24 Şubat 2013 Pazar

Pickin'

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I'll share my favorite quote that I'm always telling my kids...stop me if you've heard this one...
You can pick your friends.You can pick your nose.Just don't pick your friend's nose.(baaaahahaaa!!! hhaaa!!! gets me every time!!!)

They hate it when I tell them this. It's like every day.  Especially when a friend is over. They bury their face in their hands and wish to high heaven that I was a normal mom. 
Speaking of picking...We picked peaches.  It was hot, but delightful.  I climbed a few trees, got a few scratches, and discovered that climbing the trees was a worthless venture because the birds had pecked all of the good ones up there.
We came home with some beauties, though!!Now I need to hurry up and do something with them.  I can't wait--the possibilities are endless.  I'm pretty sure I want to make this peach jam, as well as bottle some for cobblers and such.  

And they're so pretty. My pretty little peachy babies.

 More pickin' going on...I also picked out some books to add to my shelf.  {gasp!!}I haven't added to the shelf in a while, and since I'm on a roll of doing nothing, I figure I could do nothing whilst looking at pretty things to make.  

I'm madly in love with crewel and I can't wait to look at this book and discover all of the amazing projects I'm probably not going to make!!! {exciiiiiiting!}

This one makes me giddy, too.  My baby girl LOVES playing with her cooking stuff, so I might feel a little itch to do a project from this one.  Maybe.  I'm thinking I'd like to have a bunch of adorable felt food made in time for Christmas.  And, if you know me already, I better start now.  haha.

That's all of the picking going on for now.  Thank goodness.

Slacker!!!

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Whatta SLACKER!!!  I know, I know.  Looks like I'm on the once-a- month schedule.  Not cool!!  I miss my fun bloggie friends and the world of creativity.  I do create every now and then, but I think I'm in a phase of my life where it's not very easy, so projects are few and far between.   I do, however, maintain a regular schedule of admiring the works of others, particularly one of my heroes, Nana & Co.    I will definitely be purchasing this pattern & making one!  It's gorgeous.  I love her frame, too.


After a brief inventory of my embroidery supplies, I was aghast to discover that most of it is buried underneath all of our earthly belongings, locked away in a storage unit.  At the very bottom.  The bottom, most underneath spot.  It may as well be at the bottom of the sea underneath the Titanic.  It's NOT going to be recovered anytime soon.  I know...can you stand it?!  How could I let this happen?!  
Naturally, I had to get more stuff. 

I'm not complaining, though.  All of these delicious thread colors!  Just a buncha eye candy, alright!!  It's tedious work trying to re-establish a well-stocked embroidery inventory, but I'm getting ready to put a project together, so I need everything to be up & running...and my only staff member consists of one 3-year-old who doesn't listen to me.  



During the in-between time, when I'm not home cleaning up after people and playing dress-up with my little one, and wishing I was making something pretty, my hubs and I often load up the family & take little day trips in our great, big backyard.  I never tire of it!

During one of our slow, Sunday drive evenings, we were cruising around the old Welker Farm and spotted this gorgeous barn owl.  We couldn't get any closer, so this is as good as we get.
Isn't he BEAUTIFUL?!  {gasp!!!}  Staring right at us with those bright, yellow eyes!!!  And, if I zoom in on the photo a bit, he looks like he wants to kill me, so that's a little unnerving...



AND......my baby turned three this month.  (sniff)Remember when we were guessing what to name her?!  And her debut here on the blog...Wow.  Just wow.She still makes me tired, but I can't get enough of this little fireball!!!
She's madly in love with Periwinkle and requested the winter fairy for her birthday cake.  I think it's funny that, of all of the Tinkerbell fairies, Brooke is crazy about the winter fairy.  Makes sense...she was born in the snowy winter...it's in her blood!
My eldest daughter and I made white chocolate snowflakes on waxed paper, put them in the freezer, and used them as cake toppers.  We had the perfect winter fairy cake!!  Brookie loved it.Hey, I'm all about simple here.  The cake & frosting were both incredibly delish...that's really what it's all about!
This picture below is a treasure....she wanted a Periwinkle doll & costume SO bad.She just loved, loved, loved that doll and couldn't stop looking at her!!!  (preshesssss!!)I love the magical world that kids live in!!  I don't want her to get any bigger!!!
Excuse me while I go sob my face off.

Cheers everyone!!

Let's Play Football/ Juguemos al Fútbol

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Hola Blogueros, I am very happy to present my new bilingual picture book Let's Play Football/ Juguemos al Fútbol. As always, this book is also about my immigrant experience. When a group of friends invited me to play "futbol", I said "Okay, I can play." But when I saw the oval ball flying above my head, I realized that they were not playing my fútbol. They were playing football instead. The book will be available this March and there will be a Bilingual Edition and a Spanish Edition.

I will be signing the first copies at CABE (California Association for Bilingual Education) at Long Beach, CA on February 15th from 2:00-3:00 pm. Look for me at the Santillana U.S.A. booth.



Carlos is not sure that football can be played with an oval-shaped ball. Chris is not sure that it can be played with a round ball.
It may not be a good idea to play with a kid who is so different... He doesn’t even know how to play this game!
Wait. It looks kind of fun... Let’s give it a try!
Enjoy and celebrate the encounter of two cultures through their favorite sports. ;-)





Carlos no cree que se pueda jugar al fútbol con una pelota ovalada. Chris no cree que se pueda jugar con una pelota redonda.
Quizás no es buena idea jugar con un niño tan diferente... ¡Ni siquiera sabe cómo se juega!
Un momento. Se ve como divertido... ¡Vamos a probar!
Disfruta y celebra el encuentro de dos culturas a través de sus deportes favoritos. ;-)



saludos,
René Colato Laínez

So kids don't breathe 400ppm - NO Keystone XL Pipeline!

To contact us Click HERE

NYC neighborhood after Hurricane Sandy

This post is about Chicanoliterature. But of necessity, it's about the rest of the humans and all human culture, too.
Word usage fascinates me,something writers manipulate and craft in their literary works. It's not easy.Certain words carry unintended meaning.
Two phrases, "Ecologicalfootprint" and "Save the Earth" have always bothered me fortheir inaccuracy. The first is a measure of the demands that humans put onEarth's ecosystems. Buying a package of junk food involves cutting trees forthe box, processing oil used to produce the plastic, the consequent landfill orrecycling needed to get rid of the trash, as well as our waste products fromeating the junk. And that's just the tip of the melting iceberg.
What about footprint? To me, it's BS. Butt-print, something wider and biggerthan a foot, would more accurately describe what our presence does to theplanet. Footprint's an understatement of our negative impact, like we won'tadmit our bigger, even catastrophic, guilt.
Saving the planet sounds nice andecological-friendly, but it too lacks precision, in an opposite way. Many of ourecological movements aren't so concerned about the whole planet as much as theyare about preserving it so humans can thrive. Face up: we'd sacrifice umpteenislands and species if that paid for our continuation on top of the food chain.
350.org is a group that keepscount for us of the first phrase, footprint. 350 means climate safety, for all gente. To keep Earth fit for humans, CO2 in the atmosphere must be below350 parts per million (ppm).
Polar cap melt
You don't have to be anyscientist to appreciate that the current 392ppm of CO2 means we passed the limit, live onborrowed time. Plus, it's rising about2ppm each year. For some years this has meant we're screwing ourselves like thedinosaurs never did. Forget about "saving the planet"; Chicanos,Anglos, Boricuas, vatos, Chinese, it don't matter--we're extinction toast.
A Lakotasaying fits here: The frog does not drink up the pond in which he lives, meaningthat at least in one respect, today frogs display higher I.Q.s than us. When there's no more drinkable, livable pond, the frog dies.
As a writer, I'd like there tobe great- and great-geat-grandchildren to read my writings one day. When the CO2gets to 400 in my lifetime (knock wood), I might have to give up thatexpectation. I can understand and accept that.
That reminds me of a line in anarticle this week about Breezy Point, Queens, NY, a working-class beachneighborhood leveled by oceanic flash floods of Hurricane Sandy and subsequentfires. You can read people's accounts of the devastion, but what struck me about the residents' reactions was:"They didn't want tobelieve what was happening."
Global warming weather, 350ppm,melting Greenland and polar ice caps, loss of polar bear habitat, rising oceanlevels--some of what President Obama described this week--seem likeabstractions, until we're directly affected by them, like Katrina and Sandy. We just don't believe. Don't believe us frogs can drink up our pond.
Obviously, there are many thingseach one of us can do to get our pond back to full and livable. Below aredetails about one of the most powerfulopportunities to keep our species going. But the window of that opportunitycomes quick and closes soon.
Sunday,Feb. 17th is the Forward on Climate rallies targeted nationally for sendingPresident Obama one message:
Don't approve the Keystone XL Pipeline.
Ifthe message is powerful enough, i.e., well-attended, with one signature he can effectively prevent 700,000 barrelsof the dirtiest carbon oil on the planet goingdaily from Canada to U.S. Gulf Coastrefineries. And keep pollutants from raisingthe atmosphere's CO2ppm. [Read more here.] Congress doesn't approve/disapprove this becauselegislation isn't involved; only the President and his staff decide. Obama hasasked for us to "push" him. If you believe that, here's one for youto put your shoulder behind. Without that, all kids of all nationalities will have to learn how to breathe 400ppm in their much filthier pond in the near future.
Youcan attend one of the demonstrations (below), send messages of support (ormoney), spread the word via Facebook and other social media, E-mail, text orcall your President, congresspeople and anyone else you want to. And not stopuntil the message has gotten through. We owe something to our kids, grandkidsand ourselves. Plus, there's the pond to consider.
Dozens of groups willdemonstrate tomorrow, Sunday, Feb. 17th, 2013 on the National Mall in D.C. totake the message directly to the President. More will occur in L.A.,Monterrey, San Francisco, San Diego, elsewhere in Calif., Chicago, Iowa,Michigan, Minn., Montana, Nebraska, Oregon, Austin, Olympia & Seattle,Wash., and Denver, among others. Go here for details.
In Denver on Sunday, Feb. 17, at11:30am, A student-led "Go Fossil Free" rally will beging at 11:20am,followed by a "human pipeline" march to Civic Center Park. Starts atthe Auraria Campus' Tivoli Commons, 900 Auraria Parkway, Denver. (Please wearall black.) It ends at Civic Center Park, 101 W. 14th Ave. Pkwy. which you canjoin at 12:30pm.
If you think new jobs for usfrogs are more important than a dirtier, unlivable pond, or that a lower price for a tankful inyour butt-print car matters more than whether there'll be frogs even walking after400ppm, you might not attend. Otherwise, I'll be joining you in some way.  Es todo, hoy, but tomorrow matters mucho más,RudyG
BLESS ME, ULTIMA, the film opens in select markets next week on Friday, February 22nd, 2013. Go here for more info and check local listings.

Boston, You're Killing Me: AWP Options for the Poor

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Olga García Echeverría
“It’s interesting,don’t you think, how politicians don’t even mention the working class anymore,”said Elba, a friend and fellow poet. “We don’teven exist. Everything is either about the wealthy or the middle class.”

Her words struck a chord. We were on the phone talking aboutthe upcoming Association of Writers and Writer Programs Conference and we hadveered off on a tangent. Well, kind of.
At the end of last year, Elba and I enthusiastically registeredfor the AWP Conference being held this year in Boston, Massachusetts from March6th—9th. Neither of us had ever attended, and we thoughtit important to finally do so. 
We took advantage of the AWP pre-registration and one-yearmembership bundle, each of us paying $220.00.  It’s a pretty penny for the underemployed, butwe felt it well worth the four days of being inundated with writer’s panels,readings, presentations, book fairs and publishing information.
The bigger hurdle was lodging. Boston hotels are pricey, even thoseassociated with the conference, offering “discounts.” Elbasought out an old colleague in the area as a housing option, but that didn’tpan out. In November, I had applied for a writer’s grant and budgeted part ofthe AWP Conference as a cost for professional development. We kept our fingerscrossed. When I didn’t get the grant, we figured it was time to look forthe best deals and suck up the costs. If there’s a will, there’s a way, right?
We found and booked a hotel, but in order to get a cheaperprice, we had to prepay the entire cost of our four-day stay in Boston. When I got myconfirmation receipt online, all taxes and fees included, I gasped.  James Baldwin said it better than I ever could: “Anyone who has struggled with poverty knows how extremely expensive it is to be poor.”
Plus, there were still plane tickets to purchase. The taxifrom the airport to the hotel. The taxi from the hotel to the airport. Icould not help but convert the dollars into living expenses, one of my life-long workingclass habits. Even with all the so-called bargains, my overall trip to Boston would equal myshare of the rent for one month, two weeks of groceries and gas, and the cost of my pending visit to the dentist. Boston, you’re killing me! Forget the fancy Boston cream pie I had been fantasizingabout. Since our hotel accommodations didn't even include breakfast (that would have cost extra), I imagined packing my own tea bags and pilfering hot water and snacks to survive. In Boston, I thought, I will live off crackers and tea.
Poverty sucks.
Despite our friendship that spans decades, I was embarrassedto call Elba and express my growing anxiety over the cost of Boston. Internalized working-class shame. To make matters worse, my girlfriendhad come home from work one day and casually mentioned the Bostonweather as something we should look up. The weather? Oh yeah, that might beimportant, considering we had booked a hotel farther away from the conferencefor a better deal. Our plan was to walk daily to and from the Haynes Convention Center,where the conference is being held. Save money and exercise at the same time.That’s how the working-class rolls, or in this case, strolls.
Online, weather forecasts of March in Boston predicted in the 30's and, if lucky,in the 40's. One anonymous Bostonresident shared that in March one should expect weather that is “chilly,blustery and bleak. Nothing is blooming. Sand and trash are left around fromthe melting snow.” Another said, “Typically wet and cold.” We would be indoorsmostly, of course, but there were the walks to and from the conference tocontend. Both Elba and I are CalifornianChicanas; we don’t own East Coast winter gear. Neither do our families or friends.Would we have to rummage through our local thrift stores and buy real winter clothes and shoes? Another potential expense. Boston was slowly, butsurely, becoming a royal pain in my piggy bank's ass.
Then the phone rang. It was Elba. "We've got to talk about Boston," she said. "Yes!" I answered immediately. There was a strain in both our voices, a communal sense of urgency; yet for a few seconds, silence hung. I knew what she was going to say before she actually said it. Telepathy? Probably more like shared reality.  Finally, she spoke our truth: “Honey, we can’t afford Boston.”

I exhaled. I was sograteful for her words.
We canceled our hotel immediately. Full refund. Perhaps we should have been sad, but we were, more than anything else,relieved. We would not have to eat peanut butter and jelly for the next month.We would not have to starve in Boston.We would not have to walk through the sand and trash “left around from themelting snow” in our lightweight cloth tennis shoes, our feet stiff andnumb against the slushy concrete.
Next year the conference will be in Seattle, much closer. We’ll try again. Meanwhile,we have come up with our own AWP Conference options that are more realistic for us and for any other working classwriters out there who may not be able to attend this year's conference.
Option 1:Designate March 6th-9th as official Days of the Creative Word. Read, write,visit a new bookstore or library, hold your own intimate, local writing workshops orreadings. Elba and I will be doing just that.  It’s an opportunity to honor the AWP Conference dates we had already reservedand use that time to further foster our poetry and prose. We may not be at the conferencein the flesh, but we will be there in spirit.
Option 2: Applyfor a writer’s grant for a future conference. Yes, the competition is stiff andyou may not get it (like me this past year), but it’s a great exercise inwriting anyway. AWP actually offers two annual scholarship of $500 each toemerging writers who wish to attend a writer’s conference, center, retreat,festival, or residency. Submissions are accepted between December 1 and March30 of each year (there’s still time). For more information, visit  https://www.awpwriter.org/contests/wcc_scholarships_overview
Option 3: Goonline and check out the authors who will be presenting at the AWP Conference. https://www.awpwriter.org/awp_conference/featured_presenters
Depending on your budget, pick one or a few of the authorsand go out and get their books of poetry, memoir, essays or prose. Delve intothe pages. Even from afar, you’ll get a whiff and a flavor for this year's highlighted authors at the conference. This is precisely what I did. Considering all the money I won't be spending in Boston, I figure I could treat myself and simultaneously support the literary arts by buying a few books at my local independent bookstore. It isn't theactual conference, I know, and it isn't Boston cream pie in Boston, but as working class Chicana writers whoexist (despite invisibility aquí y allá), we’ve got to keep wizardingour own caminos.  
Tune in to my next blog where I’ll discuss the four AWP Conference authors Iselected from this year's line-up: Adonis, Joy Castro, Eduardo C.Corral, and Tracy K. Smith. I'm just now exploring their texts, but they are already dazzling me with their words. For now, I leave youwith a fitting verse from one of them:
Is this really the world?

Shall I grieve? Shall I hope?

I prefer to sing.

–Adonis




23 Şubat 2013 Cumartesi

Chicanonautica: OVNIs Over Aztlán and Other Phenomena

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by Ernest Hogan
Different cultures create different kinds of “aliens.” The “other” depends of who you are and where you’re from. It’s the same in UFO mythology
The OVNI literature of the Latino world is different from the UFO books of Anglolandia. You don’t find extraterrestrials without genitalia that seem to be a Puritan vision of a more advanced species -- instead, aliens are sexy, and hot for humans.
Ever since Brazilian farmer Antonio Villas Boas reported having sex with female alien in 1975 reports have come in. I’ve read about them in English and Spanish. They range from a Mexico City woman claiming to have been impregnated by a man who explained that he had to return to his home planet, to a book by a man who not only had sex with, but painted cheesy portraits of several beautiful alien women, and reverse-engineered flying saucers with Aristotle Onassis. 
I wish I could remember the authors and titles of those books . . . Meanwhile, others show up . . .
 The flying saucer and the White House on the cover of Proyecto Elevación by Enrique Barrios  attracted my attention. It has a hero on an adventure/romance with Iara, a bald, beautiful alien woman after her spaceship crashes in Arizona. “La CIA” and mysterious helicopters chase them as they race to tell the president about the conspiracy in the U.S. and British governments to stop an interplanetary project to bring advanced technology and evolution to the Earth. 
Then I looked up Enrique Barrios’ webiste. He was born in Chile and grew up in Venezuela. He has retired from “actividades públicas.” His books include a children’s book similar to Proyecto Elevacion. There is also El Oráculo del Siglo XXI that delivers I Ching-like interactions.
His attitude about a sinister Anglo-American conspiracy reminded me of the works of J.J. Benitez. I read one of his books back before he switched to writing about Jesus Christ rather than UFOs. It read like a novel, as he ran around the world chasing a mystery that never quite solidified. He had photos of his girlfriend in front of the Sphinx and in the Mediterranean with circles around what looks like dust specks in the sky. Crossing the border into America was described as a Kafkaesque nightmare. He ended the book promising that he’d reveal whatthehell it’s all about in the next book . . . maybe.
Benitez’ latest book, Caballo de Troya 9: Caná is as thick as a brick, in the Spanish Language Fiction section of the library.
Whoever runs the MilMascarasvideo2’s channel on YouTube also has a taste for UFOlogy. There you can now see the incredible movie Misterio en Las Bermudas, which has similar political themes to the works of Barrios and Benitez.
Featuring Santo and Blue Demon along with Mil, it’s a kind of everything-but-the-kitchen-sink example of the luchador/sci-fi genre: No UFOs here; instead futuristic periscopes come out of the Caribbean and alter the weather -- USOs, Unidentified Submerged Objects! Santo’s mask is found in the seaweed before the flashbacks. A wrestling tour of Europe has to be canceled because the “political situation” is getting too dangerous. An Iranian princess/martial artist needs luchador protection. There’s an underwater utopian city where people wear silver jumpsuits and headbands. The music has a lot of wah-wah.
The most bizarre thing is the ending. First, the princess is rescued, the luchadores and some babes in bikinis, all go off in a boat, like in a happy ending . . . Then we go back to the fishermen who found Santo’s mask. One of them explains that the boat disappeared into the Bermuda Triangle and declares that the prophecies of the Book of Revelation are coming true -- and we are treated to some stock footage of a nuclear explosion!
Yeah, it’s paranoid as well as sexy -- and while I wrote this, a helicopter circled over my neighborhood . . .
Ernest Hogan will have stories in the upcoming anthologies We See a Different Frontier and Super Stories of Heroes and Villains.

Let's Play Football/ Juguemos al Fútbol

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Hola Blogueros, I am very happy to present my new bilingual picture book Let's Play Football/ Juguemos al Fútbol. As always, this book is also about my immigrant experience. When a group of friends invited me to play "futbol", I said "Okay, I can play." But when I saw the oval ball flying above my head, I realized that they were not playing my fútbol. They were playing football instead. The book will be available this March and there will be a Bilingual Edition and a Spanish Edition.

I will be signing the first copies at CABE (California Association for Bilingual Education) at Long Beach, CA on February 15th from 2:00-3:00 pm. Look for me at the Santillana U.S.A. booth.



Carlos is not sure that football can be played with an oval-shaped ball. Chris is not sure that it can be played with a round ball.
It may not be a good idea to play with a kid who is so different... He doesn’t even know how to play this game!
Wait. It looks kind of fun... Let’s give it a try!
Enjoy and celebrate the encounter of two cultures through their favorite sports. ;-)





Carlos no cree que se pueda jugar al fútbol con una pelota ovalada. Chris no cree que se pueda jugar con una pelota redonda.
Quizás no es buena idea jugar con un niño tan diferente... ¡Ni siquiera sabe cómo se juega!
Un momento. Se ve como divertido... ¡Vamos a probar!
Disfruta y celebra el encuentro de dos culturas a través de sus deportes favoritos. ;-)



saludos,
René Colato Laínez

So kids don't breathe 400ppm - NO Keystone XL Pipeline!

To contact us Click HERE

NYC neighborhood after Hurricane Sandy

This post is about Chicanoliterature. But of necessity, it's about the rest of the humans and all human culture, too.
Word usage fascinates me,something writers manipulate and craft in their literary works. It's not easy.Certain words carry unintended meaning.
Two phrases, "Ecologicalfootprint" and "Save the Earth" have always bothered me fortheir inaccuracy. The first is a measure of the demands that humans put onEarth's ecosystems. Buying a package of junk food involves cutting trees forthe box, processing oil used to produce the plastic, the consequent landfill orrecycling needed to get rid of the trash, as well as our waste products fromeating the junk. And that's just the tip of the melting iceberg.
What about footprint? To me, it's BS. Butt-print, something wider and biggerthan a foot, would more accurately describe what our presence does to theplanet. Footprint's an understatement of our negative impact, like we won'tadmit our bigger, even catastrophic, guilt.
Saving the planet sounds nice andecological-friendly, but it too lacks precision, in an opposite way. Many of ourecological movements aren't so concerned about the whole planet as much as theyare about preserving it so humans can thrive. Face up: we'd sacrifice umpteenislands and species if that paid for our continuation on top of the food chain.
350.org is a group that keepscount for us of the first phrase, footprint. 350 means climate safety, for all gente. To keep Earth fit for humans, CO2 in the atmosphere must be below350 parts per million (ppm).
Polar cap melt
You don't have to be anyscientist to appreciate that the current 392ppm of CO2 means we passed the limit, live onborrowed time. Plus, it's rising about2ppm each year. For some years this has meant we're screwing ourselves like thedinosaurs never did. Forget about "saving the planet"; Chicanos,Anglos, Boricuas, vatos, Chinese, it don't matter--we're extinction toast.
A Lakotasaying fits here: The frog does not drink up the pond in which he lives, meaningthat at least in one respect, today frogs display higher I.Q.s than us. When there's no more drinkable, livable pond, the frog dies.
As a writer, I'd like there tobe great- and great-geat-grandchildren to read my writings one day. When the CO2gets to 400 in my lifetime (knock wood), I might have to give up thatexpectation. I can understand and accept that.
That reminds me of a line in anarticle this week about Breezy Point, Queens, NY, a working-class beachneighborhood leveled by oceanic flash floods of Hurricane Sandy and subsequentfires. You can read people's accounts of the devastion, but what struck me about the residents' reactions was:"They didn't want tobelieve what was happening."
Global warming weather, 350ppm,melting Greenland and polar ice caps, loss of polar bear habitat, rising oceanlevels--some of what President Obama described this week--seem likeabstractions, until we're directly affected by them, like Katrina and Sandy. We just don't believe. Don't believe us frogs can drink up our pond.
Obviously, there are many thingseach one of us can do to get our pond back to full and livable. Below aredetails about one of the most powerfulopportunities to keep our species going. But the window of that opportunitycomes quick and closes soon.
Sunday,Feb. 17th is the Forward on Climate rallies targeted nationally for sendingPresident Obama one message:
Don't approve the Keystone XL Pipeline.
Ifthe message is powerful enough, i.e., well-attended, with one signature he can effectively prevent 700,000 barrelsof the dirtiest carbon oil on the planet goingdaily from Canada to U.S. Gulf Coastrefineries. And keep pollutants from raisingthe atmosphere's CO2ppm. [Read more here.] Congress doesn't approve/disapprove this becauselegislation isn't involved; only the President and his staff decide. Obama hasasked for us to "push" him. If you believe that, here's one for youto put your shoulder behind. Without that, all kids of all nationalities will have to learn how to breathe 400ppm in their much filthier pond in the near future.
Youcan attend one of the demonstrations (below), send messages of support (ormoney), spread the word via Facebook and other social media, E-mail, text orcall your President, congresspeople and anyone else you want to. And not stopuntil the message has gotten through. We owe something to our kids, grandkidsand ourselves. Plus, there's the pond to consider.
Dozens of groups willdemonstrate tomorrow, Sunday, Feb. 17th, 2013 on the National Mall in D.C. totake the message directly to the President. More will occur in L.A.,Monterrey, San Francisco, San Diego, elsewhere in Calif., Chicago, Iowa,Michigan, Minn., Montana, Nebraska, Oregon, Austin, Olympia & Seattle,Wash., and Denver, among others. Go here for details.
In Denver on Sunday, Feb. 17, at11:30am, A student-led "Go Fossil Free" rally will beging at 11:20am,followed by a "human pipeline" march to Civic Center Park. Starts atthe Auraria Campus' Tivoli Commons, 900 Auraria Parkway, Denver. (Please wearall black.) It ends at Civic Center Park, 101 W. 14th Ave. Pkwy. which you canjoin at 12:30pm.
If you think new jobs for usfrogs are more important than a dirtier, unlivable pond, or that a lower price for a tankful inyour butt-print car matters more than whether there'll be frogs even walking after400ppm, you might not attend. Otherwise, I'll be joining you in some way.  Es todo, hoy, but tomorrow matters mucho más,RudyG
BLESS ME, ULTIMA, the film opens in select markets next week on Friday, February 22nd, 2013. Go here for more info and check local listings.

Bless Me, Ultima - the Movie

To contact us Click HERE
Today is the national release date for the much-anticipated movie of Bless Me, Ultima, Rudolfo Anaya's masterpiece. The movie has already been previewed in several places, and many of the reviews are excellent. To commemorate the movie's general release, I present a guest review done exclusively for La Bloga; a few sentences from other reviews; a re-post of a message from Mr. Anaya about the movie; and information about Denver venues for the movie. You can find out more about this movie on the movie's website:  http://www.blessmeultima.com/, and also on the movie's Facebook page.


Guest Review of Bless Me, Ultima Michael Ramos

Luke Ganalon and Miriam Colón



Let me say this right up front, I enjoyed the movie.

The filmmakers succeeded in re-creating Rudolfo Anaya's great coming-of-age story filled with drama, mystery, violence, family - but mostly it's a story about a boy who is a witness to and a participant in powerful change and transition.

I admired the interaction between Antonio (played by young actor Luke Ganalon) and the curandera, La Grande (played by veteran actress Miriam Colon). They propelled the movie forward with a strong chemistry born not only out of the family bond but also of something more mysterious and spiritual. The story moves quickly with humor, tragedy, and Antonio's entrance into a dark and disturbing world of witchcraft and violence, healing powers and the imparting of La Grande's earthy wisdom. Alfred Molina's narration provides just the right touch of maturity that helps the viewer to an understanding of the storytelling.

The film's visual style is somewhat muted and I wanted a more dramatic flair to some of the scenes, but for the most part the cinematography worked for the time and place of the story. Overall, Bless Me, Ultima is a moving, layered story that reveals the Mexican-American culture of a time that has long since passed but still resonates today. This culture, this life, as seen in the story, serves as a powerful and pervasive character of its own. The traditions, the church, farming, family bonds and loyalties, and most of all, the old ways of healing and being connected to the earth are all represented and given their due. It's a movie well done and hopefully there will be more from Anaya's rich collection of stories.

I definitely recommend this movie for many reasons but especially to support and applaud good film making.

Michael Ramos


Michael Ramos
Born in Florence, Colorado a long, long time ago. Currently residing in Mesa, Arizona. In 2002, Ramos graduated manga cum laude from Arizona State University (BFA). Currently employed at Arizona Museum of Natural History - Museum Graphic & Multimedia Specialist. Ramos enjoys hanging out with the four grandkids and creating art in a variety of media.




Other reviews

"Although it was published only in 1972, Rudolfo Anaya's Bless Me, Ultima has achieved the iconic stature as such novels as The Grapes of Wrath and To Kill a Mockingbird. Now comes a movie to do it justice. Carl Franklin's film is true to the tone and spirit of the book. It is patient and in no hurry. It allows a balanced eye for the people in its hero's family who tug him one way and another." Roger Ebert - four stars (highest rating)

"Bless Me, Ultima succeeds at placing audiences inside the head of its young protagonist, who is more of an observer than a doer, and yet, because he manages to be present for all the narrative's key incidents, emerges the most transformed by them. With its sometimes-skeptical view of religion and willingness to confront adult themes -- from violence to the corrupting influence of alcohol and prostitution on supporting characters -- Anaya's novel has encountered its fair share of controversy over the years. The film will no doubt face similar criticism, and yet, for audiences young and old alike, both represent valuable coming-of-age tracts that reject formula in favor of big questions." Chicago Tribune

"The film won't disappoint fans of the book, although they may regret some of the adaptation's necessary condensation and/or elimination of narrative themes and events. ... Filmed in New Mexico, Bless Me, Ultima visually captures the area's distinctive geography and light. Director of photography Paula Huidobro makes the landscape appear to be an active element in the story. Although Bless Me, Ultima can feel a bit overstuffed, it's an honest and naturalistic kids' story about growing up Mexican-American." Orlando Weekly

Anaya on the movie of Bless Me, Ultima
Back in July, 2012, I posted a message from Rudolfo Anaya about the movie of his famous book. In honor of the national release of the movie, here's the message again._____________________________

The producers brought the Bless Me, Ultima movie to Alburquerque for a private screening for my family and friends. The movie is excellent, it captures the story and characters. Every single person attending the screening gave it fantastic, positive reviews.

I am positive la gente is going to love the movie. Like my friend John Nichols said, a novel becomes a short story when turned into a movie. Don't expect to see the full novel on screen. Everyone knows that.


Carl Franklin did a great job with the story and bringing characters together as familia. Except for Miriam Colón, the cast are actors that don't have big celebrity names.  I hope they do after their roles in the movie.  Everyone did excellent work.

Carl Franklin, the director, did talk to me and asked me questions, but the screenplay is his work. I approved his work.  Some themes in the novel are left out, but the story works.
Carl Franklin

I met the director several times here at our home. I was invited to play a role in the movie and attend all shooting events, but I stayed home. My feeling was to let them do their work. I don't make movies.


I met all the actors at the cast party. They had only positive things to say of the process. Miriam Colón visited me here at our home. She is lovely, a perfect Ultima. Her face shines in the movie, so does Luke (Ganalon) who plays Antonio.

Get it to Denver, the people will love it. Will there be critics? Of course.  All art is criticized if only by responding to it. Let the people enjoy and judge. I feel confident the movie will be around in 50 years.

tu amigo  Rudolfo Anaya





Bless Me, Ultima in Denver
These theaters have scheduled the movie. Check with them for show times. We all know how important the opening weekend is for any movie - if you have the opportunity, take your family and friends to Bless Me, Ultima.


UA Denver Pavilions Stadium 15

500 16th St.
Denver, CO 80202
(303) 454-9086

AMC Cherry Creek 8 

3000 East First Avenue Located in the Cherry Creek Mall
Denver, CO 80206
(303) 393-0530

Harkins Northfield 18

8300 E. Northfield Blvd.
Denver, CO 80238
 

Century Aurora and XD 

14300 E. Alameda Ave.
Aurora, CO 80012
(303) 363-0300

AMC Westminster Promenade 24 

10655 Westminster Blvd.
Westminster, CO 80020
(303) 439-7014

AMC Highlands Ranch 24 

103 W Centennial Blvd.
Highlands Ranch, CO 80129
(303) 471-6911

Later.

Manuel Ramos
Desperado: A Mile High Noir (Arte Público Press - March, 2013)

Why la política in latino fiction and poetry

To contact us Click HERE
by RudyG
March on The White House
Photos are of nationwide protests against Keystone XL Pipeline, of which my wife and I attended the Denver march and rally last week. More here.

One question raza writers and poets gets asked, usually by blancos, is why we "put" the politics of the Mexican-American War and other information about repression and rebellion into our fiction, like the latinoamericanos so often do. The easy answer is that culturally and politically we share in the history of U.S. corporate and governmental domination and exploitation.

This answer has always bothered me--not that some raza writers and essayists have not covered it well, but because it seemed to not go the final step, at least in my head. For some reason, this week jelled it better for me.


D.C. rally, 50,000
Below you'll read news and events from Califas, Nuevo Mexico, Tejas, AridZona and Latin America. The content obviously touches, if not more deeply examines, the historical exploitation of mexicano labor, Obama's so-called immigration reform, internationally illegal American torture camps, the ecologically devastating XL Pipeline, and the outlawing in Aridzona of Mexican American studies. How these things negatively affect latinos should be obvious; if not, you can click links to read more.


S.F. rally
What dawned on me was that the reasons for such news and events happen every week, if not day, in the latino communities. It's life for our gente. But do they not also happen every day for Anglos? Yes, but many don't see them as relevant to attend, support or learn about.

Which led me to a new conclusion: it's not that latinos "put" more politics about repression, exploitation and protest into their stories and poems. It's that most/many Anglo artists are behind us, historically, on the curve of learning about their own dire situation, and how and why they should in fact having been injecting la politica into their own fiction.

The result is that our fiction, because it includes the political, tends to be more realistic, and theirs (as a rule), because it excludes a big chunk of reality, leans toward idealism and romanticism in its portrayal of American life.

So, the next time you a latino get asked this question at a reading or conference, you might ask the questioner why his favorite gringo fiction writer doesn't include global warming, ripping the ecological guts out of America's Heartland with the XL Pipeline, exploitation of farmworkers by gringo agribusiness, school board repression of Mexican American Studies, the American gov't's illegal torture camps, for instance. I'm interested in hearing others' thoughts on this.

If you missed it, check Ramos's post yesterday about the film version of Rudy Anaya's novel, Bless Me, Última, that opened this week in theaters. He's got links to find venues an times.

I'm taking my young godson with me, making him put down the video remote and shut off his cell, so that he too leaves more knowledgeable about his gente. Take a kid of your choosing with you when you go, por favor. 

Es todo, hoy.

Farmworkers & Immigration Reform: The Forgotten Ones


The numerous discussions on immigration reform presently taking place between Obama and the Congress that would grant legal status to those living within the shadows of society include some form of legal residency with a possible path to citizenship. This proposed legal residency could take the form of either a visa or green card. The discussions pertain to the eleven million undocumented persons within the country, but the fate of the two million farmworkers is viewed differently by Republicans and some conservative Democrats. Read the entire Latino POV post of February 19, 2013 by Jimmy Franco Sr.
here.

Update: Arizona - The Battle Over Ethnic Studies

PBS's Ray Suarez of Need to Know traveled to Tucson, Arizona, to report on a long-running dispute over a Mexican-American studies program. Mexican-Americans have the second highest push-out / drop-out rate in the nation. That accompanied with the fact that they are the fastest growing demographic in this country with the lowest educational attainment is a crisis not just for the Latino community but for all communities.

Mexican American studies in Tuscon’s public school district, a program created to reach out to ‘at risk’ Latino students was an idea to improve academic performance by teaching literature and history they could personally identify with. Students who never had an interest in school started coming to class.

A University of Arizona study found that in 2010 students in the program were 64% more likely to pass standardized tests than students of a similar ethnic background not in the program. Ethnic studies programs like this have now been outlawed by the state of Arizona, forcing classes to be conducted in a youth center and not a high school. Read the entire report or watch the video here.

The Latin American Exception -
How a Washington Global Torture Gulag Was Turned Into the Only Gulag-Free Zone on Earth by Greg Grandin - excerpts


Gitmo detention camp
Of 190-odd countries on this planet, a staggering 54 participated in various ways in the American torture system, hosting CIA “black site” prisons, allowing their airspace and airports to be used for secret flights, providing intelligence, kidnapping foreign nationals or their own citizens and handing them over to U.S. agents to be “rendered” to third-party countries. The hallmark of this network has been torture.

What’s most striking is that no part of its wine-dark horror touches Latin America; that is, not one country in what used to be called Washington’s “backyard” participated in rendition or Washington-directed or supported torture and abuse of “terror suspects.”  Not even Colombia, which throughout the last two decades was as close to a U.S.-client state as existed in the area. It’s true that a fleck of red should show up on Cuba, but that would only underscore the point of Guantánamo Bay Naval Base, held by the U.S. "in perpetuity."

How did Latin America come to be territorio libre in this new dystopian world of black sites and midnight flights, the Zion of this militarist matrix? After all, it was in Latin America that an earlier generation of U.S. and U.S.-backed counterinsurgents put into place a prototype of Washington’s twenty-first century Global War on Terror. Read the full story here.


Jan. 1948 disaster news
The Deportee Song memorial

From Tim Z. Hernandez comes this:
I’m currently working on a book surrounding the “Plane Wreck at Los Gatos” incident, in which 32 people died, 28 who were “Mexican nationals” and were being deported. This is the incident on January 28, 1948, that Woody Guthrie wrote his famous song The Deportee Song about, and was later recorded by Dolly Parton, Bruce Springsteen, Bob Dylan, and many others. For details about my book project and the incident, check out the website.

In short, the 28 “deportees” were buried in a mass grave at Fresno’s Holy Cross Cemetery, and during these last 65 years their names have never been on that headstone. It simply reads “28 Mexican Nationals Who Died in a Plane Crash Buried Here.” A big part of my research has been to confirm the names of all 28 people, and with the help of Holy Cross Cemetery we have accomplished this.

We are now going one step further and working to erect a new memorial headstone listing all of their names. The memorial will be a public event at a later date. Right now we are working hard to raise $10,000. This is the total cost of the memorial. Again, if you click on the aforementioned link you will get the details on how to contribute. Also, I want to announce a new opportunity to contribute as well.

Fresno based musician, Lance Canales and I have recorded a new version of the famous song, which includes me reading the names of the passengers. You can now purchase a copy of this song, and all proceeds will go directly to the memorial. Simply click on this link,

Also, we’ll be organizing a concert fundraiser in Fresno, so please keep an eye out for that, too. If you have any questions at all you can contact me.
Thank you all, sincerely…
Tim Z. Hernandez 
e:tzhernandez@yahoo.com       web: www.timzhernandez.com

From Idle No More to Eagle Ford and Beyond: ...

Esperanza Peace & Justice Center
922 San Pedro Ave, San Antonio, Texas
Saturday, March 2, 2013, 10:00am–3:00pm CST


Idle No More is an indigenous rights movement that began in December 2012 in Canada, in response to the passage of Bill C-45. Most famously, Attiwapiskat Chief Theresa Spence undertook a 44-day hunger strike to protest the bill, which weakens treaty rights for First Nations peoples and national environmental protections, giving industry greater access to Native lands and to Canadian waterways. From its beginning in the actions of four Indigenous women, Idle No More has refused to be a single issue movement, with many observers comparing it to the Arab Spring and calling it an “Occupy movement with roots.”

Since it began, numerous solidarity actions have taken place across the world, including here in San Antonio on January 11th and 28th. These actions were organized by a group of residents from San Antonio, Tejaztlan who support the vision of Idle No More—recognizing that indigenous rights are human rights, and that the struggle to preserve indigenous sovereignty and knowledge is crucial to the struggle to protect the planet for its own sake and for all of our children.

In solidarity with First Nations peoples of Canada, our next step is to make urgent connections between the concerns of Idle No More and local environmental justice issues. Please join us for a teach-in March 2nd on INM, the Keystone XL Pipeline, and fracking.

Facilitators include:
Diane Wilson, a 4th-generation shrimper and longtime environmental justice activist who recently completed a 45-day hunger strike protesting Valero’s involvement with the Keystone XL Pipeline.
Krystan Bruce, a seventh generation South Texan from San Antonio who recently returned to her home state to join the fight against the oil and gas industry. In the past, she organized with Black Mesa Indigenous Support to help residents resist Peabody Coal's theft of their land, livestock and water.
Antonio Diaz, a Native rights activist from San Antonio and former Green Party congressional candidate.
For more info, go here.

The Handsome Pepper art show in San Anto
Saturday, March 2, 2013


6:00pm until 9:00pm CST

Born in Mexico D.F., Carlos G. Gómez found his first artistic expression in the “Tex – Mex” culture of the Rio Grande Valley in Brownsville where he was raised. “Brightly colored buildings and the surreal atmosphere of the Mexican border towns gave me the first appreciation of color, line, and the generalization that my chosen images would have to be bold and realistic," explains Gómez. He obtained his B.F.A. at Pan American University and attended Washington State University for his M.F.A. in painting and drawing. He is currently exploring multi-technique painting and drawing. 
A prolific artist with an extensive resume, Gómez is an active curator and currently is the Interim Chair and Professor of Visual Arts at the University of Texas at Brownsville. Gómez was included in Arizona State University Hispanic Research Center publications; Contemporary Chicana and Chicano Art Work: Artist, Works, and Education and Chicano Art for Our Millenium, among others. 

The Handsome Pepper is a celebration of the beauty that for thousands of years dominated the new world. The peppers like the original people of the Americas vary in nature. This body of work looks at the strength and determination of a people metaphorically and places them in typical situations common to all human beings. The pepper icon was chosen due to its impact globally when Columbus introduced it to the rest of the world. The intensity of its flavor and depth of varieties mimic the plethora of new world people. The Handsome Pepper was an idea that came about when a art connoisseur viewed it as an inferior symbol not worthy of hanging.
Gallista Gallery1913 S Flores St., San Antonio, TX.
(210) 861-3646
San Antonio, Texas

Denver's KUVO 89.3fm's Raza Rocks! anniversary




MeCha Reunion by Mecha de WNMU

Let's Get Ready to Create New Great Memories!
April 5-7, 2013 at WNMU
Events:
Friday: Tentative: Meet Greet at MeCha Building (T-Shirts)to be handed out!
Saturday: BBQ 11-2pm Location TBA
Saturday: Evening: Appetizers Location to TBA
Sunday Brunch: @WNMU
Please message back if you will be coming for the Great Event I will need you Names and addresses to send out proper invites by March 5th!
This event is brought to you by New and Old MeChistas and WNMU Alumni! This event will be $35.00 per person and the money will go towards the weekend and any money left over going towards the Club. If you would like information about the Event please feel to email me at angiereds08@gmail.com or call me at 520-227-9507.

Please let me know by the end of the Feb, 23rd, 2013!
Angelica Rojas, WNMU, Silver City, New Mexico