Monday, February 27, 2006
Dalila
I wanted to share this website of a fellow epicentro poet and artist. Give it up to Dalila who continues to inspire us.
http://www.ixchelana.com/
Friday, February 24, 2006
CaRaCoL Marketplace
CaRaCoL Marketplace
"Working together to build a sustainable future"
"Working together to build a sustainable future"
Please join us this Sunday
February 26, 2006
10am - 3pm
Books, Clothes, Jewerly, Natural Body Care Products,
Art, Herbs, Healthy Food and Community
February 26, 2006
10am - 3pm
Books, Clothes, Jewerly, Natural Body Care Products,
Art, Herbs, Healthy Food and Community
All this and more at:
PROYECTO JARDIN
1718 Bridge St. Boyle Heights, ELA
(between State & Boyle, behind White Memorial Plaza I)
PROYECTO JARDIN
1718 Bridge St. Boyle Heights, ELA
(between State & Boyle, behind White Memorial Plaza I)
A free event for the whole family!
EVERYONE IS WELCOME!
EVERYONE IS WELCOME!
Thursday, February 23, 2006
Friday, February 10, 2006
Finding American Dream, in El Salvador
Thanks to Santiago Bernal for sending this article.
From the Los Angeles Times
Finding American Dream, in El Salvador
By Héctor Tobar
Times Staff Writer
February 9, 2006
SACACOYO, El Salvador - The 170 laborers ensconced at the Hacienda San Clemente here consider themselves the champion sugar cane cutting team of El Salvador.
They work seven days a week. The youngest and strongest of them can cut 12 tons of cane stalks in one shift.
"One day, I'm going to tell my children what we did here," Adrian Sanchez Corrales, 53, said proudly.
Salvadorans take pride in calling themselves the hardest-working people in Central America. But Sanchez Corrales and his team aren't from El Salvador; they're migrants from Honduras.
Thousands of Salvadorans have immigrated to the United States, legally and illegally, sparking a labor shortage in their homeland. In addition to the sheer number of workers lost, the dollars those immigrants send home discourage those who remain behind from performing low-paying, backbreaking labor like that of the sugar cane harvest.
The Hondurans at the Hacienda San Clemente are more than eager to fill the labor gap.
In November, Salvadoran Agriculture Minister Mario Salaverria announced that 15,000 foreign workers would be needed to complete the cane, cotton and coffee harvests here.
The labor shortages are being felt across the region. Mezcal producers in the Mexican state of Oaxaca, coffee plantations in Nicaragua and chile farmers in the central Mexican state of Zacatecas have found themselves in a similar predicament because so many local people have left to seek better wages elsewhere.
"The problem is that remittances [from the U.S.] have made Salvadorans comfortable and they don't want to work cutting cane," said Italo Escrich, harvest supervisor for the Central Izalco sugar refinery, which contracted the workers.
In addition to the Hondurans, who come from the province of Choluteca, Escrich also hired 25 Nicaraguan workers.
Traditionally, migration between the neighboring countries has gone in the other direction. In fact, the presence of thousands of Salvadoran immigrants in Honduras helped precipitate the 1969 "Soccer War" between the two nations. But for the poor of Honduras and Nicaragua today, Escrich said, "El Salvador has become the Central American dream." For the Hondurans, the relative abundance of El Salvador is, unlike the faraway United States, just a day's bus ride away.
People here get paid in dollars - El Salvador adopted the U.S. currency in 2001. The local currency, the colon, has all but disappeared from circulation. The Honduran migrants find that the dollars earned in El Salvador go much further when they are sent home and converted to Honduran lempiras.
"Here, a pound of cheese can cost you $3 or $4," said Jose de la Cruz, 22. "For that much money, I can get 3 pounds in Choluteca."
Raymundo Calderon, a sociologist at the University of El Salvador, says the supply of Salvadoran laborers for arduous work such as cutting cane has declined in part because of the country's cultural and economic contact with the United States.
It's common for Salvadoran families to have at least one relative living in the United States. About one in nine people born in El Salvador moves to the United States, according to the most recent census figures for both countries.
"Most of the Salvadorans who have migrated to the United States are not well educated," Calderon said. "But when they get to the U.S., they have access to better housing and better pay. Their view of the world changes, and they communicate this to their families in El Salvador."
There is some concern here that Salvadorans are losing their industrious self-image, a vision celebrated by poets such as Roque Dalton, whose "Love Poem" recounted the exploits of Salvadoran laborers up and down the Americas.
In November, Interior Minister Rene Figueroa issued a plea for Salvadorans to work the harvests.
"Today some sectors are telling us that they have enough with their family remittances," he told a Salvadoran newspaper. "It's not possible that we are abandoning our own fields and that we have to bring in labor from abroad."
Figueroa's appeal to the "fame" of the Salvadoran worker did little to stop the buses bringing in thousands of Honduran and Nicaraguan laborers.
The Hondurans at Hacienda San Clemente have been living since last fall in two warehouse-like buildings near the town of Sacacoyo, about 25 miles west of San Salvador. The accommodations are spare: bunk beds and two color televisions for the 170 men.
And yet the men speak with great optimism and a sense of gratitude about their situation, not least their pay: as much as $125 a week for the best cutters.
"The engineer [Escrich] told us that we were in first place in the whole country," De la Cruz said. No other brigade of cutters had knocked down as much sugar cane in a day as they had.
During one memorable day recently, their boss informed them that they had cut twice as much cane per man as a group of Salvadorans working alongside them, De la Cruz said.
"Any person who is held in high regard by his employer is going to feel good about himself," Sanchez Corrales said. The sugar refinery was so pleased with the Hondurans that it bought them all Christmas presents.
Shortly after the workers' arrival, the sugar refinery also helped most obtain official permits to work in El Salvador, the local equivalent of the "green card" so many immigrants aspire to obtain in the United States.
"This is a real achievement for me," Sanchez Corrales said, holding up the card.
Sanchez Corrales, a man with leathery skin, said he probably would return home to Choluteca in a few months. He planned to make good use of his Salvadoran-earned dollars.
"The guy who has a good head on his shoulders buys a cow, a pig or two, as an investment" for his farm, he said.
After tending to his crops and animals for a few weeks, Sanchez Corrales said, he'll be back on the bus westward to El Salvador, a place where a hard-working Honduran man can earn more dollars than he ever dreamed of.
*
Tobar, The Times' Mexico City Bureau chief, was recently on assignment in El Salvador. Special correspondent Alex Renderos in San Salvador contributed to this report.
From the Los Angeles Times
Finding American Dream, in El Salvador
By Héctor Tobar
Times Staff Writer
February 9, 2006
SACACOYO, El Salvador - The 170 laborers ensconced at the Hacienda San Clemente here consider themselves the champion sugar cane cutting team of El Salvador.
They work seven days a week. The youngest and strongest of them can cut 12 tons of cane stalks in one shift.
"One day, I'm going to tell my children what we did here," Adrian Sanchez Corrales, 53, said proudly.
Salvadorans take pride in calling themselves the hardest-working people in Central America. But Sanchez Corrales and his team aren't from El Salvador; they're migrants from Honduras.
Thousands of Salvadorans have immigrated to the United States, legally and illegally, sparking a labor shortage in their homeland. In addition to the sheer number of workers lost, the dollars those immigrants send home discourage those who remain behind from performing low-paying, backbreaking labor like that of the sugar cane harvest.
The Hondurans at the Hacienda San Clemente are more than eager to fill the labor gap.
In November, Salvadoran Agriculture Minister Mario Salaverria announced that 15,000 foreign workers would be needed to complete the cane, cotton and coffee harvests here.
The labor shortages are being felt across the region. Mezcal producers in the Mexican state of Oaxaca, coffee plantations in Nicaragua and chile farmers in the central Mexican state of Zacatecas have found themselves in a similar predicament because so many local people have left to seek better wages elsewhere.
"The problem is that remittances [from the U.S.] have made Salvadorans comfortable and they don't want to work cutting cane," said Italo Escrich, harvest supervisor for the Central Izalco sugar refinery, which contracted the workers.
In addition to the Hondurans, who come from the province of Choluteca, Escrich also hired 25 Nicaraguan workers.
Traditionally, migration between the neighboring countries has gone in the other direction. In fact, the presence of thousands of Salvadoran immigrants in Honduras helped precipitate the 1969 "Soccer War" between the two nations. But for the poor of Honduras and Nicaragua today, Escrich said, "El Salvador has become the Central American dream." For the Hondurans, the relative abundance of El Salvador is, unlike the faraway United States, just a day's bus ride away.
People here get paid in dollars - El Salvador adopted the U.S. currency in 2001. The local currency, the colon, has all but disappeared from circulation. The Honduran migrants find that the dollars earned in El Salvador go much further when they are sent home and converted to Honduran lempiras.
"Here, a pound of cheese can cost you $3 or $4," said Jose de la Cruz, 22. "For that much money, I can get 3 pounds in Choluteca."
Raymundo Calderon, a sociologist at the University of El Salvador, says the supply of Salvadoran laborers for arduous work such as cutting cane has declined in part because of the country's cultural and economic contact with the United States.
It's common for Salvadoran families to have at least one relative living in the United States. About one in nine people born in El Salvador moves to the United States, according to the most recent census figures for both countries.
"Most of the Salvadorans who have migrated to the United States are not well educated," Calderon said. "But when they get to the U.S., they have access to better housing and better pay. Their view of the world changes, and they communicate this to their families in El Salvador."
There is some concern here that Salvadorans are losing their industrious self-image, a vision celebrated by poets such as Roque Dalton, whose "Love Poem" recounted the exploits of Salvadoran laborers up and down the Americas.
In November, Interior Minister Rene Figueroa issued a plea for Salvadorans to work the harvests.
"Today some sectors are telling us that they have enough with their family remittances," he told a Salvadoran newspaper. "It's not possible that we are abandoning our own fields and that we have to bring in labor from abroad."
Figueroa's appeal to the "fame" of the Salvadoran worker did little to stop the buses bringing in thousands of Honduran and Nicaraguan laborers.
The Hondurans at Hacienda San Clemente have been living since last fall in two warehouse-like buildings near the town of Sacacoyo, about 25 miles west of San Salvador. The accommodations are spare: bunk beds and two color televisions for the 170 men.
And yet the men speak with great optimism and a sense of gratitude about their situation, not least their pay: as much as $125 a week for the best cutters.
"The engineer [Escrich] told us that we were in first place in the whole country," De la Cruz said. No other brigade of cutters had knocked down as much sugar cane in a day as they had.
During one memorable day recently, their boss informed them that they had cut twice as much cane per man as a group of Salvadorans working alongside them, De la Cruz said.
"Any person who is held in high regard by his employer is going to feel good about himself," Sanchez Corrales said. The sugar refinery was so pleased with the Hondurans that it bought them all Christmas presents.
Shortly after the workers' arrival, the sugar refinery also helped most obtain official permits to work in El Salvador, the local equivalent of the "green card" so many immigrants aspire to obtain in the United States.
"This is a real achievement for me," Sanchez Corrales said, holding up the card.
Sanchez Corrales, a man with leathery skin, said he probably would return home to Choluteca in a few months. He planned to make good use of his Salvadoran-earned dollars.
"The guy who has a good head on his shoulders buys a cow, a pig or two, as an investment" for his farm, he said.
After tending to his crops and animals for a few weeks, Sanchez Corrales said, he'll be back on the bus westward to El Salvador, a place where a hard-working Honduran man can earn more dollars than he ever dreamed of.
*
Tobar, The Times' Mexico City Bureau chief, was recently on assignment in El Salvador. Special correspondent Alex Renderos in San Salvador contributed to this report.
Monday, February 06, 2006
WORLD CINEMA AUDIENCE PRIZE, DOCUMENTARY: DE NADIE (NO ONE )
Despite sometimes heavy-handed efforts to tug at audience heart-strings, debutant Mexican helmer Tin Dirdamal's "No One" reps a moving portrait of Central American immigrants passing through Mexico to El Norte in search of a better life. Central American subjects interviewed recount appalling tales of beatings and worse encountered en route from gangsters and police, but still cherish fragile hopes for the future. Slickly assembled pic will put a human face on familiar statistics at further fests and liberally inclined cablers, and make Dirdamal a talent to watch.
More
Thursday, February 02, 2006
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