X-Posts: Ecuatoriano asesinado por motivos raciales

[from hope to grief. i do not know marcello lucero or his family but on veteran’s day i will be thinking of him as a fallen soldier in the cultural wars that are going on right now. looking through this list of links, i feel like i should keep going on and posting these announcements of his passing and the outrage that a group of kids could think of his murder as sport. but then i look on his name and see how even in his death he still has no name as american, ecuadorian, and world news organizations can’t agree on one spelling. is that too much dignity to ask? my renewed hope that started on election night has been a pragmatic one from the start, i was waiting to see what news from washington or abroad would shift the spotlight away from the promises of change and remind us that nothing has really changed. i would have never guessed it would be a murder of a fellow ecuadorian immigrant just making it day-to-day. when i first saw the headline, i was afraid it was family. after reading the tragedy of his death, i can say, ‘yes, it was somebody i knew, he was somebody just like my family.’]

Ecuatoriano asesinado por motivos raciales
Marcelo Lucero, 37 años, fue apuñalado. Era soltero y tiene a su madre en Ecuador

NUEVA YORK.- El ecuatoriano Marcelo Lucero, de 37 años, fue asesinado el sábado anterior en Long Island (condado de Suffolk) por una pandilla de adolescentes blancos.

Lucero fue atacado con armas blancas, y murió de una puñalada en el pecho. En el momento del ataque, estaba acompañado por un amigo que resultó ileso y avisó del hecho a la Policía.

Por su parte, los uniformados detuvieron a unos siete jóvenes de entre 16 y 17 años, miembros del grupo atacante, que fueron acusados por ataque en pandilla.

De acuerdo con una publicación del diario colombiano El Tiempo, la fiscal asistente del condado de Suffolk, Nancy Clifford, mencionó que el ataque tuvo tintes racistas, pues en las confesiones de los chicos habrían mencionado que, la noche en la que mataron a Lucero, salieron “en busca de algunos hispanos”.

Puedes leer más aquí

§

Otro asesinato racista
BBC, José Baig. Mundo USA

La muerte de Marcello Lucero, el sábado en la noche en Patchogue, estado de Nueva York, habría pasado como otra cualquiera en las estadísticas de la violencia urbana. Excepto por un detalle: sus asesinos habían salido decididos a matar a un hispano.


Puedes leer más aquí

§

Hispanos en Nueva York denuncian asesinato de ecuatoriano
10 de Noviembre de 2008, 06:58pm ET

PATCHOGUE, Nueva York, EE.UU. (AP) – La comunidad hispana de las afueras de Nueva York denunció el lunes el asesinato de un ecuatoriano que supuestamente fue apuñalado en el pecho por una pandilla de adolescentes blancos.

La fiscal asistente del condado de Suffolk, Nancy Clifford, dijo que uno de los adolescentes apuñaló a Marcelo Lucero, de 37 años, la noche del sábado porque era hispano. El asesinato ocurrió cerca de la estación de trenes de Patchogue.

Grupos de defensa de derechos de los inmigrantes reaccionaron con estupor a la noticia y condenaron el ataque.

“Pedimos que toda la comunidad se una, no sólo para condenar el ataque y expresar simpatía a los Luceros, pero para denunciar por qué estos adolescentes pensaron que tenían vía libre para atacar salvajemente a otro ser humano”, declaró Luis Valenzuela, director ejecutivo de la Alianza Inmigrante de Long Island.

El activista denunció a través de un comunicado el “ambiente anti-inmigrante” que se respira en el condado de Suffolk.

Puedes leer más aquí

§

Police: Slaying of NY immigrant was a hate crime

By FRANK ELTMAN – 5 hours ago

YAPHANK, N.Y. (AP) — Seven high school students looking “to beat up some Mexicans” attacked an immigrant from Ecuador on a Long Island street, with one of them fatally plunging a knife into the man’s chest during the brawl, police said.

A prosecutor compared Marcello Lucero’s death over the weekend to a lynching, and the attack was officially labeled a hate crime by Suffolk County authorities. Some outraged supporters of Hispanic immigrants suggested that recent crackdowns on illegal immigration fomented an atmosphere of intolerance that contributed to the attack.

“Today, some of the highest leaders of our community also have blood on their hands,” said the Rev. Alan Ramirez, a longtime advocate for Hispanic day laborers and Latino immigrants. “I have said for a long time that it would only take time for something like this to happen.”

Read more here

§

A Death in Patchogue

Marcello Lucero was killed late Saturday night near the commuter railroad station in Patchogue, N.Y., a middle-class village in central Long Island. He was beaten and stabbed. The friend who crouched beside him in a parking lot as he lay dying, soaked in blood, said Mr. Lucero, who was 37, had come to the United States 16 years ago from Ecuador.

The police arrested seven teenage boys, who they said had driven into the village from out of town looking for Latinos to beat up. The police said the mob cornered Mr. Lucero and another man, who escaped and later identified the suspects to the police. A prosecutor at the arraignment on Monday quoted the young men as having said: “Let’s go find some Mexicans.” They have pleaded not guilty.

Read more here

§

New York Governor David Paterson’s Statement

“Today, I ask New Yorkers to join me in mourning the death of Marcello Lucero, a Hispanic man of Ecuadorian descent who was the fatal victim of a vicious hate crime over the weekend in Suffolk County. This disgraceful act should serve as a source of outrage for all of us.

“Suffolk police tell us that Mr. Lucero and a friend were attacked late Saturday night by seven teenagers who were driving around looking for a Hispanic to beat up. The companion walking with Mr. Lucero escaped, but Mr. Lucero was stabbed to death. This senseless and cowardly attack by these teenagers cannot stand. I am directing State law enforcement agencies to assist Suffolk County officials in any way possible to ensure swift and certain justice for this heinous crime. Our State has zero tolerance for such bigotry and I urge authorities to move quickly to prosecute the perpetrators to the fullest extent of the law.

“Today, I ask that you offer your prayers to Mr. Lucero’s family. I would like to extend my deepest condolences as they come to the terms with the enormous pain of this loss. Mr. Lucero’s death is a jarring reminder that we must remain vigilant and continue our fight to eradicate prejudice in our words and in our actions.”

It ain’t hard to tell, I excel, then prevail


DSC00051
Originally uploaded by Ferg

I’m loving the reports of the President-elect walking around with a copy of Derek Walcott’s Collected Poems.

I wonder what’s next: Poetry readings in the China Room? Slam in the West Wing? Haiku writing in the Rose Garden?

More facts about Obama (including his status as award-winning spoken word artist!) can be found at Fifty things you might not know about Barack Obama but here are some of the quick literary bits:

• He collects Spider-Man and Conan the Barbarian comics

• He won a Grammy in 2006 for the audio version of his memoir, Dreams From My Father

• He has read every Harry Potter book

• His favourite book is Moby-Dick by Herman Melville

• He and Michelle made $4.2 million (£2.7 million) last year, with much coming from sales of his books

• He repaid his student loan only four years ago after signing his book deal.

Vote!

Walt Whitman and William Carlos Williams are among the nominees for the 2008 New Jersey Hall of Fame. If you want to make sure that the rich literary tradition of the Garden State gets its just props, then click here and cast your vote. You don’t have to be from or live in Jer-say to vote.

New Jersey Hall of Fame Announces 30 Nominees

EAST RUTHERFORD, NJ – The New Jersey Hall of Fame announced 30 nominees in five categories as the organization launched voting for the Class of 2008. These leaders and legends, from presidents to poets, in the categories of Historical, Arts & Entertainment, Sports, Enterprise and General, hail from all corners of New Jersey and share a close relationship to the state.

Read the rest of the article here

Jimmy Santiago Baca at the Cesar Chavez Public Library (Salinas, CA)

There is nothing greater than when a community comes out in force to hear their poet. Mad props to the staff of the Cesar Chavez Library for getting the word out and making sure that all of Salinas knew that Jimmy Santiago Baca was coming to read.

A crowd of 100+ from every demographic you can think of came out ready and eager for Mr Baca. I was very fortunate to be included as one of the readers for the night and was asked to go up first. Reading from Palimpsest, I shared “The Story of How Pigeon Came to Live in City” and “Palipsest: Ghazal.” Both poems went over pretty well considering my voice was very nervous.

Local poet and journalist Marc Cabrera came through next with two very earnest poems. The first felt like a riff off of Miguel Piñero’s “A Lower East Side Poem” as Cabrera was asking that his ashes be spread over the East Side of Salinas. Cabrera’s attention to detail and sincere love of his East Side home came through loud and clear in his poem and gave me an even greater appreciation of Salinas.

Garland Thompson, Jr; Marc Cabrera; Oscar Bermeo and Jimmy Santiago BacaGarland Thompson closed out the opening poets with some signature pieces done with a bombastic theater style. Garland was one of the event organizers and had been working tirelessly throughout the weekend to make sure that Jimmy could speak at local youth centers and get to catch some of the sights in the Monterey Peninsula. Much props to him for all his hard work.

Jimmy came out to close the night in the role of poet and story teller. Barb and I were talking this morning about how some poets do such an eloquent job at being able to share the details of their lives and the urgency behind their craft. Elders like Al Robles, Wanda Coleman, Anne Waldman, Amiri Baraka, and José Montoya come quickly to mind. This list isn’t all about elder status, I’m thinking about the great talk Junot Diaz gave recently and how only a little of it was him actually reading from the book and so much was the experience of writing the book. Folks like Roger Bonair-Agard, Suheir Hammad, Javier Huerta, Paul D. Miller, and Chad Sweeney are some other writers who can make writing feel alive without resorting to didatic rehashing.

Back to Jimmy, his stories of survival and cultural pride cut straight to the heart of the Salinas residents. He praised them for their hard work but also pushed them to take another step and be able to claim their identities in both familiar and hostile environments. More than anything, Jimmy speaks the straight-up, el vivo y hecho, the real deal, to communities that have been repeatedly lied to. In return for his honesty, the communities gives him respect and attention so that his poems can have an open space to be absorbed.

The selection Jimmy read from his new collection, Rita and Julia, was epic in its scope but remained centered with a clear speaker living and considering the choices the world gives. A very Whitman-esque turn in Baca’s work that extends the long poem form he has embraced since Martín & Meditations on the South Valley and C-Train and Thirteen Mexicans.

For me, it was an incredible treat to hear him read “I Am Offering This Poem.” It’s been a favorite of mine for years and to see him pull out Immigrants in Our Own Land brought out all kinds of fanboy in me. On the critical tip, Jimmy read the poems from his newest collection and first collection with an ease of voice and writing styles (the poet in control of his craft and confident in his text) while sill maintaining a sense of urgency (the poet offering the poem as a point of discussion, an opportunity for dialogue, that the audience may not take so he must relay in his voice and word choice how critical the message is). If you didn’t see him switch books, you might even imagine that he was reading from the same book which, after seeing some writers endlessly read from their old work or clumsily tripping over their own new text (I’ve been guilty of both crimes), is a level of poetic mastery more poets should be trying to reach.

Jimmy Santiago Baca: Partial BibliographyIn the end, it’s all about the transformative power of poetry and how it can affect every life; poetry can get you love, prestige, and acclaim. But poetry can’t do anything if you try to jam it down people’s throats or present it in a laissez faire fashion.

The difference maker? Trust, in your work and in your reader, and faith, in the work and in yourself.

The proof? The life story and rich literary history of Jimmy Santiago Baca.

Jimmy Santiago Baca reads at the Cesar Chavez Public Library

[ETA: Barb’s thoughts on hanging with Jimmy and the Salinas reading.]

Palimpsest

Palimpsest, my new chapbook, is available now. I will ship you a copy for FREE if you would like to swap a copy of your own chapbook. If you don’t have a chapbook of your own, I am willing to swap a copy for a chapbook, journal, CD, or used book from your personal library. Authors with full length collections, I’ll swap a copy of Palimpsest and Anywhere Avenue in exchange for your book.

For more swap info, contact me via e-mail at oscar(at)oscarbermeo(dot)com
Please include the words “Palimpsest Chapbook Swap” in the subject line of your message.


Palimpsest by Oscar Bermeo
Originally uploaded by geminipoet
Original cover image courtesy of Pro-Zak

Palimpsest

• Definition
• Sonnet
• B-Boy Prayer
• Antipoema
• Nomenclature
• Psalm for Public Housing
• Zuihitsu
• The Trouble with Poverty
• Ars Poetica
• A Bodega on Anywhere Avenue
• Congruence
• My Father’s Accent
• The Story of How Pigeon Came to Live in City
• Ghazal
• The Break
• Fire Escape

To purchase a copy for $5, please click on the PayPal button