into like the Cuban Genealogy Center, the Anillo de Genealogia Hispana, the USGenWeb Project and The Center for Family History and Genealogy.
6. You can buy a �Family Tree� program and start entering all the information you have and up-date as you gather more data. (My aunt uses MyHeritage.com and we get regular notices about birthdays and anniversaries in the family�)

The most important part is to talk to your family, especialmente los mas viejos. Ellos tienen mucha informacion y despues que se mueran, es muy dificil buscarla. La informacion familiar, es la mas inportante para empezar.

C: How do you feel when you find new info?
Tia: Great. It makes want to keep on going and try to find more information. And on the way you meet a lot of nice people that just love to help you find the information that you need.

C: What is the most interesting information you have found?
Tia: I got copies from Spain�s Archivo General Militar de Segovia dated 1888 where my great-grandfather (your great-great-grandfather) was requesting from the Spanish Army permission to stay in Cuba after the war. All the documents were written by hand in old Spanish. There was another document signed by him in Cuba dated: �Holguin, 28 de Agosto, 1886″ and another dated �Holguin, 4 de Febrero, 1896.� It is incredible to be able to have, in your hand, these documents that many, many years ago were written by your great-grandfather. Some one you never met, but who is part of your genes.�

*** OK, everybody say gracias to my fabulous Tia for the information and inspiration and onward with More Hispanic Family Research Resources to get you started on the search for raices.

If my family is any example of the notoriously good record-keeping by the Spanish, researching Latino and Hispanic roots can be pretty fruitful, compared to those with roots in other parts of the world. The Spanish � and the Mexicans and other Latin Americans � liked their records thorough. And, unless there has been fire or destruction, those records likely are available and waiting for you to dust them off.

Experts say data going back to at least 1500 is available. My family has found records through both governmental and church sources � everything from deeds to ship logs to birth records. Church records � especially the Catholic Church � can provide information on baptisms, marriage, death and more.

If your family has roots in Spain and Latin America, look for national identity records, which were required for citizens to carry. And, of course, don�t forget that Latinos have roots belonging to native people, plus countries like the Philippines, Ireland, England, France, Germany, Portugal, China and dozens of other lands.

The Family History Library of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, or Mormon Church, is an excellent starting place. The library has more than 3 million records from 11o countries, according a page on About.com. It also has several branches across the United States and the church has an online research site called Family Search, with a page specific to Hispanic research.

The book, Finding Your Hispanic Roots by George R. Ryskamp, a Brigham Young University professor, is often cited. Here�s a link to a great talk he gave in Texas. He has written several other books, including Finding Your Mexican Ancestors.

A great place for background reading, tips and links is the genealogy page at About.com.

MyHeritage.com, where you can create an online family tree, get matched with others who add the same ancestor and participate in forums.

Ancestry.com offers a variety of services, including beginner guides and searches for census, military, birth and immigration records.

Association of Hispanic Genealogy, Hispagen, a Spain-based site for family search.

University of Miami Cuban Heritage Collection.

Cuban Genealogy Center

Hispanic Genealogical Research Center of New Mexico, with links to other sources.

The San Antonio Public Library has a Hispanic Genealogical Research Guide with tips and links for getting started.A thorough post with links to resources at Genealogy and Family History.And you, where do your roots dig in? De donde vienes?  If you have been doing family tree research, what resources can you share?

 


Free Classes Provide Worldwide Access to Family History Expertise

SALT LAKE CITY�As students all over the country head back to school, family historians also have the opportunity to learn �but they can do it from home at their convenience.

FamilySearch now offers 81 free lessons on FamilySearch.org, enabling people anywhere in the world to access family history expertise any time. The topics range from basic research to training on specific record types and can be beneficial to both beginners and experienced researchers. Most of the classes come from research consultants in the world-famous Family History Library in Salt Lake City, but FamilySearch is also now working with partners to broaden the pool of expertise.

For example, FamilySearch worked with the Mid-Continent Public Library in Independence, Missouri to record and post 12 classes. These classes are available on both FamilySearch.org and the Midwest Genealogy Center�s site. Such collaboration benefits everyone involved, according to Darin Hakes with FamilySearch Community Services.

�We see partnering as a mutually beneficial situation for FamilySearch, our partners, and the patrons,� Hakes said. �We realize that FamilySearch does not have expertise in every area, nor do we have the bandwidth to create all the training that is needed. However, there are many excellent individuals and organizations that have created training that can benefit the genealogical community. They may not have the resources to record and publish their classes, so working together is the perfect solution.�

Midwest Genealogy Center librarian Janice Schultz agrees that partnering with FamilySearch increases their reach.

�The online classes allow people to attend no matter where they live,� Schultz said. �It helps us achieve our mission of educating genealogists. We have received many positive comments about these classes.�

In addition to the Mid-Continent Public Library, FamilySearch is working with the Association of Professional Genealogists, the Board of Certified Genealogists, and the International Commission for the Accreditation of Professional Genealogists. Individual genealogists may also use FamilySearch�s free services to record and share their presentations. One result of an individual partnering with FamilySearch is a class called �Inferential Genealogy� by prominent researcher and teacher Tom Jones.

�Tom�s class is excellent, but may be too complex for some patrons,� Hakes said. �We tried to provide a different instructional approach, to make the presentation of the content more visual and provide opportunities for practice. We added value by presenting his content in a different way, taking something fairly complex and making it more easily digestible.�

Upcoming FamilySearch classes will focus on U.S. courthouse research and a series of courses for those just getting started in family history research. There are also more interactive classes planned on reading handwritten records in different languages, a list that now includes Dutch, French, Italian, Polish, Portuguese, Russian, and Spanish.

All of the classes can be accessed on www.familysearch.org by clicking on Free Online Classes on the home page.



Thanks to Dick Eastman for carrying this announcement
Sent by Bob Smith phinkel@scgsgenealogy.com 

 


John Inclan Genealogy Research
From: Laura Sosa <babytwocakes@yahoo.com>
To: fromgalveston@yahoo.com
Sent: Thu, September 9, 2010 6:38:03 PM
Subject: purchase charts (genealogy)

Dear John,
I am interested in purchasing several of your genealogy research. Do you have a catalog or listings in which I can view and purchase? I see you researched and published several of my family history.

Please advice?  Laura

Laura,
 
The genealogical charts that are currently posted on the Somos Primos Website are offered, at no charge. You are welcome to download or copy.
 
These trees are a core of our own personal ancestors. The trees are not complete.
 
Feel free to download and customized to your own personal descendant's to these
trees that are currently available on the Somos Primos Magazine site.
 
I do have a MORE detail trees on my on ancestral lines. These trees can be found
at the local libraries in the following cities, Washington DC, New York City NY, Albuquerque NM, San Antonio TX, Houston TX, Austin TX, El Paso TX, Tucson AZ, San Diego CA.
 
If you find one that you are interested in, I will reprint.  I will charge you for the cost of the paper/pages, binding at Kinkos, and mailing.

Sincerely yours, John D. Inclan
P. S. Thank you for your interest

John's compiled pedigrees can be found at http://www.somosprimos.com/inclan/inclan.htm

Table of Contents
Descendents of . . . 

Lieutenant Vicente de Alderete and Dona Maria Josefa Garcia de Rivera y Camacho
D�n
 Francisco Javier de Alcorta
D�n Francisco Joseph de Arocha and Dona Juana Ramirez Curbelo Umpierre
Captain Francisco Baez de Benavides & Dona Isabel Martinez Guajardo
Captain Juan Esteban de Ballesteros
D�n
  Nicolas Balli Perez II & Dona Josefa Manuela Guerra de la Garza
Alcalde Mayor Fernando del Bosque Almendariz
Captain Pedro Botello de Morales
D�n
Juan Canales 
Captain Alberto del Canto

D�n Juan de Caliz and Dona Catalina Gomez de Coy (Santos Coy)
The Descendents of Captain Bernabe de las Casas And Dona Maria Beatriz Navarro Rodriguez
(Part 1: Generations 1-5)
(Part 2: Generation 6)
(Part 3: Generation 7)
(Part 4: Generation 8)
(Part 5: Generation 9)
(Part 6: Generation 10)
D�n Juan Cavazos del Campo and Dona Elena de la Garza Falcon
Descendents of D�n Juan Bautista Cavazos Fernandez
D�n Juan Bautista Chapa and Dona Beatriz Olivares de Trevino
D�n
  Pedro Duran y Chavez and Dona Isabel de Baca
Descendants of Christopher Columbus
D�n
Antonio de Ecay y Muzquiz and Dona Vicenta Vera
General Pedro de Elizondo
D�n  Alonso de Estrada
D�n Juan
Fernandez de Jauregui and Dona Isauel de Aldama
General Antonio Fernandez y Vallejo
Pedro Flores- de-Abrego

D�n Juan Galindo Morales And Dona Melchora Sanchez Navarro
D�n Blas Maria de la Garza yFalcon and Dona Beatriz Gonzalez Hidalgo
Captain Pedro de la Garza Falcon y Trevino
Lord Pedro Gonzalez de Mendoza And Lady Aldonza Lopez de Ayala
D�n Miguel de GortariD�n
Jose Manuel de Goseascochea  
               and Dona Maria Francisca Xaviera de la Garza y de la Garza
D�n Jose Bartolome Inclan Cabrera
D�n Jose Luis Jasso &Dona Maria Nicolasa de Luna
Jean Juchereau, Sieur de More
Captain Antonio Ladron de Guevara
Descendents of Captain Pedro Lozano Urquizu & Dona Marianna de la Garza y Rocha
D�n
Juan Francisco Martinez Guajardo and Dona Ursula Ines Catarina Navarro Rodriguez
Descendents of Don Pedro Miguel Mendez

Captain Francisco de Mier Noriega
D�n Juan Perez de Onate and Dona Osana Martinez de Gonzalez
D�n J Clemente Perez-de-Ancira-Gonzalez-de-Paredes
D�n
Francisco Perez de Escamilla and Dona Leonor de Ayala
D�n Lorenzo Perez and Dona Adriana de Leon
D�n Joseph de Plaza and Dona Cathalina de Urrutia y Flores de Valdez
Major Diego Ramon
Gonzalo de Reina and Catarina Gumendio y de la Garza
Captain Antonio Rodriguez de Quiroga
D�n Manuel de Sada
D�n Pedro de Salazar
D�n Francisco Sanchez de la Barrera & Dona Maria Duran de Vzcanga
D�n
  Joseph-Antonio Seguin and Dona Geronima Flores de Abrego
Descendents of D�n Juan Alonso de Sosa
Descendents of Don Martin Sosa y Bravo
Chief Constable Vicente Travieso Alvarez 
D�n Joseph Diego de Tremino y Quintanilla
D�n Pedro Uribe y Vergara and Dona Ana Lenor Tovar
D�n
San Juan de Urrutia y Allende  and Dona Casilda Retes y Retes 
D�n
Joseph de Urrutia y Escurta and Dona Francisca Nicolasa Javiera Fernandez de la Garza
Descendents of Don Andress de Valdivielsso
D�n
Gutierre Vasquez de la Cueva and Dona Francisca de Carvajal
D�n Pedro Fernandez de Velasco,  1st Count of Haro
D�n Martin de Veramendi and Dona Benita de Olagrie
Descendents of Don Juan Ignacio de Verridi
Villarreal Lineage: Franciso (1st generation), Diego (2nd) Diego (3) Juan (4th) :
      Alferez Diego de Villarreal and Dona Beatriz de las Casas y Navarro
      Captain Diego de Villarreal-de-las-Casas and Ines de Renteria
Descendants of Juan de Villarreal-de-las-Casas
Jose-Benito Zambrano
D�n Nicolas Zambrano-Tresalvo

Suggestion: Do an edit-mode search on any surname of interest
Letters and questions

VILLARREAL FAMILY 
I reviewed your monthly publication and focused on "Jesse Villarreal Jr.: UT graduate advances to become chief of staff for FDIC chairman: article. His pedigree is also published.  I was proudly impressed by his achievements and contributions. 

It brought to mind a recent project my Villarreal Family is currently involved, This will be aired on a local Illinois PBS TV station and a follow up book based on the history of the migrant families (12) of Galesburg Illinois, my childhood town, and their achievements. 

luzandwill@gmail.com
  producers of this project Sent by Tomas Ascensio TomAsnsio@aol.com 

http://library.rice.edu/collections/microforms/
microform-sets/microform-sets-hispanic-studies 
MICROFORM SETS 

US Census soon free on www.FamilySearch.org 
Indexing
volunteers at FamilySearch have begun adding the 1930 U.S. Census index to their free online collection.

The following three sites have an abundance of information: 

http://www.newspaperobituaries.net/california/
san_francisco_county_obituaries.htm

http://www.ancestorhunt.com/genealogical_prison_
records.htm
Prison Search 

http://juhuj.com/open-file-htm-convert-htm-download
-san+francisco+genealogy-page-5.htm 

CUESTA GENEALOGY  http://www.cuestablog.com
I have been gathering genealogical data on my Cuesta (Ortiz; Cajero) and Saldana (Villarreal; Urdiales) lineages since the 60s.  I have visited Nochistlan and Real el 14. I have found relatives in Virginia Beach, Virginia; Ontario, California; and Salt Lake City, Utah. Now, more and more, I focus on digital research and social networking to supplement my findings.


 


ORANGE COUNTY, CA



October 7: City of Anaheim commences Dia de los Muertos activities
October 13: The City of Huntington Beach Celebrates Hispanic Heritage Month
October 15th:  Para Todos Celebrates it 15th Anniversary Celebration
October 23th: Westminster Founder's Day Parade
Save the date, November 6th: 14th Annual Veterans Day Celebration
Save the date, November 13th: California Heritage Day 
Orange County Register Revolutionary stories, gathered by Ron Gonzales

WANTED, DESCENDANTS, FAMILY, &  FRIENDS of the SIGNERS 
of the
1849 CALIFORNIA CONSTITUTION, a BILINGUAL DOCUMENT

The  City of Anaheim will be celebrating El Dia de los Muertos for 7 weeks, starting Oct 1st and running until November 7th.  

Mounted by PETER PEREZ, a full five weeks of city-wide activities include Music, Giant Puppets, Aztec Dancers, Folklorico Dancers, Comida, Crafts for the Family, a Parade, Altar Exhibition by Children, Familes, Schools and Individuals, and many more activities are scheduled.  For more information on the history and traditions of El Dia de los Muerto, and a full descriptions of activities, please go to
2010 Anaheim, "El Dia de los Muertos" 

Proposed Day of the Dead Schedule of Events 
Oct.
� Workshops
Oct. 1
� Intro to El Dia de los Muertos Lecture
Oct. 9
� Artist�s Reception
Oct. 10
� Opening Event
Oct. 1 - Nov. 7
� Exhibition at Arts Center
Oct. 15
� Sugar Skull
Oct. 9 - Nov. 2
� Community Celebration
Oct. 30
� Mol� Competition, early afternoon
� Procession, early evening Stage Final�
Event at a stadium.

Ancient Pre Colombian cultures believed that we suffer three deaths; when the body ceased to function, when the spirit leaves the body and the final and most tragic death is when a person is forgotten. Family altars are to remember and honor ancestors.

We will all die... but we will not be dead until we are forgotten.

 

 
Oct 13: Bella Terra Mall in Huntington Beach (at Beach and Edinger)is hosting a Hispanic Heritage Event; entertainment starts at 5:30 pm in the open amphitheater.  The event was organized by an ad hoc committee of the Orange County Human Relations Commission. At 7 pm, Judge Fredrick Aguirre and Ron Gonzales, Orange County Register, will speak at Barnes and Nobles on Hispanic history and presence in Orange County.  No cost.
  

15th ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION
and Latino Decade Awards, 
Friday, October 15th, 2010 
at the Bowers Museum.

Valuable friends of PARA TODOS:
We are looking forward to seeing you in October.

A night of recognition, music, dining and reflections of the last 15 years.  Sponsorship opportunities, call (949)493-1492

Tickets and Sponsorships are still available.
To purchase tickets via phone or for sponsorship opportunities call (949)493-1492


Learn more about the event & tickets purchase: 
English http://paratodos.com/english/?p=153
Spanish http://www.paratodos.com/pt/?p=1837

Silvia Ichar, Publisher 
PARA TODOS Magazine

 

 
The City of Westminster is holding its Founder's Day Parade Festival, October 22nd, 23rd, 24th.  The event includes a Battle of the Bands, Rides & Kiddie Zone, Carnival Games, Food Courts, Arts & Crafts Booths.  On Saturday, 23rd, the parade will start from Sigler park at 9:30 am, 7200 Plaza St.   If your organization would like to to participate in the parade, please contact the department staff at 714-895-2860 to obtain a parade application or download the parade application online www.westminster-ca.gov 
 
 


SAVE THE DATE: 

14th ANNUAL VETERANS DAY CELEBRATION:
HONORING THOSE WHO HAVE SERVED AND THOSE WHO ARE SERVING. 

A SPECIAL TRIBUTE 
TO 

GOLD STAR FAMILIES
 
OF THE IRAQ AND AFGHANISTAN WARS


Saturday, November 6, 2010
Posting of Colors - 10:00 a.m.
Keynote Speaker : Col. John Telles
USMC (Ret.) and Presidential Marine One Helicopter Pilot
California State University, Fullerton
Titan Student Union
800 N. State College Blvd.

Information, contact: Latino Advocates for Education
(714) 225-2499   www.latinoadvocates.org 

 

 




The SOCIETY OF HISPANIC HISTORICAL AND ANCESTRAL RESEARCH is assisting with  . .  

 California Heritage Day at the Heritage Museum of Orange County  

NOVEMBER 14, 2010
3101 West Harvard St.
Santa Ana, CA 92704  

If you have not visited the Heritage Museum and toured the Kellogg House, built in the late 1880s, you are missing
 a sweet experience.  There are no ropes, cordoning off areas.  You can touch and experience history.

Usually a tour of the Kellogg House costs, $5. for adults and $4. for children,
BUT ON THE 14TH. . . IT IS FREE!!

Wonderful opportunity to celebrate California Diversity from its 1849 birth.
Descendants of Spanish/Mexican Californianos will be with us.

We are looking for the descendants of the signers, Hispanic and non-Hispanics.  
Click for an alphabetical listing of all the signers of the California Constitution.
Please contact Mimi with any possible contacts, mimilozano@aol.com 714-894-8161


Introducing A. Edward Moch

Hello Mimi:

The photo was taken in The Historic San Gabriel Mission Garden where it is alleged that Historian-Writer, Hellen Hunt Jackson (the writer of "Ramona") wrote "The Mission Plays" here, under 'The Mother Grape Vine', that still survives to this day. On my anglo side... I am a distant cousin to Helen.

I am portraying Spanish Californio Soldaldo "Pablo Antonio Cota", one of the Escorto Soldiers of The Los Pobladores that went from San Gabriel Mission to Pueblo Los Angeles back in 1781. He later became Escorto Soldaldo to Fr. Junepeo Serra, who founded most of The Missions along California.
The lovely Seniorita is Eleanore "Noor" Pekala. she was born in The Netherland's of mixed European Origin. Part of her dominant heritage is Spanish (under the Spanish name of de Cresto).

Hello Mimi;

I continue to pass on information to Bob, regarding the upcoming CA. Signing Anniversary Event. Like Bob, I too am a costumed Historical Re-Enactor and performer. Though I do many historical characters, the ones I do mostly are members of "The Cota Family"...

Soldaldo Roque de Cota: A private from San Diego Presideo. who was one of the escorto soldiers of El Pueblo Los Angeles in 1781. He later retired and settled in the Northern part of The San Fernando Valley.

Soldaldo Pablo Antonio de Cota; High Lieutenant of Presideo, Santa Barbara, who was one of the four escorto soldiers of El Pueblo Los Angeles in 1781. He later became escorto to Fr. Junipero Serra, and was one of the founders of Ventura and associate founder of Santa Barbara CA.
(via Presideo Santa Barbara) in 1782. He also served as an over-seer of the building of Missions and Buildings in the Santa Barbara Regional Area.

Capt. Leonardo de Cota, who was famed for being the Californio Lancers Commander at the first "Battle of San Pasqual". With later assistance from Gen. Andres Pico, they routed Gen. Kearny and his men to "Mule Hill" during The Mexican-American War. He was the Grandson of Roque de Cota and Son of El Pueblo Los Angeles Escalente (Mayor), Guillermo de Cota.  Leonardo served originally as El Pueblo Los Angeles Town Clerk, during the time Californio Gov. Pio Pico moved the Capitol from Monterey to El Pueblo Los Angeles, due to the 1842 Gold Strike at Placerita Canyon (Near Pueblo Los Angeles). 

Leonardo's sister, Maria Egracia de Cota-Dominguez, was married to CA. Signer, Don Manuel Dominguez. After the Mexican-American War, and the annexation of California to The United States, Leonardo continued to serve as an early Los Angeles County Sheriff and a County Supervisor, in what is today now part of Orange County CA.. He was one of the founders of Santa Ana, CA.

Don Francisco de Cota, who was famed for being at "The Battle of Dominguez Hills", was the brother of Capt. Leonardo de Cota and Maria Engacia de-Cota-Dominguez. His Brother-In-Law was CA. Signer, Don Manuel Dominguez, who also served as Escalante (Mayor) of El Pubelo Los Angeles. He was a major Californio Rancho land owner.

Because of their close social-political associations with most of the original CA. Signers, it is alleged that one or both Capt. Leonardo and Don Francisco attended The California Signing as delegation-visitors along with CA. Signer, Don Manuel Dominguez. 

Best Regards;  Alfred "Ed Moch" Cota  


Revolutionary stories: 
2010 Series in the Orange County Register, compiled by Ron Gonzales

A century ago this fall a revolution that changed Mexico forever began, transforming the country and the lives of its citizens.

In the midst of the war, many of them headed north � to escape the violence and to begin their lives anew. Thousands settled in Orange County and throughout Southern California.

Were members of your family among the Mexican immigrants who came during the 1910-1920 war or in its aftermath? If so, we want to hear their stories, and yours. What moved your family to leave Mexico for the United States - the threat of violence or the promise of prosperity? Who in your family came? From where? Why? Where did they settle? How did you come to live in O.C.? What do you think about when you reflect on their experience?

Send your story and your photo, along with photos of your immigrant parent, grandparent or ancestor (.jpg format) to Ron Gonzales. Your story can range from about 400 to about 900 words.

Email rgonzales@ocregister.com. Please include your name, your hometown and a daytime phone number where you can be reached. Selected stories and photos will be published in the Register during Hispanic Heritage Month, which begins Sept. 15, as well as on ocregister.com. Questions? Call 714-704-3792.
http://www.ocregister.com/news/information-260741-saturday-call.html


 


LOS ANGELES, CA

Oct 1-2, 8-9, 22-23: Stories of  Cesar Chavez, written and performed by Fred Blanco
Oct 1-3:
Bilingual Foundation of the Arts, Cecilia Valdes
Oct 9th: Hispanics for LA Opera
Oct 23rd: 5th annual L.A. Archives Bazaar 
Area Event: 2010 Oral History Workshop at UCLA
          Saturdays, Oct 2, and Oct 16
Avenue 50 Studio Exhibits works of Sonya Fe and Margaret Garcia, Brushes of Fire 
Oct 9-10th History in the Making:  13th Annual LA Latino Book & Family Festival
The Stories of  Cesar Chavez, Oct 1-2, 8-9, 22-23
A dramatic look at the real life civil rights leader as he builds
Written and performed by Fred Blanco

Voted, the Best of San Francisco Fringe Festival 2010
Exclusive Long Beach Enggement: 3 weeks only
The Found Theatre
599 Long Beach Blvd. Long Beach
foundtheatere.org or facebook.com/thestoriesofcesarchavez


Oct 1-3: Bilingual Foundation of the Arts presents a West Coast Premiere  . .  Cecilia Valdes, based on the novel by Cirilo Villaverde, music by Gonzalo Roig, adapted for the stage by Margarita Galban and Lina Montalvo.  

Set in colonial havana, this Zarzuela sutured with Afro-Cuban tones and cadences, portrays the story of a beautiful mulato girl who falls in love with a white aristocrat.  For more information, go to:
www.BFATheatre.org or call 323-225-4044




Oct 9th: Hispanics for LA Opera starts its new season with the performance of Mexican composer Daniel Cat�n's opera  Il Postino.  Please visit www.hispanicsforlaopera.org  for details.


5th annual L.A. Archives Bazaar to be held Saturday, Oct. 23rd, 9am 'til 5pm at USC's Doheny Library:
Sent by Alex King avking@gmx.com 
http://www.usc.edu/libraries/archives/arc/lasubject/ 



Area Event: Oral History Workshop at UCLA
Dates: Saturday, October 2, 2010 and Saturday, October 16, 2010


The UCLA Library�s Center for Oral History Research is offering its biannual oral history workshop for UCLA graduate students, faculty, staff, and community members. The workshop will provide an introduction to the basics of oral history methodology, including:

- Drawing up interview outlines and questions
- Effective interviewing techniques
- Legal and ethical concerns

The workshop takes place in two sessions. The first session will cover the general issues and skills involved in conducting an oral history; the second session is optional and will focus on developing and refining participants� own projects and providing them feedback on their interview design and techniques.

Dates: Saturday, October 2, 2010 and Saturday, October 16, 2010
Time: 9 AM-1 PM
Place: UCLA Young Research Library Presentation Room, room 11348 (down the hall to the right side of the circulation desk; note that you�ll have to wait on the portico outside until the library opens at 9)

Workshop leader: Teresa Barnett, Head, Center for Oral History Research

*Enrollment is limited, so respond promptly in order to secure a slot*. In your RSVP, please indicate whether you want to enroll in both sessions or only in the first one, and if you are currently conducting or planning an oral history project (e.g., for your dissertation), indicate what the project is about and what stage it is at.

RSVP: tbarnett@library.ucla.edu  or 310-206-2454 

Teresa Barnett, Head
UCLA Library's Center for Oral History Research
Young Research Library 11717, UCLA
Los Angeles, CA 90095-1575
(310) 206-2454   tbarnett@library.ucla.edu

 

Avenue 50 Studio Exhibits works of Sonya Fe and Margaret Garcia 
Brushes of Fire 
September 11 through October 3, 2010

The Dead Need To Be Fed -- Sonya Fe 

Sonya Fe: Sonya's large scale works in oil, wax and copal are composed of earth tones, soothing to the eye, |yet whose content shakes you out of your normal comfort zone. Fe is an exuberant person with a large personality. 

Woman in Red -- Margaret Garcia 

Margaret Garcia: A painter with fiery brush strokes 
and colors just as aggressive, Garcia's images are as potent as the artist herself. 

The Avenue 50 Studio is proud to present Sonya Fe and Margaret Garcia in an exhibition of recent paintings. We are honored to host two powerful artists as our participation in Latino Heritage Month for the City of Los Angeles and in Northeast LA�s Second Saturday Art Night.  Each artist delves into personal struggles matched by tremendous strength of will. This is an exhibition you will not want to miss. 
And The Annex Presents:  Free Form, a new series of paintings from Pat Gomez. Pat Gomez has created a new series of light and lyrical free form abstract paintings that are playful and unfettered. Please join us as we imaginatively explore Pat's poetic ruminations. 

Avenue 50 Studio is supported in part by the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors through the Los Angeles County Arts Commission; the California Community Foundation; the Los Angeles Department of Cultural Affairs; NALAC Fund for the Arts, Nescafe Clasico and the Ford Foundation; and in part by the California Arts Council, a state agency, and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency, a 501(c)(3) non-profit art gallery

Avenue 50 Studio, Inc. www.avenue50studio.com
131 North Avenue 50
Highland Park, CA 90042
323-258-1435 

History in the Making: The 13th Annual
Los Angeles Latino Book & Family Festival will feature 100 Latino Authors & Artists  By Reyna Grande
 
 
The upcoming Los Angeles Latino Book & Family Festival, to be held at Greenlee Plaza on the campus of California State University,  Los Angeles (CSULA) on the weekend of October 9-10, will feature an outstanding lineup of 100 Latino authors & artists from different genres: Journalists such as Pulitzer-prize winner Sonia Nazario and L.A. Times staff writer Sam Qui�ores; poets such as Juan Felipe Herrera and Luis J. Rodriguez; contemporary writers such as Alisa Valdes-Rodriguez, who was named "The Godmother of Chica Lit" by Time Magazine and Crafty Chica Kathy Cano-Murillo and Michele Serros; Literary writers such as Stella Pope Duarte and Patricia Santana; film and TV writers/producers such as Ligiah Villalobos (Under the Same Moon), Javier Grillo-Marxuach (LOST) and Nely Galan (The Swan); emerging authors such as Daniel Chac�n and Alex Espinoza; and children's book authors such as Rene Colato Lainez, Amada Irma Perez, and Jose Luis Orozco.
 
Special events taking place at this year's festival include 36 panels/sessions, such as: Mixing it Up: Writers who Write in Multiple Genres; The Children's Hour: Writing & Publishing Books for Kids; In Focus: The Immigrant Experience in Literature; It's Nothing Personal: Agents & Editors Tell it Like it is; Fade In: Latinos in Tinseltown; Di�spora & Exile: Writers from Latin America; How to Stay Alive in a Dying Industry; and Chicano/Latino Mural Art, among others. 
 
The festival will have a children's area and stage, featuring several children's book authors and celebrities for story-time as well as arts & crafts activities. The Main Stage will feature Folkl�rico dance performances, singers, plays, poetry jams, and much more.
 
In addition, there will be a dinner reception, "Evening with the Authors", which includes music and dance performances, and an award ceremony on Saturday October 9th at the Golden Eagle Ballroom (CSULA), featuring dancing, music, and a keynote by Father Greg Boyle.
 
Edward James Olmos, actor and community activist, is the Co-Producer of the Latino Book & Family Festival, a weekend event that promotes literacy, culture and education in a fun environment for the whole family. Launched in 1997 in Los Angeles and organized by the non-profit organization Latino Literacy Now, the LBFF has provided people of all ages and backgrounds the opportunity to celebrate the beauty and diversity of the multicultural communities of the United States.
 
For more in-depth research please call Kirk Whisler, Latino Print Network, 760-434-1223, kirk@whisler.com

 

New Exhibits in Mission Churches

Two photographic exhibits open this month 


� Jeffrey Becom

The first is on display at the newly restored Mission San Miguel, California, until February 2011. The show consists of large scale photographs by the well known California photographer Jeffrey Becom taken at the five Sierra Gorda mission churches, founded by Padre Jun�pero Serra and others in the present state of Quer�taro. These colorful church fronts are among the most stunning in Mexico. Drawings by artist Richard Perry are also on exhibit there.

 

 


Northern California

Oct 9th: Family History Day 2010 at the California State Archives
Read More About Ulises in the San Francisco Chronicle
Poets from the American West: An anthology of poets from eleven Western states
Dominguez Rancho

Family History Day 2010 at the California State Archives

 
We are excited to announce that planning for Family History Day 2010 is underway.  This FREE event will be held on Saturday, October 9, 2010 at the California State Archives, 1020 "O" Street, Downtown Sacramento from 8:30am to 4pm.  Mark your calendars now!
 
Volunteers in period clothing will greet and mingle with attendees at throughout the day. This fun and informative day will include over twenty classes for the beginner to the experienced researcher on internet resources and specialized research topics; classes in the Preservation Lab to see how to preserve family papers; research in the Root Cellar Genealogy Library; and tours of the Archives to learn about the historical documents held there.  Genealogical, historical & lineage societies, research libraries & archives will be on-hand with displays and information.
 
We welcome your organization's participation with a display/exhibit at Family History Day.  For details, please contact Gwen Myers at gg.myers@pobox.com or Sandra Benward at slbenward@comcast.net.
  
New this year is a Blog devoted to Family History Day 2010. The Blog will serve as one of the communication tools used to keep interested participants and attendees up-to-date on the day's activities such as profiles on the speakers and class topics as commitments are finalized.  The website for the Blog is http://fhd2010.blogspot.com/.  

Your help in getting the word out about Family History Day 2010 would be very much appreciated .  The official Family History Day flyer is linked to the Blog and is also attached to this email.  Please print it, post it, distribute it at meetings and workshops, even include it in your newsletters and periodicals during this year.
 
We hope to make this the best Family History Day ever!  We look forward to your participation!  If you have any comments or questions, please send me an email at familyhistoryday2010@gmail.com.
 
Sincerely, Denise
_________________________________
Denise H. Richmond, Publicity Coordinator
FHD2010 Planning Committee
Member, Root Cellar Sacramento Genealogical Society
www.rootcellar.org
 

 


Read More About Ulises in the San Francisco Chronicle
Read more about Ulises in the San Francisco Chronicle

Michoacan, Mexico is home to the Monarch Butterfly, mountain forests, wildflowers, the historic Morelia, and the lesser known tierra caliente, the hot lowlands between the Sierra Madre range and the Pacific Ocean. Here the old men sit in the shade, away from the oppresive heat, at rickety tables playing dominoes and drinking beer, when they can afford it. Young boys lead herds of cattle out the dusty roads in the morning, and back again in the evening, because the teenagers and young men have all left for "el norte" .


In a tiny village here, Los Cuachalalates, Ulises Valdez grew up. Life was the equivalent of about two generations prior here in the United States; there were few cars, few homes had televisions, even fewer had telephones. Electricity was just arriving. Life was simple, and the people had a simple happiness about them. When I first met Ulises, he could recite the names of all the people in the village.


Ulises' father died, while working in the fields near Bakersfield, when Ulises was just seven. Ulises was one of eight children. Unluckily, the oldest were girls. At ten years old Ulises left for Mexico City, to work with an Uncle in a mercado, or flea market. Though times were hard, Ulises still remembers with a smile selling women's lingerie as just a boy. After a few years here, Ulises went to the northern state of Sinaloa to work cutting sugar cane.

Ulises is known almost exclusively by his first name. He has the good fortune to have a uniuqe name, and it fascinates Americans more accustomed to a Jose or Pedro. Ulises captiolizes on this distinction in an almost political manner, eager to meet and endear himself to everyone, shying away from nothing. Some would call him a showboat, but Ulises pulls it off.

Ulises was sixteen when we crossed paths at my father's vineyard in Dry Creek Valley. It was December 2, 1985, grey, drizzly; the first day of the pruning season. Ulises lied about his age, and did a good clean job, and was able to stay to completion. When the work ran out, I was able to get Ulises a job with a friend and neighbor, Bob Polson of Lake Sonoma Winery. Ulises moved from a run down trailer park in Cloverdale, to a small shack in Dry Creek Valley, and eventually to what amounted to a camper shell where he lived with his brother Nicolas for a year or two.

Times were rough in the vineyard business, and, just out of school, I managed to pick up a lease on a property in Dry Creek Valley, whose owner had run out of options, and was ready to abandon the vineyard. It rained almost every day that February, and we often had to prune in the rain to get the job done before bud break, speeding around the vineyard in a Honda Civic, trying not to get stuck in the standing water. One day Ulises approached me with the offer that he would not take any pay for the entire season. and that after harvest, he would take his earnings and reinvest them and that we would form a partnership, which I agreed to.

That thirty acres would grow to nearly six hundred acres farmed by the time the Valdez and Florence partnership ended in early 2003. Now sole owner, Ulises farms over eight hundred acres as Valdez and Sons Vineyard Management. Ulises married in 1989, and has four children today. He attained US Citizenship in 1996.

There seems to come a time in the grape growers career, when he develops a taste for wine, and begins to look at his crop in a different light. Ulises was able to adjust to farming grapes as a commodity, to wine-growing. Growers such as Kent Ritichie of Poplar Vineyards introduced Ulises to some of Sonoma County's finest winemakers, such as Mark Aubert, and Paul Hobbs, in the late 1990's. Ulises magnetism, charisma, combined with hard work, continued to open doors. Today, as Ulises enters the wine business, he has at his disposal an arsenal of advice, support, and influence.

Ulises decided to make wine in 2004, and as fate would have it, he came to his old partner, to buy Zinfandel from my Rockpile Road Vineyard. These days, Ulises spends more time on the cell phone, but still remembers where he came from, and, as always, has big plans for the future.---Jack Florence, Jr.

 

 
Poets from the American West 
An anthology of poets from eleven Western states

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 13th; 7 p.m.
MARIN ARTS COUNCIL GALLERY
906 - 4th Street, San Rafael, CA 94901

Poets Reading: CB Follett, Rafael Jes�s Gonz�lez, George Keithley, Melinda Palacio, Susan Terris, Joyce Young
Questions: CB Follett, 415 331-2503, Runes@aol.com. There is no charge for this event.

Rafael Jes�s Gonz�lez
P.O. Box 5638
Berkeley, CA 94705


Dominguez Rancho
 
The amazing oral history of the Dominguez Ranch is a true story, as told by the descendants of the Dominguez families who came to Alta California from Mexico in the mid-1800s.  This is an inspirational account about the men and women who raised their many children at the ranch, toiled the land, became property owners, grew their own foods, had cattle and horses, and participated in the world market with their goods.  Our Californio antepasados were all about family, community, and country. I never cease to be inspired by their pioneer work ethic--totally driven to succeed, resourceful, and doing and being the best that they could be in this wonderful state of California. Kudos to all the Dominguez family members who gave the oral history accounts, and to the Ventura Historical Society for recording and archiving the information for us.   http://dominguezranch1.com/history.html 

Sent by Lorri Ruiz Frain

 

 

 


SOUTHWESTERN UNITED STATES
   

Fort Crockett and the Occupation of Veracruz, Mexico
Old family photo memorializes a time of vibrant connection By Hector Tobar
New Play:  The Eagle & The Serpent: A History of Mexico Abridged by James E. Garcia
Recommended URLs
Links to
10 Photos of the Mexican Revolution sent by Joaquin Gracida
Latinos, Whites, and the Shifting Demography of Arizona By Rogelio Saenz
Un Camino Real de Tierra Adentro
 

Fort Crockett and the occupation of Veracruz, Mexico

 
Editor:  The inter-relationship of weather, economics, government, and social conditions all seem to collide in the history of Galveston and Fort Crockett.  This is a look at the relationship between Mexico and the United States when the United States military forces occupied Vera Cruz between April 21 and November 23, 1914.  Out of a total of 6000 US Marines landed, 18 were killed and 400 Mexican civilians were killed.

In 1900, prior to the great hurricane, Galveston, with a population of 37,000, was the 4th largest and most sophisticated city in Texas. On September 8th, the hurricane made landfall, bringing 130-mph winds and a tidal wave that killed more than 6,000 people and destroyed one-third of the city. In 1902 measures were begun to prevent such as catastrophe from occurring again. The 10.4 mile Galveston seawall was constructed, the level of the island was raised, and structures on the island were jacked up. Construction of the seawall was completed in 1910, and the raising of the elevation was completed in 1928. The construction of the causeway linking the island with the mainland took place 1909-1912. The elegant Hotel Galvez opened in 1911. 

     Because of unstable conditions in Mexico, on Feb 23, 1913, as a precautionary measure, President William H. Taft ordered 3 transports and 2 brigades to Galveston.  For the full story, go to: 

http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~katloregen/FtCrockett.htm



Old family photo memorializes a time of vibrant connection
By Hector Tobar
September 3, 2010


Not long ago, my wife put up a black-and-white photograph in our living room. It shows her grandparents, very young � supposedly on a street in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico.

This summer, on a whim, I pulled that picture out of its frame and had a closer look.  I quickly realized they weren't in Ciudad Juarez at all. And with just a little detective work, I entered a world that is lost to history now, when two cities were joined together as one, despite the narrow river and the international border between them.

To show my wife and kids exactly what I learned, I decided to take them all on a 2,000-mile road trip to El Paso.

"I don't want to go to Texas," one of my sons said. But I'm a dad, and my word is law, so I dragged him and his brother and sister east anyway, despite advice that summer is not a good time to visit El Paso.

I'm a firm believer in the idea that you can learn a lot by standing at a place where history unfolded, whether it's the history of your family, your country or your ancestors. I've taken my kids to the U.S. Capitol, the pyramids of Teotihuacan in Mexico and the campus in Northern California where my wife and I first met.

To me, taking them to Texas was just as important. I wanted them to understand that when their great-grandparents passed through those border towns, they were a place of hope.

Divided by the slow-moving Rio Grande, the twin cities of El Paso and Juarez are a continental crossroads. Thousands of L.A. families have roots there.

This is also the place where my kids' maternal great-grandparents first met, started a family and eventually crossed over from Mexico.

Luis Alberto Chavira died in 1995. His widow Guadalupe is 97 now and isn't up to being interviewed. But some years back she told me how she met Luis on the bridge over the international border. It was a wintry day when the Rio Grande beneath them flooded and they were stranded in the middle.

The photograph in question was snapped some years later, in 1933. Luis is wearing the cap of his then employer, the Mexican postal service and seems to have a bounce in his step. Guadalupe is wearing a nice winter coat and high-heel shoes that suggest she's out for a day on the town.

After scanning and enlarging the picture, I noticed English words in the background: "Bus Stop" and "Five Entire Floors." On a hunch, I turned to Google Maps to pinpoint the location.

After 30 minutes of scanning the present-day cityscape with Google's "street view," I found the location � at the corner of Mesa Street and Texas Avenue in El Paso.

Luis had apparently picked up Guadalupe at the end of his workday at the Mexican post office and taken her to the U.S. on a late-afternoon visit. It was a reminder of the ease with which people crossed the border in those days.

"It was really a casual back-and-forth across the river then," said Pat Worthington, curator at the El Paso County Historical Society. A trolley route connected the two cities.

In the first half of the 20th century, downtown El Paso was a lively, elegant destination, Worthington said. It was there, in 1929, that Conrad Hilton opened his first high-rise hotel.

The tall structure in the left of the photograph is the Caples Building. Francisco I. Madero, the politician who helped launch the Mexican Revolution, established his headquarters as an exile there in 1911.

The storefront right next to the couple housed the Elite Confectionery, famous in El Paso as the place where another revolutionary, Pancho Villa, stopped for copious servings of peanut brittle and strawberry soda during his own brief exile in the U.S.

When my family finally reached El Paso after a two-day drive, we found all the old buildings in the photograph.

It was very odd, I thought, to be standing on a block in Texas that had hosted so many episodes of Mexican history. But Mexican and U.S. history are woven together in many ways in El Paso.

El Paso was linked to L.A. by the Southern Pacific railway in the 1880s. To a good chunk of Latino L.A., El Paso and its bridges served as a kind of Ellis Island.

Luis and Guadalupe Chavira got their permanent U.S. residency there in 1945 and began a life in the U.S. now stretching into its fourth generation.

"I never wanted to come here because I thought of it as a place you move away from," my wife said after we visited the site of the photograph. "Now I see it has this rich history."

Digging deeper into public documents available online, I found border passes for the Chavira family issued by the U.S. immigration authorities in the 1930s. One listed a home address in Juarez that was just four blocks from the Rio Grande.

I had envisioned as the climax of our drive to El Paso a short walk across the border to show my family that home. "You can see where your grandmother was born," I told my kids.

But in El Paso, everyone I met told me to stay away from Juarez.

The drug wars are strangling life on the other side. During our Texas visit, the local news was filled with reports of Juarez atrocities, both random and calculated.

So instead of making the crossing, we drove to the top of an El Paso hill and looked down into Juarez's narrow streets.

The neighborhoods that hosted the Mexican chapters of our family story were, at least for the moment, unreachable. We could see them but not touch them. And that too was a kind of lesson about our history.

Today, more than ever, the cities in our Latin American past and the cities of our U.S. present are separated by powerful barriers.  But it wasn't always that way.

Once, a young Mexican postman of limited means could take his girlfriend on a trolley across the border for a strawberry soda. Or he could walk to the El Paso train station with his wife and begin an American family, entering a country where no one yet thought of building walls to keep people out.

Hector_Tobar,_Old_family_photomemorializes_a_time_of_vibrant_connection,_LA_Times,_9.3.10.docx, Luis_&_Guadalupe_Chavira,_ElPaso,_TX,_1933,_Foto_LA_Times,_9.3.10.jpg   

Sent by Roberto Calderon, Ph.D.  beto@unt.edu


"The Eagle & The Serpent: A History of Mexico Abridged" 

Commemorating the 200th Anniversary of Mexico�s War for Independence (1810-1821)

New Carpa Theater Company presented a new play by James E. Garcia which opened Sept. 24, 2010 at the Arizona Latino Arts & Cultural Center (ALACAZ.ORG) 147 E. Adams, Phoenix, AZ 

Directed by Arturo Martinez, with the Ruth Vichules as the music director, seven actors performed in 50 roles recreating the history of Mexico from 30,000 B.C. to the present in 90 minutes or less. Immediately after the show, the audience was invited to meet Cantinflas, Pancho Villa, Lazaro Cardenas, Subcomandante Marcos, Gen. Antonio Lopez de Santa Ana, Hernan Cortes and the entire cast of characters.

 

James Garcia
Producing Artistic Director
New Carpa Theater
info@newcarpa.org
 www.newcarpa.org or 623-252-2772

  


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gScQpzkMjB  Sent by Juan Marinez 
http://rubifamilygen.com/?page_id=658 
http://www.nmgs.org/artcuar2.htm  Sent by: alfonso2r@live.com 
http://bit.ly/9alW5h   YouTube video on Mexican Immigration Through New Mexico and the Southwest. 
Sent by Tom Miles, Albuquerque 

 


10 Photos of the Mexican Revolution sent by Joaquin Gracida

Mimi, there are 100 of pictures.  Some of them are not of genealogical interest.  I've copied the ones that have names that may be of some used to the families doing research.  The others are more of historical interest mostly well known, previously seen, and surrounding Pancho Villa, Emiliano Zapata, Francisco Madero, Venustiano Carranza, and other well known personalities.  

Col_Urbina.jpg, EmilianoZapata.jpg, FMadero_y_Gen_Blanco_y_Sanchez_Ancona.jpg, Gen_Fierro_Villa_y_Ortega.jpg, GenEufemioZapata.jpg, GenFranciscoVillaYsusDorados.jpg, MacedonioManzano.jpg, Madero_y_groupo.jpg, SanchezYMonroy.jpg, VillaY_ColSanchez.jpg 

 
Joaquin Gracida 
jcg2002@gmail.com
 

 

 


Latinos, Whites, and the Shifting Demography of Arizona

By Rogelio Saenz

(September 2010) Over the past several decades, Latinos have made up an increasing share of the U.S. population. States along the U.S.-Mexico border are at the forefront of this transformation and their policy responses have generated great debate over the issue of immigration and border security. The signing of the legislative bill SB1070 in Arizona in April 2010 is the latest effort to try to round up undocumented immigrants and to stem their entry.1

What are some of the key demographic, political, and economic factors contributing to Arizona's growing immigrant population and shifting racial/ethnic composition?

Rising Latino Immigration

Although the majority of Latinos in Arizona were born in the United States, the share of the population that is foreign-born increased from 18 percent in 1980 to 33 percent in 2008.2 

A variety of factors have contributed to the state's growing foreign-born population. The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) in 1994 stimulated immigration to the United States as many farmers in rural areas of Mexico could not compete effectively with U.S. agriculture.

In addition, beginning in the early to mid-1990s, the Immigration and Naturalization Service set up blockades in California and Texas to avert the entry of immigrants, resulting in more immigrants entering through Arizona.3 More than half of foreign-born Latinos living in Arizona in 2008 have entered the United States since 1994.

California's weakening economy has also pushed many Latino immigrants to other states. While California's share of all foreign-born Latinos in the four border states (Arizona, California, New Mexico, and Texas) dropped from 71 percent in 1980 to 60 percent in 2008, Arizona's share rose from 3 percent to 7 percent over the same period.

The Shifting Demography of Arizona

The population of Arizona more than doubled from 2.7 million in 1980 to 6.5 million in 2008, growing from the 29th-largest state to the 14th-largest in the United States. Latinos accounted for two-fifths of the nearly 3.8 million people added to the state's population between 1980 and 2008, as the Latino population more than quadrupled from nearly 441,000 in 1980 to almost 2 million in 2008.

The share of Arizona's growth due to Latinos has grown significantly across the last three decades while the growth due to whites has declined (see Figure 1). One in every two people added to the state's population between 2000 and 2008 was Latino. The percentage of Arizonans who are Latino increased from 16 percent in 1980 to 30 percent in 2008. In contrast, the share of the state's population that is white declined from 75 percent in 1980 to 58 percent in 2008.

Figure 1
Percentage of Arizona Population Change Due to Latino and White Population Growth

Sources: Frank Hobbs and Nicole Stoops, Demographic Trends in the 20th Century; and U.S. Census Bureau, 2008 American Community Survey 1-Year Estimates.

Youthful Latinos and Aging Whites

The shifting racial/ethnic composition in Arizona reflects a major demographic divide between Latinos and whites across Arizona's age spectrum. Whites account for over half of the state's population ages 35 and older and make up at least 80 percent of those in elderly age categories (see Figure 2). In contrast, Latinos outnumber whites in the two youngest age groups (0 to 4 and 5 to 9). While the median age of the white population is 43, it is only 26 among Latinos.4

A younger age structure creates population momentum for Latinos through a high number of births relative to deaths. In 2006, while there were 1.2 births to every death among whites, there were 8.9 births to every death among Latinos, reflecting the youthfulness of the Latino population.5

Figure 2
Percentage of Latinos and Whites in Arizona Across Age Categories, 2008

Source: 2008 1% American Community Survey (ACS).

Implications

The shifting racial and ethnic composition of the Arizona population has led to the creation of practices and policies, such as SB1070, and the patrolling of its border by vigilante groups.6 Charges have been leveled that Latino immigrants are taking jobs from Americans and that they are not integrating into the American mainstream.

Others, however, argue that Latino immigrants take low-paying and dangerous jobs that many American shun. They also are concerned about the potential for racial profiling and the violation of human rights associated with laws such as SB1070.

The growth of the Latino population in Arizona has not occurred in a vacuum. The families of many Latinos in the state have been there for generations. Furthermore, globalization, the expansion of economies across international borders, and the aging of the populations of developed countries all stimulate the movement of people into places such as Arizona.

Rogelio Saenz is professor of sociology at Texas A&M University. The author acknowledges the helpful comments and suggestions of Eric Zuehlke.

References

1. For details on SB1070, see Arizona State Legislature, "SB1070," accessed at www.azleg.gov/DocumentsForBill.asp?Bill_Number=sb1070, on July 21, 2010. 

2. The data used in this report come from the following sources: Frank Hobbs and Nicole Stoops, Demographic Trends in the 20th Century, Census 2000 Special Reports, Series CENSR-4 (Washington, DC: U.S. Census Bureau, 2002); and the 1980 5% Public Use Microdata Sample (PUMS), 1990 5% PUMS, 2000 5% PUMS, and 2008 ACS Sample, downloaded from Steven Ruggles et al., Integrated Public Use Microdata Series: Version 5.0 (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota, 2010), accessed at http://usa.ipums.org/usa/index.shtml, on July 21, 2010.

3. Karl Eschbach et al., "Death at the Border," International Migration Review 33, no. 4 (1999): 430-40. 

4. U.S. Census Bureau, 2008 American Community Survey 1-Year Estimates, accessed at http://factfinder.census.gov/servlet/DatasetMainPageServlet?_program=ACS&_submenuId=&_lang=en&_ts=, on July 21, 2010. 

5. Joyce A. Martin et al., "Births: Final Data for 2006," National Vital Statistics Reports 57, no. 7 (Hyattsville, MD: National Center for Health Statistics, 2009); Compressed Mortality File Underlying Cause of Death: Mortality for 1999-2006 With ICD 10 Codes (Atlanta: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention), accessed at http://wonder.cdc.gov/mortSQL.html, on July 21, 2010. See also: Carl Haub, "Hispanics Account for Almost One-Half of U.S. Population Growth," accessed at www.prb.org/Articles/2006/HispanicsAccountforalmostOneHalfofUSPopulationGrowth.aspx, on July 21, 2010. 

6. The Associated Press, "Militia With Neo-Nazi Ties Patrols Arizona Desert," The New York Times, July 18, 2010, accessed at www.nytimes.com/2010/07/18/us/18militia.html, on July 21, 2010.


http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archivo:CaminoRealAdentro.gif Un Camino Real de Tierra Adentro

For more information, please click to the website:
El Camino Real de Tierra Adentro

Historia

Una vez sometida la gran Tenochtitl�n, los conquistadores iniciaron una serie de expediciones con el prop�sito de expandir sus dominios y obtener mayores riquezas para la corona espa�ola. Al principio siguieron los senderos con las fr�giles huellas de los nativos que intercambiaban mercanc�as entre el norte y el sur. En 1598 consolidaron y ampliaron un trayecto de 3.000 kil�metros que lleg� hasta lo que hoy es Santa Fe, en Nuevo M�xico. Dicha ruta recibi� el nombre de Camino Real de Tierra Adentro.

Los investigadores Enrique Lamadrid, Jack Loeffer y Tom�s Salda�a, cuentan la historia del Camino Real, el m�s antiguo de Norteam�rica:

Los caminos reales fueron las rutas principales de transporte para la comunicaci�n, el cambio cultural y el comercio. El ej�rcito virreinal, organizado en compa��as volantes de caballer�a ligera, proteg�a a los viajeros, el ganado y las mercanc�as", explican los especialistas.

Existieron cuatro troncales del Camino Real, que un�an la ciudad de M�xico con Acapulco, Veracruz, Audiencia (Guatemala) y Santa Fe: �Conformaban una cu�druple ruta repleta de caminantes, carretas y recuas de mulas�.

El Camino Real de Tierra Adentro sigui� una ruta marcada por el terreno: �La actividad volc�nica y un clima inclemente labraron una tierra rica en dep�sitos de plata, cobre, oro, �palos, turquesas y sal. Los desplazamientos de las placas tect�nicas abrieron en el centro de Nuevo M�xico una grieta de m�s de kil�metro y medio de profundidad, la segunda m�s larga del mundo. Las aguas del deshielo que flu�an hacia el valle formaron el r�o Bravo y �ste fue llenando con sedimentos la profunda brecha�.

Durante miles de a�os, los ind�genas n�madas vivieron de la caza y la pesca en la zona. Despu�s la agricultura los arraig�. Con el tiempo surgieron y florecieron "grandes civilizaciones". Y mucho antes de que los europeos llegaran, ya ten�an establecida la red de comercio que despu�s se convertir�a en el Camino Real.

En abril de 1598 �se�alan los investigadores� �un grupo adelantado de soldados se pierde en el desierto al sur del Paso del Norte, buscando la mejor ruta al r�o Bravo. Un indio cautivo llamado Mompil traza en la arena un mapa del �nico paso seguro, que pronto formar� parte del Camino Real de Tierra Adentro�.

Ciudades hist�ricas situadas en la ruta

 

 


INDIGENOUS

Native American scenes, the Paper Sculptures Art of Allen and Patty Eckman
Native Americans Lost the Battles, But Won the Kitchen War by Richard G. Santos


Native American scenes, Paper Sculptures Art of Allen and Patty Eckman

Paper art of Native American indians made by Allen and Patty Ec
These stunningly detailed sculptures may only be made from paper - but they are being snapped up by art fans for tens of thousands of pounds. The intricate creations depict Native American scenes and took up to 11 months to make using a specially formulated paper. Husband and wife team Allen and Patty Eckman put paper pulp into clay moulds and pressurize it to remove the water
 
 
The hard, lightweight pieces are then removed and the couple painstakingly add detailed finishing's with a wide range of tools.  They have been making the creations since 1987 at their home studio, in South Dakota, America, and have racked up a whopping £3 million selling the works of art. 
 
 
 
The pieces depict traditional scenes from Native American history of Cherokees hunting and dancing

 
 
 
The most expensive piece is called Prairie Edge Powwow which sold for £47,000.
  
 
Allen said: "We create Indians partly because my great, great grandmother was a Cherokee and my family on both sides admire the native Americans...

  
 
...I work on the men and animals and Patty does the women and children" explains Allen

 
 
 
"I enjoy most doing the detail. The paper really lends itself to unlimited detail. I'm really interested in the Indians' material, physical and spiritual culture and that whole period of our nation's history I find        fascinating. From the western expansion, through the Civil War and beyond is of great interest to me."

 
 
 
..
Allen explained their technique: "It should not be confused with papiermache. The two mediums are completely different. I call what we do 'cast paper sculpture.'" ."Some of them we create are life size and some we scale down to 1/6 life size"�
"These sculptures are posed as standing nude figures and limited detailed animals with no ears, tails or hair" 

"We transform them by sculpting on top of them - creating detail with soft and hard paper we make in various thicknesses and textures.
"We have really enjoyed the development of our fine art techniques over the years and have created a process that is worth sharing. There are many artists and sculptors who we believe will enjoy this medium as much as we have."

An Indian mother holding her baby is a favorite of many clients.

Sent by Kandace Ojeda kandyojeda@msn.com

 


NATIVE AMERICANS LOST THE BATTLES BUT WON THE KITCHEN WAR

 By

 Richard G. Santos

 

      Historically, Native Americans may have lost most of the battles against the invading Europeans, but in the long run, they won the kitchen war. We can note it began with the first voyage of Cristobal Colon (aka Christopher Columbus). He was searching for a new path to the spices of the Orient and instead bumped into what he himself in his fifth voyage called �A New World�. This New World that Americo Vespucci charted took the cartographer�s name and came to be known as the American Continent.  

      To the Spaniards and Portuguese, as well as Dutch Sephardic Jewish sea-faring merchants who controlled international trade, the New World was a cornucopia of unknown but delicious edibles. From the Caribbean Island came maiz (maize) that Hernan Cortes later sent to Europe under its Nahuatl name elotl (elote/corn). He also sent guajolotl (guajolote/pavo/turkey), tomatl (tomate/tomato), patatl (papa/potato), camotl (camote/sweet potato), xocolatl (chocolate/chocolate) and many herbs and spices unknown to Europe. Cortes also sent a product that reminded him of the last lady of the night he had spent time with before sailing to the New World.  

He named it after her. He thus introduced and immortalized �vainilla� (vanilla). There were other edibles adopted with Nahuatl names such as xitli (chile/peppers) and mexquitli (mesquite). On the somewhat questionable side, the Native Americans also gave the Old World tobacco, marijuana, coco leaf for cocaine, peyote, mescal and pulque. The list of Native American contributions to humanity�s cuisine is endless but above all, corn joined wheat and rice as one of the three main staples of human consumption worldwide.  

      In the southern half of Texas (Eagle Pass area east northeast to Nacogdoches and western Louisiana), the chroniclers who kept the diaries of the Spanish expeditions recorded a number of edible products. Among those mentioned from the late 1600s to early 1800s are: alfalfa, maguey (century plant), pita (yucca or Spanish Dagger of which the flower is edible), nopal (cactus) chinquapin (a chestnut variant), hierba/yerba buena (mint), hickory, oregano, mesquite, pecans, walnuts, persimmons, ciruela (wild plums), prickly pears, wild (mustang) grapes, squash, granada (pomegranate), sassafras and camote silvestre (wild sweet potato). It is interesting that the diarists did not mention chilepiquin which is native and abundant in South Texas.  

      Likewise, much of the cuisine of the Native Americans of the Trans-Mississippi area was adopted and adapted by the U.S. frontiersmen, traders and families that lived among them. The non Native Americans who lived among them, and in many cases inter-married with them, used corn to produce cornmeal (masa), cornbread, hominy (pozole) and corn mush (atole). The Native Americans also used cranberries, raspberries, beans, pumpkin and squash in their cuisine. The newcomers soon made corn bread and corn mixed with wheat bread. The natives also used in their cuisine �little barley�, sunflowers, quinoa and sunflower seeds. Quinoa is an extremely nutritious food item and recently identified as such by scientists and health food experts. It is a chenopodium called �goosefoot� which is a variant of amaranth (quelite). It should also be noted that the mammals, fresh water fish and fowl used in the cuisine of the Trans-Mississippi area Native Americans and South Texas were the same. Grits (ground corn and hominy) as well as chitterlings (fried intestines/tripitas) were also adopted. Lest we forget, corn whiskey (moonshine) was concocted. One item that no one truly knows the origin of is pit barbeque. Like the Tejano babacoa de pozo, an entire or portion of beef, deer, pork, or whatever mammal, was cooked in a pit over embers of whatever wood was readily available. This could range from cedar to oak but not mesquite which was not native to the Trans-Mississippi area. The meat basted with tomato based sauce with salt and locally grown spices was  cooked overnight. 

The cuisine of the Trans-Mississippi Native American and U. S. frontiersmen becomes important as U.S. citizens from the Trans-Mississippi area migrated to Texas, New Mexico and Colorado beginning in the late 1700�s illegally, and legally from 1821 onward. An overlooked factor regarding U.S. migration into the Spanish North American frontier were the U.S. economic depressions of (1) 1797 � 1800, (2) 1807 � 1814, and (3) 1819- 1824. Economically displaced families and individuals as well as sons, seeking their individual fortunes elsewhere, thus migrated to Spanish Texas and New Mexico.        

      Also not to be overlooked, the drastic measures to remove Native Americans from the areas they occupied within the boundaries of the United States had an impact on Spanish and Mexican Texas. Although historians and the public have concentrated on the Cherokee Nation and the 1830 Trail of Tears, the expulsion of the Native Americans east of the Mississippi River began much earlier. By the time Jean Louis Berlandier inspected Texas for the Mexican Government in 1828-1834, he recorded the existence of Cherokees, Choctaws, Delaware�s, Alabama�s, Pawnees, Coushatta�s and Seminoles in East Texas along the Louisiana border. The women wore contemporary U.S. feminine attire as did some of the men. Also moving into north central Texas during the same period were the Arapaho, Kiowa, Biloxi, Chickasaw, Muskogee, Anadarko and Wichita.  

The Yamparica and Quahadi Comanche who had entered Texas in the mid 1700�s had already pushed the Lipan Apache into South Texas and the abutting Mexican states of Chihuahua, Coahuila and Tamaulipas. Influenced by Spanish culture, the Comanche and Apache clans and tribes roved South Texas until the 1880�s. Although many were killed in U.S. and Texas government �ethnic cleansing� battles between 1837 and 1890, an unknown number were assimilated into the Tejano population.   

      Lest we forget, U.S. immigrants brought whatever dishes they had adopted from the Native Americans of the Trans-Mississippi area plus their respective ethnic or family recipes. One item that stands out is hogs. It is interesting to note that Hernan Cortes brought hogs as well as horses and cattle in 1519 when he landed on the Mainland. More interesting is Hernando Alonso, a hog breeder and merchant, who was the first Crypto Jew burned at the stake in Mexico City on October 17, 1528. Continuing with interesting facts, hogs are not listed in the inventory of estates of the colonists of Nuevo Santander (Tamaulipas) nor are they mentioned in the early records of Nuevo Leon, Coahuila or Spanish Texas! Hogs were available, being bred and sold. So, why are hogs not mentioned on the Spanish North American Frontier?  

      Crypto Jews and conversos (New Christians) did not keep kosher for to do so would bring them to the attention of the Inquisition. Consequently, they did eat pork where available. On the other hand, as long as there were jabalinas in abundance in Northeast Mexico and Texas, a person or family could still get the lard and meat from the peccary which is not mentioned on the list of prohibited items on the Judaic Dietary Laws. A similar incident occurred when the U. S. colonists introduced baking powder. The Tejanos did not use yeast but again, baking powder is not listed on the prohibited items of Judaic Dietary Law. Not having a word, they simply adopted the English �baking powder� as �espauda� (it�s powder). 

      In a nutshell, all pork products from smoked ham to chitterlings (hog tripitas) and cracklings (hog chicharrones) were introduced to Texas and New Mexico-Colorado by the recent arrivals from the United States. In time, pork replaced jabalina as in calabacita con puerco (squash or zucchini) with pork. Calabacita can also be prepared with chicken (calabacita con pollo) or turkey. The small green squash, or zucchini, with whole kernel corn, tomatoes, salt, and frequently pepper (green, Anaheim, poblano, Serrano or chilepiquin) is stewed with water and when ready the meat or fowl is added, stirred and allowed to simmer.  

      Baked ham and baked jabalina roasts have almost identical recipes. The ham (or jabalina quarter) with onions, potatoes, carrots and spices is boiled in a kettle. Once boiled it is allowed to simmer until cool. For the ham, sugar is added with a sprinkle of vinegar and mustard. The jabalina may have tomatoes, cilantro and peppers (green, ancho, poblano, serrano or chilepiquin) according to taste and spiciness. Either recipe may have sliced or diced potatoes. Pork and jabalina casserole can be seen as a short cut to the roast. The meat is chopped, sprinkles with salt and spices, the dutch oven is placed over flames or embers, and allowed to simmer. Potatoes, onions, tomatoes, carrots, celery and peppers can be added. 

 More recipes of the pre-1861 U. S. migrants to Texas and New Mexico-Colorado will follow next week. Meanwhile, send me your home recipes at richardgsantos@yahoo.com    

End �����������.. end ������� end ���������. end    

Zavala County Sentinel� 24-25 March 2010

   Sent by Juan Marinez

 

 


SEPHARDIC

Tracing the Tribe
American Sephardi Federation via Facebook and Twitter
DNA tests have shown that Adolf Hitler is likely to have had Jewish and African roots 
Looking Back: Jewish Life in Morocco
Tracing the Tribe:  Schelly Talalay Dardashti has tracked her family history through Belarus, Russia, Lithuania, Spain, Iran and elsewhere.
A journalist, her articles on genealogy have been widely published.
In addition to genealogy blogging (since 2006), she speaks at Jewish and general genealogy conferences, co-founded GenClass.com.  Past president of the five-braqnche3d JFRA Israel, a Jewish genealogical association, she is a member of several professional organizations.
Have a genealogy question? 
Sent it to: http://tracingthetribe.blogspot.com 

Found on Geneabloggers. 
http://www.geneabloggers.com/genealogy-blogs-september-11-2010/

You can now 'follow' the American Sephardi Federation via Facebook and Twitter. Sign-up today to keep up with the organization's latest news and events!

Go to for the ASF Facebook account   http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=31680686481 
Go to for the ASF Twitter account  http://twitter.com/AmericanSephFed 

DNA tests have shown that Adolf Hitler is likely to have had Jewish and African roots 

 

Saliva samples taken from 39 relatives of the Nazi leader show he may have had biological links to the �subhuman� races that he tried to exterminate during the Holocaust.

Jean-Paul Mulders, a Belgian journalist, and Marc Vermeeren, a historian, tracked down the Fuhrer�s relatives, including an Austrian farmer who was his cousin, earlier this year.

A chromosome called Haplogroup E1b1b1 which showed up in their samples is rare in Western Europe and is most commonly found in the Berbers of Morocco, Algeria and Tunisia, as well as among Ashkenazi and Sephardic Jews.

"One can from this postulate that Hitler was related to people whom he despised," Mr Mulders wrote in the Belgian magazine, Knack.

Haplogroup E1b1b1, which accounts for approximately 18 to 20 per cent of Ashkenazi and 8.6 per cent to 30 per cent of Sephardic Y-chromosomes, appears to be one of the major founding lineages of the Jewish population.

Knack, which published the findings, says the DNA was tested under stringent laboratory conditions.

"This is a surprising result," said Ronny Decorte, a genetic specialist at the Catholic University of Leuven.

"The affair is fascinating if one compares it with the conception of the world of the Nazis, in which race and blood was central.

�Hitler's concern over his descent was not unjustified. He was apparently not "pure" or �Ayran�.�

It is not the first time that historians have suggested Hitler had Jewish ancestry.

His father, Alois, is thought to have been the illegitimate offspring of a maid called Maria Schickelgruber and a 19-year-old Jewish man called Frankenberger.

Sent by John Inclan  comfromGalveston@yahoo.com 

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/world-war-2/7961211/Hitler-had-Jewish-
and-African-roots-DNA-tests-show.html

 


"Looking Back: Jewish Life in Morocco"
NEW YORK, NY (September 20, 2010) An exhibition entitled: "Looking Back: Jewish Life in Morocco," will have its Opening Program and Reception on October 14, 2010 at the Center for Jewish History in New York City. Produced by the American Sephardi Federation, the exhibition will focus on the history of the Jewish people and Jewish life, as it once was in Morocco

The event will launch a year-long series of programs on "2,000 Years of Jewish Life in Morocco: An Epic Journey" including an international Symposium, a concert, and individual lectures. 

David Dangoor, ASF President said, "The American Sephardi Federation aims to promote cross-cultural understanding and highlight the diversity and international scope of the Sephardic Jewish heritage. The ASF is delighted to present this series of multidisciplinary events that will celebrate the patrimony and legacy of Jewish culture in Morocco."

Jews have lived in what is today Morocco since at least the period of the Phoenicians in 550 (BCE). There, over a period of several thousand years, Jewish communities lived among, and were influenced by, various peoples including the Berbers, the Spanish, the Arabs and the French. This exhibition will provide an overview demonstrating the presence and flourishing of Jews in the ancient and modern Kingdom of Morocco. 

The exhibition will be presented through the implementation of artistically designed textual displays, documents, pull quotes, non-photo images (e.g. lithographs and engravings), historic photos, captions, replications of historic documents, and other visuals which demonstrate the life of the Jews living throughout this North African country. 

On this night, Dr. Norman A. Stillman, the Schusterman-Josey Professor and Chair of Judaic History at the University of Oklahoma, will present the keynote address. "This exhibition, part of the ASF's year-long program, will enlighten the visitor on the beautiful history and culture of the Jews of Morocco," said Shelomo Alfassa, the exhibition's curator.

Contact: Shelomo Alfassa at 917-606-8262
Visit the new Website of the American Sephardi Federation to learn more.


AFRICAN-AMERICAN

DNA and the Legacy of West Ford 
Vicente Guerrero: The first Black president in North America? By Mumia Abu-Jamal

DNA and the Legacy of West Ford 
Dick Eastman Online 
7/18/2001 - Archive 

Historians and genealogists have long maintained that George Washington had no  children. However, the descendants of West Ford maintain otherwise. West Ford  was born in 1784 or 1785 on the Bushfield Plantation in Westmoreland County,  Virginia, to Venus, a mulatto slave woman owned by George Washington's brother,  John Augustine Washington and his wife, Hannah. According to Ford family oral  history, Venus told her mistress Hannah that George Washington was her child's  father. Historians dispute this claim, suggesting that one of Washington's  nephews may have fathered the boy West. 

A similar scenario existed with Sally Hemmings, a slave owned by Thomas  Jefferson. Her descendants also claimed that Jefferson fathered one or more of  Hemmings� children. Recent DNA analysis compared the Y-chromosome DNA from the  living male-line descendants of Jefferson and Hemmings. In November 1998, the  British science journal Nature published the results of Dr. Eugene Foster's DNA  Study. The Thomas Jefferson Memorial Foundation then issued a report in January  2000 concluding that Thomas Jefferson was the father of at least one and perhaps  all the children of Sally Hemmings. Now the descendants of West Ford are  attempting to conduct a similar DNA analysis to prove or disprove the  two-hundred-year-old family tradition.

West Ford grew up on Bushfield Plantation in John Washington�s household. In the  years 1785 to 1791, George Washington frequently visited the Bushfield  Plantation. During these visits, West Ford served as Washington's personal  attendant. Washington took him riding and hunting, and Ford often accompanied  him to Christ Church, where he was provided with a private pew. Washington  became President of the United States in 1791 and did not visit Bushfield  Plantation again.

West Ford moved to the Mount Vernon plantation after the death of Martha  Washington in 1802. He was freed on his twenty-first birthday in 1805 or 1806.  In 1985, Donald Sweig wrote in the Fairfax Chronicles, "In his role as overseer  at Mount Vernon, Ford had considerable independence and responsibility." The  Washington family treated him as a privileged servant. Ford's children were  educated in the estate schoolhouse along with the Washington children. West Ford  became the first tomb guard for George Washington's gravesite. Three generations 
of Fords would also hold the title of tomb guard at the Mount Vernon plantation.

Bushrod Washington became the owner of Mount Vernon until his death in 1829. In  his will he gave 160 acres of land adjacent to Mount Vernon to West Ford, who  continued to live on the Mount Vernon estate. In 1833, Ford sold his land and  purchased 214 acres adjacent to it. This area is known today as the Black  community of Gum Springs, Virginia. In 1857, an entry in the Fairfax County Deed  Books noted that Ford divided his land among his four children, giving each of  them 52-3/4 acres.

In June 1863, an ailing West Ford was brought back to the Mount Vernon estate by  the Mount Vernon Ladies' Association. The association cared for him until his  death on July 20, 1863. The following day, the Alexandria Gazette carried his  obituary, stating: "West Ford, an aged colored man, who has lived on the Mount  Vernon estate the greater portion of his life, died yesterday afternoon, at his  home on the estate. He was, we hear, in the 79th year of his age. He was well  known to most of our older citizens."

Was West Ford the son of George Washington? It was thought that we would never  know. However, modern DNA technology may soon be able to prove or disprove this  Ford Family oral history. For more information about West Ford, look at "The Legacy of West Ford" at:  westfordlegacy.com. The information about possible DNA analysis can be found at:  westfordlegacy.com/mvmtg/qa.html 

Sent by John Inclan fromgalveston@yahoo.com 



Vicente Guerrero: The first Black president in North America?
By Mumia Abu-Jamal, San Francisco Bay View

Vicente Guerrero
was born in Ixtla, Mexico, in 1782-1831, of mixed white and Negro parentage with an Indian strain.
Mexican revolutionist and president (Apr.-Dec., 1829).  http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1E1-GuerrerV.html

The first black president in North America led Mexico some 173 years ago.  Vicente Guerrero -- a decorated revolutionary hero -- helped write the Mexican constitution.

For much of the U.S. populace, the very idea of a black president is one so new, so novel, that it forces many people to think of it as if it is barely possible . as if it is the stuff of fiction, not fact. Fiction has indeed been the realm of this idea, as in movies and television series, actors have played the part; but that, of course, is on TV.

Of course, time will tell if that is more than imagination, but for millions of people who share this vast land space we call North America, the idea is neither new nor ground-breaking. That's because there are some 100 million people living in Mexico, and that country had a black president, albeit briefly, some 173 years ago.

It was during their war for independence from Spain when a warrior emerged, a black Indian named Vicente Guerrero. In his first battle, he was commissioned a captain. As the independence war raged on, many of the 
leading revolutionaries were either killed or captured. Guerrero fought on, leading some 2,000 men into the Sierra Madre mountains to continue the fight.

By 1821, the Mexicans were prevailing over the Spanish, and Guerrero was hailed as an incorruptible independence fighter. In 1829 he became president of Mexico, and as scholar William Loren Katz writes in his 1986 book, Black Indians:

He began a program of far-reaching reforms, abolishing the death penalty and starting construction of schools and libraries for the poor. He ended slavery in Mexico. Yet, because of his skin color, lack of education and country manner, he was held in contempt by the upper classes in Mexico City.

This president, who had, according to U.S. historian M.H. Bancroft, .a gentleness and magnetism that inspired love among his adherents,. was still a triple-blooded outsider <<<<<<<.

Black historian J.A. Rogers summarized Guerrero.s striking accomplishments by calling him the George Washington and Abraham Lincoln of Mexico..

Guerrero, who in his youth was an illiterate mule driver, once bitten by the bug of Mexican independence, rose to the highest office in the land.

He learned to read when he was about 40 and helped craft the Mexican Constitution, of which he wrote the following provision: .All inhabitants whether white, African or Indian, are qualified to hold office.  He wrote this in 1824, over 30 years before the U.S. Supreme Court's infamous Dred Scott decision, which announced, emphatically, that .a black man has no rights that a white man is bound to respect,. and that Black people weren't, and could never be, citizens of the United States.

In that era of revolution and social transformation, a black man became president of the second largest country in North America.  http://indiancountrynews.net/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=3207&Iteid=74 

Submitted by
Dr. Carlos Munoz, Jr.
Professor Emeritus
Department of Ethnic Studies
Berkely, California 
http://ethnicstudies.berkeley.edu/faculty/profile.php?person=21



 

   
EAST COAST

The Hispanic Genealogical Society Of New York
Oct 16:
Hispanic Family History Fair 
Latinos in New York by Angelo Falcon
History 101  Florida

"The Hispanic Genealogical Society Of New York".

The Beginning: In 1993 three people, interested in finding their family's history, met on-line and began what is now "The Hispanic Genealogical Society Of New York".

They began by helping each other research their Puerto Rican roots on Compuserve's Genealogy Forum where there were very few people researching Latin roots. With time, the Latin American Forum was created where the group was able to expand their knowledge, specific to Hispanic research. They created an on-line Hispanic reference library, collecting genealogical resources from all over Latin America and Spain.

Attendance to the forum continued to grow as on-line conferencing and networking between members from many Latin American countries, and Spain, enabled the group to be diversified. A short editorial letter in HISPANIC magazine gave further exposure to the groups purpose, helping to make it the largest Hispanic genealogical group on-line, at the time.

In 1995, Jorge Camu�as, Alfred Sosa and Charlie Fourquet got togther in a meeting with some key people, including Executive Director of The Puerto Rican Heritage House, and began plans to form a Hispanic Genealogy society that could reach out to all fellow Latinos, sharing their expertise and helping to pave the way for Hispanic research in New York.

The Society
The Hispanic Genealogical Society Of New York is a non-profit, public service and educational organization, headquartered in New York City, where our volunteer staff organizes meetings, plan projects, provide instructional forums and host seminars. The society is still working towards establishing a library and research center in the borough of Manhattan, where their extensive collection of reference publications and research materials will be housed. Members of our volunteer staff.

http://www.hispanicgenealogy.com/who_we_are.htm

 

Oct 16: Hispanic Family History Fair 

Sponsored by the Center for Puerto Rican Studies at Hunter College; October 16, 10-1 pm: - a series of genealogy workshops by the Hispanic Genealogical Society of New York; October 16 at 2:30 pm � 
Ivo Tirado ...
The United States of America... - http://publisherarticles.blogspot.com/

Latinos in New York: A Review of Recent Literature
By Angelo Falc�n (September 20, 2010) 
These past few weeks a number of projects came to fruition almost simultaneously that thoughtfully reflect on the Latino experience in New York City (or is it the New York City experience with Latinos?). Hispanic New York: A Sourcebook (Columbia University Press), edited by Claudio Iv�n Remeseira just hit the bookshelves. This was followed by the current Museo del Barrio exhibit and its catalog, Nueva York 1613-1945, edited by Edward J. Sullivan (New York Historical Society in association with Scala Publishers). And just before these came out, last month saw the more subdued publication of Puerto Rican Citizen: History and Political Identity in Twentieth Century New York City (University of Chicago Press), by Lorrin Thomas.


HISTORY 101 FLORIDA

Sender's comments food for thought
Florida was settled way before the thirteen colonies, and my research has led me to the dinner table where these Spanish colonizers gave thanks to the all mighty and celebrated their first thanksgiving dinner. However these early Florida colonists were probably not the first Spaniards to celebrate such an event. The point here is that the first thanksgiving as we were taught in school is misleading. That was one of many. Just something to entertain in our minds. By the time the English came, they already knew what to expect from reports from their neighboring country.

In 1559, Luis de Velasco, Viceroy of New Spain, chose the lands around Pensacola Bay as the place to begin the conquest and colonization of Florida. Known as Polonza or Ochuse on maps of the day, members of two Spanish expeditions had visited the site searching for mythical riches during the preceding thirty years. Chosen to command the enterprise was a seasoned explorer, Don Tristan de Luna y Arellano, a veteran of the expeditions in Mexico under Hernan Cortes and Coronado�s journeys through the American Southwest in search of the mystical city of gold, Cibola.
Arriving on August 15, 1559, colonists went ashore from their anchorage in Pensacola Bay to pick a suitable place to build a town, and de Luna dispatched scouting parties to look for food and any sign of native villages. A mere thirty five days later, a hurricane passed over the area destroying all but three of the vessels, some still loaded with essential supplies. The heavy rains which accompanied the storm damaged many supplies that they had already deposited on shore and many colonists lost their lives. Despite the arrival of four relief voyages from the Spanish colonies in Cuba and Mexico, the colony could not recover from the calamity that had befallen them. Hunger and discord among the colonists quickly escalated into mutiny and, despite the arrival of a new governor, the colony failed and the remaining settlers returned to Mexico, abandoning the Gulf Coast of Florida.
Given detailed instructions, de Luna was to construct a fortress large enough to contain 100 colonists at Ochuse (Pensacola). The fortress was to include storehouses, jails, inns, and a slaughterhouse. To establish and maintain order, the Viceroy told de Luna to appoint councilmen, judges, and bailiffs.
The armada assembled to transport the expedition from the Mexican port of Veracruz consisted of eleven ships. Since this was an expedition aimed at colonization, the band consisted of more than 1,000 colonists, including women, children, servants, and natives from New Spain, with the tools necessary for agriculture and construction.
Supporting the colonists were 540 soldiers with their arms and armor, and 240 horses. When they left for Florida, they were heavily laden with supplies of corn, hardtack biscuit, bacon, dried beef, cheese, oil, vinegar, wine, and live cattle to support the expedition for eighty days.
The 5 Flags of Escambia County
More than 438 years ago, settlement of Florida began here on the shores of Pensacola Bay. With more than one thousand colonists, Don Tristan de Luna raised the flag of Spain in Escambia County. Although this first settlement would last only two years, it was a precursor to the struggles which, over the intervening years, saw the flags of five nations flutter in our skies.
Abandoned for 139 years, the bluffs bordering the bay again saw visitors, and another attempt at settlement in 1698. In that year, Don Andres de Ariola and 350 Spanish soldiers succeeded in constructing the first permanent post and fort on Pensacola Bay. Seeing an opportunity to secure the port, the Spanish constructed another fort on Santa Rosa Island near the mouth of the harbor. That was in 1719. Troops of the King of France took control of the forts and Bay soon after.
Spain regained control of the area in 1722, and moved their settlement to Santa Rosa Island where they could better defend against an approach by hostile troops. Like the first attempt at colonization, a hurricane passed over the Bay and wiped out the colony.
Spain abandoned further attempts to settle it. As part of the Treaty of Paris of 1763, which ended the Seven Years War in Europe, Spain ceded the area to the British. The British added order to the area by laying out the streets of today's Pensacola Historic District, establishing gardens and a public water well. While Britain was occupied in the Revolutionary War, Spain recaptured Florida in 1781.
A new chapter of history in the County began when Pensacola became part of the United States in 1821. With future-president Andrew Jackson as a resident and the first territorial governor, Escambia County became the first county in the new territory.
A new flag was raised over the County in 1861 when troops of the Confederate States of America occupied Fort McRee at the harbor entrance. After a lengthy standoff, Confederate forces evacuated the city in 1862 leaving it again under the "Stars and Stripes."
Courthouse History
http://www.jud10.org/Courthouses/Escambia/ak-scambia10.jpgEscambia County is one of the original two formed in 1821. The name reflects the Escambia River. The derivation is unknown but possibly of Native American origin. There was a Spanish mission known as San Cosmo y San Damian d'Escambe.The county seat, Pensacola, actually predates St. Augustine, having been colonized by Tristan de Luna in 1559, but this habitation was not continuous. Again, the origin of the name is obscure.
The black-and-white photo of the Escambia courthouse is from the state archives and dates from around 1912. This rather grandiose Victorian building was built in 1885 at a cost of $44,000, and demolished in the 1930's. For a time the county also used the former U. S. Customs House and Post Office, depicted below, also constructed in 1885 but at the far higher cost of $200,000 (suggesting the relative importance of the port of Pensacola). The modern courthouse dates from 1978.

Decided to look at Francisco de Villarreal, since he is an ancestor.
http://mvgdesign.us/franciscovillarreal/franciscodevillarreal.htm#signos 

1591
Francisco de Villarreal was the first Villarreal to arrive in Saltillo; he likely arrived by the same route as the majority of founders, which was by way of Mazapil and Zacatecas. Francisco was not an original founder of Saltillo but arrived shortly thereafter with Urdinola when he relocated 400 tlaxcaltecas to the Northern colonies. He arrived in Saltillo on the 2 nd of September 1591. Don Luis de Velasco commissioned Urdinola. Was Francisco was under the command of Luis Velasco or Velasco's men? Francisco de Urdinola was born in 1552 died 1618; Bernabe de las Casas was born in 1573 most of the men of Urdinola were born approx during that time frame.

Sent by Margarita Garza  Mage1935

 

 


EAST OF MISSISSIPPI

URLOfficial louisiana Tour Guide
URLThe Historic New orleans Collection
URL Books
Information on ordering obituaries or biographies: Louisiana Division
Genealogy site for Cajun, Acadian and Louisiana genealogy, history, and culture

 

Official Louisiana Tour Guide
http://www.nxtbook.com/nxtbooks/milesmedia/10LOU/#/0

Sent by Bill Carmena

The Historic New Orleans Collection http://www.hnoc.org/ 


http://www.nxtbook.com/nxtbooks/milesmedia
/10LOU/#/0

 

Information on ordering obituaries or biographies:
Louisiana Division
New Orleans Public Library
219 Loyola Ave.
New Orleans, LA 70112
(504) 596-2610

The online Index includes references to obituaries in New Orleans newspapers from 1804 to 1972 only.

http://neworleanspubliclibrary.org/~nopl/obits/orderingobits.htm 


Cajun and Cajuns: Genealogy site for Cajun, Acadian and Louisiana genealogy, history, and culture
Editor:    www.thecajuns.com  This is a great resource. If you have any lines in Louisiana or surrounding states, do check it out. Below are just a few examples of name changes of locations, but there is considerable more resources, such as:

Louisiana History: Old and New Place Names

There are many references in the early Louisiana records to place names that have changed or some that remain the same but aren't incorporated areas.  This page will provide the old and new names or a description of the old and current location.  Please send any additions to cajun @ thecajuns.com

Old New
First Acadian Coast St. James Parish

Second Acadian Coast

Note: The church established in 1772 was named La Iglesia de la Ascension de Nostro Senor Jesu Cristo da Lafourche de los Chetimaches (the Ascension of Our Lord Catholic Church of Lafourche of the Chitimaches). The church parish was also referred to as the Parish of Ascension of Valenzuela; the Parishof Valenzuela; and, Ascension de La Fourche

Ascension Parish

Note: The parish seat of the civil parish is Donaldsonville; the church parish is Ascension. Valenzuela was on Bayou Lafourche near the current city of Plattenville

Ainse de la Graise "Greazy Bend" [L'Anse a la Graisse] and Nuevo Madrid - located on the shores of the Mississippi River about 12 leagues below the mouth of the Ohio River New Madrid, Missouri
Arkansas Post - Poste de Arkansea

at Quapaw Indians Village of Osotouy, near mouth of Arkansas River at Mississippi River. Moved several times because of flooding. Named Fort Carlos III under Spanish Rule. In 1862, the Confederates constructed a massive earthen fortification at the site known as Fort Hindman. The Union Army destroyed Fort Hindman in January 1863, ensuring control of the Arkansas River.

State of Arkansas - original site about 9 miles south of Gillett, Arkansas.

Sent by Bill Carmena JCarm1724@aol.com

 

 


TEXAS

Battle of Medina, Oct 2nd and 9th Activities
Papalote, new South Austin Restaurant
Oct 24th: Celebrating the 10th anniversary of the dedication of the Juan N. Seguin Statue
Recommended URLs by Margaret Garza
Nov 6th: Save Texas History Symposium
Nov 26th: 100 Years of Mexican American History in Dallas 
TexasTejanos Wreath Laying Ceremony held Sept. 25th
Austin History Center recognizes Mexican American trailblazers

A Joyful Noise: Music and Musicians in the Painted Ceilings
The 6th Annual Tejano Vigil was held Sept. 11
Battles Fought By Mexican Ancestors 
On the priest who begun the building of the Mission San Antonio De Valero Mission  
Alf�rez Francisco Hernandez & Ana Garcia, First Settlers of San Antonio, B�xar, TX
Myth & Propaganda More Popular than Actual Facts By Richard G. Santos
100th anniversary of the Getsemani Presbyterian Church, San Benito, Texas
 
Battle of Medina, Oct 2nd and 9th Activities
Recently the State Board of Education approved adding the "Battle of Medina," the biggest and bloodiest battle ever fought on Texas soil, as part of the 7th grade Social Studies curriculum. Author Dan Arellano, whose testimony on the Battle of Medina was adopted will be speaking at Nuevo Leon Restaurant 1501 East 6th Street at 10 A.M. on Saturday Saturday October 9th at 10 A.M.

The "Battle of Medina," the untold story. "Tejano Roots" brings a historic and a renewed sense of pride to our Mexican American Community with a story that belongs to them, their families, their history and their hearts.

Many Mexican Americans have given their lives in defense of freedom and democracy. A thousand Tejanos were killed in one battle alone in defense of these causes; but this conflict was not on foreign soil; not on the beaches
of Normandy, not in Korea or Viet Nam, although Tejanos were there, but much closer to home in South Texas, less than twenty miles south of San Antonio. The "Battle of Medina,"..the forgotten history of our Tejanos, these first
sons and daughters of the State of Texas, unknown and unrecognized for their ultimate sacrifice.

Click to an essay on the Battle of Medina by Richard G. Santos, first Bejar County archivist. 

On October 2, 2010 a group will be doing an archeological dig on a ranch in Losoya Texas in search of the battle site of the Battle of Medina. Any member wanting to attend please contact me. Also in November for the Dr J. Frank de la Teja and the Dr Andres Tijerina book signings have been tentatively agreed on by Dr Miranda, and will be held at the same location on the Austin Community College Campus in Riverside.  

All events are free, the public and educators are welcome. For more information contact:  
Dan Arellano darellano@austin.rr.com 512-826-7569

Dallas celebrates the 200th anniversary of Latin America's independence with the 4th annual Fiesta Latinoamericana!
music, dance, workshops, food, and family fun from 15 nations  Sunday, Oct 10, 2010  11 am to 7 pm FREE
2301 Flora St, Dallas, TX 75201 in the Dallas Arts District 
from Guadalupe Cathedral & Meyerson to the AT&T Plaza
www.dfwinternational.org/FiestaLatinoamericana 
Sent by AnneMarieWeiss@dfwinternational.org

Announcing new restaurant, Papalote, in South Austin. Austin, TX .  The Varela family are the owners of the restaurant, Azul Tequila. �We are so excited to open Papalote,� said co-owner Sergio Varela. �After nine years of bringing authentic interior Mexican cuisine to South Austin, we are thrilled to share a different side of Mexican food�as tortas de mole, potato-stuffed blue corn masa cakes, and tacos de lengua. Papalote�s menu will also feature organic coffee and vegetarian taco options.  Location:  2803 S. Lamar Blvd, Austin.

Sent by Christian Lozano


SUNDAY, OCTOBER 24, 2010, 1:00 P.M.
GUADALUPE COUNTY COLISEUM SEGUIN, TEXAS
The Twenty-Second Annual Memorial Gathering
Celebrating the 10th anniversary of the dedication of the
Juan N. Seguin - Memorial Statue
Speaker: Carolina (Caroline) Castillo Crimm
Professor of history at Sam Houston State University

Mariachi San Antonio, Door prizes, Refreshments compliments of The Seguin Area Chamber of Commerce

Saturday, October 23, 2010, Laying of the Wreath at the Statue (4:00 P.M.) "Hats Off To Juan Seguin"
Participate in the Parade and Contest.  Wear your most outrageous and original hat! (7:00 P.M.)
Free admission - Open to the Public

For more information:
Albert S. Gonzales: aseguin2@aol.com 409-948-4094
Juries A. Seguin: juriesseguin3@yahoo.com 210-648-1297


Recommended URLs by Margaret Garza
Adina de Zavala
http://www.tamu.edu/ccbn/dewitt/adp/history/bios/zavala/zavala.html  

Our people were so brave. Way back before Diez Y siez was even a thought, to some of our ancestors, they were already fighting other battles just to stay alive. and to survive in this wild and untamed land.�
http://www.forttours.com/pages/hmnueces.asp 

Save Texas History Symposium:
Discovering Spanish and Mexican Texas
Saturday, Nov 6, 2010, hosted General Land Office

Symposium promises to be a jewel. Review the above website, review the program and presenters, and do register. It seems well organized and there will be extremely good presenters. Jose M. Pena

100 Years of Mexican American History in Dallas  
Presently in place and will run until Nov 26, 2010.
Presented by the Dallas Mexican American Historical League & Dallas Public Library 

The history of Mexican Americans in Dallas over the past 100 years reflects the history of the city itself. Mexican Americans have helped in its creation and growth � laying railroad track, running pipeline, toiling in cement factories, and industrializing Dallas. It has been transformed, in great part, by the civic and economic contribution of Mexican Americans and the barrios that dot its landscape. Materials for this exhibition � celebrating the centennial of the Mexican Revolution � are provided by the Dallas Mexican American Historical League (DMAHL) and Texas/Dallas History & Archives Division. Sent by Roberto Calderon, Ph.D.  beto@unt.edu


Texas Tejano.com, a San Antonio-based research, publishing, and communications firm, and Alamo Legacy & Missions Association (A.L.M.A), held a wreath laying ceremony beginning on Sept. 25th at the historical San Fernando Cemetery #1 (1100 S. Colorado).

In 1936, during the state�s centennial celebration, the state placed several Historical headstones at these hollowed grounds commemorating the contributions, sacrifices and roles Tejanos played in the revolution. The event is being held in honor of the Tejano participants of the Texas Revolution who are interred at this cemetery.  

For more information about TexasTejano.com  Contact Rudi R. Rodriguez, President/Founder  (210) 673-3584.


Austin History Center recognizes 32 Mexican American trailblazers. www.statesman.com/.../mexican-american-trailblazers-
recognized
-by-austin- history-center-870768.html
 


 

A Joyful Noise: Music and Musicians in the Painted Ceilings

Exhibit of images from the spectacular painted ceilings of churches in western Michoac�n. Entitled A Joyful Noise: Music and Musicans in the Painted Ceilings, it opens September 23 at the Cathedral in Dallas, Texas, and features a selection of photographs by Carolyn Brown that illustrate this theme.

This inaugural exhibit will run until December and is part of a larger project under development that will showcase a variety of images from these painted ceilings entitled Heavens Above.

Sent by Richard Perry

ESPADANA PRESS 
Richard Perry 
Exploring Colonial Mexico 
http://www.colonial-mexico.com 

 


The 6th Annual Tejano Vigil was held Sept. 11
To all Tejanos and Texians,

(San Antonio, Texas) September 10, 2010 � Texas Tejano.com, a San Antonio-based research, publishing, and communications firm, in conjunction with the Alamo Legacy & Missions Association (ALMA), a San Antonio-based, non-profit organization that provides living history reenactments to educate youth and adults about Texas history, are proud to announce today that they will host the 6th Annual Tejano Vigil inside the Alamo shrine on Saturday, Sept. 11, 2010 beginning at 7:00pm.

This very solemn and reverential ceremony continues to grow in size and circumstance. Past speakers include Gen. Alfred A. Valenzuela, LTG Charles G. Rodriguez, State Rep. Joe Farias and Chief Justice Alma L. Lopez. Created to bring awareness of Tejano settlers� contributions to Texas history to the public. The Tejano Vigil is just one of the many projects developed and promoted by Texas Tejano.com in celebration of Tejano Heritage Month, the month of September, as designated this year by the honorable Gov. Rick Perry.

�We are proud to once again hold this event inside one of the most sacred landmarks in our state, the Alamo Shrine,� says Rudi R. Rodriguez, Founder of Texas Tejano.com. �The sacrifices made by our Tejano ancestors during the fight for independence should never be forgotten. This event and the partnerships that it has fostered will go along way in making sure that this history and their legacies will be remembered for generations to come.�
The Tejano Vigil is just one of many events taking place throughout the State of Texas in honor of Tejano Heritage Month. Texas Tejano.com and its Tejano Heritage Month Partner the Alamo Legacy & Missions Association (ALMA) are proud to have collaborated this year with the Alamo, EPI Electrical Enclosures Inc., the Hispanic Heritage Center of Texas, Valero and Citicorp on this year�s Tejano Vigil.

Please find attached the fact sheet on the Tejano Vigil in the Alamo Shrine
Viva Tejano Texas!


Rudi R. Rodriguez
(210) 673-3584

 The Tejano Vigil at the Alamo Fact Sheet  

In 1690, when Nueva Espa�a created the new Province of Texas, Tejanos became the first families living in Texas. Tejanos built the first roads, forts, towns, laws and ranching economy in Texas. Tejanos are the descendants of the first Spanish, Mexican and indigenous families on the Texas frontier in Texas. Not much has been written about these forgotten Texans, but we are very proud to provide the leadership to help provide this long overdue honor.  

That is the reason Texas Tejano.com created the first ever Tejano Vigil in 2005. Along with our partners we conducted a very auspicious ceremony inside the Alamo Shrine in San Antonio, Texas. Our ceremony is intended to identify, elevate and celebrate Tejanos who were patriots and heroes involved in the Revolution of 1835�1836. Both Tejanos and Tejanas paid the ultimate price for a free and independent Texas.  

Activities conducted during the ceremony include a benediction, the lighting of candles, singing by the children�s choir of the Basilica of the Shrine of the Little Flower and remarks made on behalf of Tejano legacy and heritage as it relates to the development and contributions to Texas history by a litany of distinguished speakers.  

Past speakers include: Congressman Henry Cuellar, State Sen. Carlos I. Uresti, State Sen. Leticia Van de Putte, State Rep. Trey Martinez Fischer, Maj. Gen. Alfred Valenzuela (this year�s Honorary Event Chairman), LTG Ricardo S. Sanchez, Judge Monica E. Guerrero, Judge Catherine Torres-Stahl and Alamo Legacy & Missions Assoc. Chairman Charles Lara.  

Preceding this event is a reception held at the historic Menger Hotel ballroom. It was once said: �Texas history can never be complete without the story of Tejanos being told.� For more information of Tejanos please visit www.TexasTejano.com.   

About TexasTejano.com

            TexasTejano.com is a San Antonio-based research and publishing company dedicated to bringing awareness of Tejano history to the public by designing and developing print materials, electronic media and historical exhibits that tell the stories of the state�s first pioneers.

More information about TexasTejano.com including a calendar of the month�s celebratory events can be found at www.texastejano.com or by calling 210.673.3584.


     
 

Battles Fought By Mexican Ancestors 

http://www.forttours.com/pages/hmnueces.asp 

Tom: when we were growing up, I knew that the Mexicans were not liked even though we were the majority, and treated like the minority, maybe the link below will throw some light into it. Maybe they knew more history than we did. 

Our part of the country, the Neuces Strip, really was involved in a lot of history. please read.

Mimi: I know you have a lot of material already, but I just had to share this link as it shows all the struggles that our people had to face for us to be here today. One of many examples and it hits hard and makes me realize so much that we have to be thankful for. Our people were so brave. Way back before Diez Y siez was even a thought, to some of our ancestors, they were already fighting other battles just to stay alive. and to survive in this wild and untamed land.   Looks like a lot of history took place in so. Texas.

Margaret Garza  
 


On the priest who begun the building of the Mission 
San Antonio De Valero Mission,  1716 to 1720
  


Some History: In the early 1960's when my father talked to my sister and me about an Olivares relative traveling North to build a mission. My father said that through the years his father and grandfather have passed down the information that an "Olivares" went North to build a mission. He said over 200 years ago.....

The research: Father Antonio Benaventura y Olivares in 1716 to 1720 build the Mission San Antonio De Valero better known today as (The Alamo). I have several Olivares relatives in Zacatecas, SLP and Queretaro searching for a grave site and the archives at the Bautista Internship Catholic Church related to Father Antonio Buenaventura y Olivares. "Olivares" had injured his leg and was transferred back to Queretaro for his final days of his life. I still do not know if he returned to Spain where he had other family members.

I also understand that the mission was build by the the very best Natives/Indian of Northern Mexico...south of the Rio Grande. The mission after being build stood up to the Apache and Comanche attacks during the early years of the mission....1720-1730.

The Alamo had taken many attacks in the 116 years before 1836. 1836 was the last stand. The mission was built because of the strategic defense of the river surrounding the mission.  There is a big plaque dedicated to Father Antonio Buenaventura y Olivares at the entrance to the Alamo.

Pedro Olivares  
pedro.olivares5@sbcglobal.net
 


Alf�rez FRANCISCO HERN�NDEZ and ANA GARCIA,

First Settlers of San Antonio, B�xar, Texas.

MAR�A ELENA LABORDE Y P�REZ TREVI�O

MEXICO CITY July 26, 2010

 

 

 

1) Alferez Francisco Hernandez m. Ana Garcia, m. Mariana Longoria

Francisco Hernandez was one of the soldier with the February 28, 1707 Ramon Expedition of Sergeant Diego Ramon, Cabo of the Flying Squadron at the Presidio de San Juan Bautista, (Coahuila, Mexico). In 1718, Francisco was assigned to the Presidio de Bejar (San Antonio) where he and his family continued to live until his death on October 4, 1751

 

2) Diego Hernandez-Garcia m Josefa de Sosa

 

3) BONIFACIO HERN�NDEZ DE SOSA . 2) Diego Hern�ndez, 1) Alf�rez Francisco Hern�ndez, First Settler of San Antonio B�xar, Texas) 1st. marriage,  December 1, 1775, Ygnacia P�rez, (baptized 25 Jul 1745), daughter of Jose Perez and Maria de los Santos. 2nd marriage (circa 1793) JUANA MAR�A VEL�ZQUEZ ESPARZA, daughter of Juan Velazquez and Juana Esparza.

 

4) MAR�A PETRA SABINA HERN�NDEZ VEL�ZQUEZ . 3. Bonifacio, 2. Diego, 1) Alf�rez Francisco Hern�ndez. married 04 Nov 1818, JOSEPH RAPHAEL RODR�GUEZ CAMPOS, (baptized 26 Oct 1794, San Fernando de Rosas, Zaragosa, Coahuila, Mexico)  son of Juan Cris�stomo Rodr�guez Lozano and Mar�a Dolores Campos. d. before 1840)

 

5) MAR�A DE LAS NIEVES RODR�GUEZ HERN�NDEZ 4. Mar�a Petra Sabina, 3. Bonifacio, 2. Diego. 1 Alf�rez Francisco Hern�ndez ) b. circa 1813 B�xar, Texas, married February 8, 1848 Guerrero, Coahuila, JES�S P�REZ RISA, son of Joaqu�n P�rez Rodr�guez and Mar�a de los Dolores Risa de Alarc�n (b. circa 1830 d. 1856 Battle of Camargo, Tamaulipas.

 

6) JES�S P�REZ RODR�GUEZ. 5. Mar�a de las Nieves 4. Mar�a Petra Sabina, 3. Bonifacio. 2. Diego, 1 Alf�rez Francisco Hern�ndez. (b. circa 1850 d. december 28, 1926 Piedras Negras, Coahuila, M�xico, married Sacred Heart Church Von Ormy, Texas, August 30, 1875 MAR�A DE LA CANDELARIA TREVI�O RIVERA (b. circa 1851, d. January 2nd, 1939,  Piedras Negras, Coahuila, M�xico, daughter of Miguel Trevi�o and Eduviges Rivera Flores de �brego

 

7) MANUEL P�REZ TREVI�O, GENERAL MEXICAN ARMY. 6. Jes�s 5. Mar�a de las Nieves 4 Mar�a Petra Sabina, 3. Bonifacio, 2. Diego, 1. Alf�rez Francisco Hern�ndez, b. June 5, 1890 Guerrero, Coahuila, M�xico, d. April 29, 1945, Nueva Rosita, Coahuila, M�xico, married April 1st. 1920, Parras, Coahuila ESTHER GONZ�LEZ PEMOULI� (b. October 3rd. 1899 Hacienda Jalpa, General Cepeda, Coahuila, d. January 27, 1976 Saltillo, Coahuila, M�xico, daughter of Jos� Gonz�lez Ojeda and Rosa Pemouli� Padilla.

 

LIVING

8) JOSEFINA P�REZ TREVI�O GONZ�LEZ. 7 Manuel, 6. Jes�s, 5 Mar�a de las Nieves 5. Mar�a Petra Sabina, 3. Bonifacio, 2, Diego, 1. Alf�rez Francisco Hern�ndez (b. June 23, 1926 Saltillo, Coahuila, M�xico, married August 30, 1945 Mexico City, SALVADOR LABORDE CANCINO (b. March 13 1917 Mexico City, d. July 5th, 2001, Piedras Negras, Coahuila, M�xico, son of Salvador Laborde Dauban and Mar�a Elena Cancino y Zarco

 

9) MARIA ELENA LABORDE Y P�REZ TREVI�O 8. Josefina, 7, Manuel, 6 Jes�s, 5 Mar�a de las Nieves, 4, Mar�a Petra Sabina, 3) Bonifacio, 2) Diego, 1) Alf�rez Francisco Hern�ndez (b. July 17, 1947, Mexico City, married November 21, 1970, Mexico City, to CHARLES HAYAUX DU TILLY MAGANA (b. August 25, 1943, Mexico City, d. January 12, 1982 Mexico City, son of Yves Hayaux du Tilly Lemonnier de Gouville et Eva Maga�a Gahona  

 

Source:  

Diego Ram�n, Diario de la jornada, Archivo General de la Naci�n, Provincias Internas 28, March 9-April 8, 1707, Dolph Briscoe Center for American History, University of Texas at Austin. Robert S. Weddle, San Juan Bautista: Gateway to Spanish Texas (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1968).

 

Cox, I. J., "THE EARLY SETTLERS OF SAN FERNANDO ", Volume 005, Number 2, Southwestern Historical Quarterly Online, Page 142 - 160. http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/publications/journals/shq/online/v005/n2/article_6.html

 

Chabot, Frederick C.: �With the Makers of San Antonio �: Texas , Artes Graficas, San Antonio , Texas , April 1937  

www.texasbeyondhistory.net/gateway/index.html

 


MYTH AND PROPAGANDA MORE POPULAR THAN ACTUAL FACTS

By Richard G. Santos


Mexico is about to launch its bicentennial celebrations. The nation is celebrating two events. That is �200 years of independence� and one hundred years since the Revolution of 1910. Hence last week with great fanfare, pomp and circumstance, Mexican President Calderon escorted the remains of the Heroes of Mexican Independence to a new museum at the National Palace in Mexico City. But there is an historical problem. 

The remains placed on exhibit are those of Rev. Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla (he opposed independence from Spain), Ignacio Allende (favor independence and selling Texas to the US in 1813), Rev. Jose Maria Morelos y Pavon (issued a declaration of independence on November 6, 1813, six months after Bernardo Gutierrez de Lara had done so in San Antonio, Texas on April 6), Francisco Xavier Mina (a Spaniard loyal to King Fernando VII who was rebelling to reinstate the Spanish Constitution of 1812), and Pedro Moreno (ally of Mina). Also placed on exhibit were the remains of Royalist Officers who changed sides late in the uprising and joined the war of independence. They are Mariano Jimenez, Mariano Matamoros, Andres Quintana Roo, Nicolas Bravo and lady insurgent Leona Vicario.

For unknown reasons, Josefa Dominguez,Ignacio Rayon and the Aldama brothers have been excluded and neither recognized nor mentioned among the Heroes of the War of Independence. Also not mentioned is Jose Bernardo Gutierrez de Lara who issued the first formal, written declaration of independence against Spain. Agustin de Iturbide who issued the Plan de Iguala and authored the Treaty of Cordova that resulted in Mexico�s independence is also not mentioned or included. Even the General who overthrew Emperor Iturbide that led to the creation of the Republic of Mexico is not included! That person was Don Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna. In this case no one can say they cannot find the remains of Santa Anna. He is buried at the Tepeyac Cemetery next to the Basilica de Guadalupe in Mexico City. 

For years Mexico has erroneously portrayed Rev. Hidalgo as �the father of Mexican independence�. The truth of the matter he was loyal to Spanish King Fernando VII and started an uprising making that patently clear. The Grito de Dolores stated �Viva Fernando VII, Viva America, Viva la religion�. That is, Long Live King Fernando VII, Long Live the American Continent, Long Live the Roman Catholic Church. The Hidalgo banner which has been restored and put on exhibit plainly shows the Spanish coat of arms on the upper left hand side. At the center is an image of Our Lady of Guadalupe and on the upper right is the Catholic global logo. 

Hidalgo�s troops were composed of Native Americans and the oppressed ethnic minorities such as mulattos, mestizos and 24 other ethnic-racial mixtures considered lower-socio-economic castas. Not surprisingly, it was his followers who added �down with bad government� and �death to the Gachupinos�. The Gachupinos were the European born Spaniards who held all high offices from Viceroy and Generals to Archbishops and Bishops. It was the European Spaniards that Hidalgo and the American born Spaniards were trying to overthrow with the intent of governing themselves while remaining loyal to King Fernando VII.

Moreover, Hidalgo in his confession asked his followers to lay down their arms and remain loyal to the King. A copy of the confession is on file at San Fernando Cathedral at San Antonio. 

As previously mentioned, Jose Bernardo Maximilian Gutierrez de Lara left no doubt of his intentions. On April 6, 1813 at San Antonio, Texas, he issued the first, formal, written declaration of independence against� European Spain and all other foreign powers�. One can only theorize Gutierrez de Lara is not being honored and his remains not among the �Heroes of Independence� on display because his declaration was issued in Spanish Texas and not within the present boundary of Mexico. However, he is buried in Linares, Nuevo Leon so his remains could have been included.  

Agustin de Iturbide is an interesting historical hero of Mexican Independence who is also excluded.  As a royalist officer he fought against Hidalgo, Morelos and Ignacio Rayon and defeated all rebel forces he battled. In 1816 he was removed from command accused of undue cruelty and personal gain. He was reinstated the following year. In 1820 he was sent against rebels Vicente Guerrero and Guadalupe Victoria. Not being able to defeat them, he opened negotiations with Guerrero and on February 24, 1821, Iturbide, Guerrero and Victoria announced the Plan de Iguala. The Plan guaranteed Unity, Equality and Independence (loyal to King Fernando VII). Leadership of the Army of the Three Guarantees was given to Iturbide who with a red, white and green banner entered Mexico City of September 27 and quickly moved to negotiate a cease fire with the ruling Spanish Viceroy. Viceroy Juan de O�Donoju who had just arrived from Spain and was isolated at the fortress of San Juan de Ulua in Veracruz, signed the Treaty of Cordova in August, 1821. According to the Treaty, King Fernando, or a relative member of the Bourbon House would be invited to become Emperor of Mexico. In the meantime, Iturbide would serve as President of the Provisional Governing Junta.

The Provisional Junta was split between those favoring a monarchy under Fernando VII or a relative, and those supporting total independence from Spain. Whether orchestrated by Iturbide or his followers (historians disagree) on July 21,1822 Iturbide was named Emperor of Mexico. The coronation of Agustin I broke from the Plan de Iguala and Treaty of Cordova as Mexico became independent from Spain under a monarchial government of its own choosing.

 The continuing strife between the monarchists and republicans, as well as Iturbide�s extravagant life style, led General Antonio Lopez de Santa to issue the Plan de Casa Mata in 1823 seeking to overthrow the emperor and establish a republic. In March 1823, Iturbide abdicated and sailed for Europe on May 11, 1823. With Santa Anna in the background, generals Guadalupe Victoria, Nicolas Bravo and Pedro Celestino Negrete took over the Governing Junta. Victoria became the first President of the Republic of Mexico.

Iturbide returned to Mexico via the Port of Soto La Marina, Tamaulipas on July 14, 1824. He was quickly captured and executed. In 1833 President Santa Anna ordered the remains of Iturbide be moved to Mexico City and paid due honors for achieving Mexico�s Independence from Spain. The remains were finally re-interred in 1838 at the Cathedral in Mexico City across the street from the National Palace.

It is most interesting that President Calderon and the Bicentennial Commission have not included Iturbide or Santa Anna among the Heroes of Mexican Independence. To recap, Iturbide gained Mexico�s Independence from Spain. Santa Anna overthrew him and established the Republic of Mexico. At least Santa Anna, the scapegoat for Texas, Mexico and the U.S. political histories recognized the contributions of his former foe and had him re-interred with all due honors and respect. The same cannot be said of the current President of Mexico or the Bicentennial Commission. Instead, they continue to reinforce the erroneous and mythological image of Rev. Hidalgo as �Father of Mexican Independence� even though he staunchly opposed it. Moreover, Jose Bernardo Gutierrez de Lara and the Tejanos who issued the first formal, written Declaration of Independence from Spain at San Antonio de Bexar, continue to be ignored and excluded. Que pena, what a shame.

Changing topics but still related, the annual observation and seminar of the August 18, 1813 battle at the encinal del rio Medina took place last Saturday at Pleasanton.  It was an honor and pleasure to share the podium with friend Texas Archeologist Al McGraw as we always use the opportunity to privatly discuss our respective research. Camino Real Executive Director Steven Gonzalez spoke of the importance of the National Historic Trail. He also shared the previous day�s inspection of Canyon and Maxwell parks and Rutledge Creek that he, Poteet City Manager Lannel Matthews and I had conducted as a preliminary overview of the grant application. Texas Historian Jesus Frank de la Teja read a presentation based on his newest book Tejano Leadership and historian Robert Thonhoff spoke of the battle and the problems encountered on finding the battle field.

Attending the seminar was attorney-historian Ricardo Palacios whom I have nominated for the Board of Director of the Camino Real de los Tejas.  At my insistence, he brought along copies of his book Tio Cowboy that some of the attendees were able to purchase. Also in attendance was Margaret Trout, President of the Nacimiento del Camino Real and member Joann Null. Friends Amelia and Pete Torres from Von Ormy who make mustang grape wine as handed down for over 100 years, Felipe Castillo and Luis Tejeda, also descendants of Spanish colonial families, were also in attendance.  Even though we are really not related, it is always a pleasure to break bread with �primo� Luis Tejeda, Al McGraw and the Torres family after the event.

 

End �������� end ������� end ������� end ������. End

       Zavala County Sentinel ����. 26 � 26, 2010

Sent by Juan Marinez marinezj@anr.msu.edu

 

 


100th anniversary of the 
Getsemani Presbyterian Church, 
San Benito, TX

 

                                                      Getsemani Presbyterian Church of San Benito,
                                                              Formally Second Presbyterian Church,
                                                              Formally Mexican Presbyterian Church

In March 2009 this church was awarded a Texas Historical Commission subject marker. 
This is the narrative history of the church as compiled by Sandra Tumberlinson and edited by Norman Rozeff.  

I. Context

  For citizens, and recent emigrants, of predominantly Catholic Mexico to convert to a Protestant denomination was an unusual occurrence at the turn of the 20th Century . Undoubtedly, these particular individuals were influenced by strong role models who evidenced an attractive alternative to the religion under which they were raised or in some cases where they lacked any religion at all. After Texas had gained its independence from Mexico the Presbyterian and other Protestant denominations, primarily Methodist and Baptist, actively proselytized in Mexico, but less so in South Texas. The last half of the 19th Century saw increased activities by Protestant missionaries in South Texas and  Northern Mexico but no major inroads. The story to be told  of pioneer Hispanic Presbyterians is therefore a unique one and one which heretofore has received little recognition or documentation.

II. Overview

    Rev. Dr. Antonio Tomas Graybill was ordained by the Montgomery Presbytery, Presbyterian Church of the U.S., in 1874 after returning from a reconnaissance trip to Mexico in 1873 with the purpose of finding a suitable location for the establishment of a mission in Mexico.  Deciding that the border area was the best place for a Presbyterian mission, he settled in Matamoros, Tamaulipas, Mexico in 1874.[1]  Being an American and a Protestant, he encountered opposition among the predominantly Catholic Mexican population.  Unbeknownst to him, 30 years prior to his arrival, God had begun to open the door for Dr. Graybill:  Two U.S. Army officers, traveling on the northern banks of the Rio Grande River 30 miles upstream from Matamoros, happened upon a humble ranch home and gifted a Bible written in Castellano (Spanish) to a lively and intelligent woman.  Coming back through the area a few weeks later, the officers asked her about the Bible, and when she told them that the Catholic bishop had burned it, they gave her another.  When her husband and family found out about the second Bible, they forbade her to read it, but she hid the Bible under the roots of an old tree and secretly read it.  She converted and was baptized in Brownsville, (Texas).  There being no Spanish services in Brownsville (in 1844) she moved to Matamoros (in the Mexican state of Tamaulipas) with the hope that someday she  would hear the word of God in Spanish.  When Dr. Graybill arrived in Matamoros 30 years later, she was one of the first converts he met.  Her son, the future Rev. Leandro Garza Mora was Dr. Graybill�s first convert, the first ministerial student, the first ordained minister, the first president of the Presbytery (Tamaulipas).  Within 3 months of his arrival in Matamoros in 1874, Dr. Graybill had made his first convert, within 4 months he had held his first Presbyterian services, within one year he had organized his first Presbyterian church, and within 2 years, he had built the first Presbyterian church building.  After working in Matamoros for 14 years, in 1888 he moved to Linares in the Mexican state of Nuevo Leon to continue the work of Presbyterian faith.  He had good results in Linares, organized and built a church, establishing many congregations near and around Linares, Nuevo Leon, Mexico.  Dr. Graybill died in Linares January 21, 1905.  Before his death, he had the satisfaction of seeing that the humble work he�d begun in Matamoros had transformed into a Presbytery serving eleven churches, more than sixty congregacions, five chapels, six schools, eight missions, and 600 active members throughout the Mexican states of Tamaulipas, Nuevo Leon and the U.S. state of southern Texas[2]

    By the mid 19th century, many self-sustaining ranches existed in the area which would later become San  Benito.  The people who lived on these ranches, in many cases, were the descendents of the colonists brought into the upper Rio Grande River area in the mid-1700s by the Great Colonizer, Jose Escandon. They had over time migrated southeast on both sides of the river and settled in the area now known as San Benito. In 1904 the  railroad arrived in the Lower Rio Grande Valley of Texas. This led to the establishment of towns along its routes and brought the prospect of transporting agricultural goods north. San Benito was one such town.
     At the turn of the 20th century, a new influx of people began settling in the newly founded (1904) town of  San Benito.  The border between Mexico and the United States, the Rio Grande River, was constantly being crossed by persons who came from different parts of Mexico.  Their yearning for a better life and the threat of the Mexican Revolution accelerated this migration.  Some of these families, mainly from the Mexican states of Tamaulipas, Nuevo Leon, and Coahuila, had already heard and accepted the principles of the Protestant movement advocated by the Presbyterian Church of Mexico and were fully indoctrinated in its fundamentalswhen they arrived in their newly adopted homeland.[3]

     It is in this manner and for these reasons that by 1908, the families of Andres and Higinia Flores, Lorenzo and Nieves Pedraza, Clemente and Severa Lopez, Guadalupe and Hidelfonsa Rodriguez, Donato and Virginia de Hoyos, and Samuel and Dolores Rios, came to live in San Benito.  Other families, like native Texans Fernando and Juanita de Leon, came here from their ancestral home in Victoria, Texas.  All of these families had been members of a Presbyterian church elsewhere and now found themselves in the San Benito area where no Presbyterian church existed.  These families already knew one other and recognized the common Presbyterian background that they shared. [4]
    Based on the missionary work of Dr. Graybill from 1874 through the turn of the century, and the minutes of the Tamaulipas Presbytery, Presbyterian converts lived in this area well before San Benito became a town.[5]    In the actual minutes of the General Synod visits to the San Benito area by ministers the Revs. Leandro Garza Mora, Carmen A. Gutierrez, William Ross, and James O. Shelby are recorded as early as 1909.

These ministers encountered the aforementioned families, many of who were already known to them as members of Presbyterian churches in Mexico.[6]   It was at the homes of these Mexican Presbyterian families that the first Presbyterian Church services were first held in San Benito.[7]  The fervor and religious zeal of these early Presbyterians, as reported by the missionary ministers, was a determining factor in the Mexican General Synod�s decision to explore the possibility of establishing a Mexican Presbyterian Church in San Benito.
     Many of the members of this early group of Presbyterians established themselves in town and commenced spreading the gospel.  Lorenzo Pedraza, for example, owned a modest restaurant in San Benito where he took advantage of his patrons� mealtimes to �preach the gospel.�  It was common knowledge in town that, �if you go to Don Lorencito�s restaurant, you get fed the Bible.�  Andres Flores, on the other hand, had pastored the congregation of the Presbyterian Church of Matamoros, Tamaulipas, Mexico in 1892. This experience esta-blished him as a potential leader in the San Benito flock.  Guadalupe Rodriguez was already a Presbyterian ruling elder by the time he and his wife reached San Benito. [8]
     These early pioneers did not limit their Presbyterian work to the town�s people but also considered the small ranches in the surrounding area as fertile ground to plant the evangelical seed.  Carricitos, Texas, a river community five miles from San Benito, was established as a meeting point for the ministers and missionaries who served the communities on both sides of the Rio Grande River.[9]  Throughout 1909-1910, the pioneer Presbyterian families, along with new converts, kept alive the flame of evangelism. It was this determined group that, the following year made possible the founding of a Presbyterian church in San Benito.


     Revolution!  After 30 years of power, Mexican President Porfirio Diaz� administration was under siege likened to an erupting volcano spreading chaos, terror, and death throughout all of Mexico.  The northeastern border town of Matamoros  where the National Mission�s Department of the Presbyterian Church of the United States (PCUS) had established a Presbyterian church in 1875, suffered the consequences of this social upheaval.[10]  In conjunction with founding the church, an elementary school was started, adding a secondary curriculum in 1880.  Since its inception through 1910, the director of the school was Presbyterian missionary, Miss Anne E.  Dysart.[11]  As a result of the upheavals associated with the Mexican Revolution, all American Presbyterian missionaries were evacuated from Mexico and relocated in Brownsville and San Benito.  This is how, toward the end of 1910, Miss Anne E. Dysart, both missionary and teacher, came to live in San Benito.[12]

She became a major influence in the organization of a Presbyterian church in San Benito.  At about the same time, two missionaries �conducted a tent meeting on the present site of the Stonewall Jackson Hotel, and at its close on August 30, 1910, organized twenty person as a Presbyterian church,� which became First Presbyterian Church of San Benito.[13]
      Anne E. Dysart�s strengths lay in education and evangelism.  Her years working as director of the church-run school in Matamoros gave her an appreciation and love of the people of Mexico.  When she arrived in San Benito, she recognized that the Hispanic people with whom she dealing did not have the opportunity to receive even an elementary education. She petitioned the Mission Board of the Presbyterian Church U. S. and the Tamaulipas Presbytery of the National Presbyterian Church of Mexico for help in establishing a school.  Her concept was supported by the ministers and the Presbyterian families who lived in San Benito, and who by this time, had begun to hold regular church services in a room of an old building where Fred Booth Elementary School is today located.[14]  This was the first actual meeting place, outside of their own homes, for that group of Presbyterian families. A few months later, with Anne E. Dysart�s support, they organized themselves into the Mexican Presbyterian Church of San Benito.[15]  Anne E.  Dysart led Sunday services and during the week, she visited church families and other people who were sympathetic to the work that she was conducting.  This chain of events permanently interwove the town of San Benito and the founding of the Mexican Presbyterian Church.

Organization of the Church


     The Hispanic Presbyterian congregation of San Benito sent a letter in April, 1911, to the secretary of the Tamaulipas Presbytery in Mexico requesting permission to organize as a church. [16] The petition was approved, and the Rev. William Ross and Ruling Elder Macedonio Garcia, both from the Brownsville Presbyterian Church, were charged with completing the arrangements.[17]  They contacted the leaders of the congregation in San Benito and decided that October 19, 1911 would be the official day of the church�s dedication service.[18]  On that day, approximately twenty-five persons (most having already made their professions of faith and been baptized) met, named officers, and established a Session consisting of three ruling elders and one deacon.  The Ruling Elders were Guadalupe Rodriguez, Lorenzo Pedraza and Andres Flores.[19] The church officially became the Mexican Presbyterian Church of San Benito.


     The new church celebrated Christmas 1911 at its school in the neighborhood called �Mexiquito.�[20]  Miss Anne E. Dysart contributed much of her time and talents to the church in its early months, and especially to the children and youth, who learned poems and songs for their first Christmas as a church.


     By 1912, the church membership had grown, thus establishing the need for a proper building in which to hold services.  Miss Dysart took it upon herself to solicit funds from members of the church and influential persons in the community.  With this money together with a generous donation from Missions Department of the Presbyterian Church of the United States (PCUS), a city lot at the corner of Biddle and Hull Streets was purchased in the �El Jardin� neighborhood.[21]  On this site the first church and adjoining elementary school were built.  Known affectionately as �Miss Annie�s school,� Presbyterian boys and girls attended the school as well as neighborhood children.  The curriculum consisted of reading, writing, arithmetic and sewing.  Most importantly, the curriculum emphasized religious training, and cultivating the mind and spirit of the students.  Several of the parents whose children attended the church-school converted and became members of the church.[22] 

Among the students who attended the school between 1912 through 1916 were Juanita Flores Hernandez, Porfiria Flores Goggens, Esthercita de la Garza, Aurelia Garcia, Maria de Jesus Trevino, Maria de los Angeles Villarreal, Luis Benavides, Ambrosio Gutierrez and Alfredo Trevino.[23]

First Pastor, the Rev. Ignacio Escalante, mid 1912--1915
     The Rev. Ignacio Escalante was the first pastor of Mexican Presbyterian Church of San Benito from the middle of 1912 through 1915.[24]  This was a difficult period in the life of the church.  In 1913, an incident occurred that cast a shadow over the life of the flock and mission of the church.  One of the church-school teachers, who was also a Sunday school teacher, was killed by a frustrated admirer in one of the school classrooms. He took his own life as well.  In addition, managerial problems began occurring.  At this time, the Session was charged with coordinating all evangelical, spiritual and administrative proceedings within the church.  Yet, the church-school, an important part of the life and mission of the church, was under the direction of missionary Miss Annie Dysart.  These circumstances created some problems between the leaders of the church and the missionary, so much so, that in 1915, the problems came to a head at a meeting of the Presbytery of Tamaulipas.  The ruling by Presbytery was as follows:  The church administration was placed under the direction of Presbytery, which meant that the Session became inactive regarding its administrative responsibilities.[25]  Thus ended 1915.
      The  church again encountered difficulties in 1916.  The Rev. Escalante resigned as pastor while the Session was still inactive, and by the end of the year, with the Mexican Revolution winding down, Anne E. Dysart went back to her missionary work in Mexico.  Despite these problems, the church did not falter in its dedication to continue its work.  Worship services, Sunday school, and the church-school continued as usual.  By early 1917, the church was looking forward to finding a new pastor.

Second Pastor, the Rev. Antonio Valiente y Pozo, 1917-- Feb. 1918
     The short pastorate of the Rev. Valiente y Pozo, from early 1917 through February, 1918, was characterized by sermons emphasizing the importance of Christian behavior and the responsibilities of the church.  He preached against what he considered vices and offensive customs prevalent in the Hispanic community and that diverged from his strict Spanish background.  It was during his tenure as pastor that the church, under the jurisdiction of the Tamaulipas Presbytery and having had its session deactivated in January 1917, submitted a request to reorganize. The Presbytery sent the Revs. Santiago O. Shelby and William A. Ross to direct the reorganization process.[26]  On April 29, 1917, the reorganization meeting took place with 83 persons in attendance. Most were town members of the church plus others from the outlying mission.  The Rev. Valiente y Pozo based his sermon on Ephesians 4:11-16.  The congregation elected as Session members Agustin Plata and Samuel Rios; deacons elected were Migueas Lopez and Elias de Hoyos.[27]  The church missions in the �Mexiquito� neighborhood and down by the river at Carricitos, where Santiago Gomez and family lived, remained active.  In February 1918 the church was once again without a minister.

Period of Transition and New Presbyterian Relations
     The Mexican Presbyterian Church of San Benito, although geographically and politically in the United States, ecclesiastically was a member of a Presbytery within the Presbyterian Church of Mexico. Furthermore, the Presbyterian Church of the United States (PCUS) had established missionaries in San Benito through its foreign missions department that considered San Benito as foreign ground.  Between the years 1911 to 1919, the Mexican Presbyterian Church of San Benito was under the jurisdiction of the Presbytery of Tamaulipas, but certain circumstances would occur that prompted the church to request affiliation with an American Presbytery.
     Distance was one of the major challenges the San Benito church faced being a member of the Presbyterian Church of Mexico.  To attend a Presbytery meeting in Ciudad Victoria, Tamaulipas or Linares, Nuevo Leon, Mexico required a significant economic sacrifice, not to mention the dangers involved with travel in Mexico during the Mexican Revolution (1910-1917).[28]  As if this were not enough, there occurred a change of strategy in the foreign missions department that supported the work of the Tamaulipas Presbytery. This change caused direct repercussions in the work of all the Presbyterian churches.
     The major Protestant denominations of the United States proposed a strategy called the �Cincinnati Plan� whereby each denomination would be assigned a specific zone in Mexico for missionary work.[29]  The Presbyterian Church of the United States (PCUS & PCUSA) was assigned the central and southern regions of Mexico where, in some places, there already existed Methodist missions.  The plan involved the Methodists surrendering their land and congregations to the Presbyterians and, in turn, the Presbyterians would cede the same in the northern region of Mexico to the Methodists and Baptists.  This plan would dissolve the Tamaulipas Presbytery, relocating its ministers to central Mexico and yielding all its churches and congregations to the Methodist denomination.  The pastors and congregations of the Tamaulipas Presbytery vehemently opposed the plan and vowed to stay with their congregations.  But the missionaries whose job was directly under the Department of Foreign Missions (PCUS), obeyed the plan, relocating to central and southern Mexico in April, 1919.
     The Mexican Presbyterian Church of San Benito, which was a member of the Tamaulipas Presbytery, was affected, to a certain extent, by the Cincinnati Plan, and, while this was not the only reason, it did contribute to the church�s continued desire to become affiliated with a Presbytery in the United States.  Being without a pastor since 1918 and not being able to find one, the San Benito church began bonding with the Texas-Mexico Presbytery in the hopes of negotiating membership with the Presbyterian Church of the U.S.  The two affected Presbyteries (Tamaulipas and Texas-Mexico) agreed to the move and on November 10, 1919, the Mexican Presbyterian Church of San Benito became a member of the Texas-Mexico Presbytery of the Presbyterian Church of the U.S.[30]  The Rev. Isabel Balderas was named interim pastor until a full time pastor was called. 

New Location for Church
      Since 1919, the church had owned two buildings, the sanctuary and the school. Although not located in an advantageous site, both buildings were in good condition.  Rainy weather, however, made the roads impassable, making it very difficult to get to the church.  Also, the church was not centrally located.  At the end of 1919, the membership decided to explore the possibility of purchasing a larger site, since its merger with a U.S. Presbytery would potentially encourage growth.  The Session named Miqueas Lopez and Guillermo A Walls (interim pastor sent by Presbytery to help with Sunday school) to look for a prospective property on which to relocate the church.   A few months later, in July 1920, at a meeting of the congregation, the following decisions were reached:
1. Trustees were named:  Miqueas Lopez, Socorro Plata, and Agustin Plata.
2. Trustees were authorized to purchase four lots in Block 1, Addition 7, San Benito, at the corner of Combes and Diaz Streets.
3. Trustees were authorized to sell the two lots where the church and school were located.
The congregation approved a proposal to borrow $250, payable in 2 years, from the Texas-Mexico Presbytery.  A few months later, the church-owned buildings were moved to the new location at 140 Diaz St.[31]

Third Pastor, the Rev Ventura Euresti, July 1920�June 1928

The eight-year pastorate of the Rev. Ventura Euresti began July 1920.  The congregation at that time consisted of sixty-nine members, excluding children.  On most Sundays, the attendance at Sunday school and worship service was forty.  The  Rev. Euresti�s time in San Benito was marked by his ability to consolidate the church and its organizations, both spiritually and materially.  He emphasized the importance of observing the Sabbath as �God�s day.�  During his first few years, he activated the �Esfuerzo Cristiano� (Christian Effort) working with the youth, teaching them how to help with worship services.  It was during this period that on February 5, 1924, the women of the church formed the �Sociedad Auxiliar Femenil,� (Women�s Auxiliary. Society) an organization that became the backbone of the church and continues with the name �Dorcas" to this day.    During this time, revival campaigns were held at least once a year.  Some of the ministers who led these revivals were the Revs. Elias Trevino, Octaviano Lopez, and Arquimedes Martinez.  The congregation in Carricitos was regularly assisted by the Rev. Euresti, and a mission in the community of Rio Hondo, Texas was assisted by deacons Miqueas Lopez and Miss Lydia Rodriguez.  A mission was also begun in Harlingen, Texas, a neighboring town, where in 1927, ruling elder Vidar Najar was in charge of assisting the new congregation in their quest for a pastor.[32]
     By 1925, the church-run school had stopped operating. The building was refurbished and used as the church manse.  Around this time, Julio Cantu, who had been named ruling elder in 1923, became the first pastoral candidate from the church.  He was ordained in 1937 serving three churches in the Texas-Mexico Presbytery.[33]  After his retirement, the Rev. Cantu assisted the church in an unofficial pastoral capacity.  Another member of the church who became a Presbyterian minister was D.G. Vera.[34]
     From May 1926 to March 1927, forty new members were added to the rolls through profession of faith or transfer of membership and eight babies were baptized.
     In 1926, the Rev. Euresti married Miss Juanita Garcia, a member of the congregation.  In June 1928, Euresti was called for service by the Presbyterian Church of Kingsville.


Fourth Pastor, the Rev. R.D. Campbell, July 1928--April 1929
     With the departure of the Rev. Euresti, the Texas-Mexico Presbytery assigned the church to be under the guidance of the Domestic Missions Department of the PCUS headed by the Rev. R. D. Campbell.  He�d been in contact with the church since 1918 when the Texas-Mexico Presbytery assigned him the task of negotiating between the church and the Presbytery for admittance.  The Rev. Campbell had also been charged with the arrangements for the Rev. Euresti to become pastor of the church, so when Euresti left, the congregation felt comfortable calling him to the pulpit position, a call which he accepted.[35] 
     The Rev. Campbell�s brief time with the San Benito church saw an exceptional growth in its missionary work in Carricitos and a new mission in Los Indios, Texas.  He received a $40/month salary after a $10 increase.  The most notable event occurring during his one-year term in San Benito was the Texas-Mexico Presbytery meeting held in the San Benito church.  This was the first time the Presbytery meeting had been held in the Rio Grande Valley.  The church rejoiced and warmly welcomed its Presbyterian brothers from April 10-14, 1929. 
     Unfortunately, the Rev. Campbell�s health didn�t allow him to continue to minister the San Benito church.  At the 1929 meeting of the Presbytery held in San Benito he requested a transfer to another location that would be more beneficial his health. His term ended May 1929.

Fifth Pastor, the Rev. Crescencio S. Guerrero, June 1929--June 1930
     As was his predecessor, the Rev. Guerrero�s term as pastor of Mexican Presbyterian Church was short but valuable to the life of the church.  Week long evangelical services increased church membership, Sunday school training for teachers was initiated, the missions at Carricitos and Los Indios reached sixty and forty members respectively, and in 1930, the San Benito church membership reached 130.  These circumstances increased the coffers and the church was able to remodel the sanctuary adding fifteen feet to its rear side at a cost of $165.  The Carricitos congregation built a church for their worship services.  The Women of the Church hosted a joint meeting of Presbytery WOC groups with churches as far away as Corpus Christi represented.  The Rev. Guerrero�s term as pastor of Mexican Presbyterian Church of San Benito, though brief, saw a tremendous growth in membership.[36]

Sixth Pastor, the Rev. Desiderio G. Cavazos, June 1930--May 1940
      The Rev. Desiderio G. Cavazos� decade as pastor of Mexican Presbyterian Church occurred during the life of the church when the second generation individuals of founding families became old enough to serve in a variety of capacities.  His pastorate was well defined in three areas: education, missions and spiritual.[37]
      Vacation Bible School, sometimes lasting three weeks, was begun at this time.  Sunday school attendance was so large and consistent that it had directors, secretaries and eight teachers.
     Revivals were held yearly, and new missions were begun at Las Flores and El Fresnal.  The mission at Carricitos was reorganized in 1936 after having been briefly abandoned.
     The Session of the church was characterized as one of strong internal discipline and severity regarding its influence over the lives of church members.
     The Valley Presbyterian churches formed an organization named �Regional Convention of Valley Presbyterian Churches� that met twice a year to promote and rekindle evangelical spirit.
     On Labor Day, September 3, 1933, a strong hurricane caused severe damage to the church sanctuary. For a while, worship services were held at the manse.  With donations from members, the community, other churches and $415.92 from Texas Synod, the new church was built.  A service of re-consecration was held April 7, 1935 with the Rev. Abraham Fernandez officiating.  Later, in Feb. 1939, the manse was severely damaged by fire.  After rebuilding it, insurance for both buildings was purchased.[38]
     Of the original three trustees, two had died.  The congregation named Natividad Castillo, Zeferino Rios, and David Plata to serve with ruling elder Miqueas Lopez as trustees.  At the end of the Rev. Cavazos time in San Benito, the church boasted 179 members.

Seventh Pastor, the Rev. Ruben M. Armendariz, June 1940- July 1943
     During the Rev. Armendariz� term as pastor of Mexican Presbyterian Church, two major events occurred, one world-wide and one local.  The first was the commencement of World War II.  Many young men of the church served in World War II. Two died in action.  The second event was that the Valley Convention ( �convencion�) of Presbyterian churches met in San Benito.[39] 
    
Eighth Pastor, the  Rev. Alberto Luna, August 1943�December 1948
     The Rev. Alberto Luna came as pastor in 1943. His energy and enthusiasm quickly spread throughout the congregation. Membership grew to 150 persons with two-thirds attending church regularly. 
    Though the war in Europe raged, church finances reflected a healthy U.S. economy.  In 1939 the church budget was $750, in 1945 the budget was $2,000 reaching a high of $3,366 in 1947.  The pastor�s salary was still $40 in 1939 but by 1947 had risen to $100.[40]
     The church hosted three Presbytery meetings. 
     During the Rev. Luna�s service, the church began a campaign to raise funds for the building of a new brick church.  The Texas Synod donated $1,200 to initiate the fund drive, and the members donated the remainder.[41]

Ninth Pastor, the Rev. Juan D. Cavazos, January 1949�April 1955
     The Rev. Juan D. Cavazos� time with the San Benito church can be characterized as one in which the spiritual leadership of the church was guided by a philosophy of strict and firm discipline both ecclesiastically and morally.  The conservative outlook prevalent in early 1950s society, defined the attitude of the congregation.[42]
     Membership grew from 164 to 217 members during this time, making Mexican Presbyterian Church of San Benito one of the strongest and most solid of the churches in the Texas-Mexico Presbytery.
     It was during this pastorate that the new church building, of which plans were set in motion during the Rev. Luna�s years, was constructed.  The building cost approximately $20,000.  The General Assembly donated $3,500 and Texas Presbytery donated $1,200.  The remainder of funds came from members of the church as well as other Presbyterian churches. 
     July 1954, the Texas-Mexico Presbytery met at the San Benito church for one of the last times before it was dissolved by the Synod.
    The Rev. Juan D. Cavazos and the Rev. Desidero G. Cavazos were brothers.

Tenth Pastor, the Rev. Fernando Padilla, October 1955�February 1960
      The Rev. Fernando Padilla came to San Benito from The Divine Redeemer Presbyterian Church of Monterrey, Mexico.  
      Worldwide postwar social changes, as well as technological advances, began to show their affects on the local congregation.  The clash of the traditional and the modern was felt especially by the transitioning younger generation.
     The Mexican Presbyterian Church of San Benito, along with many other Spanish-speaking congregations, became members of the Western Texas Presbytery with the dissolving of the Texas-Mexico Presbytery.[43]
     During these years of the Rev. Padilla�s service, the church became financially solvent and no longer received subsidies from Presbytery. [44]

First Period Without a Minister, February 1960�May 1961
     During this period without a minister, South Texas Presbytery made changes in the focus of its congregations.  Between 1920 and 1959, four of the ministers who had served the San Benito church had received their degrees and formal training in Mexico.  It was observed that those who had received their degrees and formal training in Mexico had served the church for a total of thirty years, while those whose degrees and training had been obtained in Texas, had served only ten total years.[45]   It was also noted that since the founding families were from Mexico, and those Americans who joined at a later date were primarily Spanish speakers, the language used in worship was Spanish.  The literature for Sunday school was also in Spanish, and church customs and traditions were derived from those practiced in the National Presbyterian Church of Mexico.  However, when the predominantly English speaking baby boomers of the 1950s ,and who had been born and educated in Texas began to grow up, their allegiances to Mexico and its customs, began to change.  As a consequence of this change, the congregation named a committee in November 1960 to find a pastoral candidate who could deal with the transitional changes reflecting the new focus of the congregation. 

Eleventh Pastor, the Rev. Guadalupe M. Armendariz, June 1961�June 1971
     The Rev. Guadalupe M. Armandariz, earned his credentials at Austin Theological Seminar and had pastored several Mexican-American churches before coming to San Benito.  His ability to work with Mexican traditions in an ever-increasing American setting and his work with English speaking youth made him the perfect man for the transitioning church.  One month into his new position, the congregation changed its name from Mexican Presbyterian Church to 2nd Presbyterian Church.[46] 
     At this time, educational literature formally ordered only in Spanish, was now being ordered in English too.  Hymns, prayers and poems for special occasions were also presented in both languages, thereby offering the congregants a bilingual choice.  Services, social functions and communion services with 1st Presbyterian Church of San Benito were also held encouraging the youth of both churches to worship together. 
     Ruling elders and deacons, as of 1965, came under the rules of the Presbyterian Church of the United States (PCUS) and its rotating terms of service.  The implementation of this rotation system allowed for a democratic change of ideas and people in authority.  At this time, the first female ruling elder and deacons were elected. 
     For many years, the spiritual and social life of the church remained separate, but with the arrival of the Rev. Armendariz, special worship services were often followed by congregational meals.  Youth activities often included trips to the beach and bowling.   The Educational Building, which personified the spirit and progressive attitude of the Rev. Armendariz, was erected in 1969 at a cost of $65,894.[47]
     The Rev. Armendariz retired from the ministry in 1971. 
     The Revs. Ruben Armendariz and Guadalupe Armendariz were brothers. 

Second Period Without a Minister, July 1971�December 1972
     After the Rev. Armendariz� retirement, the pulpit committee again had the task of finding suitable ministers to supply worship services while a permanent minister was called.  One of the ministers who assisted the church in this capacity was the Rev. Pedro Lopez, a Baptist minister, who had been approved by Presbytery to supply the San Benito church. 
     In its efforts to serve the community, the church allowed a kindergarten school, not affiliated with the church, to operate in the educational building, and, in 1972, the majority of the building was rented to Texas Migrant Council as a preschool.[48] 

Twelfth Pastor, the  Rev. Pedro Lopez,  January 1973�March 1976
     The Rev. Pedro Lopez preached in both English and Spanish and began the practice of giving ten minute sermonettes for the children during Sunday morning services.   During his tenure as pastor, the interior of the church was remodeled and the exterior re-roofed. The Women of the Church donated the curtain that hangs behind the pulpit.  The choir ordered robes, and Sunday school was flourishing.


Third Period Without a Pastor, April 1976--May 1978
     The pulpit committee was reinstated and, while it vetted pastoral candidates, it provided the church several pastors to preach on Sundays.  Vacation Bible School continued to function.

Thirteenth Pastor, the Rev. Joel Martinez, June 1978--1984
     Second Presbyterian Church was renamed Getsemani Presbyterian Church in 1979 by congregational vote.  The pastor reflected that there were as many men as women on the church rolls and that the proportion was equal between youth and children.  The men of the church formed a group to coexist with the Dorcas (Women of the Church) and the youth became very active again, taking trips to Mo Ranch and serving in the church.  

Fourteenth Pastor the Rev. Dr. Jesse Leos, 1984--1987
Fifteenth Pastor, the Rev. Guillermo Enriquez, 1987--1991
Sixteenth Pastor, the  Rev. Dr. John Paul Roberts Haine, 1994--1997
Seventeenth Pastor, the  Rev. Efrain Buenfil, 1999
Eighteenth Pastor, the  Rev. Jesus Juan Gonzalez, 1991--2001
Nineteenth Pastor, the  Rev. Thomas C. Johnson 2002� present

III. Historical and Cultural Significance

 

The Presbyterian church in San Benito that began by serving the community's Hispanics is nearing its 100th anniversary. It now serves all, regardless of ethnicity.  The following list clearly demonstrates how it has and continues to have a positive impact on the growing City of San Benito and its surrounding areas. Its commitment to the betterment of the city's citizens has never wavered and therein lies its historical/cultural significance.

Community Participation by Getsemani Presbyterian Church
1. 1912-1916   Missionary Miss Annie Dysart ran a school for the �Mexican� children of the community.
2. 1970   Private Kindergarten started in the annex serving town children.
3. 1972-2005  As a community center for migrant children- Texas Migrant Council.  This facility served 10,200 children in the 34 years it used the church annex to house its office and classrooms.
4.  2005�present   As emergency distribution center for Texas Migrant Council for disaster or other emergencies.
5.  1971-1983   As a community polling location for city and county elections,
6.  2006-present   As a local Food Bank and Clothes Closet-clothing distribution center for the public.
7.  2005-present   As a community distribution center for children�s books, backpacks, back to school articles.
8.  As a headquarters for Presbyterian Disaster assistance building groups (Hurricane Emily assistance to Green Valley Colonia � three homes reroofed); (Coodinating for 2008 Hurricane Dolly relief efforts � three persons from this church are on the Valley Hurricane Dolly Disaster response team).  The National Presbyterian Church General Assembly has given over $22,000, and we have centralized our efforts with other churches out of �Loaves and Fishes� in Harlingen.) 
9. 2005�present  Hosting community wide gatherings of children � food and safe environment for games.
10.   60 years Vacation Bible School for all community children
11.   Fall Festival in November
12.   Spring Festival in March-April
13.   Wednesday bible study for children of the community
14.   English Language classes offered to the public by the Robers
15.   Women�s Ecumenical Bible study every Monday
16.   Men�s Ecumenical Bible study every Tuesday
17.   Prayer Chain
18.   Yearly Scholarships for graduating high school seniors
19.   Foster children of a church member, help with money
20.   Benevolent fund set up for indigent
21.   Su Casa Esperanza with money donations and volunteers
22.   To  KVMV  96.9 Christian radio station, money donations
23.   San Benito Food Pantry money donations and volunteers
24.   Music Fest different churches from the community invited
25.   The Women of the Church, Dorcas, provide a meal for families who have lost a loved one.
26.   Present minister, the Rev. Johnson, donated his time at the school district�s redirection center working with troubled youth who are in an alternative school setting.
27.   The church in conjunction with the Mexican Presbytery sponsors an international mission in Mexico at the Prince of Peace church..  People from the church regularly attend and help in keeping the Presbyterian effort alive.  One person from our church preaches there too.


[1] Brackenridge, R. Douglas and Francisco O. Garcia-Treto, Iglesia Presbiteriana, A History of Presbyterians and Mexican Americans in the Southwest,  (Trinity University Press, 1974), p 12

[2] Shelby, Dr. James Oliver, �The History of the Mexico Mission of the Presbyterian Church US.� P 2-3, c1944 (date according to Rev. Clarence Bassett and Missionary Edson Johnson, Jr.)  (San Benito Historical Society).    Transcribed by Rev. Tom Johnson,1303 N. Bowie, San Benito, Texas; Translated by Sandra Tumberlinson, San Benito Historical Society, 2400 Zillock Rd, San Benito, Texas: 

�Rev. Dr. Antonio Tomas Graybill was ordained by the Montgomery Presbytery in 1874 after returning from a reconnaissance trip to Mexico in 1873 with the purpose of finding a suitable location for the establishment of a mission.  Deciding that the border area was the best place for a Presbyterian mission, he settled in Matamoros, Tamaulipas, Mexico in 1874.  Being an American and a Protestant, he encountered opposition among the predominantly Catholic Mexican population.  Unbeknownst to him, 30 years prior to his arrival, God had begun to open the door for Dr. Graybill:  Two U.S. Army officers, traveling on the (northern) banks of the Rio Grande River 30 miles upstream from Matamoros, happened upon a humble ranch home and gifted a Bible written in Castellano (Spanish)  to a lively and intelligent woman.  Coming back through the area a few weeks later, the officers asked her about the Bible, and when she told them that the Catholic bishop had burned it, they gave her another one.  When her husband and family found out about the second Bible, they forbade her to read it, but she hid the Bible under the roots of an old tree and secretly read it.  She converted and was baptized in Brownsville, (Texas).  There being no Spanish services in Brownsville (in 1844) she moved to Matamoros (in the Mexican state of Tamaulipas) with the hope that someday she would hear the word of God in Spanish.  When Dr. Graybill arrived in Matamoros 30 years later, she was one of the first converts he met.  Her son, Rev. Leandro Garza Mora was Dr. Graybill�s first convert, the first ministerial student, the first ordained minister, the first president of the Presbytery (Tamaulipas), the first general evangelist, and the leader of the giant  Self Sustaining movement which began in 1919.