Vida y obra del MAESTRO RAFAEL APÓSTOL DE LA EDUCACIÓN

La Fundación Francisco Manrique Cabrera se complace en invitarle a la presentación del libro

Vida y obra del MAESTRO RAFAEL APÓSTOL DE LA EDUCACIÓN
Obra encomendada al Abad Oscar Rivera por el Círculo Maestro Rafael Cordero.

La presentación del libro estará a cargo del Lcdo. Noel Colón Martínez.

Domingo 24 de octubre de 2010, a las 7:30 p.m.
Salón Félix Ochoteco
Colegio de Abogados
Ave. Ponce de León en Miramar
San Juan de Puerto Rico

La entrada a esta actividad es gratuita.

A Nuyorican State of Mind: The Life & Writing of Pedro Pietri

 

 

POETS HOUSE
Thursday, November 4, 7:00pm

with Sam Diaz
David Henderson
Bob Holman
Marilyn Kiss
Jesús Papoleto Meléndez
Nancy Mercado
Myrna Nieves
& Dan Shot

$10, $7 for students and seniors,
free to Poets House Members

Poets and friends gather to honor the life and work of Pedro Pietri (1944-2004), a seminal Nuyorican poet and playwright, whose subversive, irreverent, deeply political writings include Puerto Rican Obituary, Invisible Poetry, Traffic Violations and The Masses Are Asses.

Poets House, 10 River Terrace
(at Murray Street) in Battery Park City
For more information, call (212) 431-7920
or visit www.poets

From the Taller Boricua Blog

http://tallerboricua.wordpress.com/fact-sheet/

ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION (EDC) AND THE REQUEST FOR EXPRESSIONS OF INTEREST (RFEI)

_On September 17, 2010, EDC informed Taller Boricua that a Request for Expressions of Interest (RFEI) would be issued for its leased multicultural space in the Julia de Burgos Cultural Center.

_EDC’s rationale for the RFEI is that the Julia de Burgos theater space should be rented together with Taller Boricua’s multicultural space because of the lack of soundproofing between spaces. No other issues were brought to Taller Boricua at that time.

_EDC issued the RFEI on September 30, 2010. The RFEI states that EDC has the authority to select any group of its choice to take over Taller Boricua’s leased space without consideration from current tenants in the Julia de Burgos Cultural Center, Taller Boricua, Community Board 11 (CB11), or the greater community of East Harlem.

_Should EDC follow through with its plan and terminate Taller Boricua’s tenancy of the multicultural space, it will potentially cripple Taller Boricua’s community arts and cultural programming, including events associated with its art exhibitions. Apart from Taller Boricua’s own programming, the multicultural space is used by the community to celebrate milestones in their lives as well as by other not-for-profits in Spanish Harlem to further their programming.

_This is not the first time EDC has taken such unilateral action without community involvement. La Marqueta faced a similar RFEI. The RFEI is just one more step towards the gentrification of Spanish Harlem and the continual dismantling of the efforts won by the Latino community.

_ Community Board 11 has requested that EDC hold off on issuing the RFEI in order to discuss how the cultural center will be utilized.

_Council Member Melissa Mark-Viverito strongly supports the RFEI. Her reasons are broad and subjective such as “activation,” “limited access” and “underutilization.” These undefined statements inaccurately and unfairly group the Julia de Burgos Theater and Taller Boricua’s multicultural space together into those categories.

_Joining the theater and all its real problems with Taller Boricua’s space below confuses the actual facts. It is a calculated move that mischaracterizes the real situation.

JULIA DE BURGOS LATINO CULTURAL CENTER BUILDING, CURRENT MANAGEMENT AND ORIGINAL VISION
_The New York City Economic Development Corporation (EDC) manages the Julia de Burgos Latino Cultural Center overall. Taller Boricua is a paying tenant for our multicultural space. The RFEI takes away our lease on the multicultural space within the building and joins it with the Julia de Burgos Theater.

_The Julia de Burgos Theater is NOT managed or administrated by Taller Boricua. It is City/EDC owned and managed. The THEATER is extremely underutilized and mismanaged. It has limited access and use due to its desperate need for logistical repairs and renovations.

_In addition to Taller Boricua, the Julia de Burgos Cultural Center houses the Heritage School and three Puerto Rican not-for-profits, including Los Pleneros de la 21, the Puerto Rican Traveling Theater, and Taller Boricua.

_Taller Boricua was one of the founders of the Julia de Burgos Cultural Center over 15 years ago and has been an ideal tenant ever since (paying rent, insurance and upkeep). Taller Boricua provides active cultural programming to the community in accordance with the original vision for the Julia de Burgos Cultural Center.

_Heritage High School currently occupies two floors of the building. It was located in the Julia de Burgos Cultural Center as a temporary solution to maintain a steady cash flow while the not-for-profits that originally applied to be in the building (and were denied for lack of funds) were able to acquire funding.

_The original visioning plan for the Julia de Burgos was that the entire building would be available to arts and culture not-for-profits groups and programming.

_At her visioning session, many community leaders requested a halt to the RFEI to discuss the issues within the community and to give Taller Boricua due process. She ignored them. She has not approached the current tenants of Julia de Burgos Cultural Center to discuss or define clearly the issues she states have been brought to her. She has not attempted to pursue any alternatives such as relocating the Heritage School so as to make room for other local and cultural not-for-profits.

_As Founders and current occupants of the Julia de Burgos we deserve to be informed and given the chance to clearly understand and correct whatever issues were brought to Council Member Melissa Mark-Viverito’s attention. We deserve inclusive dialogue and alternative solutions — not ultimatums and deadlines.

RFEI PITS EL BARRIO’S COMMUNITY AGAINST EACH OTHER
_This RFEI has caused controversy and in-fighting among East Harlem community members, dividing the Latino community rather than unifying them through positive collective development of the Julia de Burgos Cultural Center. Divide and conquer— that is how gentrification of an existing community starts.

_Members of the Cultural Affairs Committee to CB11 have officially recused themselves from handling matters concerning the Julia de Burgos Cultural Center due to a conflict of interest. Cultural Affairs Committee Board members Aurora Flores and Celia Ramirez intend to apply under the RFEI issued by EDC.

_Releasing the RFEI and then giving additional reasons are calculated moves. After-the-fact explanations of “limited access” and “under use” are subjective, broad terms that deserve to be quantified and qualified. If under use of the theater is the real issue than allocating funds to renovate it and make it usable is the answer. It is not necessary to cause this damaging controversy within the community.

TALLER BORICUA’S LEGACY OF COMMITMENT TO EL BARRIO, SPANISH HARLEM
_Taller Boricua’s mission has always been for positive change and growth for Spanish Harlem. The “issue” of soundproofing the theater is an opportunity for jobs for workers in Spanish Harlem and a revival of the theater’s use – not a cause for dividing the community.

_Starting in the 1960’s, a time when Spanish Harlem was ignored and ostracized socially, economically and politically, Taller Boricua fought for our community, dedicating the organization to the improvement of living conditions and providing arts and culture programming to El Barrio.

_The founders and current directors of Taller Boricua, Fernando Salicrup and Marcos Dimas, have always been involved in bringing basic public services as well as the arts to the neighborhood such as: working with Operation Fightback to create and keep affordable housing; being part of the original founding board of El Museo del Barrio and assisting Boys Harbor’s move to Spanish Harlem. They also helped more recent not-for-profits art groups such as Art for Change and Media Noche start-up in the community. Taller Boricua’s goal was and still is to build a “cultural corridor” from Museum Mile into Spanish Harlem.

_Apart from Taller Boricua’s own programming (Salsa Wednesdays, open poetry nights, film screenings, lectures and panels,) the multicultural space is used by the community to celebrate milestones in their lives (memorials, weddings, baptisms and birthdays) as well as by other not-for-profits in Spanish Harlem to further their programming. To name a few: New York Latinas Against Domestic Violence, Danisarte, Community Works, Los Pleneros de la 21, Harlem Community Justice Center, 100 Hispanic Women, Hope Community, Pathways to Housing, Art for Change, Friends of Claridad, Cemi-Underground, Community Planning Board, Absolutely on 2/Latin Dance with Carmen Marrero, Little Sisters of Assumption, Community Voices, The Field, The Renaissance School, Artist in the Schools, The Puerto Rican Traveling Theater, ArtCrawl Harlem. Zon de Barrio, Yerba Buena.

ONGOING PATTERN OF GENTRIFICATION
An RFEI does not justify taking away Taller Boricua’s space to allow EDC and the City to avoid fixing the theater. Forcing Taller to participate in an RFEI for a space we already occupy and use is wrong. It is disrespectful and dismissive of our history and current cultural programming.

_It is also disrespectful and dismissive of all the other current tenants of the Julia de Burgos who also have active, ongoing cultural programming: Los Pleneros de la 21 and the Puerto Rican Traveling Theater

_To ignore and try to undermine the history and the contributions of a community’s leaders means you have no intention of insuring that community’s future.

_If long term productivity and continued growth of arts and culture in El Barrio was the true mission, than an RFEI that gives EDC (a Development Corporation) full decision-making and selection power would not be the process (see page 6 of the RFEI application).

_EDC’s issuance of the RFEI is just one more step towards the gentrification of Spanish Harlem and the continual dismantling the efforts won by the Latino community. We have lost many important groups in the past few years such as Chica Luna and the Association for Hispanic Arts (AHA). The deliberate and unilateral action of EDC gives the impression that there is a concerted effort to erase our culture in El Barrio.

Community Board 11 Executive Committee requests the Economic Development Corp rescind RFEI

THANK YOU to everyone who came to the Community Board Office to support Taller Boricua Wednesday night. At Wednesday night’s Executive Committee meeting, a motion was approved to send another letter to the Economic Development Corporation with stronger language requesting EDC to:
01. Rescind the RFEI;
02. Communicate directly with Taller Boricua concerning any grievances; and
03. To put up the money for soundproofing the Julia de Burgos Theatre.

THIS IS NOT A FINAL ACTION, but serves as a recomendation which will be considered by CB 11 at next Tuesday’s (October 19) Full Board meeting.

We know the fight is not over yet. The RFEI is still in motion. We need your community support more than ever. Please stand with Taller Boricua at the next Full Board meeting where the entire Community Board will take a final position on EDC’s RFEI.

WHEN: Tuesday, October 19th at 6:30pm
WHERE: EHCCI Auditorium 413 East 120th Street (btwn 1st & Pleasant Avenues)

WE NEED TO KEEP SPEAKING OUT UNTIL WE ARE NOT JUST HEARD BUT LISTENED TO AND ACKNOWLEDGED.

If you have not signed already, please sign our petition:

If you would like to further support stopping the RFEI over the Julia de Burgos Cultural Center, please contact EDC and our public officials. For contact information go to “GET INVOLVED” menu tab.

Joining Taller Boricua’s multicultural space with the theater and forcing us to participate in an RFEI for a space we already occupy and use is wrong. It is disrespectful and dismissive of our history and current cultural programming.

It is also disrespective and dismissive of all the current tenants of the Julia de Burgos who also have active, ongoing cultural programming: Los Pleneros de la 21 and the Puerto Rican Traveling Theater.

Activating the Julia de Burgos Theater requires funding and renovations by EDC and the City – NOT RFEI’s that put their responsibility on the community’s applicants

As Founders and current occupants of the Julia de Burgos we deserve inclusive dialogue and alternative solutions — not ultimatums and deadlines.

What’s really ‘going on’ at the Julia de Burgos Cultural Center?

by Gloria Quiñones & William Gerena-Rochet

As long-time residents of El Barrio, we have been concerned for years about how the Julia de Burgos Latino Cutural Center has not fulfilled its mission: to provide the community with spaces in which we would celebrate our Puerto Rican and Latino identity through cultural and artisitic events produced by our various artists and cultural groups.

For too long the City of New York, the owner of the building, as well as prior elected officials failed in their duty to supervise the Center, creating the void that allowed el Taller Boricua, one of the tenants who control most of the spaces in the building, to take over the multipurpose space, while allowing the theatre space to remain virutally unusable and closed.

Councilwoman Melissa Mark-Viverito brought the community’s concerns before the City’s Economic Development Corporation, and the agency has responded by issuing a Request for Expressions of Interest (RFEI), whcih calls on all interested groups to submit proposals for the management of these two spaces at the Center – the theatre and the multi-pupupose space, which Taller Boricua has managed.
We are pleased that the City has finally taken action and support this effort to revitalize the Center.

It is truly infortunate that the debate around this issue has engendered such unnecessary confusion due to a campaign of lies and distortions, that are being repeated despite multiple efforts at clarification. Except for the “Salsa Wednesdays”, recently suspended by El Taller Boricua, few if any cultural events are programmed in the multicultutral space on a consistent basis. More often than not it is rented by El Taller for private events at its discretion.

In order to maintain control of this income-producing space, the leadership of El Taller Boricua has resorted to a campaign of personal attacks and distortions, such as equating this effort with “gentrification” a situation which is of grave concern to the residents of El Barrio.
This campaing has to stop immediately, as it only seeks to block positive change, and to discourage interested groups from bringing their art to El Barrio.

In the long term, we favor the creation of an administrative entity, developed and directed by the community, that will oversee the operation of the Julia de Burgos Center. This would ensure that more groups and invidual artists would have access to this very important cultural resource as well as expand and diversify programs for the residents of El Barrio /East Harlem. We join this effort to insure that the future of the Julia de Burgos Cultural Center is one that will offer our community a variety of cultural programs and prevents one organization from gaining a monopoly over these spaces.

Gloria E. Quiñones geq339@gmail.com y William Gerena-Rochet gerena339@gmail.com

Lolita Lebrón: A Commemoration of Her Life

 

 

Saturday November 20, 2010 @ 7:00 PM

Hunter College/CUNY
68th Street and Lexington Avenue
West Building, 7th Floor/ Lecture Hall
Manhattan

Guest Speakers:
María de Lourdes Santiago (Vice President of the Partido Independentista Puertorriqueño (PIP)
Pedro Nuñez Mosquera (Cuban Ambassador to the United Nations)
Carol Delgado (General Consul of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela in New York)
Linda Alonso Lebrón (Niece of Lolita Lebrón)
Dylcia Pagán (Former Puerto Rican Political Prisoner & Prisoner of War)

Cultural Presentations by:
Delilah
Jani “Bomba” Rose
Veronica Verdad
Sery Colón

MC: Nancy Cabrero

Sponsored by:
Casa de las Américas
Department of Romance Languages, Hunter College CUNY
Eugenio María de Hostos Student Club, Hunter College CUNY
Fundación Andrés Figueroa Cordero, Inc.
National Congress for Puerto Rican Rights
Partido Independentista Puertorriqueño
Partido Nacionalista Puertorriqueño

African Sacred Traditions in the Spanish-Speaking Caribbean

 

 

A presentation and panel discussion with Dr. Marta Moreno Vega, President, Caribbean Cultural Center African Diaspora Institute and Rev. Dr. Samuel Cruz, Assistant Professor of Religion and Society, Union Theological Seminary

Wednesday, October 20, 6:00 pm-9:00 pm

Union Theological Seminary
3041 Broadway at 121st Street
New York, N.Y. 10027

To confirm your attendance please email us at confirm@lpacministries.com

Puerto Rican Heritage Month Kick-Off Celebration

 

 

COMITÉ NOVIEMBRE
mes de la herencia puertorriqueña

Cordially Invites You & a Guest to Attend its
Twenty-Fourth Anniversary

Wednesday, October 27, 2010
6:00PM – 9:00PM
• “Lo Mejor de Nuestra Comunidad” Awards Presentation
• CN Scholars Recognition
• Announcement of the Richie Perez Scholarship for Peace & Justice Recipients

El Museo Del Barrio
1230 Fifth Avenue (at 104th Street), New York City

Please RSVP by Friday, October 22, 2010 to (212) 677-4181

CNN’s Sanchez out after controversial comments

Anchor Rick Sanchez left CNN on Friday, one day after making controversial comments.STORY
By the CNN Wire Staff
CNN.com (October 1, 2010)

HIGHLIGHTS
CNN: “Rick Sanchez is no longer with the company”
Sanchez calls Jon Stewart “a bigot” on satellite radio show
Sanchez’s 3 to 5 p.m. daily spot will be filled by “CNN Newsroom”

Atlanta, Georgia (CNN) — CNN anchor Rick Sanchez abruptly left the network Friday afternoon, just one day after making controversial comments on a satellite radio program.

“Rick Sanchez is no longer with the company,” according to a statement from CNN. “We thank Rick for his years of service and we wish him well.”

On Thursday, Sanchez appeared on the XM Sirius radio program “Stand-Up with Pete Dominick.” During the interview with Dominick, Sanchez called “The Daily Show’s” Jon Stewart “a bigot” and then said that he was bigoted against “everybody else who’s not like him. Look at his show, I mean, what does he surround himself with?”

Dominick pressed for specifics, and Sanchez, who is Cuban-American, responded, “That’s what happens when you watch yourself on his show every day, and all they ever do is call you stupid.”

Dominick, who was once the warm-up comic at Stewart’s Comedy Central show and now has a spot on CNN’s “John King, USA,” noted that Stewart is Jewish and so a minority himself.

“I’m telling you that everybody who runs CNN is a lot like Stewart, and a lot of people who run all the other networks are a lot like Stewart, and to imply that somehow they, the people in this country who are Jewish, are an oppressed minority? Yeah,” Sanchez responded.

The comments were widely quoted online and on social media.

Sanchez’s 3 to 5 p.m. daily spot will be filled by “CNN Newsroom” for the “foreseeable future,” CNN said.

Latin Media and Entertainment Week starts Monday, October 4

 

 

SOME PROGRAMS BY NY HAVANA FILM FESTIVAL

New Children/New York is an intimate portrait of the struggles and perseverance of young immigrants coming of age in a rarely seen New York City. Set in a community workshop in Bushwick, a Latino immigrant and low-income neighborhood of Brooklyn, the documentary follows three young people who are studying filmmaking. Their gripping, self-exploratory films – excerpted throughout the documentary and each exhibiting a distinct voice and style – reveal the confidential perceptions of these youngsters who dramatically straddle the opposing cultures of the U.S. and their homelands. As filmmaking encourages them to reflect on their identities, their family situations and the elusiveness of the “American Dream,” the documentary poignantly portrays how these young adults are triumphing over the barriers of illegality, economic hardship, discrimination, family fracture, cultural loss and social alienation.

Want to know more? See New Children/New York’s website, trailer and blog. And watch the producer, Lauren Mucciolo, in LMEW’s video.
Memories of Overdevelopment, Oct. 10
Sunday, October 10 10:30am: Memories of Overdevelopment
An encore screening of the 2010 Havana Star winner! Director Miguel Coyula will answer questions afterwards. More details in next week’s newsletter.

Both screenings are part of Latin Media and Entertainment Week, sponsored by the Latin Media and Entertainment Commission.
Afro-Cuban Jazz Celebration at Jazz at Lincoln Center

October 22-23
Save up to $30 on tickets to see Jazz Meets Clave (10/21-10/23) featuring the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis! Use code “Jazz 25” to order now.
CenterCharge: 212-721-6500
Click here to buy online

The godfather of Afro-Cuban music, Mario Bauza, and his fellow countrymen Machito, Chano Pozo, and Cachao were the early innovators who first showed Latin musicians how to swing and bop, and at the same time taught the great jazz artists like Dizzy Gillespie and Charlie Parker how to play the intricate polyrhythms of Cuba. The Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis will explore the early breakthrough hits “Tanga” and “Manteca,” the development of the mambo and the cha-cha-cha years later, and the enduring legacy of these explosive, technicolorful musical pioneers.

Other Events:
Chucho Valdes & The Afro-Cuban Messengers
October 22-23, 7:30pm & 9:30pm, The Allen Room

Free Pre-Concert Celebration, October 22-23, 6:30pm
Featuring live music, tastings, and cultural demonstrations, our pre-concert celebration is open to the public, and will include the following partners: the American Friends of the Ludwig Foundation of Cuba/Havana Film Festival New York, Cuban Art Space/Center for Cuban Studies, Dizzy’s Club Coca-Cola Cuban sandwiches, El Taller Latino Americano, and more.

Free Pre-Concert Discussion, Nightly, 7pm