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Asunto:[MESHIKO] Chicano Park Day 2001 / 210401 / Este sabado!
Fecha:Martes, 17 de Abril, 2001  00:54:27 (-0700)
Autor:Ricardo Ocampo-Anahuak Networks <chicanos @...........mx>

Chicano Park Day 2001 / 210401 / Este sabado!


----------
From: Calaca Press <calacapress@home.com>
Date: Mon, 16 Apr 2001 11:37:50 -0700

Toder el Poder al Pueblo y Todo el Pueblo al Poder!

31st ANNUAL
CHICANO PARK DAY
CELEBRATION


Saturday, April 21, 2001
10:00AM - 5:00PM
Chicano Park (under the SD-Coronado Bay Bridge)
Barrio Logan, San Diego, Califas

MUSIC - POETRY - DANZA AZTECA
BALLET FOLKLORICO - LOWRIDERS - AND MORE!


MUSIC:
Lalo Guerrero
The Revelations
Quetzal
Aztlan Underground
Quino
Emaue
Koryn Cuevas w/ Mariachi Agua Dulce
Mad One
Delia Moreno
Mariachi Griego
Martin Espino
Granger Jr. High School Jazz Ensemble

POETRY:
raulrsalinas
Los Delicados
Sara Duran

BALLET FOLKLORICO Y DANZA AZTECA:
El Tesoro de Jamul
Ballet Folklorico Yaqui
Grupo Folklorico Chicano
Piltzin Ahuiliztli

SPEAKERS:
Chicano Park Steering Committee
Crusade for Justice
Brown Berets de Aztlan
Union del Barrio
Save Our Centro Coalition

PLUS:
Children's Martial Arts Demonstration by Healthy Kicks
Lowriders, Children's Activities, Cultural Vendors, Food y mucho más!

Chicano Park Day is organized by the Chicano Park Steering Committee and
sponsored by the Brown Berets de Aztlan, Union del Barrio, and Amigos
Car Club.

For more info call: (619) 563-4661 or email:
mailto:cpscchicanopark@ixpres.com or visit the CPSC website
<http://calacapress.com/cpsc.html>.

========================================
The Chicano Park Steering Commitee is a non-profit volunteer
organization dedicated to preserving and promoting Chicano Park and the
struggle for the rights of Chicanos Mexicanos and all indigenous people
of the Americas. The CPSC is always in need of volunteers the day of the
event. If you are down for helping out an hour or two or three or all
day please call (619) 563-4661. Gracias.
========================================

Little something about Chicano Park

Chicano Park was founded on April 22, 1970 when the San Diego community
of Barrio Logan and Chicano movement activists joined forces to protest
the construction of a Highway Patrol station on the present site of the
park. The Highway Patrol office was at the time the final insult to a
community that had already been degraded by the demolition of hundreds
of homes to make way for Interstate 5, the Coronado Bridge, the
placement of toxic industries and junkyards, lack of community
facilities, proper schools, jobs, social or medical services. Protesters
led by the Brown Berets, community activists, artists, M.E.Ch.A. and
others took over the site and faced police and bulldozers for days while
negotiations took place that resulted in the land being given over for a
community park. In the following days and months similar actions by the
same groups led to the forming of a Chicano Free Clinic, now known as
the Logan Heights Family Health Center, and the Centro Cultural de la
Raza in Balboa Park. The struggle for Chicano Park symbolizes the
Chicano Mexicano people's struggle for self-determination and
self-empowerment. The murals in the park painted by artists such as
Victor Orozco Ochoa, Mario Torero, Salvador "Queso" Torres, Yolanda
Lopez, Jose Montoya, Bernice Badillo, Sal Barajas and many others
portray the social, political and cultural issues that are relevant to
not only the community of Barrio Logan but to the entire Chicano
Mexicano community throughout Aztlan, Mexico and beyond.

========================================
Calaca Press, P.O. Box 620786, San Diego, Califas 92162
http://www.calacapress.com calacapress@home.com
========================================

Independent Spirit, Community Activism and Cultural Self-Determination:

The Story of Calaca Press


By Victor Payan

The story of Calaca Press began in 1997 with a conversation about the
future which San Diego community activists Brent Beltrán and Consuelo
Manríquez de Beltrán were having with their friend Manuel J. Vélez.
Vélez, a poet who had recently graduated with a Masters' degree from a
creative writing program at UTEP, pondered the lack of publishing
opportunities for independent Chicano writers. Taking a cue from their
activism, Brent and Consuelo knew that the best opportunity for success
is the one you create yourself.

After assessing their resources, which basically consisted of their
do-it-yourself attitude and a Macintosh Performa computer, Brent and
Consuelo gave birth to Calaca Press and a first edition of Vélez's book
of poetry, Bus Stops and Other Poems. Four years and a Macintosh G3
later, and their small press has published two more books and seven
spoken word CDs, all sharing Brent and Consuelo's independent spirit and
vision of community activism and cultural self-determination.

"We're an independent Chicano family-owned press that believes in
creating avenues for bilingual artists and performers," says Beltrán.

In their commitment to supporting new, emerging and established artists,
Calaca Press has showcased the work of nearly two dozen writers and
performers representing the diversity of the contemporary Chicano and
Latino experience. Speaking loudly, proudly and with eyes wide open,
Calaca Press' authors unflinchingly telegraph their experiences and
speak their minds.

"We believe that there are many unknown voices within our community that
are worthy of being published yet are not due to various societal and
corporate realities, restrictions and biases," says Beltrán. "This is
particularly true when it comes to publishing progressive bilingual
voices."

Since its humble beginnings with Bus Stops, Calaca Press has published
two more literary works, Campesino Fingerprints by Rod
Ricardo-Livingstone and as our barrio turns...who the yoke b on? the
anticipated novel by alurista, the renowned Chicano poet and author of
Floricanto en Aztlán and Nationchild Plumaroja.

In addition, Calaca Press has also actively developed a relationship
with local San Diego artists such as Victor Orozco Ochoa, Mario Torero
and Sal Barajas, each of whom have designed original artwork for Calaca
projects.

In 1999, Calaca Press expanded from publishing literary works into
recording and producing spoken word CDs. Their inaugural project, Raza
Spoken Here: poesía chicana volume 1, was a cutting-edge collection of
contemporary Chicano and Chicana poets. The critically-acclaimed CD
featured an early sampling of high-powered verse by emerging poets such
as Manuel J. Vélez, Sandra C. Muñoz, Olga Angelina García Echeverría,
Daniel Sánchez-Glazer, Chuy Quintero and Christian Ramírez. Even more
established performers such as Elba Rosario Sánchez, the Taco Shop Poets
and revolutionary border-bard Trago Amargo contributed to the effort.

Since that intrepid introduction, Calaca Press' foray into CD production
has yielded numerous titles which document the emergence of a strong and
exciting grass roots Raza literary movement.

Raza Spoken Here 2, the much-anticipated followup to their debut disc,
delivers up more notes from the underground with an even more diverse
selection of writers and performers. In "Summer Fruits," Fresno-born
poet Rod Ricardo-Livingstone recounts his upbringing in the San Joaquin
Valley. Salvadoran-born Leticia Hernández-Linares takes a stand against
consumerism, globalization and gentrification in "Gold Rush,"
Austin-based Xicanindio activist poet raúlrsalinas boldly declares "We
Hafta Shaft NAFTA!" Award-winning Iranian/Guatemalan hiphop rockero
robertkarimi recounts the vigilante killing of two grafitti artists in
"La pena de muerte," and self-described Tejana punk Buddhist Tammy Gomez
presents a rollicking musical meditation on assimilation in "On
Language." The disc concludes with the Northern California raza rock
group Grito Serpentino inviting the listener on a bluesy chalupa-induced
cultural nightmare in the hilarious "Ode To The Taco Bell Chihuahua."
RSH2 also includes works by alurista, alejandra ibarra, Antonieta
Villamil, Los Delicados, and tatiana de la tierra.

In addition to these two compilations, Calaca Press has also released
five full-length spoken word CDs in the last two years, which they sell
through independent book and record stores, cultural centers, and their
website, www.calacapress.com.

Elba Rosario Sánchez and Olga Angelina García Echeverría team up for
When Skin Peels. Bay Area favorites Los Delicados serve up a postmodern
barrio snapshot in Word Descarga, and the San Diego-based Taco Shop
Poets chime in with Chorizo Tonguefire. Currently, the Taco Shop Poets
are in the studio working on their second collaboration with Calaca
Press called Crossing Guard, which features guest appearances by José
Montoya and raúlrsalinas.

Working with Red Salmon Press, Calaca Press released the electrifying
Los Many Mundos de raúlrsalinas: un poetic jazz viaje con friends in
2000. In this impassioned, jazz infused disc, word warrior raúlrsalinas
tackles issues relating to cultural survival, historical erasure, AIDS,
and the prison-industrial complex in such works as "Pueblo Querido," "A
Walk Through the Campo Santo," "Amorindio," "La Peste Arriveé,"
"Homenaje a la Pachuca."

Calaca Press has also collaborated with acclaimed artist and author
Simón Silva to release Small-Town Browny, a double-CD of Silva's
poignant short stories about rural campesino life.

Beltrán says he and Consuelo actively pursue collaborations with other
community artists and small presses.

"Calaca Press has been lucky to come across so many talented voices, yet
we recognize that our means are limited to produce them all," he says.
"Therefore, we strongly encourage and assist other people, friends,
poets, writers and performers to start their own presses, to
self-publish and to record their own CDs."

Still with an eye to the future, Calaca Press has also begun producing
cultural events in San Diego. Over the past few years, they have brought
raúlrsalinas, Leticia Hernández-Linares, Rod Ricardo-Livingstone, Olga
Angelina García Echeverría, Elba Rosario Sanchez, Sandra Muñoz, Los
Delicados and Grito Serpentino to San Diego, a city hungry for Chicano
cultural arts programming.

"There is a definite need for this kind of material," says Beltrán,
"especially considering the changing demographics of California, the
southwest and the rest of the country. It is necessary and important for
each community to develop its own artists and speak for itself."

All of the titles in the Calaca Press catalog are distinguished by a
confidence and vitality that emanates from the powerful sense of
awareness and self-determination of their authors. A welcome resistance
to the corporate cultural erasure of the so-called "Latin Explosion,"
these diverse works present intelligent, critical and original voices
that challenge, uplift the spirit and also entertain.

With all of this that has come in during the past four years, just
imagine what the future will bring!


========================================
Calaca Press, P.O. Box 620786, San Diego, Califas 92162
http://www.calacapress.com calacapress@home.com
========================================


Courtesy of AztecaNet Internet Services http://www.azteca.net
Azteca Web page http://www.mexica.net


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