

All posts by escalona
Malasangre en el Teatro Rodante Puertorriqueño
“Malasangre”
por
Roberto Ramos-Perea
Miercoles, 25 de abril a las 8:00 de la noche
Comenzará la temporada oficial de presentaciones de este drama que
ha suscitado las más acaloradas discusiones en las comunidades
donde se ha presentado.
El Teatro Rodante Puertorriqueno
304 oeste de la Calle 47
entre las avenidas 8va. Y 9na. en Nueva York
Afrolatin@ Forum Benefit
Afrolatin@ Forum Benefit
April 29, 5-7pm
Nuyorican Poets Cafe
236 East 3rd Street (between B and C Ave.)
Poetry: Mariposa, Willie Perdomo
Special Guest: Joe Bataan
Music: San Juan Hill
Discussion…
$10 at the door
For more information e-mail: info@afrolatinoforum.org
The afrolatin@ forum works to build and strengthen research and activist networks among Latin@s of African descent in the United States. Our focus is on Black Latin@s in the United States and their relationships with other communities of color. This emphasis is guided by a transnational perspective that recognizes the centrality of race in understanding today’s global reality and the struggle for social justice.
Conferencia con Juan Mari Bras
Conferencia
“El derecho de los puertorriqueños nacidos en Estados Unidos a reclamar la ciudadanía puertorriqueña, dentro de la concepción sociológica de la ciudadanía en Hostos”
por
Juan Mari Bras
Catedrático de Honor Eugenio María de Hostos 2006-2007
26 de abril del 2007
5:30pm
Galería de Arte, edificio C
Colegio Comunal Eugenio María de Hostos (CUNY)
500 Grand Concourse
Bronx, NY
Para más información:
ddefilippis@hostos.cuny.edu
Auspiciado por la
Unidad de Lenguas Modernas, Departamento de Humanidades
_____
VIOLENCE INTERVENTION PROGRAM AT RISK
VIOLENCE INTERVENTION PROGRAM AT RISK
Wednesday, April 11th, 2007
The Community Supporters of the Violence Intervention Program (CSVIP) are calling a press conference to speak about the crisis situation confronting the Violence Intervention Program, Inc. (VIP) and the steps we are taking to try to save it.
Elected Officials, domestic violence survivors and advocates, and representatives from the CSVIP call upon YOU to exercise your leadership role in support of the battered women and staff of VIP by joining us at the press conference.
WHEN: Thursday, April 12, 2007, 10 a.m.
WHERE: Julia de Burgos Cultural Center, 1680 Lexington Av
Confirm your attandance email SaveVIP@aol.com or call 212.650.4938 or 212.423.9010
BACKGROUND INFORMATION:
Community Supporters Unite to Save Domestic Violence Program
Recent Actions by Board Members Have Placed Organization in Jeopardy
The Community Supporters of the Violence Intervention Program (CSVIP), a group made up of domestic violence advocates and a wide array of community leaders, including elected officials, is demanding the resignation of the Board of Directors of the Violence Intervention Program, Inc. (“VIP”), the establishment of a new Board with the necessary qualifications and the reinstatement of Grace Perez as Executive Director.
The current board members are Vivian Selenikas, newly appointed Chair, Kenneth Diaz, Acting Chair, Sandra Quilico, Treasurer, Nancy Nazario, Secretary, Zarah Guzman, member, and Vivian Rivera, member. Calling the Board’s actions “irresponsible, arbitrary and capricious,” the CSVIP has issued an Open Letter and Petition to the Board (“The Petition”), seeking their resignation.
The reasons for this request include the following: their failure to respond to repeated requests made by community leaders to meet with them; their refusal to bring a neutral third party to facilitate whatever conflict that may have existed between them and the Executive Director; the unjustified discharge of VIP’s Executive Director; their failure to have a plan in place to ensure the management of the organization and the provision of services for VIP clients (battered women and their children); and their failure to fully explain their decision to not purchase a building that could have become a permanent home for VIP.
VIP is a very important organization that has been at the fore front of serving battered women and their children since 1984 when it opened its doors in East Harlem and became the first bilingual/bicultural (Spanish/English) domestic violence service provider in the state of New York, and one of a handful in the entire nation.
Over the years, VIP has developed and grown tremendously expanding its services beyond East Harlem to also serve women and children in the Bronx and Queens. Today, VIP provides crisis intervention, counseling, support groups, case management, and residential services to hundreds of women and children in
three boroughs.
The Board Has Refused to Meet With Community Leaders to Resolve Situation
For months, VIP’s Board of Directors has refused to meet with or respond to the calls of various community leaders who have knocked at their doors trying to prevent the very crisis that they have now created. On Monday, March 26, Jenny Rivera, who was recently appointed by Attorney General Andrew Cuomo as Special Deputy Attorney General for Civil Rights, resigned her position as Chair of VIP’s Board. However, before she did this, she made sure that the Board fired Grace Perez, who has served as VIP’s Executive Director for the past 17 years, helping to make it the exemplary organization that it is today.
The Board made this arbitrary and capricious decision without adequate reason and without having an interim director or a plan of action in place. Furthermore, prior to the discharge, the Board refused any attempt on behalf of Ms. Perez or community leaders to resolve whatever management/governance differences may have existed between the Board and the Executive Director with a neutral third party.
What we find illogical and absurd is that the only reason that this Board cited for dismissing Grace is the actions that she took related to the purchase of a building in East Harlem that would serve as a permanent home for VIP.
We know that for more than a year, Grace Perez, with the help of Councilwoman Melissa Mark Viverito, and with the approval of this Board, was able to obtain a $500,000 grant from the NYC Council to renovate the building once it was purchased; a $140,000 down payment for the purchase of the building and $40,000 for closing fees; the pro bono services of an architect to draw up the floor plans; as well as the pro bono services of a real estate lawyer to represent VIP in the purchasing transactions. However, at the last hour, without consulting it with Grace Perez or Councilwoman Mark Viverito, the Board decided not to go through with the purchase.
The Board cited as the reason for this decision, the advice of an unnamed financial advisor, whom they claim determined that VIP was not in a financial position to move forward with the purchase. However, this conclusion is not supported by the review of VIP’s finances by the City Council and its approval for a $500,000 grant nor by the two banks which had provided letters of intent for a mortgage of up to $1.2 million.
Board Failed to Appoint Someone to Manage the Organization Before Firing ED
The discharge of Grace Perez, and the manner in which she was terminated, demonstrates the Board’s abuse of power and the fact that they seem to care very little about the lives of the women and children served by VIP. To this day, two week after her dismissal, there is still no one appointed to manage the organization.
While the Board carries out their supposed “national search” for a new Executive Director, who is in charge of VIP’s operation and management? They took the time to find a lawyer to advise them in connection with their decisions, but they did not take the time to find someone who could oversee the operations and management of the organization before they fired Ms. Perez.
Thanks to the dedication of VIP’s staff who have taken it upon themselves to carry on with their work, the women and children have been shielded from the unconscionable chaos and atmosphere of insecurity which the Board has created.
On the day that Ms. Perez was fired, 10 representatives from local organizations went to the offices of VIP, as a group, to demand an immediate meeting with Board. Zarah F. Guzman, the only Board member, who went to VIP that day to try to change the locks on the door, took the names of the 10 representatives and promised the Board would contact them for an emergency meeting. The representatives are still waiting to hear from the Board.
As a Board that heads such an important and necessary organization, they have placed this organization and the people it serves in serious jeopardy and numerous community members have signed the open letter and petition asking for their resignation and making room for a new board that has the knowledge, experience, and credibility necessary to lead and govern VIP.
Please eMail your Comments & support to The Community Supporters of the Violence Intervention Program (CSVIP), SaveVIP@AOL.Com.
Collection of Pedro Pietri’s papers at Centro
Come to the unveiling of
Reverend Pedro Pietri Life Time Work!
At Hunter College School of Social Work
129 East 79 Street Lexington Ave.
March 23, Friday at 6:30
El Cento de Estudio in Hunter College will be housing
Pedro Pietri Collection,
which will now be open to the public.
There will be Poetry, Video, Food and music.
All Free!
In Honor of El Reverendo Pedro Pietri’s Life Time Works
“The ONE Festival” — ENTRY DEADLINE: 2/28
Final Deadline for February 28th, 2007
COPWATCH DURING NATIONAL PUERTO RICAN DAY PARADE
Click below to watch a documrntary trailer for “CopWatch : What’s your badge number?” specifically documenting the history of Sunset Park Brooklyns communities police problem:
CopWatch / What’s your badge number?
http://vids.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=vids.individual&videoid=2034786634
http://vids.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=vids.individual&videoid=2033434037
As summer begins in NYC, the weekends get filled with cultural parades and an array of activities that is distinct to each community and neighborhood in NY.
The Puerto Rican Day Parade brings millions of people alongside 5th Ave on the east-side of manhattan. Many who return from the main parade continue to celebrate in their neighborhoods as we pour out onto the streets waving flags, salsa music blaring from speakers and conga players drumming those African Rhythms of our roots.
In communities such as Sunset Park in Brooklyn, a mostly Puerto Rican neighborhood, year after year, local youth are all too familiar with the aggressive confrontations of police officers who greet them with shoves and batons to the head. Many are corralled and pushed around from block to block as cops claim that these are disturbances to the quality of life in the community.
CopWatchers have documented these mistreatments, videotaping police shoving youth right in front of their own homes who aggressively told that they must clear the streets immediatley or face arrest, many clearly never even getting the opportunity to walk away.
Droves of young people get assaulted. Including an 8 yr. old girl who was shoved onto a gate in June of 2004. Teenage girls were maced, chocked and manhandled by NY’s Finest, 72nd pct. 19 young people were assaulted and charged for misdemeanors including disorderly conduct and resisting arrest, all of which eventually got dropped because police officers failed to prove why they were charged.
None of the officers were ever charged. All continue to work 72nd pct in the same community. Year after year, police aggression during the Puerto Rican Day Parade have escalated to levels reminiscent of those same images taken in the 50’s and 60’s of police violence.
As a result, in 2006 community members/local clergy and cultural workers organized a free concert which at the same time served as a campaign to educate folks on their rights when dealing with police conflict. The concert was called “El Grito de Sunset Park” and it went on, even though the 72nd pct. police community affairs officers and the commanding officer refused to grant them a sound permit.
That year, no one was arrested, even with all the police provocation. Irish communities in NYC have not recieved the same level of aggression from the police during their st. patricks day parade. Copwatchers have also documented the NYPDs tolerence for public intoxication and have also witnessed the blind eye police give to their selected communities. Could it be that the NYPD favors selected ethnic groups? Is it because the NYPD has historically been an Irish dominated run department within the state.
This is not to take away from the Irish community from peacefully celebrating their pride and culture, but one would like to believe that everyone has the opportunity to have a day in which they can celebrate without being discriminated against because of their race and culture. So once again, the community will come together for “El Grito de Sunset Park 2, 2007” along 49th St. and 5th avenue @ 6:30pm in Brooklyn despite the 72nd pcts. commanding officers attempt to deny the community members its sound permit. And despite the fact the the NYPD has permanently installed survelience cameras at all the places were CopWatchers documented police violence in years past. Are those cameras there to document police conflict? Or are they there to selectively chose video for manipulation as an excuse to the NYPD’s violence?
But just like 2006, the community will gather for a peaceful day to enjoy music, celebrate its pride and ultimately a showing that this community can police itself without the need of the NYPD.
The State of Puerto Rican Politics in New York City
The National Institute for Latino Policy
invites you to a roundtable
Discussion based on José Ramón Sánchez’ new book
Boricua Power: A Political History of Puerto Ricans in the United States
Tuesday, May 15, 6:15pm
NYU Wagner
The Puck Building, 2nd Floor Conference Room
295 Lafayette Street (and Houston Street)
New York, NY 10012-9604
(B,D,F,V to Broadway-Lafayette, N,R,W to Prince Street, 6 to Bleecker Street)
Roundtable Participants
Alicia Cardona
Author: Rambling on Random Thoughts and New York Puerto Rican Women Achievers
Arlene Davila:
Professor, Anthropology, Social and Cultural Analysis (American Studies)
New York University, author: Barrio Dreams: Puerto Ricans, Latinos and the Neoliberal City; Latinos, Inc.: The Marketing and Making of a People; and Sponsored Identities: Cultural Politics in Puerto Rico
David Diaz
Distinguished Lecturer in Media & Politics, City College (CUNY);
formerly senior correspondent and anchor on WCBS and WNBC-TV
José A. García
Senior Research and Policy Associate, Demos: A Network for Ideas
and Action; and author, East Coast Latino Voting Rights Act Reauthorization Manual
Mickey Melendez
Author, We Took the Streets: Fighting for Latino Rights with the Young Lords
Councilmember Melissa Mark Viverito
Democrat representing District 8
Joseph Wiscovitch
President, Wiscovitch Associates
Respondent
José Ramón Sánchez
Associate Professor of Political Science and Chair of Urban Studies,
Long Island University-Brooklyn Campus
Moderator
Angelo Falcón
President and Co-Founder, National Institute for Latino Policy; and author, Atlas of Stateside Puerto Ricans,
and co-editor, Boricuas in Gotham: Puerto Ricans in the Making of Modern New York City
Co-sponsored by the
Women of Color Policy Network
at NYUWagner
RSVP with
Wynnie Lamour 212-334-5722 or wlamour@nlcatp.org
MediaNoche presents WEBSITE IMPERSONATIONS by Ursula Endlicher

MediaNoche, the unique new media gallery in Spanish Harlem presents:
New media artist Ursula Endlicher performing her “Website Impersonations: The Ten Most Visited”
Ursula will take directives from the”html-movement-library,” drawing on the movements and gestures uploaded by the public. These will determine the flow of her “Website Impersonations” in real time as she performs in MediaNoche. The same choreographic instructions will be projected on the he handball court wall of the local playground (White Park), across the street from the gallery. Visitors to the exhibition and passers-by are invited to join in.
Saturday, May 12 at 8PM
At MediaNoche
161 East 106th Street, between Lexington and Third Avenues
and White Park (handball court) across the street
We hope you will attend. MediaNoche is Uptown’s first new media gallery where the digital arts and community converge. We offer exhibition space and residencies for artists working in new media. Only blocks from Museum Mile, MediaNoche is easily reached by the IRT #6 train to East 103rd Street, or by the bus routes along Third and Lexington Avenues.
FREE and open to the public!
For more information:
Judith Escalona, Director of MediaNoche
212.646.228.7950 or 212.828.0401 .
http://www.medianoche.us
http://www.ursenal.net
EXHIBITION IN GALLERY HAS BEEN EXTENDED THROUGH JUNE 8th.



