Thursday, December 16, 2010

Dedicated to ‘Xicano' culture

[Click photo to enlarge. Article courtesy of My San Antonio.]

By Meredith Canales

Anisa Onofre and Juan Tejeda have been working on their small business — Aztlan Libre Press — for the last year.

Aztlan Libre Press opened in January. The couple said their daughter Maya Quetzalli, is the inspiration for one of the independent publishing company's newest projects, a new coloring book titled, “Aztec Calendar Coloring Book.”

“We decided to do a coloring book based on the Nahuatl language,” said Tejeda.

He added, “We wanted our daughter to know part of her culture, and the symbols looked so simple we thought we could use them for a coloring book.”

Aztlan Libre's first endeavor, a book and tour for celebrated Chicano poet Alurista, went well, said Onofre. They are hoping Aztlan's second project will get off the ground in a similar way.

“Juan saw the Sun Stone in Mexico at the Museo Nacional de Antropología and has always admired those depictions on the stone,” she said. “He wanted a way of introducing the Aztec language, Nahuatl, to children, combining it with Spanish and English to make it easier to understand.”

Tejeda said when he began studying the images, he realized they might easy to teach to his 3 year-old daughter.

“They were so simple and fantastic,” he said.

Nahuatl is not a language Tejeda speaks fluently, and he's aware not many other people in the United States speak it either. He said many people in Mexico still speak Nahuatl.

“I took a class at The University of Texas a while back, and I know a lot of words. This is kind of a process of recovery for one of the many indigenous languages of Mexico,” he said.

Another Aztlan project titled, “Nauhaliiandoing Dos,” is an anthology of poetry in Nahuatl, English and Spanish.

A fourth project, also in the works, is a collection of poems from Reyes Cardenas, whom Onofre said she has greatly admired for years.

“He's been writing for 30 or 40 years, and Juan has known him for quite a while,” she said. “I just got to met him when Alurista was in town. He came to our home for the tour, and we took it from there. We don't think he's received as much attention as he's deserved.”

The couple's passion for art came from their own creativity, said Tejeda.

“Anisa and I are both writers, and she's the director of writers and communities at Gemini Ink,” he said. “It was always a dream of ours to start an independent publishing Chicano publishing company.”

Tejeda added, “We have received so many (written works) that it just proves there's a great need for more Chicano publishing houses to publish our stories, novels, drama and poetry.”

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Friday, December 10, 2010

No jail time for PEC executive


Fuelberg gets probation for stealing from members


The former Pedernales Electrical Cooperative (Johnson City, Texas) executive convicted of stealing from its members will not spend any time behind bars. Jurors in Gillespie County sentenced Bennie Fuelberg to probation, and a $30,000 fine.

Fuelberg's terminally ill wife broke down on the witness stand Monday, asking jurors to be merciful in sentencing her husband on the charges the largest public electricity co-op in the nation. "He loved PEC. He loved PEC," Jeanie Fuelberg repeated tearfully, apologizing to the judge for her strong emotion.

She told the jurors she is terminally ill, suffering from myelofibrosis - a progressive disorder of the bone marrow. She said her 66-year-old husband is her primary caretaker - a role he wouldn't be able fill from prison.

Fuelberg is the former PEC senior manager. PEC is the largest public power co-op in the nation.

Fuelberg was found guilty Friday by a Gillespie County jury of third degree theft, money laundering and misapplication of fiduciary property. The charges stem from the payment of of thousands of dollars of co-op money to relatives of PEC executives between the mid-1990s and 2007. Indictments showed more than $200,000 went to Curtis Fuelberg, Bennie Fuelberg's brother and William Price, a Lampasas attorney and the son of former PEC Director E.B. Price.

Fuelberg could have received up to 20 years in prison for the crimes. A judge will determine the terms of his probation in January.

Walter Demond, the co-op's outside attorney at Clark, Thomas & Winters , an Austin law firm, was also indicted on the same charges.

The prosecution wrapped up its case by 11 a.m., having called John Watson, a PEC member to the stand, Luis Garcia, PEC's general counsel and a fraud investigator with a consulting firm that conducted an audit on PEC that showed mishandling of funds.

Monday morning prosecutors called Todd Lester, director of Navigant Consulting , to the stand in an effort to show the jury Fuelberg disregarded Texas law and profited from a project known as the Texland Electric Cooperative--a failed plan to generate power to Pedernales.

An audit by Navigant Consulting found that Fuelberg was paid $6.3 million between 1998 and 2007.

Lester told jurors his audit showed Fuelberg was funding family trips on PEC money.

"I'd say his wife came with him on about 25 percent of 150 trips," Lester testified.

Lester also estimated Fuelberg used $32,000 of PEC money to pay for his wife's plane tickets to multiple locations, such as Boston.

During cross-examination, attorney Chris Gunter tried to show the jury that other PEC directors were along on these trips and also took their spouses along.

"Did you look for the records recording other PEC directors?" Gunter asked Lester.

"Some of the wives went, and we found expense for hotels and airfare," Lester testified and later agreed that the PEC board, who decided travel policies, did lack oversight on the matter.

Lester also testified that while the co-op did flourish under Fuelberg, the co-op's expenses "outpaced revenue."

Luis Garcia was recalled to the stand by prosecutors. He testified that since the arrest and conviction of Fuelberg, co-op members have lost trust.

"Even if we are making decisions in public at public meetings, there is suspicion," Garcia explained.

PEC member John Watson also testified that during Fuelberg's control of PEC, he was shut out of closed door meetings and members like himself were trying to get involved but were shut out.

Defense attorneys called their first few witnesses to help establish that Fuelberg is a good candidate for probation.

BIll Knight, a Blanco probation officer, was the first to take the stand. Next, Lamont Ramage, a former federal probation officer who used to be a PEC board member took the stand.

Both Knight and Ramage testified that they knew of no reason why Fuelberg would not make his probation terms if given probation.

A few of Fuelberg's Dripping Springs neighbors, his pastor and a former co-worker also praised Fuelberg as a 'trustworthy' and 'good person.'

Demond will be tried separately next year.

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Thursday, December 09, 2010

‘Crystal City 1969’ raises awareness about discrimination against Chicanos

Written by Vidwan Raghava The University of Texas at Arlington Shorthorn staff

In 1969, Chicano students in Crystal City, Texas broke out in protest over their school historically denying them an equal chance to participate in school activities.

Today marks the 41st anniversary of Chicano civil rights protests in Crystal City, which began when a Chicano student was barred from becoming the homecoming queen.

Playwright Raul Trevino and producer and director David Lozano co-wrote Crystal City 1969, to illustrate the events of the 1969 walkouts.

The importance of the play lies in addressing issues that have been have downplayed by society, Lozano said. He said many people that lived through this era were seeing it dramatized for the first time.

“You will never find anything about Crystal City in any history books,” Lozano said.

Lozano was pained to find out that Mexican American students weren’t allowed to be homecoming queen or participate fully in sports.

Amongst other things, the school had a policy whereby only one Chicano girl could be a cheerleader, said associate history professor Roberto Trevino.

“In 1969, one student protested this but she was denied permission to be a cheerleader and that triggered a student boycott,” Trevino said.

The student, who was denied, was expelled which led to students protesting the policy.

Twenty-three at the time, Political science professor Jose Gutierrez arranged for a lawyer and got the student reinstated, which raised other students hopes that their protest for equal rights would bear fruit.

Supporting the protest was the Mexican American Youth Organization headed by Gutierrez.

The organization consisted of young adults, who were mostly college graduates and working professionals.

“I graduated from Crystal City,” he said. “I have first-hand experience of the discrimination faced by Chicanos,” Gutierrez said.

On Dec. 9, 1969 the students began their walkouts, which was marked with hundreds of students walking out of class, eventually leading to a shut down of the school.

In January the school board members capitulated and agreed on a compromise, but with clauses allowing them to renege, Gutierrez said.

On Jan. 10, following the compromise, Gutierrez and members of his youth organization started the Raza Unida party.

Raza Unida party members were elected to the Crystal City school board and this ensured the loopholes in the compromise were never used, Gutierrez said.

“There are these wounds, these wounds from being slapped for speaking Spanish, being kicked for being Mexican, being put in shop class in a remedial school just for being Hispanic,” Lozano said

The story is about any person who has felt discriminated against and not solely Hispanics, said actor Priscilla Rice who plays the role of Severita Lara in the play.

“I do this out of a love and respect for the activists and the sacrifices they made,” Rice said.

Gutierrez says he went to see the play last year and felt it did justice to the movement.

“It is historically accurate, but dramatizes certain events, which is fine because its primary purpose is to entertain, “ Gutierrez said.

Irving Arts Center
Dupree Theater 3333 N. MacArthur Blvd., Irving, TX 75062
8 p.m. Today all tickets are $25
8 p.m. Dec. 10 – 11 Students and seniors $10 and general admission $15

Latino Cultural Center, Dallas
2600 Live Oak St. Dallas, TX 75204
8 p.m. Dec. 16 General admission $10
8 p.m. Dec. 17 - 18 Students and Seniors $10 General admission $15

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Wednesday, December 01, 2010

Wikileaks and Latin America: Same Old Imperious U.S. Diplomats


By Former Senior Research Fellow Nikolas Kozloff

As more and more documents become available from Wikileaks, the public has gotten a novel and close up view of U.S. diplomats and their operations abroad. I was particularly interested to review heretofore secret documents dealing with Latin America, a region which has absorbed the attention of Washington officials in recent years. While it’s certainly no secret that the Bush administration, not to mention the later Obama White House, have both sought to isolate the so-called “Pink Tide” of leftist regimes in South America, the Wikileaks documents give us some interesting insight into the mindset of U.S. diplomats as they carry out their day to day work.

Needless to say, the picture that emerges isn’t too flattering.

Take, for example, a 2005 cable from the U.S. Embassy in Brasilia1 which details a high level conversation which took place between the American ambassador, John Danilovich, and Brazilian General Jorge Armando Felix. A longtime businessman, Danilovich spent 20 years in the shipping industry in London and it was there that the American organized voters for George Bush and his father. A big time GOP donor, Danilovich proved a loyal lieutenant at his post in Brasilia, specifically by opposing the left turn in South America.

In 2005, Hugo Chávez was at the height of his political powers, challenging the unpopular Bush regime throughout the region. Over in Bolivia meanwhile, Washington fretted that an erstwhile coca farmer, Evo Morales, might win his country’s presidential election. For Washington, Brazil had become a country of vital geopolitical importance: if President Lula could be persuaded to drop his support of neighboring Venezuela, then the U.S. would certainly be more successful at halting the region’s leftist advance. In the effort to turn back the Pink Tide, Danilovich was a key figure.

Speaking with the Brazilian daily O Estado de São Paulo, the diplomat accused Chávez of actually funding political forces within Bolivia. Seeking to foster a common U.S.-Brazilian front, Danilovich said the funding was a concern for Washington and ought to preoccupy officials in Brasilia as well. When reporters asked Danilovich whether he was accusing Chávez of directly funding Morales’ campaign, the diplomat would not specify [Morales himself denied the U.S. allegations].

Behind closed doors, Danilovich continued his diplomatic offensive. After lunching with General Felix, the ambassador broached the subject of Venezuela, noting that Chávez was “disrupting Brazil’s efforts to play a leading role politically and economically in South America.” It’s unclear from the cable what Felix might have thought about the ambassador’s comments, though reading between the lines it seems the military man may have been sympathetic toward the U.S. and disagreed with his own government’s official policy toward Venezuela.

Since we don’t have the full text of Danilovich’s cable, it’s unclear whether the diplomat approached other figures in the Lula government about Venezuela, let alone military officials. To be sure, at the time of this meeting Felix was working as Lula’s own Minister of Internal Security and as such no longer occupied an official post within the ranks. Yet, there are some disturbing parallels to the historic past here. Consider that it was not too long ago that Washington collaborated with the anti-Communist Brazilian military which overthrew democracy in a coup. Later, the armed forces hunted down leftists both within the country and abroad through so-called “Operation Condor.”

From Brazil to Argentina

Elsewhere in South America, the U.S. has faced political opposition from some unlikely quarters. Take for example Argentina, up until recently a fairly reliable U.S. ally which followed the Washington economic consensus. With the coming to power of Néstor Kirchner and his wife Cristina Fernández de Kirchner however, U.S.-Argentine relations have taken a nosedive. A fierce critic of the International Monetary Fund, Néstor also pursued an unprecedented diplomatic alliance with leftist Venezuela.2

Wikileaks cables document the deteriorating relationship between Washington and Buenos Aires and show U.S. diplomats as imperious and scheming. Take for example a diplomatic spat between Obama’s Assistant Secretary of State for Hemispheric Affairs Arturo Valenzuela and Argentine officials, an incident that I wrote about at the time.3 An American of Chilean descent and a Chavez critic, Valenzuela made his way to Buenos Aires late last year. Causing a diplomatic firestorm, Valenzuela declared before the local media that Argentina lacked adequate legal protections. When the government protested that such was not the case, Valenzuela clarified that he had personally spoken with representatives of American companies through the U.S. Chamber of Commerce who were upset about management of the economy. They were reluctant to invest due to lack of legal protections, Valenzuela added.

As if he had not annoyed the government enough already, Valenzuela then declared that he personally had detected a change in the investment climate between 1996 [the height of Argentina's flirtation with neo-liberal economics] when “there was a lot of enthusiasm to invest,” and the present day. In a communiqué, the Argentine foreign ministry angrily retorted that the government “had not received complaints from U.S. companies which had interests and investments” in the country.

The irate chorus continued with Interior Minister Florencio Randazzo regretting that some U.S. officials had gone back to “the old practices” even though “there was an expectation in Argentina of the inauguration of a new U.S. foreign policy” during the Obama era. The Minister of Justice added that Valenzuela’s remarks were “very unusual and unjustified.” By far however the most incendiary remarks came from former president Néstor Kirchner who accused Valenzuela of behaving like a “viceroy.”

Far from feeling contrite toward Argentina, U.S. diplomats treated the Valenzuela episode rather flippantly and superciliously. In a cable sent to Washington, recently released through Wikileaks4 , American officials in Buenos Aires wrote that the local press had “sensationalized” and over dramatized the incident. “Once again,” diplomats remarked, “the Kirchner government has shown itself to be extremely thin-skinned and intolerant of perceived criticism.” Downplaying the tenor of Valenzuela’s remarks, the authors added that many Argentines routinely complain about the weakness of governing institutions and the rule of law.

It’s difficult to parse what Washington’s policy might be toward Argentina in the Obama era. Judging from another cable released by Wikileaks5 , U.S. officials are still trying to sort it all out and seek to acquire as much information about the Kirchners as possible. Prior to Néstor’s recent death, Secretary of State Clinton personally wrote to the American Embassy in Buenos Aires, remarking that the U.S. was drawing up “a written product examining the interpersonal dynamics between the governing tandem.”

Clinton added that State had a pretty “solid understanding” of Néstor’s style and personality, but Cristina remained a mystery. Specifically, Clinton wanted to know how Cristina managed “her nerves and anxiety.” Somewhat bizarrely, Clinton then asked her subordinates whether Cristina was taking any medications. Again and again, the Secretary of State pressed for details about Cristina’s psychological and emotional profile.

Though certainly intriguing, the Wikileaks cable fails to answer a vital question: why would Clinton seek a psychological evaluation of Cristina in the first place? Perhaps, the United States government simply lacked information about the Argentine president and wanted to know who it was dealing with in South America. Another darker reading however is that the U.S. does not trust Argentina and is seeking to manipulate Cristina or uncover some dirt. A Machiavellian if there ever was one, Clinton is surely capable of playing political hardball and engaging in diplomatic intrigue.

For far too long, the U.S. public has remained ignorant of its government’s overseas efforts to turn back Latin America’s leftist Pink Tide. Though scant thus far, Wikileaks’ release of documents pertaining to Latin America is telling. From Brazil to Argentina, American officials have emerged as an imperious and cynical lot. Hopefully in the days ahead we may learn more about the Bush and Obama administration’s handling not only of Brazil and Argentina but also Venezuela, Bolivia, and Honduras.

Nikolas Kozloff, Ph.D. is a former COHA Senior Research Fellow and is the author of
Revolution! South America and the Rise of the New Left.

Some of his other posts are available at www.nikolaskozloff.com

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My Wife Had A Book Signing In San Antonio

  My wife Ann Marie Leimer had a book signing and lecture in San Antonio this past weekend. We had an opportunity to see friends and also go...