Borderzine, journalism across fronteras, is a web community for Latino student journalists, a two-way bridge connecting the classroom and the newsroom. It creates an unprecedented national dialogue around issues of newsroom diversity and shifts the new voices, perspectives and experiences of Latinos in the U.S. from the borderline to the centerline.

Borderzine is a project of the University of Texas at El Paso (UTEP), with participation by the Department of Communication and the Sam Donaldson Center for Communication Studies. It is overseen by Zita Arocha, director of Borderzine.com, as well as, director of internships of the Department of Communication at UTEP.



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20 de Agosto 2010

Exodus from Ciudad Juárez impacts El Paso economy

By Randy Anaya
Borderzine


CIUDAD JUÁREZ, México -- Roaming the city is not what it used to be; the once busy and bustling city is losing money and residents very quickly. Recent provisional data from the INEGI show that Juárez has lost about 24% of its population. A city of 1.3 million has shrunk to one million, and 60 thousand families have migrated to other areas of Mexico or to the U.S.

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As a result of this people flight, statistics from the Colegio de la Frontera Norte reveal that 116,000 houses have been abandoned, leaving 24% of the city's homes empty. Yet those statistics may be erroneous because a study form the Universidad Autónoma de Ciudad Juárez reveals that the sum might be closer to 100 thousand families leaving the city, leaving half a million (or about 40%) less inhabitants.


A sign reads "For Rent" at Avenida Juárez. (Randy Anaya/Borderzine.com)
These latter numbers do coincide; an article posted by the Diario de Juarez states that since 2006 nearly 110 thousand Mexican citizens asked for political asylum in the U.S., but only 183 obtained the asylum, less that 2% of the total. This has left many families no choice but to reside illegally in the neighboring city of El Paso.

Mar Patricia Gutierrez, a manager for a Juarez real estate company also verifies the exodus: "the sales have plummeted to the floor, a few years ago we would sell at least five or six houses every week, now we sell about two to four a month".

In an associated story published by El Diario, a Juarez daily newspaper, Pablo Hernandez from the Asociación Mexicana de Profesionales Inmobiliarios de Ciudad Juárez (AMPI) says that 116,000 houses are empty, 14% of the industrial space is empty and about 40% of local businesses are closing; the Servicio de Administracion Tributaria or SAT, states that since 2008, 10,670 businesses have closed, both for the economic crisis and the insecurity issues.

Likewise in El Paso, Kandice Diaz from the El Paso Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, notes that their stats from 2009 show that 202 clients have asked for information to expand or transfer their business to El Paso. This is a significant 40% hike compared to 2008.

Out of those 202 clients...

Finish reading Exodus from Ciudad Juárez impacts El Paso economy

3 de Agosto 2010

Johnny Costello sings his own journey through life

By Adrian Aguirre
Borderzine


EL PASO -- Standing over six-and-half feet tall, musician and singer/songwriter Johnny Costello looks like he should be dunking a basketball instead of strumming a guitar.

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Even though Costello can still jam a hoop as he did when he was a forward playing AAU basketball in high school, his passion for music has changed who he is today.

Many musicians play because of the love and passion they have for the art. For Costello, his music reflects not only who he is, but also the journey that brought him to the realization that one day everyone will hear his tunes.

His life experiences have shaped the music he sings and writes. Born in Germany and raised in Dallas, Texas, Costello learned his craft in church playing sheet and cord music on an acoustic guitar.

He describes his music as, "...say your cup of water is folk music, and the little lemon on top of the glass is blues. It's just got a little blues influence on it."

Over the years Costello has strived to perfect his musical talents but he remains his own harshest critic. "You never really realize that you can do this as a career and you're always very critical of your music. You go off the response of your audience and ask yourself --can you see yourself doing anything else? And the answer is usually no," he said.

After doing a great deal of traveling over the years, Johnny came to El Paso two years ago to continue his education at the University of Texas at El Paso. The move to the Sun City was an unexpected blessing to his music career.

Costello credits El Paso for helping him turn his hobby into something he wants to do for the rest of his life. Of all the cities he's lived in, Costello says the stillness of El Paso helped him focus on his music.

"There weren't that many distractions in El Paso to where I couldn't do what I wanted to do," says Costello

Costello also has come to know some of the talent that resides in El Paso. Musician...

Finish reading Johnny Costello sings his own journey through life

22 de Julio 2010

El Paso has a front row seat on the unending killing in Juarez

By Raymundo Aguirre
Borderzine


EL PASO, Texas -- About a century ago, El Pasoans lined themselves up near the border for a good view of the revolutionary war raging just across the river as gunshots and war cries echoed from the brush and dirty water.

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A hundred yeas later, El Paso once more holds a ringside seat to the bloodshed of Mexican souls. Last week, shots fired from Mexico hit the windows of El Paso's City Hall. Although no one can be sure how or when the bulk of the violence will die down, many students at the University of Texas at El Paso (UTEP) have their opinions.


A quiet morning in downtown El Paso, for how much longer? (Photo: Lourdes Cueva Chacón/Borderzine.com)


A quiet morning in downtown El Paso, for how much longer? (Lourdes Cueva Chacón/Borderzine.com)
"A lot of people have told me that maybe if they legalize marijuana in Juárez it would be better because then the drug lords would loose some of their power," said Lindsy Gutierrez, a music major. She sat in the shade outside the Fox Fine Arts building of UTEP reading a book on poetry. "I don't know if I agree with that because then they might go on to sell harder things," Gutierrez added.

Some students don't think the Mexican government is capable of handling the situation on its own. "Because of some of the findings, it's interesting to see where the government stands. There is a war, yes, but exactly who is fighting whom? That I don't know," said Jorge Espin, a nursing student.

The situation in Juarez and the manner in which it is being handled has caused much insecurity in the general public. "It's interesting to find out where exactly the government stands where the military is concerned. Is it helping one side or the other or is it vying for its own side. I don't know," said Espin.

The overwhelming number of killings in Juárez ...

Finish reading El Paso has a front row seat on the unending killing in Juarez

8 de Julio 2010

Research and Education Now Cross-connects Beyond Borders

By Adrian Aguirre
Borderzine

EL PASO - The University of Texas at El Paso and other research and educational institutions across the U.S. have teamed up with universities in Mexico to make it easier and more affordable for them to access the state of the art Internet research capabilities available in the U.S.

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The jointly constructed optical infrastructure between El Paso and Ciudad Juárez is called Cross Connect. "We have designed an innovative way for exchanging teaching and research information," says UTEP Vice President for Information Resources and Planning, Dr. Stephen Riter.

(© iStockPhoto.com/ahlobystov)

According to Dr. Riter, this started more than five years ago when UTEP used money from the National Science Foundation to begin a link of networks from El Paso to Ciudad Juárez. UTEP established a relationship with the Universidad Autonoma de Ciudad Juárez to help enhance research tools for students in Juárez.

Students in Mexico now have the ability to...

Finish reading Research and Education Now Cross-connects Beyond Borders

22 de Junio 2010

Teen authors of the California border pave their way through self-publishing

By Marisol Díaz
Borderzine


IMPERIAL VALLEY, Calif.-Teenagers all over the world are anticipating the June 30 movie release of "Eclipse," the third installment in the phenomenal "Twilight" saga, to see how the romantic fantasy about a teenage girl and her intense love affair with a vampire continues to play out.

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The "Twilight" books, written by Stephanie Meyer, inspired the movie series and a cult following of both readers and movie-goers around the globe. But during the last decade, that inspiration was not limited to just reading or watching the mythical and unorthodox teen romance stories; inspiration bled over into the minds of young writers, including those in the Imperial Valley.

Teen author Angela Lee, (right) and her best friend Rebecca Rodriguez look over "Birds to Fly Me to You." Said Rodriguez of her friend being a published author, "I liked her book. But it made me sad in the end." (Photo by Marisol Diaz)

Often seen as culturally dry as the desert it occupies, the Imperial Valley is home to several young authors who have crafted their own fantasies in the pages of books that are sold on Amazon, Barnes and Noble, at the local bookstore, and can be found in local libraries. These youthful writers have not experienced the notoriety of Meyer - at least not yet.

Angela Lee, 16, is writing her second novel. "The book is going to be about a different dimension, but in this world," Lee said. "There will be action and adventure, somewhat like Twilight." The Brawley High School junior self-published her first book, "Birds to Fly Me to You" in 2009.

Fantasy adventures like "The Way to Fairyleland" and "The Collusion Series" have sprung from the minds of local teen authors prolifically in recent years. Publishing house Wandering Sage Books recently released a commemorative edition of "The Way to Fairyleland," by Belén Ramos, and a third young writer, Alexandra Lopez, is penning her third and fourth books.

But fantasies can spring from just about any source. Angela Lee, who writes under the pseudonym of Fantasy Angie, decided to write "Birds" as a result of her eighth-grade history lessons. "I was learning about the war in history class," she said about the idea for her first book. The story takes place during World War II and centers around two girls of different ethnic backgrounds and the difficulties of their friendship.

Writing is "a way of spacing from reality," said Lee, who writes anywhere she can translate her imagination into stories-at school, at home, and even at her mother's nail salon, where she spends most of her after-school hours. She said her second book promises to have "a lot more action and fantasy" than her first, more realistic story.

Just like veteran authors, young writers want to fine-tune their works, draft after draft. Belen Ramos had similar feelings about her third book--she wanted to make it more "teenage-ish," according to her brother Omar, although he chuckled that he didn't know what she meant by that.

Belen Ramos was killed in an automobile accident outside of El Centro in February 2008. At the time of her death she was writing the sequel to "Fairyleland" and a second draft of her third novel, "The Voice in the Box," which her brother says the family would eventually like to see finished by a ghost writer. "I think my mom would really like that," Omar Ramos said.

In the meantime, Belen Ramos's publisher, St. Louis-based Wandering Sage Books, has ...

Finish reading Teen authors of the California border pave their way through self-publishing

15 de Junio 2010

Juarez Drug War Criminals Even Shake Down the Street Vendors

By Borderzine Staff
Borderzine


CIUDAD JUÁREZ, México -- Daytime here displays a busy city, alive and full of productive energy. Street vendors hawk their products, restaurants await the rush hour crowds and mechanics do tune-ups out of their homes.

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These images of a normalcy, however, are deceptive. More than 5,000 of Juarez businesses have closed their doors permanently during the past four years of drug war violence, according to Cámara de Comercio de Juárez, which has infected every aspect of Juarenses' life.

(© iStockPhoto.com/kevinruss)

Nighttime is a different creature altogether, according to Martín, the owner of a few very profitable food stands in Juárez and no stranger to the cartels. Martín requested we use an alias.

"The first time they came, they came in the day. The second time they came, it was because I had refused to pay and they robbed one of my stands. That's when I finally paid," Martín said.

This is a common occurrence in Juárez these days. Drug cartels are now trying more than ever to institutionalize their control over the city by charging people "taxes" and many business owners have gone through the trauma of facing a stranger in their office demanding a payoff "tax" for protection.

"There is very little conversation, but they make it obvious what they are there for," said Martín, adding that he was a past victim of refusing to pay their quotas. "A man came in and began asking me questions about my business like what the traffic of customers was like, how much profit the stand yielded.

I honestly believed he wanted to buy the stand or something because he was dressed very classy and arrived in a European car. Then he asked if my business was protected and I still wasn't catching on to what was going on."

Martín said the well-dressed man danced around the topic for a while before he hit him with the offer.

"For a while he danced around it, then he hit me with it. 'Look, there are a lot of criminals out there that will rob the stand, burn it, and the police won't do anything about it. They may even harm you, but if you come under our protection we'll make sure nothing happens to the stand or to you,' Martín said.

Martín said he literally did not know what to say, he felt he knew this day was coming, friends were telling him they had been visited, but nothing prepared him for it.

"Once he knew I caught on, he said he wanted me to meet his 'numbers guy' so that he could calculate what the proper quota would be for this stand," Martín said.

A formal "yes" was not needed from Martín, his compliance came by way of submission. He just allowed it to happen. Whatever these men asked for they were going to get, including the books and accounts to the stand. His papers were returned four very long days later, with a note that simply had a time, a place and an amount--a very large amount.

When the time came to pay his quota, Martín never showed and he felt the consequences immediately...

Finish reading Juarez Drug War Criminals Even Shake Down the Street Vendors

9 de Junio 2010

Hispanic or Latino: What's the Big Deal About a Label, Anyway?

By Max Hendra
Borderzine


JOHNSON CITY, Tenn. -- Javier Martinez Vargas sat in a booth one day last fall, counting the money he made waiting tables that afternoon at El Matador in Johnson City, Tenn.

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A customer asked him if he was planning on doing anything for Hispanic Heritage Month. Martinez Vargas, a Mexican national and legal permanent resident of the U.S., shook his head. Then the customer asked him what he thought about the word 'Hispanic.'

"I don't really care what they call me," Martinez Vargas said. "To me, [Latino] sounds better than Hispanic or Mexican."

Why is that?

"We speak Latin," he said. "Spanish is a Latin language."

At first glance, the words 'Hispanic' and 'Latino' appear to mean the same thing. When you ask the Spanish-speaking community, however, you'll find that there are plenty of differences between the two.


Hispanic

Hispanic means "pertaining to Spain," according to Webster's Dictionary. It refers to a U.S. citizen who lives in a Spanish-speaking home or has family ties to either Spain or another Spanish-speaking country.

In 1976, the White House Office of Management and Budget proposed a law requiring that all Spanish speakers be called Hispanic for U.S. Census data. The law defines Hispanics as "Americans who identify themselves as being of Spanish-speaking background and trace their origin or descent from Mexico, Puerto Rico, Cuba, Central and South America and other Spanish speaking countries."

Some Spanish speakers have adopted the word 'Hispanic' as a sense of pride. Michael Hofius, a U.S. citizen from Guatemala, is one of them.

"Hispanic is an overall term that is used by all of us who are not ashamed of our Spanish or Spanish-American heritage," said Hofius, who lives in Bristol, Va. "[Hispanics] include every possible racial group and can come from every possible continent, except Antarctica."

Some think that Hispanic only applies to a person's heritage. Diego Iglesias, an Argentine citizen with legal permanent residence in the U.S., sees a connection between the use of 'Hispanic' and naturalized U.S. citizens.

"If I have a kid, I think he or she could consider themselves Hispanic but not necessarily Latino," said Iglesias, "but that kid's going to turn out to be full-blown American. To that extent, I think I'd consider him more Hispanic."

Iglesias, vice president of Bank of Tennessee's Hispanic market division, said he usually calls himself Argentine.

"For me, Hispanic and Latino mean the same thing," Iglesias said.

Other Spanish-speakers do notice a difference...

Finish reading Hispanic or Latino: What's the Big Deal About a Label, Anyway?

26 de Mayo 2010

Facing a decaying mural and fading message, the Calexico-Mexicali camaraderie struggles to survive

By Stacy Garcia
Borderzine

CALEXICO, Calif.-This bustling border town in Southern California's Imperial Valley was quite different in the 1960s than it is today. People filing through the international port of entry merely had to state where they were born in order to enter the U.S.

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Port vehicle traffic flowed in just two lanes rather than snaking through the 12 they have today. The friendship between Calexico and its sister city, Mexicali, on the Mexican side was so casual, kids in both countries could share what could be called a bi-national game of baseball.

But, more than a decade ago a solid brown metal fence was erected as part of Operation Gatekeeper, President Clinton's answer to stem the tide of illegal immigration from Mexico into the U.S. between California and Texas.

A child's discarded push car toy lies among the empty bottles, televisions, tires and other debris in front of the two-mile mural painted on the international border fence separating Calexico and Mexicali. There are no plans to repaint the mural as it begins to fade. --Photo by Stacy Garcia

"When this fence went up, the ability to perceive and to sense this community, this trans-border community all of a sudden became harder because you couldn't see across the fence anymore, and so both sides of the border expressed outrage," Herrera said.

Herrera, a history professor at the San Diego State University Calexico campus, was among a small group of citizens who felt saddled by the offending fence, but did not feel they had to settle on its appearance, so they set to work on making it more aesthetically appealing.

In 1998, the Calexico Arts Commission quickly established the Border Metamorphosis-Binational Mural Project to raise about $60,000 from public and private sources, commissioning internationally renowned conceptual artist and Calexico native Armando Rascon to create an artistically meaningful message to be emblazoned on two miles of the American side of the fence.

Rascon designed an image that represented the beliefs of one of Mexico's oldest civilizations--the Olmec people.

"It symbolizes the Olmec, who believed that the world is perceived through sight, touch and sound, so the idea here is communication," Rascon said in a telephone interview from his studio in Washington, D.C.

The two-mile-long mural depicts what the ancient Olmec used in their "friendship bracelet," a series of geometric figures with a central orb, or an "all-seeing eye," Rascon said.

More than 2,400 people from the Imperial Valley helped paint the mural on the dull, brown fence from 1998 to 2001. "Some people came as far as Australia to do a few brush strokes on the mural," Herrera said.

Busloads full of high school students would arrive on site every Friday throughout the project to help paint the mural. Among them was Rene Miranda, now a microbiologist in San Diego. "I didn't think much about what I was doing," Miranda said. "But now with all that is happening in Arizona, I reflect on the actions we, my classmates, were doing and I see how important it is to unite for the sake of our community."

The "friendship bracelet," however, has not replaced a certain camaraderie felt between kids on both sides of the border, who were able to see, talk to and tease each other through only a chain-link fence that separated them decades ago.

As a child Herrera and his buddies would play baseball in vacant lots next to the border. "To hit a homerun you had to hit the baseball over the fence into Mexicali," he said. But even friendship had its price at the time.

"It was very difficult to get the ball back," he laughed. "A lot of times there were kids our age on the Mexicali side, just sitting on the sidewalk just watching us play baseball, and they would give us back the ball if we gave them a quarter, so we always had to have a couple of quarters."

Today, a visitor even approaching the border fence is stopped and questioned by border agents. The vacant lots no longer host baseball games, but instead have become a wasteland for discarded toys, bottles, electronics, tires and other debris.

After 10 years of three-digit summer temperatures and mercilessly constant hot winds, the friendship mural is rotting away. Rust smears the precise lines of the art. Mexicali residents burning their waste right behind the mural, on the Mexican side of the fence, also melt and distort the mural's paint, according to Herrera.

And, there is no plan or future funding to keep the mural intact and alive, as it erodes.

But, then, that's not what was planned...

Finish reading Facing a decaying mural and fading message, the Calexico-Mexicali camaraderie struggles to survive

18 de Mayo 2010

Texas Finally Managed to Erase César Chávez

By Abraham Villalobos
Borderzine

EL PASO, Texas -- César Chávez was a Chicano leader who led the fight in a proud movement in the 1960's for the rights and dignity of migrant farm workers. He fought so they would receive better treatment and better pay for their hard labor in the fields.

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By organizing the United Farm Worker and using peaceful protest as a tool for change Chávez gave voice to an entire minority in what can be seen as American free speech at its finest. To the Texas State Board of Education, however, Chávez isn't worth putting in the high school history books.

Texas State Board of Education turns its back on César Chávez. (Photo: Mireya Toy/Borderzine.com)

"Personally I believe that not mentioning him [Chávez] would be taking away the identity of people who really struggled and managed to shape the political landscape. Most importantly though, Chávez is indeed an iconic figure in our society. Leaving him out doesn't do the Chicano culture any justice," said graduate student and Chicano Ricardo Cortez.

Every 10 years the Texas curriculum is changed in schools and one of the many things discussed is who and what will be in history books. In January the discussion to remove César Chávez from Texas history books sparked a debate with those in the Chicano community.

The Texas State Board of Education board members believe that there is an over-representation of minorities in textbooks. Most of these members are strongly conservative and believe that the separation of minorities should be done away with.

"Its colonialism at its finest." said Cortez, " I tutor students at local high schools and a lot of them barely know who Chávez is. If you remove him it will again be another forced assimilation. The same assimilation our ancestors experienced before us."

Texas high school teachers have mixed feelings about the situation based on their identities.

"As a teacher I truly understand and see both sides of the debate in what will be taught in our classrooms. Normally a name like César Chávez is one southwest Americans can't ignore. The Board indeed wants history to be of the same American effort but Chávez clearly changed the lives of thousands of people. He changed history and he should be acknowledged for it," said middle-school teacher India Hoover.

The attitudes expressed by board members fail to select good examples of outstanding cultural leaders who did things the right way compared to people who didn't. For example, why should Texas Conservatives allow someone like Sen. Joseph McCarthy...

Finish reading Texas Finally Managed to Erase César Chávez

3 de Mayo 2010

Bilingual City Can Be an Obstacle to Learning English

By Gregory Gordon
Borderzine

EL PASO, Texas -- It's a beautiful thing that a majority of El Paso is bilingual. I don't think I have ever been anywhere else in the United States where so many people can speak more than one language. Only a minority of the population is monolingual. For those readers who are bilingual, being bilingual can open a lot of doors in other cities, but you can also be very problematic for a person trying to learn English.

I realized this while I was tutoring an adult ESL class. Our students would often be reluctant to speak English during class and on field trips. In my hopes of preventing their reluctance, on my first day tutoring the class I advised them to always speak English with a strong voice and have confidence. I also told them to practice English outside of class.

At first it was a little frustrating that even after my advice, none of our students would speak English when they talked with each other during class. It always seemed to ruin the point of trying to teach them English. After all, they were there to learn English, and the best way to learn a language is to use it whenever you have the opportunity.

What better opportunity than in a classroom of your peers where no one can judge you?

At first, we had a pretty good idea of why our students were so reluctant to speak English. They lacked the confidence necessary to use it effectively. The truth is that no one wants to look or sound foolish in front of other people. It is especially embarrassing when you are doing your best to speak with someone and make mistakes in pronunciation or grammar.

I know this from my experiences trying to speak in other languages with their natives. I'm positive that I made a huge ass out of myself every time I attempted to speak French and German. Unfortunately, the only way to learn something is by jumping in and making mistakes.

Our students faced greater challenges than looking foolish. They would have to find a way to practice their English with someone who could more easily speak to them in Spanish. How could they get a bilingual person to speak to them in English when it would be so much more difficult than Spanish? How would they not resort to their first language when it is so much easier and natural for them?

Even with their bilingual family members and friends, they had trouble. Some of my students told me that whenever they tried to speak English with their children or friends, they were laughed at when they made a mistake. In the worst cases, they were told to just speak Spanish. In these cases, the family or friends inadvertently denied them the right to learn English...

Finish reading Bilingual City Can Be an Obstacle to Learning English

20 de Abril 2010

Juárez Terror Etched in La Loteria de la Muerte

By Lucia Murguia
Borderzine

EL PASO, Texas -- Student artist Yvianna Hernandez uses cards from a popular borderland bingo game known as "La Loteria" to depict the tragedy of a drug war that has claimed some 5,000 lives in Ciudad Juárez in the last two-and-a-half years.

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The popular Mexican game of chance has long been a staple in the border sister cities of El Paso and Juárez. Now Hernandez, a senior drawing major at the University of Texas at El Paso (UTEP) is calling attention to the violence by using the traditional folk-art icons as backgrounds for her drawings.

"It was actually a silly idea to me that I really didn't want to do because 'La Loteria' has been overdone so many times," said Hernandez. "You even see loteria art on the walls of Wal-Mart bathrooms, so I really wasn't too inclined to do it."

Having started with the idea of "La Llorona," based on the Mexican folklore of the weeping woman, Hernandez decided to depict a portrait of a woman crying over her dead son, killed in the Juárez bloodshed.


The future is the last card on Hernandez's La Loteria. (Lucía Murguía/Borderzine.com)
"The ideas slowly started snowballing after that," said Hernandez.

Her piece, titled, "La Loteria Fronteriza: Book/The Borderland Lottery: Libro," grabbed widespread attention. Although Hernandez at first was too shy to show off her work, her art professors encouraged her to hold an exhibit of her work, in the Glass Gallery, located on the third floor of the Fox Fine Arts Center at UTEP. She titled the exhibit, "Face to Face."

The work portrays many of the reoccurring incidents that Juárez has been facing since the drug war broke out in 2008...

Finish reading Juárez Terror Etched in La Loteria de la Muerte

7 de Abril 2010

Mercado Mayapán Celebrates Chicano Power and Pride

By Raymundo Aguirre
Borderzine


EL PASO, Texas -- The smell of tacos al pastor greeted visitors of the Mercado Mayapán like the warmth of a Mexican grandmother's bosom. Chicanos gathered here surrounded by the beat of indigenous drums and warm colors for Chicano Power: Legacy of the Chicano movement in El Paso on a Saturday afternoon.


brown-beret.jpgThroughout the month of February, Museo Mayachén and La Mujer Obrera presented to the El Paso community different exhibits all having to do with the struggles of the Chicanos and Chicanas during the 60's and 70's.

Brown Beret Salvador Avila, organized the panel Chicano Power 
(PHOTO: Raymundo Aguirre/Borderzine.com)

Cultural dances, musical performances, and informatory forums were hosted at the Mercado Mayapán every Saturday in an effort to bring people to the recently opened museum dedicated to the Chicano movement in El Paso.

The forum on February 13th was organized by Salvador Avila who participated as a member of the Brown Berets during the era of the Chicano movement. "Hoy se hace historia en la comunidad de El Paso," Ávila said.

It has been a dream come true for many of the activists involved in this movement to see a museum erected to honor the struggles of the time. "[Se hace] un sueño realidad al tener un museo que cuente nuestra historia por nuestros historiadores y no gente y escritores que no conozcan nuestra comunidad," said Ávila, "La historia se está contando del otro lado del punto de vista."

The four speakers of the forum were all active in the struggle for the Chicano's equality. Each specialized in a main respective activity: health, housing, politics, and legal matters...

Finish reading Mercado Mayapán Celebrates Chicano Power and Pride

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