Thursday, April 29, 2010

FYI: COUNCILOR ROMERO CALLING ON GOVERNOR BREWER TO VETO UNCONSTITUTIONAL RACIAL-PROFILING BILL

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Unidos Venceremos! United We Will Win!
~Peta-de-Aztlan~ Sacramento, California, Amerika
Email: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com 
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"Those who make peaceful revolution impossible,
make violent revolution inevitable."
~ President John F.Kennedy ~ Killed November 22, 1963
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----- Forwarded Message ----
From: Coalición de Derechos Humanos <kat@derechoshumanosaz.net>
To: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com
Sent: Wed, April 28, 2010 10:00:59 PM
Subject: COUNCILOR ROMERO CALLING ON GOVERNOR BREWER TO VETO UNCONSTITUTIONAL RACIAL-PROFILING BILL


Coalición de Derechos Humanos

Contact:
P.O. Box 1286
Tucson, AZ 85702

Office: 520.770.1373
or 1.800.682.4280
Fax: 520.770.7455

www.derechoshumanosaz.net

ningun ser humano es ilegal
Coalición de Derechos Humanos is a grassroots organization which promotes respect for human/civil rights and fights the militarization of the Southern Border region, discrimination, and human rights abuses by federal, state, and local law enforcement officials affecting U.S. and non-U.S. citizens alike.
_____________________________________________

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Please distribute widely!  Councilor Romero is requesting the City of Tucson Mayor & Council file an injunction challenging the State regarding SB1070. 
 
Please contact the Tucson Mayor & Council Members to ask them to vote in favor of the proposal.  People interested should also show up at Call to the Audience at 5:30pm City Hall 255 W. Alameda, Tucson, AZ.
 
Mayor Bob Walkup 791-4201  email_mayor@tucsonaz.gov
Council Member Regina Romero 791-4040 ward1@tucsonaz.gov
Council Member Karin Uhlich 791-4711 ward3@tucsonaz.gov
Council Member Shirley Scott 791-3199 ward4@tucsonaz.gov
Council Member Richard Fimbres 791-4231 ward5@tucsonaz.gov
Council Member Steve Kozachik 791-4601 ward6@tucsonaz.gov
 
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Darlane Santa Cruz, Ward I Council Aide
(520) 791-4040 TTY: (520) 791-2639
Darlane.SantaCruz@tucsonaz.gov
Date: April 22, 2010


COUNCILOR ROMERO CALLING ON GOVERNOR BREWER TO VETO UNCONSTITUTIONAL RACIAL-PROFILING BILL

Ward 1 Councilor Regina Romero is calling on Arizona Governor Jan Brewer to veto Senate Bill 1070, the unconstitutional anti-immigrant bill recently passed by the state legislature.

Councilor Romero led the Tucson Mayor and Council to unanimously oppose SB 1070, as it forces police to stop and question anyone on the suspicion of having entered the country illegally. The bill would make it a crime to not carry documentation that proves a person is in the country legally.

"This is a divisive bill. In the midst of major state budget deficits, the Republican-led legislature instead focuses on dehumanizing minorities," Romero said. "Our law enforcement resources should be utilized against violent crime, break-ins, and general public safety, not in random searches for undocumented people that opens the door to racial profiling."

Romero is also concerned with the lawsuits that would follow if citizens perceived that police departments and government officials were not enforcing the law.

"We cannot allow children and their families to live in fear," Romero said. "The public will lose trust in police and government officials and may avoid reporting serious crime or seeking emergency medical care."

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Coalicion de Derechos Humanos | P.O. Box 1286 | Tucson | AZ | 85702

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

MAY DAY - WHY WE MARCH via Nativo Lopez, MAPA President

http://bit.ly/aiIMQz

5-01-10=700

Wed, April 28, 2010 11:39:24 AM
From: Nativo Lopez ~Email: nlopez@hermandadmexicana.org
To: Peter S. Lopez de Aztlan ~Email: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com;
Bejarano ~Email: artxchange@yahoo.com

The nefarious Arizona law – SB1070 – has captured the attention of the nation during the run-up to the International Worker’s Day celebration of May First. It only gives working people, immigrants, youth, women, trade unionists, and their sympathizers more reason to march. It is estimated that masses of workers will take to the streets in over 70 cities nationally to not only decry the horrible legislative act in Arizona, but to demand a fair and humane immigration reform by this Democratic administration in 2010.

May Day is celebrated worldwide, although it was founded in the U.S. after the execution of the eight Chicago Haymarket labor martyrs at the culmination of the labor struggles at the end of the 1800s and the fight for the 8-hour day. These struggles for improved working and living conditions were led principally by European immigrant workers and were met with repeated acts of state terrorism and repression.

And, while the U.S. labor movement does not traditionally celebrate this labor-day, in city after city it has been roped into participating since 2006 by the pressure from below emanating from the immigrants’ rights movement, which has increasingly become more militant in demanding immigration reform and the right to organize.

Once again, immigrants of all hue, but principally Mexican and Latin American, are at the fore-front of waging a tenacious fight for legalization and an end to repressive measures, either those that rain from the federal government or those from their respective states, SB1070 being the most recent example.

It’s an unfortunate truism that there does exist terrible precedents to the Arizona experience. Three come to mind. During the 1930s over two million Mexicans were deported from the U.S., 1.2 million of whom were actually citizens of the United States, in a state-sponsored paramilitary operation dubbed Operation Repatriation. In 1892, 192,000 Chinese were required to register as foreigners and carry a state-issued photo identification card. It has been reported that less than 3,000 complied with the law. And, in the 1940s, 150,000 Japanese-Americans were rounded up and imprisoned in state-sponsored concentration camps for the duration of the war.

It should not be lost on anyone that the radical increase in federal immigration enforcement by President Obama and the Department of Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano created the broad-strokes parameters for what has occurred in Arizona. At all criteria levels of enforcement, the percentages are up from between 40 to 60 percent above the previous Bush administration – detentions, deportations, incarceration of minors, separation of families, expansion of private prisons, expansion of the 287(g) and Secured Communities programs (federal ICE and local police cooperation), border patrol personnel assignments, and the use of high tech surveillance tools and mechanisms.

In 2009 some 350,000 individuals were deported by DHS and the stated goal of this federal agency for 2010 is 450,000. When you take into consideration that an estimated 1.5 million Mexicans have voluntarily returned to their states of origin over the past year, according to Mexican government reports, due to the declining economic prospects and state-sponsored persecution, the removal factor will certainly climb to 3 million persons by the end of the year.

Fair and humane immigration reform is most urgently on the legislative agenda and will be the rally cry of marchers along with the demand to repeal SB1070. LEGALIZATION or NO RE-ELECTION is a slogan that strikes terror in the hearts of Democrats who will dispute the control of the U.S. Congress in the November elections. But, they have themselves to blame in that the Latino electorate was inordinately loyal during the general elections of 2006 and 2008, and the Democratic Party has not reciprocated. The Party has not enjoyed such a margin of majority status in both houses and the control of the White House since the 1970s post-Watergate election of President Jimmy Carter.

In a perverse way, Arizona’s mistake may work in favor of moving the reform agenda forward. The immigrants’ rights movement will next be perplexed by the type of reform proposed by the Democrats, which may not be to its liking. For the moment, let us identify with all those who will be singled out by the racial profiling SB1070 with a declamation that WE ARE ALL ARIZONANS!

Nativo Vigil Lopez
National President
Mexican American Political Association
Hermandad Mexicana Latinoamericana

Nativo V. Lopez
National Director
Hermandad Mexicana Latinoamericana
611 W. Civic Center Drive, Suite 402
Santa Ana, CA 92701
(714) 541-0250
Fax: (714) 541-4597
nativolopez@sbcglobal.net

National President
Mexican American Political Association (MAPA)
310 N. Soto Street
Los Angeles, CA 90033
(323) 269-1575
nativolopez@mapa-ca.org

Related Blog~
http://nativolopez.blogspot.com/
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Network-Aztlan-News-Blog Link=
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Rep. Grijalva Calls for Federal Non-Cooperation with Controversial AZ Immigration Bill +Comment

http://bit.ly/9gk6Bd

Rep. Grijalva Calls for Federal Non-Cooperation with Controversial AZ Immigration Bill

Grijalva-dn

Outrage is growing over the passage of a controversial new measure in Arizona that forces police officers to determine the immigration status of someone they suspect of being an undocumented immigrant. We speak with Rep. Raúl Grijalva (D-AZ), who is urging federal non-cooperation with the new law and is calling for a targeted economic boycott of Arizona. We also speak with Sunita Patel, an attorney at the Center for Constitutional Rights, which is filing a lawsuit demanding records related to ICE's little known "Secure Communities" program. [includes rush transcript]

Guest:

Rep. Raul Grijalva (D - AZ), co-chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus.

Sunita Patel, staff attorney at the Center for Constitutional Rights.

SHARIF ABDEL KOUDDOUS: Outrage is growing over the passage of a controversial new measure in Arizona that forces police officers to determine the immigration status of someone they suspect of being an undocumented immigrant. Republican Governor Jan Brewer signed the bill on Friday following its approval in the state legislature earlier in the week. Opponents call it the harshest anti-immigrant measure in the country and a license for racial profiling. Shortly after adding her signature, Brewer said she thought the measure is, quote, "what's best for Arizona."

At the White House, President Obama denounced the bill and suggested the federal government could intervene.

    PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA: Indeed our failure to act responsibly at the federal level will only open the door to irresponsibility by others. And that includes, for example, the recent efforts in Arizona, which threaten to undermine basic notions of fairness that we cherish as Americans, as well as the trust between police and their communities that is so crucial to keeping us safe. In fact, I've instructed members of my administration to closely monitor the situation and examine the civil rights and other implications of this legislation. But if we continue to fail to act at a federal level, we will continue to see misguided efforts opening up around the country.

AMY GOODMAN: Well, for more on this bill, Arizona Democratic Congress member Raúl Grijalva joins us from Capitol Hill. At a protest this weekend, Congressman Grijalva urged federal non-cooperation with the new law.

Welcome to Democracy Now! What exactly do you mean, Congressman Grijalva, "federal non-cooperation"?

REP. RAÚL GRIJALVA: Well, first of all, I think—I'm very appreciative, many of us are appreciative, of the President's comments, right upon the signature of this legislation, to look at the civil rights and the constitutional implications, which we feel that this legislation is patently unconstitutional.

What we feel—the point about non-cooperation is the next step. You know, immigration is a federal law, and if we are asking the President for him not to cooperate in the implementation of this law through Homeland Security, through Border Patrol, through detention, and a non-cooperative stance by the United States government and the federal agencies, would render much of this legislation moot and ineffective.

SHARIF ABDEL KOUDDOUS: And Congress member Grijalva, can you explain exactly what does this law do?

REP. RAÚL GRIJALVA: Well, it's a license to racially profile. It creates a second-class status for primarily Latinos and people of color in the state of Arizona. And what it does is it says to local law enforcements, you now have the power to, on reasonable suspicion, based on—primarily on somebody's—based on appearance, to stop, demand papers, demand citizenship, demand information. And if that person cannot—does not have it with them, then that person is then arrested and faces up to $500 fine for not having the proper documentation with he or she.

The other part, there's are other parts that—in other legislation, which is to require school teachers to become immigration officers and keep a list of potentially undocumented kids, for schools to keep data on potentially undocumented children in their schools, another clear violation of federal protection.

This is—you know, Arizona has been the petri dish for these kinds of harsh, racist initiatives. Our border is practically militarized. The pincher effect of forcing people into the desert and to Arizona to cross has been going on since 1994. The National Guard at the border, now it's being asked for again. All those have happened in Arizona, and this harsh legislation is another example. I don't think it's a coincidence. It's been a part of a national strategy. What you can get away with in Arizona then becomes the harbinger for other things in other states. It is a very dangerous precedent. We believe it's unconstitutional, and it has to be fought on a political, legal and an economic level.

AMY GOODMAN: Do you support an economic boycott of Arizona, of your state, Congressman Grijalva?

REP. RAÚL GRIJALVA: Yeah, I support some very targeted economic sanctions on the state of Arizona. We will be asking national organizations, civic, religious, political organizations, not to have conferences and conventions in the state of Arizona, that there has to be an economic consequence to this action and to this legislation. And good organizations across this country, decent organizations that agree with us that this bill is patently racist, that it is unconstitutional, and it's harsh, it's unjust, that they should refrain from bringing their business to the state. It's very targeted on conventions, and it's very targeted on national conferences that would come to the state.

But when Jan Brewer signed it, she sent the state of Arizona into an economic black hole, that one convention not coming to Arizona is minuscule compared to her signature. Tourism is going to suffer. Import-export is going to suffer, a potential loss of up to $700,000,000 tax dollars from immigrants that work in the state. With her signature, she's caused an already distressed economy in Arizona to sink deeper and deeper into a hole.

SHARIF ABDEL KOUDDOUS: And your office has received some threats, some death threats? You were forced to close your Tucson office, is that correct?

REP. RAÚL GRIJALVA: Yeah, we closed it last Friday. The threats became particularly dangerous. Federal agencies responded, police agencies. We understand that the person that made the threats is being questioned, and we'll see what happens with that. But, you know, it was one of those discretion being the better part of valor. Most of these are idle threats, and we tend to ignore them. But these were particularly vile. And, you know, people come to our offices in Arizona for services and the good people that work in our offices, you know, sometimes it's better to err on the side of caution, and that's what we did.

AMY GOODMAN: I'm curious, Congressman Grijalva, what do police in Arizona feel about this law? This means also a lot more work for them.

REP. RAÚL GRIJALVA: There has been, other than Sheriff Arpaio, who helped cheerlead this law in Maricopa County, the Sheriff of Santa Cruz County, that's on the border, has publicly, before the vote, and even now, opposed it, Sheriff Estrada. The Sheriff of Pima County has opposed it. Police chiefs have opposed it. And rank-and-file police officers, in my conversations with them, they feel that they have just been handcuffed, for lack of a better expression, in being able to do the kinds of intelligence community work that is required and to get the public to come forth in order to keep some of the neighborhoods safe. They feel this is now an additional impediment and a barrier on trust that they need very desperately to do their job.

SHARIF ABDEL KOUDDOUS: Well, while the passage of the new law in Arizona has been widely decried, the number of programs involving collaboration between ICE—that's Immigration and Customs Enforcement—and local and state police across the nation is continuing to grow.

Today, the National Day Laborer Network, the Immigrant Justice Clinic of the Benjamin Cardozo Law School, and the Center for Constitutional Rights are filing a lawsuit demanding records related to ICE's little known "Secure Communities" program. The program further embroils local and state law enforcement agencies in federal immigration enforcement and is already operating in 168 jurisdictions in twenty states.

AMY GOODMAN: Advocates warn that more agreements are anticipated in the coming days and say Secure Communities require police to run individual fingerprints through multiple databases upon arrest, even if no charges are brought and regardless of how minor the charges are.

We, in addition to Congressman Grijalva, are joined by the person at the Center for Constitutional Rights in Washington, DC, who is taking on this case, Sunita Patel, staff attorney at CCR.

Welcome to Democracy Now! What is the story here, Sunita?

SUNITA PATEL: Thank you for having me.

First, the story here is that Secure Communities is very similar to 287(g) and Criminal Alien Program, both of which have been overwhelmingly criticized in the public, in the media, and even by the government itself. What we see in Arizona is a culmination of these types of programs where immigration duties are divested to local law enforcement agencies. And they really must be stopped.

Today, we have filed a FOIA lawsuit demanding information and records related to Secure Communities and its relationship to these other programs. Also today, there is the launch of a national coordinated week of action called Uncovering the Truth, around local law enforcement and ICE collaboration efforts. There will be events in several cities. I think we're up to ten or eleven cities, with different types of actions, community education events, releases of reports. We really hope that we can raise the profile of these disastrous and dangerous programs.

SHARIF ABDEL KOUDDOUS: And can you explain a little more about what the Secure Communities program actually does? How does it further link local law enforcement with federal immigration policy?

SUNITA PATEL: Well, what it does is it allows the local law enforcement agencies to check not only the FBI databases, which they've traditionally always done, it also allows them to sync up with immigration databases, which are notoriously unreliable because of errors with the data entry, because they just have incorrect information on citizenship status. And so, what happens is you have—in the first year, we had a million people go through the system. Of those, 5,900 were—about 5,900 were US citizens, and there were thousands and thousands of green card holders that were put through the program. And so, what happens is you go through this program, then ICE is contacted, and they may authorize the law enforcement agency to issue what's called a "detainer" and prevent the release of the individual. And so you have this very broad net being cast.

And the program is set to be in every state by 2011 and in every jail by 2013. And even though this is an enormous program, there is very little known publicly about it. There is very little available to all of us. And so that is why CCR and NDLON [National Day Laborer Organization Network] and Cardozo Law Clinic decided to file suit to get this information. There's an urgent need for information related to this program, so that law enforcement agencies and local government officials can make the right choices and make the right decisions about the program.

AMY GOODMAN: Let me bring Congress member Grijalva back into this in the Capitol Rotunda. Going bigger, to federal immigration reform, you pushed hard to include a public option. Progressives did not get any concession there from President Obama. What do you expect to see from him here?

REP. RAÚL GRIJALVA: Well, you know, what happened in Arizona should be an urgency. And I want to tell the people at the Center that the FOIA request is very important. We've been focused on 287(g) and the abuses there, and I think this information will be critical to finally analyzing what the real role is with regard to immigration enforcement in the states and in local communities.

We have to pass comprehensive immigration reform. We have to undo this law in Arizona. They're linked, but they're not mutual, in the sense that, one fight and another fight. What I expect is comprehensive reform. And if it continues to be a discussion in which the primary focus is going to be enforcement, enforcement, security, and no real path to legalization, which is critical to comprehensive reform to deal with the undocumented that are here, then I think we're going to be spinning our wheels.

And we're talking about not getting the public option in healthcare, I think it's a great comparison, Amy, in the sense that if there is no path to legalization that begins to deal with the reality of people here, then I think that we're going to be spinning our wheels. We're going to end up with something that is watered down, that it will not deal with the problem that we're having in Arizona and won't deal with the problem we're having in communities across this nation.

AMY GOODMAN: Congress member Raúl Grijalva, thank you very much for joining us from the Capitol Rotunda, co-chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus.

REP. RAÚL GRIJALVA: Thank you.

AMY GOODMAN: And Sunita Patel, staff attorney for the Center for Constitutional Rights, also joining us from DC.

http://www.democracynow.org/2010/4/27/rep_grijalva_calls_for_federal_non
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Comment: It is patent that this whole AZ Immigration Bill is illegal, racist and fascist as its core. The people of La Raza are native indigenous to the U.S. Southwest. Aztlan is our homeland and we need to look at our historical-cultural right to be here now, free of any fears of deportation. We of La Raza (Chicanos, Mexicanos, Indigenous Peoples and Latinos in general) are in a historical-social situation similar to the Palestine people are in today. There is no Palestine state and the Palestine people have a right to their own state. However, those of us here in the U.S.A. are only calling for our natural right to be here inside the U.S.A.regardless of our citizenship status. We are in a very unique historical situation that should be recognized in its uniqueness by U.S. citizens and the federal government of the United States. It is not merely a matter of immigration reform~ it is a matter of non-recognition of the U.S.-Mexican border, helping the Mexican people to improve their own standard of living and making the term America meaningful to all those who are in all of the Americas south of the present U.S.-Mexican border. This is a radical idea whose time has come.
 
Unidos Venceremos! United We Will Win!

~Peta-de-Aztlan~ Sacramento, California, Amerika
Email: peter.lopez51@yahoo.com 
http://help-matrix.ning.com/
http://twitter.com/Peta_de_Aztlan
http://www.facebook.com/Peta51
"Those who make peaceful revolution impossible,
make violent revolution inevitable."
~ President John F.Kennedy ~ Killed November 22, 1963
c/s

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

First Nations United Statement Against SB 1070

Short URL= http://bit.ly/csAYSu
Link Original Yahoo Group Message~
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NetworkAztlan_News/message/40691
4-24-10=Tweets
thanks carlos

On 4/27/10, Carlos Munoz, Jr. ~cmjr@berkeley.edu
First Nations United
All Saints Church
3044 Longfellow Avenue South
Minneapolis, MN 55407
www.firstnationsunited.com
PRESS RELEASE
> April 26, 2010

"While the power of the Europeans has continued, I see the other part of the Ghost Dance prophecy coming true today. So-called 'Hispanics,' with faces that sure look like Indians to me, are returning to repopulate North America. We cannot always speak to each other because we have learned the languages of different colonial powers. But these Indians have as much right to come and go on our land as the geese when they migrate north and south. No one would dare to ask them for their passports and visas as they cross man made borders.

Instead of seeing 'Hispanics' as outsiders who do not belong here, we need to start seeing them as ancestors of the original inhabitants of these lands. They are the living fulfillment of the Ghost Dance prophecy."
-Chief Billy Redwing Tayac, Piscataway Nation

First Nations United, an Indigenous organization largely made up of members of the Red Lake/Ojibwe and Dakota nations, would like to formally express its outrage and disagreement with the SB 1070 ("Support Our Law Enforcement and Safe Neighborhoods") Bill passed last week by the state of Arizona. This bill is extremely detrimental to the indigenous communities (including indigenous peoples of Latin American origin), which reside in the state of Arizona as well as those who live throughout the country. The language of the bill states that if there is "reasonable suspicion" that a person is an illegal immigrant, a "reasonable attempt shall be made, when practicable" to check for documents. Such language purposefully promotes the racial profiling of brown-skinned people, and in particular, of people of American indigenous background. As an indigenous organization, which stands for the civil and human rights of indigenous peoples throughout the continent, we are concerned that this bill will promote the unfair and discriminatory arrests, prosecution, and deportation of people of American indigenous descent-not only of those who belong to federally recognized tribes, but also of the hundreds of thousands of indigenous people who have migrated from South/Central America and Mexico to what is now called "the United States." Indigenous peoples across the continent do not recognize the borders established by the settler colonialist state on our lands, and, we do not agree with the malicious and dehumanizing way in which the settler colonialist government wants to enforce them.

As an Indigenous organization, we recognize that indigenous peoples from Latin America have every right to migrate up and down the continent as they please and as they have done through trade and communication routes since time immemorial. The native peoples of the continent should be the ones establishing immigration laws and enforcing them. However, because we were disempowered through genocide and colonization, and because we have consistently treated "foreigners" in a more humane and hospitable way, we respect peoples' rights to migrate. If we did enforce such power, only tribal identifications from throughout the continent (including documentation identifying peoples from Latin American indigenous ancestry) would be recognized as legitimate, and we could very well racially profile people of Caucasian descent as the true and eternal foreigners.

As the first peoples of this continent, we pose this question to Governor Brewer, Senator Russell Pearce, and law enforcement in the state of Arizona, "Who are you to check for documents?" We remind them that the power they have taken to legislate was established by an immigrant and illegal settler colonialist government, which has consistently relied on the genocide and mistreatment of the original peoples of this continent.

First Nations United greatly objects to SB 1070 and denounces Governor Brewer, Senator Pearce, and the State of Arizona as anti-Indigenous, cruel, and racist. We call for an Indigenous boycott of the State of Arizona until this bill is repealed or found unconstitutional as it will gravely violate the civil and human rights of indigenous people in the state and throughout the country.

FIRST NATIONS UNITED
Gabriela Spears-Rico
Doctoral Candidate
Dep't of Comparative Ethnic Studies
University of California, Berkeley
506 Barrows Hall
Berkeley, CA 94720
(510) 643-0796 [Tel]
(510) 642-6456 [Fax]

"What I treasure most in life is being able to dream. During my most difficult moments and complex situations, I have been able to dream of a more beautiful future." ~Rigoberta Menchu Tum
--
> Dr. Carlos Muñoz, Jr.
> Professor Emeritus
> Department of Ethnic Studies
> 510-642-9134
> http://ethnicstudies.berkeley.edu/faculty/munoz/
"Life is struggle and struggle is life,
but be mindful that Victory is in the Struggle"
- Carlos Muñoz, Jr.
wrote:
--
Dorinda Moreno, Fuerza Mundial
Elders of 4 Colors 4 Directions
Hitec Aztec Collaborations/FM Global
fuerzamundial@gmail.net

Corazon Del Pueblo Cultural Center
4814 International Blvd.
Oakland, CA 84601

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