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    chicano history

    Explore " chicano history" with insightful episodes like "Hispanic Heritage Month: Why I Don't Like It", "In the Beer Garden with David Favela", ""Once You Know, You Can't Stop": Victoria Cervantes' Lifelong Commitment to Social Justice.", "The History of Cinco De Mayo and How the celebration came to the US" and "July 29th, Monday | Tocqueville admires America" from podcasts like ""Growing with Sol", "Inhabit", "Metropolis Rising Podcast", "That Wasn't In My Textbook" and "Well-Bred & Well-Brewed"" and more!

    Episodes (5)

    Hispanic Heritage Month: Why I Don't Like It

    In the Beer Garden with David Favela

    In the Beer Garden with David Favela

    Get to know David Favela on his own terms on his own turf—in the beer garden of Border X Brewing in Barrio Logan, San Diego. In this extended interview, the Chicano CEO and brewery owner shares his backstory in the technology industry, his hot takes on culture and sustainable development, and why his community needs a Chicano 2.0. Plus, meet Yanel de Angel, managing director of Perkins&Will’s Boston studio and the genius behind ResilientSEE, a collaborative initiative to restore and sustain communities throughout her first home, Puerto Rico.

    Click here for the show notes.

    Inhabit is a a member of the SURROUND Podcast Network.

    "Once You Know, You Can't Stop": Victoria Cervantes' Lifelong Commitment to Social Justice.

    "Once You Know, You Can't Stop":  Victoria Cervantes' Lifelong Commitment to Social Justice.

    In this episode of Metropolis Rising, our guest is Victoria Cervantes.  Vicki is a lifelong activist who first became politicized in high school in the mid-to-late-1960s during the social upheaval of the Vietnam era's civil rights and anti-war movements.  Vicki has been a community and labor activist for decades in Chicago's Mexican community, where she has raised her family.  After the military coup in Honduras in June 2009, Vicki helped to found the Honduras Solidarity Network and serves as the network's North American coordinator.  She has traveled regularly to Honduras, where she spends time in the campesino and indigenous communities and the broader resistance movement, and works as a human rights observer. 

    Host  Nicholas De Genova
    Producer & Editor  Magdalena Rodriguez

    The History of Cinco De Mayo and How the celebration came to the US

    The History of Cinco De Mayo and How the celebration came to the US

    Whether or not you plan on drinking margaritas today, (no judgement) let’s uncover the the true history of Cinco De Mayo. So we’re not one of the people getting sippin and eating today with no context, thinking today is Mexican Independence Day! 

    In this episode, we discuss:

    • What happened on this day in history
    • One of the most common misconceptions about this day
    • If and how they celebrate Cinco De Mayo in Mexico
    • How and why Cinco De Mayo became such a big deal in America

    Available now, where ever you listen to podcast. 

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    EPISODE CREDITS:
    Research and scripted by host Latoya Coleman (@ToyaFromHarlem).
    Edited and Mixed by Julius Shepard-Morgan
    Music Licensed through Epidemic Sound

    July 29th, Monday | Tocqueville admires America

    July 29th, Monday | Tocqueville admires America

    The date is July 29th, Monday, and today I’m coming to you from Portland, Oregon.

    Today is the birthday of Alexis de Tocqueville, French politician and historian

    Born in 1805 in France, Tocqueville’s lasting mark in history is his work De la démocratie en Amerique or Democracy in America

    A typical aristocratic upbringing saw Tocqueville seamlessly enter politics. When Tocqueville was 26, the French Monarchy sent him and a partner to America. They were to study the American prisons and prison systems and report back. Tocqueville returned after nine months in North America and, three years later, published an account of his travels. Democracy in Ameri ca published in 1835 is not what the Monarchy had asked for, but it is undoubtably a more interesting read. 

    Tocqueville did pursue a line of inquiry into American prisons, but he was much more impressed with cultural differences between America and Europe. Tocqueville found that while Europe clung to the vestiges of an idle aristocracy, American democracy championed and rewarded hard work. He noted that hard work in Europe was often looked down upon (for certainly if you were working so hard you must be poor). But Tocqueville noted a staunch individualism in America meant that men of all classes enjoyed a sense of dignity. The common man was lauded for dogged work ethic and was not afraid to defy elites or nay-sayers.

    And today is the birthday of Maria Latigo Hernandez, Mexican-American activist. 

    Born in 1896, just across the border in Mexico, Maria Latigo was a schoolteacher in her young teens. At 18 she fell in love with Pedro Hernandez from Texas. She moved to Texas to be with him and they were married not long after. 

    Maria Latigo Hernandez was no dunce. Although her formal education was limited to small-town schools, her father was a professor. There’s no doubt he valued education and saw to it that his daughter was just as quick and intelligent as he was. 

    She became keenly aware of the rife discrimination that Mexican Americans and African Americans faced in Texas. She and her husband got involved in politics when the last of her ten children were still babes. She became a force to be reckoned with and fought her whole life for civil rights. 

    She believed strongly in the role of the mother in society. She argued in a 1945 essay that mothers (or the stay-at-home parent) were of the utmost importance to society as they wielded considerable influence over the next generation during their formative years. 

    In 1968 at the age of 72, she testified to the United States Commission on Civil Rights that increased education for all children and adults was necessary in order to rewrite “deformed historical narrations.” She continued her activism until her death at age 99 and was known as an “untiring fighter.”

     

    I Never Saw That Land Before

    Edward Thomas

     

    I never saw that land before, 

    And now can never see it again; 

    Yet, as if by acquaintance hoar 

    Endeared, by gladness and by pain, 

    Great was the affection that I bore 

     

    To the valley and the river small, 

    The cattle, the grass, the bare ash trees, 

    The chickens from the farmsteads, all 

    Elm-hidden, and the tributaries

    Descending at equal interval; 

     

    The blackthorns down along the brook 

    With wounds yellow as crocuses 

    Where yesterday the labourer's hook 

    Had sliced them cleanly; and the breeze 

    That hinted all and nothing spoke. 

     

    I neither expected anything

    Nor yet remembered: but some goal 

    I touched then; and if I could sing 

    What would not even whisper my soul 

    As I went on my journeying, 

     

    I should use, as the trees and birds did, 

    A language not to be betrayed;

    And what was hid should still be hid 

    Excepting from those like me made 

    Who answer when such whispers bid.

     

    Thank you for listening. I’m your host, Virginia Combs, wishing you a good morning, a better day, and a lovely evening.