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    It’s been a while///s.pancho

    Author: orgullocafe
    11.21.2007

    Buenas tardes. Yes I know, I know It's been a while since the last blog but I'm Back. Orgullo Cafe has been working on our first album. Yes FIRST.It's crazy because it's taken us a long time to get to the step that we are in right now. What happend to us is a very interesting story that I one day will probably write a book about and It will make a great movie! But anyhow, I have learned alot about myself and about how bad I want to make and maintain my music career. 

    The album is called CHANGA-ZERO. It is a way of saying "do or die." If you have ever played Handball, I think it's also called FRONTON. But in my neighborhood we call it BOLA or REBOTE. I chose to call the first album that because when I play BOLA I kind of relate it to the way I see my life. The ball will bounce and there will always be someone on the court to challange the winner. So one must use strategy, skill amd reflex while keeping the fun in the game to stay in the game and want to still play. 

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    09.20.2007

     

    So last night my boyfriend took me to the Arclight in Hollywood to see the infamous film "Across the Universe." Although i had extremely high expectations it didnt fail to meet almost all of them.

    Even if it had some monotonous scenes it still made me laugh, cry and even get chills at some points. I say if you love listening to the beatles and enjoy musicals/love/war related films i totally recommened it.

    Also, it really has some amazing visuals and psychodelic scenes that blow your mind away!

    :)

    "There's nothing you can do that can't be done.
    Nothing you can sing that can't be sung.
    Nothing you can say but you can learn how to play the game
    It's easy.

    There's nothing you can make that can't be made.
    No one you can save that can't be saved.
    Nothing you can do but you can learn how to be in time
    It's easy.

    All you need is love"

    -od.

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    when bad design happens

    Author: Eye on You
    09.14.2007

    Would you be surprised if I tell you that not everything at the Mercedes Benz Fashion Week in NYC is great? Of course not! I wil not only tell you that some collections were simply NOT suppposed to be allowed on the runway but I will show you some examples. Even the models look a bit confused with the "jogger wonder woman, sock tied around my head" look.

    Lacoste, Herrera & Baby Phat: what the f@%! were you thinking?  Call me crazy but, come on! It is true that high end fashion designers with a name have a free-for-all liscence but sometimes, once in a while, some things, just don't make any sense.
    What do you think? I say NO.

     

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    Just Sweet is now ONEWORD

    Author: Eye on You
    09.13.2007

    JLo closes NY Fashion Week Spring 2008 with a few thumbs up! 

    JustSweet, JLo’s new fashion line introduced earlier this year, presented its Fashion Show at Eye Beam during NY Fashion Week Spring 2008 on Tuesday, September 11. The “JLO by Jennifer Lopez” brand launched in 2001 but was phased out with JustSweet.

    JLo staged the surprise JustSweet show, as she took to the catwalk herself at Eyebeam studios after her models wearing a trendy lime green mini-dress from her new fashion line.

    J Lo

    She called JustSweet "a fantasy - classic inspiration but with a new, kind of funky spin. Girls who are young are going to wear it… to feel sophisticated, because it does have a chic kind of feeling to it, but people who are older who wear it are going to feel young, flirty and fun. It really has a nice mix." We agree and we like JustSweet being just oneword.

    JustSweet

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    Simon Bolivar, Jose Marti, Che Guevara, we know the names of these liberators and countless others, but seldom outside of Puerto Rico do I hear the name of Pedro Albizu Campos.  Actually the name was uttered countless times by Che Guevara himself who testified before the United Nations asking that the u.s. stop torturing him in their prisons.   But I often wonder why he's obscure or feared. Is it that the u.s. has worked hard to ensure that it be this way? Is it because he was a man with a huge fighting spirit and had no issues going toe to toe with the u.s.? I was happy to learn that a friend's mom, a peruana honors Albizu and his work. She remembers the legacy he left and his close connection to her country as his beloved wife Laura Meneses was from Peru and one of the first Latin American woman educated at Harvard, where they met.

    Anyhow, today, September 12 is recognized as his birthday. But even that is a controversy. He used several birthdays throughout his life, one in June and this one. One in 1891 and one is 1893. That's only part of the mystique around my big hero.  Folks seem to have decided on September 12, 1891 for historical reasons. But here's my "top of the dome" tribute to this big man. And cuz you never should expect to hear about him in school. If you do send me a message so I can grant them an award!  It'll be damn long cuz great men deserve great tributes and even this won't be enough……

    Raising Revolution, Yasmin Hernandez portrait of Pedro Albizu Campos, collection of the Center for Puerto Rican Studies, CUNY.
    "Raising Revolution", 2004 by Yasmin Hernandez, Collection of The Center for Puerto Rican Studies, CUNY, NYC. www.yasminhernandez.com/raisinrev

    So Don Pedro was born a few years before the 1898 US invasion of his homeland Puerto Rico.  Growing up within these first years of colonialism, he witnessed things such as the imposed English language on school children.  Living in poverty, Pedro didn't start school till the age of 12.  He then proved to be a child prodigy, completing his primary and secondary education in only 8 years, instead of the usual 12.  He was recruited to the University of Vermont to study bio-chemistry and later was snatched up by Harvard where he studied law, military strategy, the colonial cases of Ireland and India among other things.  He also spoke 7 languages. 
    In 1917, the US imposed their citizenship on all Puerto Ricans. It was a strategic move since it was the same year the US entered World War I so they could now draft Puerto Rican men to fight foreign wars, even though they had  no rights under the u.s. government.  The above image is of Don Pedro in a u.s. army uniform.

    Yasmin Hernandez' portrait of Pedro Albizu Campos, 1994
    "Pedro Albizu Campos", 1994, by Yasmin Hernandez. www.yasminhernandez.com/albizucampos

    It was in the u.s. army where Albizu began to recognize the unfair treatment of African-Americans and Puerto Ricans through segregation and racism.  All the injustices he endured is what encouraged him to craft his anti-imperialist ideologies, not to mention his participation on Harvard's debate team and his close ties to the Boston Irish community.  Upon his return to Puerto Rico, Pedro first joined the Union Party, the first Party to have PRican independence on its platform.  Later on when the Nationalist Party was created, he joined it, with its exclusive independence approach.  Albizu quickly climbed the party ranks becoming first its international ambassador, traveling to Haiti, Dominican Republic, Peru, and other countries to rally support for independence and then in 1930 becoming its president. 
    Under Albizu's leadership, the Nationalist party was  radicalized. The above image is inspired by an event in which he climbed a podium to speak. The podium was decorated by u.s. and Puerto Rican flags. Before speaking, he first took down all the u.s. flags and stuffed them into pocket, leaving only the Puerto Rican flags. The Puerto Rican flag was banned in Puerto Rico from 1898-1952. He and his party are the ones that promoted that flag and made it the loved piece of fabric it is today with millions waving it at the NYC Puerto Rican Day Parade.  For over 50 years, it was a crime to wave our flag.  He and his party taught us that our identity is never a crime. The only criminals are those who deem it such, the imperialists.  Albizu taught "where tyranny is law, revolution is order".  In 1932 election results for a campaign he participated in did not reflect the desire of the people. He decided then that within a colonial system, in which the u.s. president presides over all Puerto Rican affairs and has veto power over all Puerto Rican laws, a democracy cannot exist, the people's vote is always subject to a foreign government's manipulation.  Since then Nationalists do not participate in the electoral process (me either!)

    The Ponce Massacre by Yasmin Hernandez, 1997
    The Ponce Massacre, 1997 by Yasmin Hernandez. www.yasminhernandez.com/ponce

    Events like the one pictured above, the Ponce Massacre, characterized the nature of life in Puerto Rico during the 1930s under the oppressive rule of u.s. appointed governor General Blanton Winship. This is really when the Nationalist Party decided to take a self-defense approach.  In response to young Nationalists assassinated at the University of Puerto Rico in Rio Piedras and other events, the party responded by assassinating the Chief of Police.  In the above incident a peaceful parade organized by the Nationalists to commemorate the abolition of slavery in Puerto Rico, on Palm Sunday, March 21, 1937, ended with 21 dead and 150 wounded when the police fired on a crowd of unarmed men, women and children.  Albizu was arrested immediately after the assassination of Chief of Police Riggs, along with 7 other Nationalists, among them were the great Puerto Rican poets, Clemente Soto Velez and Juan Antonio Corretjer.  Another infamous event of the 1930s is when American Dr. Cornelius Rhodes decided to inject cancer into Puerto Ricans in a secret experiment. It was discovered when he crumbled up a letter to a friend in which he described Puerto Ricans as dirty and lazy and worthy of being killed off.  All this was supporting his cancer experiment which he revealed in the letter to his friend, but threw it in the wastebasket where it was found by a Puerto Rican worker. When word got back to Albizu, he took the news to the masses.  Well here's this link I found with Dr. Rhodes on the cover of Time magazine celebrated as a "Cancer fighter". Well, we were the guinea pigs, just like Puerto Rican women were guinea bigs for population control, the birth control pill and contraceptive foam. http://www.time.com/time/covers/0,16641,19490627,00.html.

    Carpeta:Albizu, Yasmin Hernandez, Archivos Subversivos series, 2007
    "Carpeta: Albizu", 2007 Archivos Subversivos Series, by Yasmin Hernandez.

    As a Harvard educated lawyer, Albizu had turned down jobs in Washington to go back home to work for the liberation of Puerto Rico. When Nationalists were arrested, he served as their defending lawyer and also represented himself in a court presided over by American judges and in trials conducted in English, a language foreign to a nation that had spoken Spanish for the past 400 years.  The FBI began their COINTELPRO harrassment on the lives of any Puerto Ricans identified or suspected of being independence supporters.  After a 1950 revolution in Jayuya led by Nationalist Blanca Canales, yes Boricua women are fierce!, over 2,000 were arrested and the "carpeta" or government file process spread like wildfire. Each independence supporter was under surveillance. Their everyday moves were tracked by the government.  The painting above is from my ARCHIVOS SUBVERSIVOS project which focuses on this part of our history and present because it still occurs.  

    Crucified Albizu by Yasmin Hernandez, 1996
    "Crucified Albizu", 2006 by Yasmin Hernandez. www.yasminhernandez.com/crucifiedalbizu

    For being a revolutionary and fighting for the dignity of his homeland and his people, Don Pedro spent the majority of his adult life in u.s. federal prisons.  While there he complained about having been subjected to radiation experiments. Many called him a loco. As if the person who studied biology and chemistry at Harvard didn't know what radiation was or the damage it could cause his body.  The American League for Puerto Rican Independence, in 1954 wrote a letter to famed scientist Albert Einstien, then studying the new atomic energy used by Americans to kill countless Japanese and used by Americans on their federal prisoners to study its affects on humans.  The letter was pleading with him to look into the case of Don Pedro. They reached out to him not only for his expertise in the field, but for his outspokeness against the un-American Committee hearings happening at the time.  Albizu continued to suffer from lesions throughout his body and burn marks.  The radiation was administered in the form of light rays in his prison cell and hospital room.  There are cases of folks using his body to create X Rays of metal objects placed under this body.  Oh and remember Dr. Cornelius Rhodes, the cancer injector? Well bust how he just happened to be the head of medical services the for the u.s. department of federal corrections at the time Albizu was being used as a lab rat.  Pay back possibly for Albizu having exposed his evil plot to exterminate Boricuas back in the 1930s through cancer? Read about it in Yo Acuso y lo Que Paso Despues, a book written on the controversy. 
    Albizu was finally pardoned in 1965 and died three months later on April 21, exactly two months after another "by any means necessary revolutionary, Mr. Malcolm X (d. Feb. 21st).  And guess what he died of, Cancer! Yes, the plot thickens.  Puerto Rican history is not about the music we make  and the way our women's hip sway, it's also about the struggle a people have endured and their resistance.

    Albizu's Partido Nacionalista de Puerto Rico, celebrates their 85th anniversary this week.  Check out this link for a flyer to a Sept 14th celebration in NYC.   http://pictures.aol.com/ap/singleImage.do?pid=2e90tYBxdJdSzzaLfD*Q0DwTcd1LkWTSNyh6v4xQp5Fd3Ig%3D

    Come commemorate Don Pedro's birthday with me tonight (Sept 12) at my talk on my ARCHIVOS SUBVERSIVOS project at Cemi Undergound. Check out my last post on this blog for details. 

    And last but not least, join me and many others on September 23 at Times Square and the United Nations where we will demand a free Puerto Rico (more details two posts ago on this blog).

    Albizu Vive!,

    Filiberto Vive!

    Que Viva Puerto Rico libre!

    Yaz

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