OCT-NOV 97 - HOME

PALABRAS FROM AZTLAN
Thoughts on October 12th
BY CESAR A. CRUZ
This October 12th marks the one-year anni-versary of the Latino Civil Rights
March on Washington. But while the March brought to-gether people from over
thirty countries, its militancy was quickly tempered with statements leaning
towards "We Shall Overcome" in Spanish.
The day's most revolutionary act was the leader­p;ship's Spanish rendition
of America's national anthem. The live stage performance proclaimed itself
to be a bold step for our movement and for Latinos in general.
Fortunately, most of the masses saw through the greed and apathy of the
'established' Latino leadership and joined Latinos from the world over in
a demonstration of pride and harmony. Aztlan was borderless, if only for
a day. But the demands made to the statues of a deceased Lincoln and Washington
proved to be only words blowing in the wind. What remained, however, was
hope, a flame within the spirits of a unified people who had experienced
the power of not bowing down.
On this year's first anniversary, multiple strategies are being employed
to have our message heard even louder. A call has been made to gather in
New York and Texas.
Masses of people will be marching on October 12th to the United Nations
in New York to demand immediate action against human rights violations of
immigrants, Latinos, people of color, and the poor. In Austin, Texas, an
expected 30,000 will gather to demand justice for Latinos in an area predominantly
known as Texas Rangers' country, an area where the hanging of Mexicans continues
even as we approach the 21st century.
The following day, on the 13th of October, civil rights organizations have
declared as an all-out International Latino Flu Day on which all Latinos
are being asked to abstain from work, school, and American consumerism.
The intention is that without the Latinos, America can and will crumble.
Amidst the hopes for national attention to human rights violations of immigrants,
there persists the creation of a penal industrial complex with a rising
majority of Latinos in lock-down, the attack on women's livelihood, the
poor, and the youth. It seems that our next step is to continue to build
the bridge with all other oppressed communities.
There lies the challenge. Aztlan, as it is thought by most Chicano Dinosaurs,
and/or professors, was a place of roots for the Chicano. Where, then, does
the Indigenous Native American now lie? How, then, does the African, the
Asian and the aboriginal fit in? Must our revolution be about one color
as it was in the 60s? Must it remain stagnant rather than evolve?
Indeed, if we continue to protest, picket and struggle in isolation, we
shall create a new generation of self-righteous youngsters who believe it
is their 'raza' primero (first) and chale con los negros, los chinos o los
homosexuales... (and screw Blacks, the Chinese [Asian] and homosexuals).
With the coming of the new millennium, it is critical that our movimiento
evolve. As we march, protest and picket, let us clench one fist sky-high
while stretching out the other to our fellow sisters and brothers all over
the world.
If not now, all we have to look forward to is a free ride to the gas chambers
of our own creation.

OCT-NOV 97 -- N.C.Xpress
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