Category Archives: The Forum

Discussions about current topics.

En defensa de su legado – Rafael Tufiño

From: pablo nieves
Date: March 15, 2008 1:54:59 AM GMT-04:00
To: abcxyz
Subject: En defensa de su legado

En defensa de su legado
El hijo del fallecido artista Rafael Tufiño, Pablo, fue consolado por Glenn Monriog tras no poder aguantar las lágrimas al hablar de su padre. (José Rodríguez / END)

Por Jaime Torres Torres / jtorres1@elnuevodia.com
Cada vez que fallece un baluarte de nuestra cultura, la Patria llora por el sentido de impotencia que embarga a sus familiares y amigos al no disponer de los recursos para sufragar los costos por servicios hospitalarios y de defunción.

La historia de Edmundo Rivera Álvarez, Abelardo Díaz Alfaro y otros se repite esta semana a raíz del deceso del artista plástico Rafael Tufiño, cuyos gastos médicos ascienden a alrededor de $15 mil, según reveló la directora ejecutiva del Museo de Arte de Puerto Rico, Lourdes Ramos.

Eso es lo que ha motivado a los artistas Glenn Monroig, Andy Montañez, Tito Auger, Eric Landrón, Haciendo Punto en Otro Son, Zoraida y Tato Santiago, Luis “Perico” Ortiz, Cultura Profética, Luis Rojas, Caribe Gitano y Walter Morciglio a escenificar mañana, desde las 5:00 p.m. en el Teatro Raúl Juliá del MAPR en Santurce, el espectáculo “Concierto y abrazo: Amamos a Tufiño”, cuyos boletos están a la venta en Ticketpop.

“Hay cosas que no debieran pasar, como tener que ver a una persona buscar dinero para sufragar gastos. Debiera haber algo que no fuera tan doloroso para los familiares. Y no hablamos sólo de artistas, se supone que un niño que necesite un trasplante lo reciba”, lamentó el Niño de Tras Talleres, Andy Montañez.

Con lágrimas, Glenn Monroig exhortó al pueblo a cooperar con la causa asistiendo al concierto y le recomendó a los hijos de Tufiño, Nitza y Pablo, que protejan con celo su legado pictórico. “Es una metáfora terrible que nosotros tengamos que estar haciendo mollero en la calle por una persona que representa tanto para nuestra cultura. Se pueden asignar fondos para cubrir barriles de tocino mientras nosotros no acabamos de entender que si este pueblo no nada solo se ahoga”, dijo Glenn Monroig, quien elogió los grabados de “Tefo” inspirados en la plena, como obras de arte que representan al País con elocuencia en cualquier rincón del mundo.

“El mensaje es que tenemos que salvar el legado de este ser humano para que no se lo venga a chupar la gran corporación y termine donde no tiene que terminar. Hay que llamar a todos los panas que son famosos y llenan ‘choliseos’ a que vengan y den la cara aquí por su país”, agregó.

En la rueda de prensa, celebrada en el MAPR, la doctora Ramos se hizo eco de las palabras de Monroig, quien se abrazó y lloró junto a los hijos del pintor, Nitza y Pablo, quienes elogiaron la iniciativa de Tito Auger y sus compañeros.

Expuesto desde hoy
Los restos del maestro Rafael Tufiño estarán expuestos al pueblo hoy y mañana desde las 12:00 p.m. en la funeraria Puerto Rico Memorial en Santurce.

Temprano el lunes, sus restos serán trasladados a la Sala Audiovisual de la Galería Nacional del Instituto de Cultura Puertorriqueña en el Viejo San Juan. El martes serán sepultados en el cementerio Santa María Magdalena de Pazzis, tras las exequias que a las 10:30 a.m. se oficiarán en la Catedral de San Juan.

THE INCOMPLETE LATINO VOTE:

PUERTO RICO AND THE PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION
By Angelo Falcón

Hispanic Link News Service (March 2, 2008)

The increasing interest in the role of the Latino vote in the Democratic primaries for United States president has opened up an important opportunity to educate the U.S. public about the Latino community. We have, hopefully, dispelled the myth that Latinos will not vote for a black for president. We have, in the process, also demonstrated that the Latino vote should not be taken for granted by the Democratic Party establishment, as the Clinton campaign now apparently views Latinos as her last best hope to revive her flailing campaign.

When talking about the Latino vote, reference is made to the fact that the Latino population in the United States now stands at 44 million. This figure is incorrect. There are actually 48 million Latinos in this country, if you include the four million living in the U.S. territories of Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands and others.

These are all U.S. citizens, mostly Puerto Ricans, with a significant number of Dominicans.

One could argue that they should not be included in the Latino population count when discussing the presidential election because, although U.S. citizens, these four million do not have the right to vote for president. But they can and do vote in the nominations process of the two major parties, so they are relevant to a discussion of the role of the Latino vote in selecting the next president of the United States.

Take the case of Puerto Rico:

Island Puerto Ricans will be holding their caucus and convention on June 7, making it the very last race for the nomination before the party conventions this summer. In the Democratic Party, Puerto Rico has a delegation of 63, which is larger than that of 24 states. If the party upholds its sanctions against Florida and Michigan for violating party rules in the scheduling of their primaries, Puerto Rico’s convention delegation will be larger than that of 26 states.

In the past, Puerto Rico’s was a winner-take-all system, but party rules have changed so that it is now supposed to be proportional. While the smart money had been that Clinton could count on all of these delegates, recent events are reflecting the Obama tsunami. The presumed solidity of the Puerto Rican delegation in this regard is crumbling.

Most recently, Puerto Rico Governor Aníbal Acevedo Vilá has endorsed Barack Obama, and it appears that Obama has raised more contributions than Clinton in Puerto Rico. The notion, advanced by Michael Barone and other analysts, that Puerto Rico would deliver all of its delegates to one candidate and could be decisive, inasmuch as it would be the last contest in a long nominations battle, is not panning out.

Despite this, the very idea that a territory (or, as I like to call it, colony) like Puerto Rico even has the possibility of determining who would be the candidate for president of a major U.S. political party is deliciously ironic, given that its residents, all U.S. citizens, do not have the right to vote for U.S. president or voting members of Congress.

In this inequity, they are joined by another million U.S. citizens in the territories of the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, Samoa, the Northern Mariana Islands and other smaller islands, as well as the District of Columbia. (Some will note that it is perhaps no coincidence that these are areas populated overwhelmingly by people of color.)

So in this very exciting presidential election, it is important that we also understand there are over 5 million U.S. citizens in the territories (colonies) and the District of Columbia who continue to be disenfranchised. The so-called “Latino vote” is diluted by this inequality, as is its potential impact. Of course, none of the presidential candidates are raising this issue.

Angelo Falcón is founder and president of the National Institute for Latino Policy, based in New York City. A political scientist, he teaches at the Columbia University School of International and Public Affairs. He is the author of the Atlas of Stateside Puerto Ricans and co-author of the book, Boricuas in Gotham: Puerto Ricans in the Making of Modern New York City. E-mail him at afalcon@latinopolicy.org.

A Walk in the Park: Community March/Rally To & At Randall’s Island

Sunday, February 24th – 1:00 PM
Meet at Triborough Bridge Entrance
Southeast Corner of 2nd Avenue @ 125th Street

Voice Your Concerns and Demand That the City & Parks Department:

• Stop the Construction! Go thru Land Review (ULURP) Process & Prepare Environmental Impact Statement
• Abolish the Private School Franchise Contract & Develop a More Open and Fair Permitting Process
• Develop a Community-Based Plan for Increased Access to Ball Fields for Local Schools and Organizations
• Provide Adequate Park Maintenance Funding & Open the 103rd Street Footbridge Year-Round
• Improve Safety and Public Transportation & Stop the Implementation of Artificial Turf
• End Private Parties That Prohibit Access to Public Park Land

PARTICIPANTS: Council Member Melissa Mark-Viverito • East Harlem Preservation• Manhattan Borough President Scott M. Stringer • Class Size Matters • Citywide Council on High Schools • NYC Park Advocates • Friends of Brook Park • New York Environmental Law & Justice Project • East Harlem Little League • Puebla en Marcha • Urban Divers • No Spray Coalition • Save Our Parks, Inc. • Community Association of East Harlem Triangle Inc. Call (212) 828-9800 to Register Your School, Church or Community Organization.  For more information and links to recent news reports, visit: http://www.eastharlempreservation.org/docs/Randalls_Island.htm

In the Heights on Broadway


Everyone’s favorite musical is now on Broadway!

GET READY TO EXPERIENCE an exhilarating journey into one of Manhattan’s most vibrant communities, named “BEST MUSICAL OF THE YEAR” by New York Magazine and “BEST OF 2007” by The New York Times. With an amazing cast, incredible dancing and a gripping story of hope and self-discovery, In The Heights is your ticket into a world where the coffee from the corner bodega is light and sweet, the windows are always open, and the breeze carries the rhythm of three generations of music.

Find out what it takes to make a living, what it costs to have a dream, and what it means to be home…In The Heights.

Check out In the Heights and see what it’s like to experience the American dream.

intheheightsthemusical.com

A Walk in the Park: Community March/Rally To & At Randall’s Island

Sunday, February 24th – 1:00 PM
Meet at the Entrance to the Triborough Bridge Southeast Corner of 2nd Avenue @ 125th Street

VOICE YOUR CONCERNS AND DEMAND THAT THE CITY & PARKS DEPARTMENT:

• Stop the Construction! Go thru Land Review (ULURP) Process & Prepare Environmental Impact Statement
• Abolish the Private School Franchise Contract & Develop a More Open and Fair Permitting Process
• Develop a Community-Based Plan for Increased Access to Ball Fields for Local Schools and Organizations
•   Provide Adequate Park Maintenance Funding  & Open the 103rd Street Footbridge Year-Round
• Improve Safety and Public Transportation & Stop the Implementation of Artificial Turf
• End Private Parties That Prohibit Access to Public Park Land

PARTICIPANTS: Council Member Melissa Mark-Viverito • East Harlem Preservation• Manhattan Borough President Scott M. Stringer • Class Size Matters • Citywide Councils on High Schools • NYC Park Advocates • Friends of Brook Park • New York Environmental Law & Justice Project • East Harlem Little League • Puebla en Marcha • Urban Divers • No Spray Coalition• Community Association of East Harlem Triangle Inc.

Call (212) 828-9800 to Register Your School, Church or Community Organization.

Art Show Opening at NMCAH Friday 22nd 4-8 P.M. on 115th St.

The National Museum of Catholic Art and History in New York City will be showing a mural scale painting by Fred Villanueva in a show curated by Mariavelia Savino. The museum will also be showing many other artists, including Andy Warhol, Arman, Fernando Botero, and Anthony Van Dyck. Art Show Opening at NMCAH Friday 22nd 4-8 P.M.
For more information about visiting The National Museum of Catholic Art and History, located in Manhattan, please check out NMCAH.org.

443 East 115th Street
New York, NY 10029
212.828.5209
212.828.5208 (fax)
info@nmcah.org

LATINO ART NOW! YOUR THOUGHTS…

latino_art_now_000.jpg

With massive movements of peoples, economies, communications and imaginations across the globe, many new questions arise about the meaning of art in the Americas. The conference Latino Art Now! seeks to understand the aesthetics of Latino art and how it is assessed and valued within a global context. The meaning of valuation entails multiple considerations, including shared community values, value in the museum world and value in the art market at large.

Conference Panels:

Latino Art from its Production to Consumption; The Dissemination, Publication and Archiving of Latino Art: Print and Media; The Origins and New Horizons of Migration, Diaspora and Exile; Intersections: US Latina/o Art and Artists and Latin American and US Contemporary Art; Cultural Brokers, Curators and New Venues; Markets: Collecting and Collections.

Americas Society (map & directions)
680 Park Avenue (68th & 69th)
New York, NY 10021
Phone: 212-628-3200
Fax: 212-249-1880

Has Justice Been Served? A Town Hall Meeting on Randall’s Island

Wednesday, February 13th (6:30 pm), Alice Kornegay Senior Houses Community Center 2101 Lexington Avenue @ 127th Street

Come chare your thoughts on the recent decision to annul the private school franchise contract. Co-Sponsors: Council Member Melissa Mark-Viverito, East Harlem Preservation, Class Size Matters, and NYC Park Advocates. This Event is Free and Open to the General Public.  Click here to view flyer or call (212) 828-9800 to RSVP.

Words of Love – Poetry of Julia de Burgos with Carmen D. Lucca

Tuesday, February 12th, 6:30 pm – 8:30 pm (Free) @ The Charles A. Dana Discovery Center, 110th Street between Fifth & Lenox Avenues

In the spirit of Valentines’ Day and to honor renown Puerto Rican poet, Julia de Burgos, on the 93rd anniversary of her birth, The Central Park Conservancy and El Museo del Barrio present an evening of poetry featuring Carmen D. Lucca – who will read from De Burgos work. Before the performance local poet and community advocate, Marina Ortiz, will introduce Julia de Burgos’ life to the audience. After the performance, the audience is encouraged to participate in an open mic session sharing their favorite poems. Free. For advance registration e-mail public_programs@elmuseo.org.

LA FONDA BORICUA presents Salsa Dura

Guataca a la Lounge

Friday, January 25, $10.00

featuring

CARLITOS SOTO *IVAN RENTA* RUBEN RODRIGUEZ* DESMAR GUEVARA* RALPH IRIZARRI* ENTRE OTROS…

****CANTA-WILLIE TORRES*******

INVITADO ESPECIAL-HERMAN OLIVERA

CON JORGE AYALA EN LA COCICNA PREPARANDO VARIEDAD DE TAPAS COMO:

PINCHOS DE CAMARONES EN SALSA DE PARCHA,BUÑUELOS DE BACALAO,RISOTO DE GARBANZOS Y
CHORIZOS,VARIEDAD DE PASTELILLOS CON UNA SALSA DE GUAYABA,Y MAS…MUCHO MAS…AL
ESTILO UNICO DE LA FONDA BORICUA