E-mails Coming in lauding LRT and Breakfast

Below are some e-mails that have come in lauding the work of the LRT and the breakfast.  It is important for all the people who worked behind the scenes (especially) to know that this work is having a big impact in creating substantial change in our communities.  We should celebrate at our Membership meeting on Saturday, April 11th, between 1 and 3 PM, at Pitzer College Broad Center Room 212 (1050 N. Mills Ave. in Claremont).

–Jose–

 

From: Stephanie Lee [stephanie@newcityps.org]
Sent: Friday, March 27, 2015 2:55 PM
To: Jose Calderon
Subject: Re: Invitation to the Latino/a Roundtable Cesar Chavez Breakfast
Dr. Calderon,
I would like to take this opportunity to thank you for inviting me to your fabulous Latin@ Round Table César Chávez breakfast! From the moment I sat down, I felt at home (coincidentally next to a kind Unitarian Universalist minister – rare to randomly meet someone of my own uncommon denomination).
Please tell the planning committee that:
  • the music was amazing – I could have listened to that trio all day
  • the speakers were inspirational and genuine – I particularly loved the united parents from the Pomona schools (when you spoke about the woman organizing from her death bed, I got choked up with you)
  • the kind servers were able to accommodate my vegan meal request + the salsa was fresh and quite yummy (unusual for a large gathering)!
  • the silent auction items were lovely – I can home with two! (signed Dolores Huerta print and the Jessie De la Cruz book by Gary Soto)
 
I know the professional photos will be arriving soon – but here are a few from my cell phone just for starters – estoy muy agradecida por la invitación al desayuno y por el apoyo que nos ha brindado.
Atentamente,
stephanie nicole lee

 

From: Eddie Marquez [marquezeddie003@gmail.com]
Sent: Wednesday, April 01, 2015 9:44 AM
To: Jose Calderon
Subject: Re: Articulo en Unidos: Dirigentes Locales Reciben Reconocimiento en Desayuno Cesar Chavez
Professor Calderon,
El trabajo que han hecho y siguen haciendo el Latino(a) Round Table ya esta impactando nuestra communidad. 
El sistema Cal State desde 2012 los Latinos son la mayoria de la poblacion.  En Cal Poly Pomona 33%, Cal State Fullerton 37%,
Channel Islands 29% etc.
Cuando yo fui a UC Riverside en 1996 eramos 14% hoy en dia estamos casi a 30% de la poblacion.
Me recuerdo cuando usted hablo y nos conto de su experiencia en Colorado donde habia menos de 10 estudiantes Latinos.
Felicdades en el trabajo que ha construido y los triunfos que vienen.
Con mucho respeto, 
 
Eddie Marquez

Articulo en Unidos: Dirigentes Locales Reciben Reconocimiento en Desayuno Cesar Chavez

http://www.unidossc.com/articles/cruz-20489-ch225vez-pomona.html

 

POMONA: Dirigentes locales reciben reconocimiento durante desayuno en honor a César Chávez

marzo 30, 2015 02:20 PM

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OLGA ROJAS

orojas@pe.com

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POMONA – Más de 400 personas asistieron al desayuno que organizó Latino and Latina Roundtable del Valle de San Gabriel y Pomona y el Concejo para el Avance Latinoamericano, en honor al líder de los trabajadores del campo, César Chávez.

Tradicionalmente por 11 años se ha estado realizando este evento, en el cual se honra a personas de la región que hayan demostrado poseer los principios y prácticas de César Chávez.

El viernes, 27 de marzo los homenajeados fueron la familia De La Cruz. La difunta abuela Jessie De La Cruz, fue miembro del sindicato de trabajadores del campo en sus inicios y ayudó a reclutar miembros y a organizar huelgas.

Su hijo, Roberto de la Cruz, ex vicepresidente del sindicato de los trabajadores del campo, hoy día se desempeña como representante internacional del Sindicato Internacional de Empleados de Servicios (SEIU, por su sigla en inglés) y el nieto, Arnulfo de la Cruz, quien trabajó como director estatal de Mi Familia Vota y ahora es director nacional del SEIU.

“Es un orgullo agarrar este reconocimiento para mi madre. Ella comenzó a organizar trabajadores entre 1961-1962 y falleció once días antes de cumplir 94 años. Pero parece que escogió cuando morir: fue un Día del Trabajo”, dijo Roberto De La Cruz.

Por su parte, Arnulfo De La Cruz, expresó que “ella debe estar mirándonos al lado de César Chávez, sé que está aquí presente en espíritu y debe gustarle lo que está pasando: más leyes de respeto hacia los inmigrantes como la licencias para los indocumentados y más derechos para los votantes”.

Además mencionó sobre las acciones a favor de los inmigrantes como DACA y DAPA. “Esos eran los temas por los que mi abuela trabajaba en los barrios en los años 50 y 60”, dijo Arnulfo De La Cruz.

Arnulfo De La Cruz recordó la actitud de positivismo de su abuela. “Ella era impresionante… En un rancho en Fresno, donde mi abuela solía hacer la comida para quienes iban a las juntas de la unión con César Chávez, ella escuchaba las estrategias de la lucha y me decía: ‘Eso era muy emocionante’”.

Hasta que un día César Chávez dijo: “Jessie debería unirse a la mesa de conversación”.

“En la actualidad hemos colocado líderes en el poder como Hilda Solis, escuchamos mentores como José Calderón, pero todavía tenemos mucho por hacer… Hay un hombre que siempre me dice que mi generación es más perezosa que la suya en organización, ese es mi papá”, dijo Arnulfo De La Cruz.

“Mi madre dejó un legado de tener conciencia. Ella amaba ayudar a la gente. Tenemos que llenar esos guaraches”, mencionó Roberto De La Cruz.

Otro de los homenajeados ese día fueron Luis Moisés Escalante, líder de larga data en los derechos de los inmigrantes y Suzanne Foster, ex directora del Centro de Oportunidad Económica Pomona o Centro de Jornaleros.

También asistieron al evento Hilda Solis, supervisora del Condado de Los Angeles, y la senadora del Distrito 20 de California, Connie Leyva, quien representa al Distrito 20 del Inland Empire.

El alcalde de Pomona, Elliott Rothman, agradeció el esfuerzo de quienes organizaron la actividad, a la que calificó como el mejor evento que se hace en esa ciudad.

Padres y alumnos

Siete estudiantes obtuvieron becas ese día por sus logros académicos y de compromiso de la comunidad, ellos son: Mitzie Pérez y Chris Gutiérrez, Mt. San Antonio College; Ariana Méndez, Pomona High School; Angelica Orozco, Cal Poly Pomona; José Orozco, Ganesha High School; Ivonne Anzures, Garey High School y Jennifer Monteon, Fremont Academy of Engineering and Design.

Andrés Chávez, nieto de César Chávez, también estuvo presente en el evento y empezó agradeciendo a los hombres y mujeres que prepararon y sirvieron el desayuno.

Él fue el encargado entregar las becas a los estudiantes de quienes expresó que espera regresen a trabajar por la comunidad.

“Hay una necesidad de cambios sociales sustentables”, dijo el joven Chávez.

Por su parte, el superintendente de Distrito Escolar Unificado de Pomona, Richard Martínez, también agradeció a Latino y Latina Roundtable por darles una voz a los padres de ese distrito quienes recibieron uno de los reconocimientos.

“Si queremos ver un cambio, tenemos que trabajar por ese cambio”, dijo Claudia Bedolla, en representación de los padres de ese distrito.

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Invitation to ROCKABILLY FESTIVAL (SAT 3/29)

The 7th Annual Latina/o Student Union Rockabilly Festival

MARCH 29th, 2014

11 A.M.-6 P.M.

Pitzer College

The Mounds

MUSIC, CAR EXHIBITION, VENDORS, ART & MORE!

FREE event, All Ages, open to public

With performances by:

Vicky Tafoya and the Big Beat

The Buzz Jumpers

Moonlight Trio

Jonny Come Lately

Los Bandits

DJ Mad Matt

Follow us!:

http://www.facebook.com/LSURockabillyFestival

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Rally for $15 Wage in Los Angeles

Support the Fight for the $15 Wage in Los Angeles.  If you want to attend the rally in Los Angeles, you can sign up and Join the Busload of people that will meet at the Pomona Day Labor Center  at 1682 W Mission Blvd at 8:30 A. M. on April 15th. 

 

The pick up point, after Riverside, is the Pomona Day Labor Center for all students and community members from Pomona and cities in the region who want to attend. 

 

I appreciate all who can help in this effort in turning out students from your college or community members. We will provide free transportation and lunch. I will just need the name and phone number f or those who want to go  — in order to assign them to the busses.   If you want to go or have a group that you have signed up (see the attached sign-up sheet), you can e-mail me at:  mrosariodelacruz@gmail.com

You will be picked up around 8:30am — and we will leave Los Angeles to return at 1pm.

I have attached the flyers for Los Angeles and Riverside and sign in sheet.

Please let  me know if you have any questions.

a15Flyer-LA-english

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InInvitation to Encuentros Showing of “Farmingville” Documentary

n the morning on Friday, March 27th, we will all be part of the Cesar Chavez breakfast in Pomona.  In the afternoon on the same day, between 1 and 3 PM, Pitzer students who have been organizing the weekly Encuentro lunches with day laborers, invite you to a showing of the internationally-acclaimed documentary “FARMINGVILLE” at the McConnell Dining Hall Founder’s Room (second floor of McConnell Building – 1050 North Mills Avenue in Claremont).  For further information, you can e-mail or call Carlos Perrett at:

carlosperrett24@gmail.com

(909) 929-4507

 

Here is the PBS description of the documentary:

 

The shocking hate-based attempted murders of two Mexican day laborers catapult a small Long Island town into national headlines, unmasking a new front line in the border wars: suburbia. For nearly a year, Carlos Sandoval and Catherine Tambini lived and worked in Farmingville, New York, so they could capture first-hand the stories of residents, day laborers and activists on all sides of the debate.

In some ways, it’s a familiar American story: an influx of undocumented immigrants crossing the border from Mexico to do work the locals won’t; a flourishing “low-wage” labor market that depends on them; rising tensions with the resident Anglo population; charges and counter-charges of lawlessness and racism; organizing and counter-organizing — then a violent hate crime that tears a community apart. But this isn’t the story of a California, Texas or other Southwestern town. It’s the story of Farmingville, New York, on Long Island.

In the late 1990s, some 1,500 Mexican workers moved to the leafy, suburban town of Farmingville, population 15,000. Many were undocumented immigrants, and most found ready employment in Suffolk County’s thriving landscaping, construction, and restaurant industries. This didn’t prevent many of the town’s citizens from being shocked at the sudden influx of employment-hungry Spanish-speaking men crowding their street corners and over-crowding rented houses in their neighborhoods. Farmingville, after all, is about as far from a border town, or traditional employer of immigrant labor, as you can get.

Farmingville meticulously reveals the underlying forces, and the human impact, of what has become the largest influx of Mexican workers in U.S. history — a migration that economic globalization is carrying beyond border areas and major cities and into the small cities and towns of America. The filmmakers spent nearly a year in Farmingville, talking to all sides and filming the conflict as it unfolded in legal and political maneuverings, community organizing, vigilante action and, most tragically, violence. Farmingville achieves a remarkable intimacy with many of the principal players in the town’s drama, who share their personal hopes and fears, revealing just how profoundly local all politics, even global politics, are.

Tambini and Sandoval explore the conflict as it plays out as an ongoing clash of personalities and perspectives. Residents such as Margaret Bianculli-Dyber, who helps found and lead a group called Sachem Quality of Life (SQL), blame the Mexican day workers for bringing noise, overcrowding, and a crime wave to the area. Tempers boil as local officials deny any increase in crime and plead powerlessness to act against the workers. Other citizens, such as Ed Hernandez of Brookhaven Citizens for Peaceful Solutions and Brother Joe Madsen, counsel tolerance for the plight of the day workers. The contractors, restaurateurs and homeowners who hire the workers claim the local economy would come to a standstill without the Mexicans’ willingness to do hard, low-paying and sometimes dangerous labor. The workers, meanwhile, face rising incidents of verbal and physical harassment.

Then a vicious crime brings the conflict fully to the surface. Lured to a basement under pretext of a job, Israel Pérez and Magdaleno Escamilla are brutally stabbed and beaten. It’s the kind of racist violence one might expect in another place and time, but not in a Long Island town like Farmingville. Two young white men with ties to racist groups are later charged and convicted of hate-based attempted murder for the attack, which draws national media attention. Ominously, however, the shock of the incident serves to polarize and harden feelings rather than bring the community together.

A compromise approach that would create a hiring hall in hopes of ameliorating the problems is derailed by community resistance and the involvement of controversial national anti-immigrant groups, including the Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR). The bad feelings escalate as SQL and other groups adopt the strident views and rhetoric of Glenn Spencer’s American Patrol and Barbara Coe’s California Coalition for Immigration Reform, which see a Mexican conspiracy to seize control of much of the U.S.

The day workers themselves, led by immigrant activist Matilde Parada, organize a mutual help association called Human Solidarity to counter the harassment, fight for their rights, and reach out to the community. The workers come together on one of their most shared cultural traditions — soccer — and, in one of the conflict’s few bright spots, employ their hard-earned expertise in landscaping in exchange for permission to play on a local school’s athletic fields. The fields are groomed and a different kind of interaction is fostered when the workers joyously take the field. Yet despite the hopeful signs of conciliation and progress, Farmingville ends without resolution; at the film’s conclusion we find the community still struggling with a situation to which no clear solution seems imminent.

Farmingville is a complex, emotional portrait of an American town in rapid transition from a relatively homogenous community to a 21st-century village. “We wanted to tell this story from the inside out,” says co-producer Sandoval, “to capture the story as it happened. We shot over 200 hours of footage, in two languages, to reveal the personal stories behind the headlines and sound bites.”

“This is the latest battle over the American Dream,” adds co-producer Tambini, “one that puts every American town on the front line of deciding just who shares — and who controls — that dream.”

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Standardized Tests

I so much agree with this — testing has become everything — and often promotes a type of a standardized “banking” system — where the power of disseminating knowledge fits into the early twentieth century industrial model of schools where students were socialized in assembly-like rows to be taught the status quo and not to be heard from (or if heard from – only through testing). With the promotion of standardized tests and quantitative methods that evaluate the performances of both teachers and students, there is a diminishing of the space for the creation of democratic bridges between what is being learned in the classroom and the challenges of democratic decision-making in our communities.

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A Good Way To Celebrate Cesar Chavez Day

A good way to celebrate Cesar Chavez Day is to support for our eleventh  annual Cesar Chavez Breakfast that will take place on Cesar Chavez Day, Friday, March 27th, from 8 A. M. to 10 A. M. (with registration beginning at 7:30 a. m.). The Latino and Latina Roundtable, as you know, continues to move forward with the commitment and dedication of dozens of volunteers and the resources that are raised from this yearly fundraiser.  

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