Wednesday, August 25, 2010

‘Aquí está más chidota’ Community-led Development Initiatives are Key to Long-Term Wellness for Border Youth

During a rehearsal break for their end of summer showcase, youth from the Semillas Youth Program gather in clusters and quietly mouth the nahuatl chant to mother earth, Tonantzin, that they will perform in less than one hour. They are dressed in white t-shirts, jeans, and red bandanas. Thinking no one is watching, a small boy does the moonwalk as he chants – a truly bicultural moment.




Eight large display boards are covered in art. Bright colors and shapes reveal the children’s thoughts. The universal: rainbows, trees, birds, and butterflies. The local and cultural: Mexican flags, Guadalupe virgins, tepees, yarn-woven ojos de dios. And, scattered among these, the painfully real: demands for peace in the notoriously violent sister city across the border, Ciudad Juarez. “Stop the killing,” says one drawing, with an upright machine gun standing in as the first ‘i.’ “Juarez needs peace,” says another.



Killings and kidnappings have become a constant background for an entire generation of youth. A tragic 28,000 people have been killed in Mexico’s drug war since 2006 – more than 6,000 of these have perished in Juarez. Many children personally know relatives, neighbors, or acquaintances who have been victims of the drug war violence. According to a 2009 report by the National Child Traumatic Stress Network, border area children have reported experiencing extensive trauma, anxiety, and insecurity – especially among recent immigrants from Juarez whose parents still have to run errands in Mexico. As if the lives of Hispanic youth on the border were not already hard enough.



For children, pressures of living in immigrant households include being witness to their parents’ struggles: abusive treatment by employers, pressure to work for below market wages, and the constant fear of deportation. Hispanic youth on the border are particularly vulnerable to depression and thoughts of suicide. According a 2009 report by the National Child Traumatic Stress Network, unflattering stereotypes about Mexicans can lead to “self-hate” among border youth who are trying to determine their cultural identity, and perceived discrimination increases psychological stress, decreases people’s sense of personal control, and can lead to depression and anxiety in immigrant populations.



In addition, being located in a major drug traffic route and having access to prescription medications such as Rohypnol and Valium through corrupt medical practices in Mexico puts border youth at high risk of developing substance abuse. Already, according to the same report, students from border schools report higher use of tobacco, alcohol, and illicit drugs. Sadly, the mental health needs of Hispanic children are not being addressed. According to 2007 data from the National Survey of Children’s Health, 69.7% of Hispanic children living in a Texas households where Spanish was the primary language who needed mental health care did not receive it.



Historically, Hispanic children living in the U.S.-Mexico border have been among the most vulnerable to cycles of poverty and poor health. According to a study by the Annie E. Casey Foundation, over half a million children living in the U.S. Mexico border in 2005 were poor and Hispanic – despite living with families where parent(s) worked. An astonishing 40% of children in the Texas-Mexico border were living in poverty, compared to 17% of children nationwide.



II.



“Tiene juegos?” a boy asks as I observe their rehearsal with my open laptop. He wants to know if my laptop has games he can play. I ask him for an interview instead.



-“What did you learn?” I ask in Spanish. Our entire exchange is in Spanish.



-“Art. We learned how to make ojos de dios, aztec dance, singing, and aztec words.”



-“What was your favorite part?”



-“Getting to play the drum.”



-“What would you have done this summer, if this program had not be here?”



-“I would have stayed at home playing videogames and on the computer all day.”



It is a digital age. A digital age, in the third world that is the border. A third world crammed in the southern outskirts of the first world. Here, children can YouTube singing hamsters one minute and narco violence the next. They can speak about playing ninjas and El Verguillas. They are children, taking it all in.



The Semillas youth program is operated by La Mujer Obrera, a community development organization operating in El Paso’s former Garment District, where many women and their families worked before the loss of 35,000 jobs, mainly in the manufacturing sector of the economy. Already an economically stressed neighborhood, it experienced further economic devastation.



The Chamizal neighborhood, the largest in the garment district, was recently recognized as one of the poorest in the nation by the Federal Reserve Bank. According to the most recent figures available at the Census Tract level, 67% of families living in the neighborhood (Census Tract 21) were living in poverty, compared with 22.6% of people in El Paso County, and 12.4% of people in the U.S. An astonishing 70% of residents in the neighborhood do not have a high school diploma and 26% of households are headed by a single parent. The median income is $11,362. To make matters more dire, almost one in five residents of the Chamizal neighborhood are unemployed. Additionally, the Census reports that approximately 88% of residents in the neighborhood speak Spanish at home.



And this is where the cycle of poverty suddenly enwraps you. You are born in a poor household. Your mother does her best to be there for you, but to provide she must work and you are home alone while she works. As an adolescent, when you need her advice the most, she is still working. And you are alone, and you welcome the attention of equally alone youth with equally hard working parents who are not around. And you find comfort in each other for a brief period of time.



The border region had more teenage mothers than the nation, with El Paso County reporting 17% of its births to teens; in the United States, 12% of births were to teenage mothers. Latino youth in the border region are three times more likely to drop out of school than their non-Latino counterparts (Border Kids Count, 2006). In the 2005-2006 academic year, Bowie High School, where many of the children at this youth program will attend, had a drop-out rate of 25%. Limited education limits employment opportunities, often to service or factory work, which lands a single parent well into poverty.



And then, you are alone. Looking for work, raising your kids. Doing the best you possibly can.



III.



Single motherhood, being Hispanic, and being poor are all tied to vulnerabilities. Food access and hunger studies conducted by the United States Department of Agriculture report that members of such households often lack food and go hungry. Children in single mother households are also less likely to participate in after school programs such as Semillas. In Texas, 36% of children living with a single mother did not participate in after school activities, compared to 22.6% of children in two parent households. Even more troubling, 58% of Hispanic children 6 to 17 years of age in households where Spanish is the primary language did not participate in after school activities, according to the National Survey of Children’s Health, 2007 figures.



This is why community based efforts that build on the cultural strengths of border youth are exceptionally critical. Language and cultural competence are key factors in mental health services, according to National Child Traumatic Stress Network. The same is true for public health prevention efforts. And who knows the community best? The community itself.



La Mujer Obrera’s members, primarily Spanish-speaking displaced women workers, took on the mission to revitalize and improve the economic, social, educational, health and living conditions of the neighborhood and its residents. In the last 29 years, displaced garment workers of La Mujer Obrera have steadfastly organized to establish education and workforce training opportunities including a workers’ training center, an apartment complex, and three social purpose businesses: Rayito de Sol Daycare and Learning Center, Café Mayapán, and most recently, Mercado Mayapan, a traditional Mexican market with fresh foods, artisan goods, an active cultural events plaza, and museum.



The Semillas program is composed of eighteen youth divided in two groups. The younger group consists of children ages 6 to 14. The older youth, ages 17 to 24, are participating through a summer job program; they are charged with mentoring the younger kids. Most of these youth speak Spanish at home; many come from single mother households. Semillas is a community-operated youth program, part of a larger community development strategy being implemented by La Mujer Obrera in the El Paso’s former Garment District. Today they will perform at the community-operated market where their mothers work.



Both the border violence and the lack of meaningful and self-sustaining economic opportunities for Hispanic women living in the U.S. Mexico border are direct results of American trade policies that cater to international corporate interests. By increasing the free trade of goods but not people, North American Free Trade Agreement created an advantageous playing field for subsidized American farmers and undermined efforts of unsubsidized Mexican farmers. Suddenly, an apple farmer in Chihuahua was unable to compete with Red Delicious apples grown in Washington state. The loss of Mexican farms translated into an entire population looking for sustenance, resulting on the one hand in increased migration to the United States and on the other, in families searching for ways to make money… even if it meant drug trafficking.



The University of Texas Pan-Am estimates that the North American Free Trade Agreement led to the loss of approximately $78,000 for every job lost. An entire cohort of Hispanic women was suddenly abandoned. Left to fend for themselves, without warning, without workforce training, the largely monolingual Spanish speaking women with limited education had to figure a way out.



IV.



La Mujer Obrera’s community development model is ecological, community-led, and leading to full community empowerment and self-sufficiency. It creates safe spaces in which children can reconnect with their culture, countering the negative stereotypes leading to that ‘self-hate.’ Here, they become inspired not in spite of who they are but as a result of who they are.



“What did you learn here?” I ask 16-year-old Amberly.



“I learned about my ancestors, what they ate, what they did, their traditions, the danza azteca [Aztec dance]. I had the opportunity to work with the kids and other teenagers my age. I had the opportunity to learn where I came from.”



But these programs cannot continue without a meaningful economic investment from the Obama administration. Although the administration has invested billions of dollars into ‘community development,’ beneficiaries of these moneys have been traditional institutions including local governments and non-profits with a national base. Local non-profits, particularly on the border, have not been included in this infusion of funds.



When asked what they would have done this summer, had they not attended the Semillas program, they invariably respond, “at home.” “Playing video games.” “Watching TV.” “On the computer all day.”



Said a 6-year-old boy in classic Chuco parlance, “Aquí esta mas chidota, aquí en el programa.” [It’s cooler here, here in this program.]



-Rubi Orozco

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Chicano Power Legacy of the Chicano Movement in El Paso

 The exhibit "Chicano Power! The Legacy of the Chicano Movement in El Paso," opens on Saturday, February 6th and runs until Sunday, February 28th at the Museo Mayachen inside the Centro Mayapan at the corner of 2101 Myrtle and Willow Streets at 6 PM.

Saturday, February, 6, 2010

1 PM - OPENING RECEPTION/CEREMONY

2 PM - FORUM/PANEL- Tratado de Guadalupe Hidalgo

Speakers: Dr. Oscar Martinez, Dr. Ernesto Chavez, Carlos Aceves, Jennifer Monsate representative of Senator Lujan of Northern New Mexico who intruced a bill concerning
the land grants and the Tratado.


3:30 PM - PERFORMANCES

Music by
Ramon "Chunky" Sanchez
Alacranes Mojados from San Diego


Ballet Folklorico Tonatiuh

Sunday February 7th
1:00 Alacranes Mojados ( Música Chicana)


2:00 Ballet Folklórico Tonatiuh

2:30 Grupo Mixteco, Música Regional Mexicana

3:30 Lotería Mexicana

 

Saturday, February 13, 2010

1 PM - PERFORMANCES

Danza Azteca

Cultural musical group Ceiba

4 PM - FORUM, PANEL

Chicano Movement in El Paso, Part 1

Invited panelists will explore issues in health, housing, politics, legal issues and labor.

Sunday, February 14, Valentines day
1:30 Grupo de Danzón, bailando el Danzón “Juárez”


2:00 Mariachi, Raíces de América





3:00 Ballet Folklórico “Tonatiuh”

3:30 Mariachi, Raíces de América

Rifas significativas para celebrar el día del “Amor y la Amistad” y la tradicional, “Lotería Mexicana

 

Saturday, February 20, 2010

2 PM - Music by Mariachi Flores Mexicanos

3 PM - POETRY READING - Words of Wisdom Chicano/a Poetry Readings by Juan Contreras, Nancy Green, Joe Olvera, Ray Ramos.

4 PM - FORUM, PANEL

Chicano Movement in El Paso, Part 2

Invited panelists will explore issues in media, arte and culture, youth and student movement.



Saturday, February 27, 2010

2 PM - PERFORMANCE

Rosa Guerrero

ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION - Current struggles & Legacy of the Chicano Movement in El Paso



Sunday, February 28, 2010

1-6 PM LOW RIDER CAR SHOW

with Music by Radio la Chusma

Monday, January 25, 2010

Latest News From Mayapan

This is a direct letter from Mercado Mayapan


Dear Friends,

The new year is upon us, and we are very grateful for the incredible support that all of you and the entire community provided us to get through 2009.

In the final days of 2009, we raised more than $7,000 in donations and short term loans from Friends and Amigos, and more than $40,000 in sales to be able to cover the final payroll of 2009, which was also a rare third payroll for the month of December. This response is a clear demonstration of the potential of the Mercado as a community cultural and economic center for not only low income women and their families, but all of El Paso as well as friends, family and tourists from afar.

With the entrance of 2010, we also are receiving a very generous and critically important grant from the North American Development Bank, which has been an investor in our social purpose businesses for more than 10 years. This support will allow us to not only sustain the Mercado but grow it towards self-sufficiency and long term sustainability.

Unfortunately, along with this wonderful news and advances, we continue to face challenges with the City of El Paso. Although through several meetings in late 2009 we had been told that the city would work with us, on January 5, city council voted to declare us in default on the loan that they provided us in June 2009. Currently we are in negotiations to try to develop a repayment agreement, which will result in payoff of the loan while allowing the Mercado to continue to operate and grow in 2010.

And to those ends, we have lots of exciting plans and events coming up very soon:


• On February 1, Café Mayapan’s restaurant will begin again. With a new menu, Café Mayapan waitress-based lunch service will be available 11am to 3pm, Monday through Friday, in our 2000 Texas Avenue building.

• On February 6, Museo Mayachen will unveil its newest exhibit, the Chicano/a Movement in El Paso in Mercado Mayapan


• Every weekend in February, there will be exciting unique programs in Mercado Mayapan dedicated to the Chicano/a movement. Each Saturday in February, there will a forum featuring key local and national Chicano/a leaders to share about the diverse impacts and milestones that the movement achieved. And each Sunday, a multitude of artists and musicians will perform, including music by Mariachi Flores Mexicanas, Alacranes Mojados, cultural group Ceiba, Radio la Chusma, Danza Azteca, Folklorico Tonatiuh, Words of Wisdom Chicano/a Poetry Slam, and a low rider show. The Mercado’s menu also will feature favorites from long-time barrio residents and families.



And this is just the beginning!!! Mercado Mayapan staff and leadership are also working on a whole new calendar of events and programming for all of 2010, including the Mercado’s first anniversary on May 1, the Mole Festival in July, and of course our annual Day of the Dead program in November.

Our fundamental goal this year is to not only expand the number of people who come to the Mercado, but in particular we want to build REPEAT customers. Our goal is to grow 5% per month.


You can help us reach those goals in several ways:

• Come by the Mercado at least once a week—during the weekdays! Growing numbers of people are attending our programming on the weekends, but we want to build the Mercado also as the community’s shopping site for groceries and gifts, as well as a meal during the week.


• Bring your family and friends to the Mercado regularly—make it your place to hang out on the weekends—the programming is ever changing, but always family friendly!! Set a goal of coming at least twice a month with family and friends, for a meal, an event or shopping on the weekend.

• Select one group you are a part of—your workplace, a club, a professional association—and commit to distributing information about Mercado Mayapan events to them each month. You can enroll in our email list to get regular bulletins on our programming (email centromayapan@mujerobrera.org to subscribe to the list)

• Work with Isabella Rodriguez, our events contract coordinator (mercadomayapan@mujerobrera.org) to schedule a meeting or event at the Mercado or the Café, or have them serve as your group’s caterer!


Again, thank you so much for all of your support in 2009 and throughout the years. We are very very excited about the potential of this year, and we are confident that with continued community support, Mercado Mayapan will become a premier cultural and commercial center for El Paso and the whole border region.

With very best wishes in this new year,

La Mujer Obrera

Sunday, January 10, 2010

Bring on the New Year!

Dear Friends of Mayapan,


2010 has arrived!!! And we are very excited about all of the new opportuntiies and development that will be occurring in the Mercado in this new year.

We really appreciate all of the help and support each of you and your family and friends have given us during 2009--it was a challenging year, but we have made it to 2010!!

Unfortunately however some issues from 2009 have carried over. As many of you may know, yesterday the City of El Paso took steps to declare us in default on the loan that was made to the Mercado last summer. This action was taken despite our having met with the City staff on a monthly basis since June, and our having a meeting, at our request, with the city manager in mid December to present a repayment plan. As we have said all along, we are fully committed to repaying the loan in 2010, and we hope that the City will work with us to allow us to repay the note. (http://www.elpasotimes.com/ci_14129934?IADID=Search-www.elpasotimes.com-www.elpasotimes.com)

Unfortunately a repercussion of this matter is that there is extensive confusion and concern about the Mercado's operations (now and in the future). We have attempted to explain that the Mercado is open, has been open and will continue to be open and operating in 2010. That in fact, 2010 looks to be an outstanding year for the Mercado's growth and development, including an expected announcment of a major grant in the coming weeks.

But right now, we need to continue to build and demonstrate community support. WE URGE YOU AND YOUR FAMILY AND FRIENDS to come to Mercado Mayapan--shop, eat, spend time in a family friendly environment. If you are out of town, check out our e-commerce site www.lummetik.com.


And if you have an organization or event, consider Mercado Mayapan, Cafe Mayapan or La Mujer Obrera's conference room as its site. Isabella will be happy to work through the details with you, just contact her at isabellarodriguez@mujerobrera.org or call her at 915-630-7048. Large or small, we have the facilities and support to make your event a memorable occasion.

Again, thank you for all of your support. And we look forward to working together this year to strengthen and grow Mercado Mayapan.

Best wishes, La Mujer Obrera

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

December Comadrazo 12/6/09, 3PM Workshop, 4PM Meeting & Ornament Exchange at Mercado Mayapan, Liberia

Host: El Paso Comadres

Location: Mercado Mayapan
2101 Myrtle, El Paso, TX 79901 US
When: Sunday, December 6, 4:00PM
Phone: 532-6200

Join us for our December Comadrazo/Ornament Exchange on 12/6 @4pm. We'll be meeting at the Mercado Mayapan. They have a wonderful mercado central/food court. Purchase your favorite platillo from the many vendors. We'll provide the drinks.


Participation in the ornament exchange is completely voluntary. The only request is that if you do plan on partaking, you please bring a nice ornament (something you would enjoy receiving) suggested price range of $5.

Open to the community and as a special holiday treat, Comadre Margie Brickey will be sharing her creative crafting skills with a WREATH MAKING SESSION from 3 to 4pm. Supply list will be sent under separate cover for those interested in coming early and joining in.

Directions to Mercado Mayapan, 2101 Myrtle, 532-6200
- I-10, exit Piedras St., turn south at Piedras
- Take Piedras overpass to Alameda,
- Turn right on Alameda, down 1/2 blk, bearing left
- Left on Myrtle 2 blks to 2101 Myrtle (its a one way street).

Thanks for joining us in November for brunch at G&R restaurant.

Remember Las Comadres has no dues, no officers, requires no commitments of you...just show up to meet the wonderful women in your community. From there we build support networks that will blow your socks off!!! We buy from each other's businesses; we post jobs, scholarships, and mucho mas!

If you haven't had a chance to attend a comadrazo in a long time (or you've never attended); now is a great time to come. We know your time is very valuable, we invite you to come partake in taking our comadrazos to the next level.

Come join us!


Con Carino,
Margie Brickey, Alicia Rascon & Rosa Celis-Rodriguez
El Paso Las Comadres Facilitators/Coordinators
Nora de Hoyos Comstock, Ph.D. Founder
Las Comadres para las Americas connecting Latinas all over the world!
http://www.lascomadres.org/; nora@comconn.com mailto:nora%40comconn.com
512-928-8780 voice/fax; Cell: 512-751-7837

eWoman Network Holiday Extravaganza 12/8/09, 5:30 to 9PM at Mercado Mayapan


Join us for a one-of-a-kind Networking Experience



 Come be part of an Exciting Evening!
 Expand your connections during Accelerated Networking!
 Start your Holiday Shopping with us at our Vendor Showcase!
 Enjoy traditional Posada Cuisine!
 Fashion Show Extravaganza featuring Prominent Fabulous Women in our community!
…and, did we mention Shopping?

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Event: 6:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. (Doors open and informal networking begins at 5:30pm)
La Mujer Obrera / Mercado Mayapan
2101 Myrtle, El Paso, TX 79901, (on Myrtle between Walnut and Willow)


$35.00 - Members and Friend of Mayapan/Mayachen, $45.00 - Prospective Members
$55.00 - Late registration, beginning December 5th.


A limited number of Business Showcase display tables are available to showcase or sell your products and services. The fee is $65.00 for nonmembers and $50.00 for eWN Members and Amigos de Mayapan/Mayachen, nonrefundable.


Sponsorships opportunities available on multiple levels.


Please join us and see why eWomenNetwork is recognized as the #1 resource for connecting and promoting women and their businesses.


For more information contact:

Melissa Rodriguez, Managing Director
(915) 494-5485
Melissa@eWomenNetwork.com

Monday, November 23, 2009

Vote for La Mujer Obrera: Chase Bank community giving Contest

Vote for La Mujer Obrera: Chase Bank community giving Contest


Please share this message with everyone you can!!!

Chase Bank is conducting a national contest to give 20 non-profits $25,000 each. But you have to vote through Facebook. It’s called Chase Community Giving.

La Mujer Obrera is an organization of that operates a social-purpose Mercado dedicated to creating jobs, businesses, and income for low-income women workers and their families in El Paso, TX. It is registered as a contestant under our corporate name Centro Obrero Del Fronterizo. The voting ends December 11th.

Please get this out to all your email contacts and Facebook friends. And please join Facebook (www.facebook.com) and vote for La Mujer Obrera.

For those who need more info on our organization, you can visit http://www.mujerobrera.org/
 or http://www.mercadomayapan.org/
 or http://www.lummetik.com/

Many thanks,
La Mujer Obrera