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Monday, March 3, 2014

Afro Latinos' Mixed Identity Can Leave Them Out of the Mix

Afro Latinos' Mixed Identity Can Leave Them Out of the Mix
JohnButts@JBMedia Reports:
Afro Latino Marco Davis laughed when he recalled the lengths he went to keep in touch with Black and Latino alumni groups when he graduated from Yale University.
“One year I would put down that I was Hispanic so I could keep in touch with the Latino groups on campus that I was involved with, and another year I would put down Black, so I could get their information. I would alternate because I wasn’t able to put down that I belonged to both,” said Davis, 43, who has a Jamaican father and a Mexican mother. “The university said they didn’t have it built in to their computers to check off more than one box at a time, and I had to do just one.” Like Davis, other Afro Latino Americans feel they
straddle two communities, each with a distinct heritage and history celebrated in the U.S. eight months apart. Black History Month comes to a close Friday and Hispanic Heritage Month begins in mid-September.
Black Latinos say there is little understanding of their mixed heritage, and little knowledge of the history of the importation of slaves by Spanish-speaking countries of which many, though not all, are descendants.
Yet growing racial pride and a move to a more multiracial society with changing demographics are helping this group stake a claim to being both Black and Latino.
Davis, now working in the Obama administration in Washington, D.C., grew up in a predominantly African American neighborhood in New York. “We weren’t Puerto Rican (the majority Latino population in New York), and people never heard of people like us,” explained Davis. “The Black people knew we spoke Spanish but they didn’t make the connection to the Hispanic community, and the Latinos didn’t quite get it, and others just assumed I was Black and that’s it.” But he attended Mass at a Mexican church two towns over, and spent summers visiting relatives in his mother’s hometown of Guadalajara, Mexico. In college, he joined a historically Black fraternity while also becoming involved with Latino groups on campus. “It really opened my eyes. I felt connected to both, but I remember being asked what would my loyalty be if there was ever a problem, and I would think, why do I have to choose? I navigate both worlds. I don’t have a choice. It’s who I am.”
That is the fundamental challenge of being an Afro Latino in the United States, said Davis. “I walk down the street and people assume I am a Black man and nothing more. The story of the Afro Latinos is a chapter in our society that hasn’t been well written. It’s a story that still needs to be told. We are of both worlds. It’s not either or, and people don’t get that.”
Some of that history will be discussed Thursday night in Washington, D.C. at a symposium on Arturo Alfonso Schomburg, held by the Smithsonian Latino Center and the Schomburg Center.
A writer, historian and activist, Schomburg is the namesake of the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture in Harlem, part of the New York Public Library system. Schomburg’s research collection laid the
foundation for the study of Black history and culture, according to the library.
But many may not know that in addition to being a Black man, Schomburg was Puerto Rican and self-identified as afroborinqueño. Puerto Rico was known as Borinquen before the arrival of the Spanish.
“He pioneered the concept of an African Diaspora — that Black people around the world are connected,” said Ranald Woodaman, Smithsonian Latino Center director. Schomburg was also involved in fighting for the
independence of Cuba and Puerto Rico. Woodman said it is important for Latinos to claim his “Latinidad” as well, and make sure he is part of the Latino Pantheon. Last week, the Washington, D.C. Mayor’s
Office on Latino Affairs, with the Afro Latino Alliance, held a two-day forum and gala devoted to recognizing dual Afro Latino identity. Organizers deliberately chose Black History Month for the event and
plans are being made for an event in September. “Afro Latinos have a right to celebrate Black History Month,” said Roland Roebuck, 66, a D.C. government retiree who advises the Afro Latino Alliance in
Washington, D.C.
Roebuck said an “invisibility” exists, which often keeps Afro Latinos “out of the mix.” Born in New York and raised in Puerto Rico, Roebuck said when he first moved to Washington in the early 1970s, after serving in the U.S. Air Force, he was told by African Americans, “you’re not a full-time brother.”
“The African American community may find it strange, but the only difference between us is the language, and the geography. It’s about where the slave ships landed,” Roebuck said.
Howard University history lecturer J. Santiago Mauer, who also uses the pen name Msomi Santiago Moor, said Black people don’t just speak English, but he did not know that growing up in Ohio as an African American.
Afro Latinos, he said, “need to be unapologetically Black. It’s okay to be Black and speak Spanish.”
About 3 percent of the 51 million people who identified as Hispanic or Latino on the 2010 Census also identified as Black.

<blockquote”>

The story of the Afro Latinos is a chapter in our society that hasn’t been well written. It’s a story that still needs to be told.

Filmmaker Dash Harris, who is of Panamanian descent, hopes to bring more exposure to the Afro Latino experience though a documentary series, Negro. Harris said the work grew from her own frustrations.

“I was exhausted trying to explain who I am,” Harris said. “I’m not here to convince anyone about their African ancestry because that’s a fact. It’s about educating the next generation.”

Afro Latina Sarita Copeland Singh, a Washington lawyer married to a Trinidadian with Indian roots, said she sees change afoot.

“We definitely need to hear and learn more about Afro Latinos so that it won’t seem so unusual,” said Singh, 30, who is of Panamanian descent. “My young daughter already moves easily between both worlds.”



UN wants 10,000 soldiers, 1,820 police for C.Africa - Yahoo News

UN wants 10,000 soldiers, 1,820 police for C.Africa - Yahoo News
JohnButts@JBMedia - Reports:
UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon Monday recommended deploying 11,820 peacekeepers in strife-torn Central African Republic, including 10,000 soldiers and 1,820 police officers, to re-establish order.
In a report sent to the 15 members of the Security Council, Ban specified that the peacekeeping mission should focus, in the initial stage, on "the protection of civilians." However, the mandate for the proposed operation would be progressively expanded to cover "support for the political process" of transition, in
particular restoring the government's authority over the country and organizing elections, safeguarding the delivery of humanitarian aid, the respect of human rights and the return of those displaced by the violence.
"It is envisaged that the strength of the peacekeeping operation would comprise up to 10,000 troops and 1,820 police personnel," and included logistical and transport support, such as helicopters, the report explained. The deployment would be rolled out in stages. "To deal with immediate security needs, there will be an initial surge of military personnel and corresponding military enablers," the report said. "Police will also be phased in and, as the security environment improves, should eventually replace the bulk of the initial military surge capacity," first in the capital, Bangui, and then in the provinces. Little by little, a large civilian component would be added, though the report does not specify exact numbers. These civilians -- administrators, engineers, rights observers and lawyers -- will be charged with helping organize elections, promote national reconciliation and to rebuild a national government that hasn't been effective for months and which no longer provides essential services for the population. But even in the best case, UN peacekeepers couldn't be deployed for another six months -- not before September or October -- because of the time
required to mount such an operation. The former French colony was thrown into chaos after rebels from the mainly Muslim Seleka group seized power in a March 2013 coup. The Muslim-Christian violence that has erupted in its wake -- killing thousands and displacing around a quarter of the country's 4.6 million people -- has prompted the United Nations to speak of fears of genocide and ethnic cleansing.
An African Union-led force, MISCA, nearly 6,000-strong, is already engaged on the ground, as are 2,000 French soldiers from the Sangaris operation.