Looking forward to this National Chicano Student Walkouts Conference taking place on November 20-23, 2019, in San Antonio, Texas. The presentations and conversation promise to inform attendees on this important part of U.S. history where school walkouts and youth activism in Texas and throughout the Southwest, motivated much of what we refer to today as the Mexican American Civil Rights movement (a.k.a. the "Chicana/o movement"). -Angela
This blog on Texas education contains posts on higher education, as well as preK-12 policy accountability, testing, bilingual education, immigration, school finance, race, class, and gender issues at both the state and national level. It also represents my digital footprint, of life and career, as a community-engaged scholar in Texas.
Showing posts with label Conference. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Conference. Show all posts
Monday, July 22, 2019
Monday, February 04, 2019
"Living Witness" A Poem by Nati Román
Do read this powerful, very moving poem by a
young San Antonio poet named Nati Román. She delivered it last Friday at the
conclusion of the Reverberations of Memory, Violence, And History: A
Conference for the Centennial of the 1919 Canales Investigation of
the brutal, lynchings of Mexicans by the Texas Rangers in the early 1900s at the Bob Bullock Museum in
Austin, Texas.
Some of the descendants of
the victims attended the conference on Thursday. Although I was unable to attend, I heard that
there wasn’t a dry eye in the house. (You can read more about the J.T. Canales investigation here.)
The whole conference will be
made available to the public by the Texas A
& M Center of Digital Humanities Research. Kudos to Professor John M.
Gonzalez, Director of the University of Texas at Austin Center for Mexican
American Studies and Texas A & M History Associate Professor Sonia
Hernandez for putting on such an excellent conference.
Nati is very modest. We’re all letting her know that she’s got
real talent with her soulful, poetic verse and historical imagination. Keep writing poetry, Nati!
-Angela Valenzuela
Living Witness
by
Nati Román
Because you were a strong little
semilla
Full of life
You burst forth from the soil
that nourished you,
Lifted your eyes to the sky
And let your billowing branches
stretch across
The rippling silk pasture as if
reaching
For the ends of the earth.
Because the Earth loved you and
The sky fed you,
Your roots burrowed deep
And your glistening leaves
fluttered
Like a million tiny wings
Quien era el primero?
Who was the first to look upon
your
Handsome, grooved face your
Thick, jutting limbs
And see their potential
To kill?
Those men, pale as stone
Insatiably hungry for land
Who draw lines in the dirt
Lines in the water.
They fitted you with cords and
rope
That squeezed your arms like a
tourniquet
Burned your bark and
Scraped it clean
That tugged like a caught bird
and then
Was still.
The men of stone circled on their
horses
Shouted and blasted their pistols
into the air
And even
Laughed.
And as the men kept coming
And your arms kept burning you
Wept
For the men whose contorted clay
faces
Lay etched in your mind.
Men the colors of clay and leaves
Men who laughed and fought
Kissed and spit
Men that twirled their señoras
when
They danced
That slurped their caldo
And bounced their children on
their knee
Men that worked long days
Men that worked for months men
Always willing to work
Men whose eyes burned like fire
Before the grip of the tree
Turned them to glass.
You heard the women cry out for
them
In the distance
The women who suffered
So many women that suffered
Who put the pieces of their lives
back together like patchwork
Who grew skin as thick as yours.
Do you feel the spirit brush
Your canopy as it ascends
Into the atmosphere?
Does it linger in your tangled
branches?
Is it crystal cold with fear
Or warm like a flash of sun
between
The shifting clouds
The birds no longer nested
In your tresses
You prayed for these souls to
shake free
From your grasp
With the next heavy rain
Prayed the rain would cleanse you
Of the putrid stench of
death
When your leaves like memories
shriveled and dried
You cast them into the night like
Cenizas in the wind
Then the winds changed
Tales of Cortina pierced the fog
of fear like the arrows of our ancestors
Stories of resistance sprouted
amongst the weeds
Women and men stood up and said:
“No nos vamos!”
And here you stand and
Here I stand
161 years later
Once a gateway to death
Now a portal to the past
I trace my finger along your deep
ridged grooves
Like a needle along a tired
record and
Hear the echoes of tragedy reverberate
Through time
Like a corrido with whose melody
we cleanse
Our wounds.
I have traveled back in time to
see you
To make sense of the stories
Told by our abuelas and our
mothers
And discover
You have been waiting for me
You wait for all of us
Are you surprised by how quickly
we have forgotten?
But here we are now
Face to face
And you still weeping year after
year for
The souls that turned to
butterflies beneath your shade
And you wait for us to remember
relearn
Rediscover
Reclaim our rightful place in
history
Wednesday, March 14, 2018
Wednesday, July 26, 2017
Aug. 10-12: Current And Aspiring Teachers Of Color and American Indian Teachers Conference
Headed soon
Headed in August to Metro State University In
Minnesota deliver a conference keynote and engage in a series of conversations with an array of folks there. Many Thanks to both Dean René Antrop-Gonzalez and The Coalition to Increase Teachers of
Color and American Indian Teachers in Minnesota for inviting me. I am very honored!
Looking
forward to having a robust community conversation on how to improve the
representation of teachers of color and American Indian Teachers in K-12 schools
in the Minneapolis area.
Angela
AUG. 10-12: CURRENT AND ASPIRING TEACHERS OF COLOR AND AMERICAN INDIAN TEACHERS CONFERENCE
The Coalition to Increase Teachers of Color and American Indian Teachers in Minnesota is hosting their summer 2016 conference at Metropolitan State. The conference begins at 7 p.m., Wednesday, Aug. 10 at the Saint Paul Campus, continues 8:30 a.m. until 8:30 p.m. on Thursday, Aug. 11 and ends on Aug. 12 with panel discussions from 8:30 a.m. until noon.
This conference honors the lived experiences and local knowledge of teachers of color and American Indian teachers by creating a safe and welcoming space in which current and future teachers are the primary participants. A core group of diverse coalition educators are planning the conference to include a series of general sessions and breakout sessions that seek to inspire, affirm, inform and energize. Participants are able to build power networks, develop legislative proposals and create action plans that remove barriers and transform state policy and local institutions to retain and increase teachers of color and American Indian teachers in Minnesota.
There is no registration fee but registration is required as space is limited to the first 300 people. Grant funding is available to support lodging and mileage expenses for those traveling from greater Minnesota. Learn more about the conference at the coalition website or Facebook page.
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