Saturday, June 1, 2013

A Grandmother Stronger Than The U.S.-Mexico Border Wall: Taide Elena Fights To Lift The Veil of Impunity After The U.S. Border Patrol Kills Her Grandson (With Video)

originally published May 29, 2013 on the Border Wars blog, North American Congress on Latin America (nacla.org)


A Grandmother Stronger Than the U.S.-Mexico Border Wall

1788
Taide Elena with portrait of grandson slain by Border Patrol, Nogales, Sonora. Credit: Josh Morgan, Tucson Weekly.
On April 10, 2013, hundreds of people gathered on both sides of the U.S.-Mexico boundary, uniting at the wall which divides Nogales, Sonora and Nogales, Arizona. The occasion was a binational vigil and protest on the six-month anniversary of the killing of 16-year-old José Antonio Elena Rodriguez, gunned down by the U.S. Border Patrol on October 10, 2012.
We protested six months without justice: six months without even knowing the names of the agent(s) who shot José Antonio from the U.S. side of the divide; six months with no charges filed against anyone in the Border Patrol by U.S. authorities; six months of grief and frustration.
But there had also been six months of struggle; six months of organizing; six months of not letting people forget. So there many of us stood on April 10, at the very spot where José Antonio died, the second large mobilization at the border wall since his death.1790April 10, Nogales. Credit: Richard Boren.
Before arriving in Nogales, I decided to make a video about the action. I usually don’t make such a decision until I attend an action and have answers to various questions: Are there enough people present? Is the event well organized? Is it sufficiently inspiring?
In this case, there were more than enough reasons to produce a video (see below). Yet, if I had to choose one I would put forth the name of Taide Elena, José Antonio’s grandmother—the grandmother who is pushing back against the wall of secrecy and the veil of impunity which hangs over these tragedies.
Taide Elena is the mother of José Antonio’s father, who passed away several years ago, so she stepped in to help her daughter-in-law fill the void in raising José Antonio. She has stated how loving a child José Antonio was and how profoundly she misses him. 
Taide Elena’s grief is painfully apparent, but it is also apparent how her iron will for justice and her remarkable courage have transcended that grief. It is clear she will not rest until there is justice for her grandson and for others who have tragically died along the border.
1791Taide Elena and Araceli Rodriguez, mother of José Antonio. Credit: Nogales International.The border can often seem like a sort of free-fire zone for the Border Patrol. Those who are gunned down, often shot in the back—as was José Antonio several times—are collateral damage. They are effectively part of the price of securing the border against supposed threats to national security.
Taide Elena and those who rallied together last month know that U.S. border policing strategy has itself become a grave threat: a threat to the rule of law; a threat to democracy; a threat to the very survival of many who live in the borderlands.
Taide Elena represents the very best of the border, where people are rising up and joining the struggle for justice, for peace, and for friendship between neighbors divided by a hideous border wall.
Due to the efforts of Taide and others the tide is slowly beginning to turn on the border. In this moment of terrible darkness, a beam of light is shining and the darkness no longer seems so vast.



Richard Boren is a free-lance journalist and activist based in the Arizona-Sonora borderlands. He blogs at The Hobo Dispatch.


                                    
                                 VIDEO

 THE DEATH OF JOSE ANTONIO: AN OUTCRY FOR JUSTICE ON THE U.S.-MEXICO BORDER

Saturday, February 16, 2013

Reflections on Occupy and the 70th Anniversary of the White Rose Executions in Germany


There Is No Fall: The Rise of Occupy 

Occupy DC, Freedom Plaza;  Jan. 2012
(All Photos By The Author)
Many think the Occupy movement is history as it lacks the high profile it enjoyed in 2011 and early 2012. Whether Occupy returns to its’ glory days is not the most important question, but rather the fate of the struggle Occupy brilliantly helped raise to a new level.  However before looking forward it is important to first look back to appreciate the interconnectedness of events.

Back in 1999 a few of my friends left Tucson for Seattle to take part in a protest against the World Trade Organization. Few could expect what a huge splash that would end up making. I decided to attend the next big protest in Washington, D.C. in April 2000 to barricade the meetings of the IMF and World Bank. There I was introduced to the “spokes-council” model for consensus-based mass meetings, which later evolved into the “general assembly” meetings used by Occupy.

Occupy Austin, TX

Mass protests continued for a time around the world targeting international financial and trade institutions. In 2003 protests were held in Miami during negotiations for the Free Trade Agreement for the Americas (FTAA). The shocking level of police brutality unleashed on protesters was the product of law enforcement’s “Miami Model” which included large-scale pre-emptive arrests.
Occupy Tampa,   Dec. 2011

Seven years later in 2011 this same draconian level of brutality would be unleashed on peaceful Occupy protesters. Police violence against Occupy Oakland perhaps tops the list, with the pepper spraying of Occupy Wall Street participants and students at UC-Davis among other notable incidents. Many of the Occupy encampments were evicted with excessive use of force.

Returning to 2003 huge marches were held around the world to try to stop the pre-emptive invasion of Iraq and thousands pounded the pavement in Tucson.  Turnouts were so large everywhere that it seemed like the peace movement could win but the Bush Administration was unmoved. The Tucson Peace Action Coalition did a great job as the lead organizer locally for these actions.

Occupy New Orleans;  Sign About Scott Olsen, 
wounded At Occupy Oakland
The next big splash I felt lucky to witness came in 2006 when millions poured into the streets around the country on May 1 including Tucson to protest changes in U.S. immigration policies. Later that day I went downtown to watch the public school students who had marched to there after walking out of classes. The energy was electrifying.  Schools had even sent buses to pick them up. Marches continue to be held in Tucson on May 1 organized by the May 1 Coalition.

The immigrants’ rights movement later shifted its focus on stopping Arizona’s SB 1070 law and I rode a bus up to Phoenix in April 2010 to march along with 150,000 others.  Of course the government shifted its tactics on dealing with this movement. In 2012 a record 400,000 were deported from the U.S.

Occupy El Paso, TX  General Assembly   Oct. 2011
In Feb. 2011,  organized labor and community allies launched a series of protests and occupation of the Wisconsin state capitol for two weeks to try to stop Gov. Scott Walker's attempt to eliminate collective bargaining. At the movements' zenith over 100,000 protesters rallied at the state capitol.

A Solidarity Lunch;  Freedom Plaza, Washington D.C.

Then came Sept. 17, 2011
Occupy Wall Street in Zucotti Park

The Occupy movement was one of the most diverse and unique movements I was fortunate to have witnessed in my lifetime. I ended up visiting ten encampments throughout the southern U.S. and have written about those inspiring experiences in earlier posts. Occupy features horizontal leadership and consensus decision-making, focus on direct action, collective structures, and overall rejection of party politics.



Occupy Tucson,  Dec. 2011; From Oct. 2011-
Feb. 2012 Occupy Tucson had three different
encampments evicted with over 700 citations and arrests.


It is also important to look at the rise of Occupy within the context of the international struggle. The December 26, 2011 issue of “Time” magazine was the person of the year issue naming “The Protester” as the winner and is a must-read (available online). The opening of that feature wonderfully captured the moment: “No one could have known that when a Tunisian fruit vendor set himself on fire in a public square, it would incite protests that would topple dictators and start a global wave of dissent. In 2011, protestors didn’t just voice their complaints; they changed the world.”

Occupy Congress;  Jan. 17, 2012


























In conclusion the international struggle is as active as ever and despite the diminished profile of Occupy in the U.S. the movement is far from dormant. Another large splash will occur sooner or later, seemingly coming out of nowhere like the Battle in Seattle, the 2003 peace marches, the 2006 pro-immigrant marches, and the hundreds of Occupy encampments that sprung up in cities large and small.

But of course nothing comes out of nowhere and thanks to Occupy many more are now active in the struggle for social and economic justice. A friend who’s part of Occupy Gainesville summed it up well, “Hey if you’re not sitting around on a couch watching TV, you’re occupying!”

Occupy Congress General Assembly


To conclude here's a video of an amazing action that occurred in the Tucson Mall on Jan. 11, 2013 in solidarity with the Idle No More (idlenomore.ca) indigenous rights movement in Canada. The Struggle Continues!


Remembering Germany's White Rose; Seventy Years Ago on Feb. 22, 1943,  The First Three Were Executed.

One of the most courageous acts in history was the White Rose group in Germany who dared resist Hitler and the Nazis by secretly publishing and distributing a series of leaflets condemning the regime.
Their acts of defiance were practically suicidal: if caught there was no question as to the outcome. But they blazed on, giving up their lives of comfort and risking all.

Siblings Hans and Sophie Scholl, Cristoph Probst
The first ones of their group to be executed
by the Nazis on Feb. 22, 1943
A prior post on the Hobo Dispatch gives much of the background with photos:
REMEMBERING GERMANY'S WHITE ROSE

It is important to reflect on those in our own country's history who have also paid a terrible price for denouncing injustice like Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. who was assassinated exactly one year after he gave one of his most important speeches condemning the war in Vietnam. The King family's civil trail concluded that "governmental agencies" were involved in Dr. King's death.

Like Nazi Germany the U.S. spends most of the budget on a war machine which is constantly used to repress both abroad and at home.  Under the banner of fighting terrorism (which has replaced past banners of communism, etc.) the U.S. continues to unleash it's own brand of terrorism supporting repressive regimes around the world (Honduras, Israel, etc.), and sending unmanned drones to bomb targets without any rule of law involved. U.S. citizens can even be on this "kill list". Scores of innocent civilians have been killed. The Occupy movement prioritized fighting the National Defense Authorization Act (N.D.A.A.) with it's indefinite detention provision.

Finally it is important to mention two brave Americans who are whistleblowers of injustice but instead have been persecuted for their actions. Private First Class Bradley Manning is at the heart of the Wikileaks scandal where classified info was released, such as the infamous "collateral damage" video showing pedestrians being gunned down in Iraq. Manning is currently facing court-martial proceedings.
Former CIA agent John Kiriakou was just sentenced to 30 months in prison for blowing the whistle on torture by U.S. agents.

Links--Occupy Posts on Hobo Dispatch

OCCUPY BOOT CAMP (Part 1)

OCCUPY BOOT CAMP (Part 2)


Tuesday, December 4, 2012

VIDEOS: JUAREZ AND WALMART, WHAT DO THEY HAVE IN COMMON? BOTH ARE SCENES OF STRUGGLE.

 The Hobo Dispatch video component, known as Videos Sin Fronteras, was busy in November making two short videos. The first was made in Ciudad Juárez, site of some of Mexico's worst drug war related violence over the past five years, but also having a rich history and many interesting places to visit. One place I've frequented for the past twenty years is a restaurant called La Nueva Central which is now slated to be demolished for an urban redevelopment project. A large section of the city's historic district has already been demolished but a campaign is underway to save La Nueva Central and other sites. The video displays Juárez's rich culture, music, aztec dancing,  and the warmth of Mexico's people.


The Last Cup of Coffee? The Struggle To Save La Nueva Central and Juárez's Historic District.

The second video was made on Black Friday (Walmart actually opened on Thanksgiving eve for the first time this year), one of the biggest sales day of the year for corporate America, but also a day of protests and walkouts by the community and Walmart workers. This video was made in Tucson, AZ where an action was held in solidarity with Walmart workers. The action was organized by the Tucson chapter of Jobs With Justice and Occupy Tucson.

                                   Black Friday at a Tucson Walmart


Thank you to all of our allies and supporters who stood with workers to make the Black Friday Walmart strike a huge success!

      Overall Black Friday was a successful day of action against the world's largest private employer with over 2 million employees in 15 countries.

Thursday, October 18, 2012

SCOOP! A US Tourist Braves Mexico; Drones To Bomb Mexico; Endorsement: Mary MacEwan/Amy Goodman for President



 Mary and Amy!


The Hobo Dispatch endorses the Mary MacEwan/Amy Goodman ticket for president. So write in your vote on the November ballot so drones will only be used in the future to drop lollipops and pencils for the world's children. Cuban dentists are already on the ground in most countries to compensate for increased cavities.





A CENTURY OF WISDOM! Listen Now!
Listen to our exclusive interview with Mary MacEwan in Tucson, AZ.  Mary doesn't mention running for president but she did speak about what often happens to presidents who fight for the poor in history--they get assassinated or imprisoned. Mary has long been involved with the Womens International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF) and she discusses her ideas for achieving world peace and inspiration from Nelson Mandela and Buddha. Mary had a tray of coffee and cookies waiting for us. We look forward to interviewing her on a regular basis!


Other Insights on the Upcoming Election

Recently writer Alice Walker (author of The Color Purple) was interviewed by Amy Goodman (link to full interview at end). During the interview, Walker read her poem "Democratic Womanism".

AMY GOODMAN: What are your thoughts about President Obama today?

ALICE WALKER: Well, you know, I continue to care for President Obama and his family. I think that in many ways they are very courageous people, and I honor that, because I know what it means to live as a black person in a racist America. But I cannot feel good about drone strikes. I cannot feel good about bombing people. I don't--I just don't believe in war. I think it's stupid.  And I think that he is so smart that it's a waste of his intelligence to pursue peace by making more war. It does not make any sense.


DRONES TO BEGIN BOMBING US-MEXICO BORDER ON LIVE TV--ENTER CONTEST TO BECOME A DRONE PILOT FOR A DAY

The Dispatch has learned that US policy-makers have designed a campaign based on a  remarkable 2008 film "Sleep Dealer" (a sort of Blade Runner on the US-Mexico border) which depicts drones bombing targets in Mexico. As portrayed in the movie this campaign will be filmed and aired as a live reality show on television. There will even be opportunities for civilians to pilot the drones after training on special video games. Watch the "Sleep Dealer" trailer below to see the chilling future waiting around the corner:






Drone Bombing 101 from the Comfort of Home Sweet Home

Tucson, AZ is one of the bases for  drones currently bombing Pakistan and patrolling the US-Mexico border. Drone pilots can bomb a Pakistani village in the morning and play a round of golf at Ventana Canyon Resort in the afternoon. Recently the Hobo Dispatch visited a protest outside the gates of Davis-Monthan Air Force Base and interviewed these anti-drone activists.




Dalton McClelland is a retired physician who grew up in India. In the interview he also discusses a letter his father sent to Mahatma Gandhi who wrote him back with his thoughts on immigration and treatment of immigrants.


Jack Cohen-Joppa is one of the founders of the Nuclear Resister publication (nukeresister.org) which provides information about and support for imprisoned anti-nuclear and anti-war activists. Here Jack shares his thoughts on the use of drones in the Middle East and Mexico.


The Mounting Toll on the Border

José Antonio Rodríguez after
being shot by US Border Patrol. Reports

stated he was hit by between 5-8 bullets and
the medical office behind him was riddled with 
bullets (photographer unknown)

Hundreds of migrants die every year trying to cross the border. Others are dying a violent death in encounters with law enforcement. In early October one Border Patrol agent shot and killed another agent while patrolling the Arizona desert. The photo on the left shows a 16-year old boy who was gunned down by US Border Patrol on Oct. 10 after he was allegedly throwing rocks at agents from the Mexican side of the border in downtown Nogales, Sonora.

Tucson-based groups Derechos Humanos and No More Deaths have long denounced the climate of terror and human rights abuses due to the militarization of the border. Links are included at the end to  their press releases and reports.








A US TOURIST DISCOVERED IN MEXICO!

Finally a hopeful sign. While visiting and filming the annual October fiestas in Magdalena de Kino, Sonora, Mexico, the Hobo Dispatch actually encountered a US tourist who dared travel there despite warnings from the US government and the barrage of bad publicity about the violence in Mexico.

  A little video about the Magdalena Fiestas which includes pilgrims walking to the town on spiritual journeys and samples of the music and culture.


AND HERE'S OUR EXCLUSIVE SCOOP WITH A REAL TOURIST FROM THE U.S AND HOW HE EXPECTED TO CROSS RIGHT INTO A WILD WEST MOVIE--WAS HE SURPRISED BY WHAT HE ENCOUNTERED!


LINKS

A recent press release from the Derechos Humanos Coalition in Tucson, AZ.
Border Patrol's Deadly Force Terrorizes Border Communities

A report about Border Patrol abuse of detained migrants from the No More Deaths
coalition in Tucson.
"A CULTURE OF CRUELTY" REPORT BY NO MORE DEATHS

Some other tragic recent news:
Border Agent Kills Mother of 5; Family Demands Answers

Mexican beaten to death by Border Agents (Democracy Now)

The wonderful Alice Walker with her words of wisdom:
Alice Walker reading "Democratic Womanism" on Democracy Now

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Photo Essay: A Brief Journey Through the Wild and Native Southwest: Colorado's Weminuche Wilderness and The Navajo Nation

The Continental Divide Trail in Colorado
(all photos by the author unless noted)



In God's wilderness lies the hope of the world-the great fresh unblighted, unredeemed wilderness. The galling harness of civilization drops off, and wounds heal ere we are aware.

John Muir








Navajos in Inter-Tribal Parade, Gallup, NM

Photos are from an early August backpacking trip in Colorado's Weminuche wilderness, east of Durango, and visits to Gallup, N.M. and the Navajo reservation (AZ and NM).



Inventory--The Glorious Beginning
 of a Backpacking Trip.  Cumbres Pass, N.M.-
(the site where an 1848 "encounter" occurred
between Ute/Apaches  and the U.S.
military--37 Indians died and 2 soldiers)

The Window and Rio Grande Pyramid
Weminuche Wilderness
The Needle Mountains,  Weminuche Wilderness
The Rio Grande Pyramid (elevation 13,827 ft.)
Weminuche Wilderness
Rio Grande Pyramid in winter
(photographer unknown)

w
Hoary Marmots in the Weminuche Wilderness
I was born on the prairies where the wind blew free and there was nothing to break the light of the sun. I was born where there were no enclosures.

Geronimo







Spruce beetle damage in the Weminuche wilderness. The majority of trees I saw were dead. Global warming has exacerbated the damage from these cyclical infestations.








Shiprock, NM on the Navajo Reservation
 (notice six-sided traditional hogan in foreground)



Shiprock High School

Years ago I saw a wonderful documentary "Rocks With Wings" about the Shiprock Chieftans girls basketball team and their African-American coach, Jerry Richardson.
Richardson led the team to several state championships in the 1990s and later died in an auto accident after taking a college coaching job in Florida. An annual tournament is now held in his name in Shiprock. 

Part of the "Rocks With Wings" can be seen on youtube (see link at end).


My friend Austin Sam outside the Querino Trading Post near his home in Burntwater on the Navajo Reservation.  Austin was a friend of the late Tony Hillerman who wrote many novels set on the Navajo Reservation. Austin has been a prolific writer himself keeping a lifelong journal about his experiences growing up on the reservation, his time in the military, etc.

Link at end to see interview with
Austin Sam


Navajo Hoop Dancers


Zuni women in the parade

Apache Dancers
“One of our people in the Native community said the difference between white people and Indians is that Indian people know they are oppressed but don’t feel powerless. White people don’t feel oppressed, but feel powerless. Deconstruct that disempowerment. Part of the mythology that they’ve been teaching you is that you have no power. Power is not brute force and money; power is in your spirit. Power is in your soul. It is what your ancestors, your old people gave you. Power is in the earth; it is in your relationship to the earth.” 
 Winona LaDuke


Chickasaw Dancers from Oklahoma




An improvised fair ride at the Gallup flea market.
Frybread anyone?







Compassion in Nature?
A Remarkable Pair of Saguaros In West Tucson. 

Link to see clips from   Rocks With Wings, and info how to order rest.
Rocks With Wings website 

LINK TO SEE INTERVIEW WITH AUSTIN SAM ON NAVAJO NATION