Lánzate 2024

Lánzate 2024

Come to the political and cultural festival for Latinx changemakers who are building a future rooted in justice, liberation, and el Buenvivir.

Indigenous Self-Care Practices for Organizers

There’s no denying that we are in the midst of a historical time where social, political, and economic trends are changing. Folks are organizing their communities, jumping full force into defending freedoms and fighting for liberation. It’s important in these times to not drift from ourselves; our bodily and spiritual needs.

As an Afro-Peruana, I grew up around my abuelas conducting “rituals.” When I moved to the U.S., I heard these rituals described as supersticious at best, and demonic at worst, especially in comparison to mainstream Christianity. Years later, I came to find spiritual fulfillment as I followed the path of my ancestors, which has helped center my intentions in the movement.

I chatted with Francisca Porchas, a Mijente member, an organizer with Puente Human Rights Movement, and an Ifa Practitioner. Francisca Porchas is well-versed on the topic of healing and finding our spiritual ground. Francisca is from Mexico and resides in Arizona. In speaking to her, she offered some advice on returning to our roots to find restoration.

Going Back: The How

How do I return to a tradition that never felt mine? Francisca said she began with the basics, by honoring her ancestors. “Our ancestors need us and we need them,” she said. “We are a result of their struggle.” Francisca began with acknowledging the trauma her ancestors survived, both personal and from colonization. Her first step was to set up an ancestor altar. Our ancestors don’t just include blood relatives or immediate family–we can also call on the ancestors of the movement. Francisca has an image of Malcolm X on her altar.

Setting up an altar:

The Incas used altars to honor Mother Earth or Pachamama, their guides, helpers and allies. Find a private area in your home–it can be small, even as small as a bedside table. Clear the area of clutter, add a cloth that is beautiful or sacred to you. Add a statuette, flower, or crystal representing the Spirit. Add photos, totems, candles, and art work. Healing herbs can be lit during prayer.

Prayers:

Some of us call it prayer, others meditation, but all must be approached with intention. Francisca Porchas published a guide called, “Morning prayers to the universe, your ancestors, your guiding spirits.” It includes:
“I give praise to the universe
I give praise to mother earth
I give praise to all of nature and its beings
I give praise to all my guiding spirits

I give praise to my ancestors
I give praise to all that came before me in this struggle
I give praise to my elders
I give praise to all those who have cared for me, protected me, guided me and loved me.”

Releasing self-depreciation energy:

Since colonization, we have been told that we are less than. Those sentiments have been echoed in the modern sociopolitical climate we’re facing, especially under the new administration. Burn out and a feeling of inadequacy can quickly bring down a community continually fighting for its protection and rights. In Ayahuasca traditions, ritual baths are a communicating method between people and the plantas maestras or Spirit of the plants. The goal of these baths is to bring coolness and clarity and are often performed by shamans or curanderos. At home, they can be performed with the intention of washing away the negativity we have internalized.

Other tips:

– Use limes and leave out to dry to capture negative energies.
– Leave pomegranates out to dry to bring you spiritual and emotional prosperity and fertility.
– Place (uncooked) rice in a container on altar as a thanks to Pachamama for the crops.
– Yellow flowers in the home invite brighter energies.
– Aloe Vera plants are believed to bring protection to our homes, and double for medicinal use.

In our conversation, Francisca and I found a common theme: Our elders and ancestors are the guides we turned to when we felt our spirit calling for growth. Despite the differences in our practices, the similarities far outnumbered them. There are elders in our communities that can lead us in our spiritual practices as well, and whom will teach us much more than Google search or a book could.

For our ancestors, our communities, and our own liberation.

Veralucia Mendoza is a queer, Afro-Peruvian immigrant residing in the Midwest. Aries, organizer, survivor, lover of books + wisdom. Follow her on IG @cala_verita.

Queer Mapuche Visual Artist: Sebastían Calfuqueo

Sebastían Calfuqeo is a young visual artist from Santiago, Chile with a degree in Fine Arts from la Universidad de Chile–an institution that he’s been known to critique as both colonialist and patriarchal. Calfuqeo’s work often explores the intersections of queerness, gender, race, and economic class.

Check out this video piece called ‘You Will Never be a Weye’ which talks about ways that colonization and homophobia have and continue to erase the experiences and stories of the Machi Weye people within Mapuche communities. Machi Weyes are gender nonconforming Mapuche people who are often thought of as spiritual leaders and healers in their communities. The video is subtitled in English.

Salem Acuña is a queer latinx immigrant originally from Santiago, Chile and currently based in Washington, DC. He’s a Leo sun sign who loves to play music, go dancing and kick it with his friends and family as much as possible.  Follow him at @SalemAcu89.

New Toolkit gives Workers Tools to Fight against Raids and Audits

Mijente Members and Labor Leaders at AFL CIO, Neidi Dominguez and Rosa Lozano along with other organizers and leaders just dropped “We Will Resist and Defend,” a powerful toolkit for organizers and advocates on workplace raids and audits.

In the age of the 45 Regime, there is a high expectation that more aggressive workplace enforcement actions and ICE raids take place against migrant workers. Therefore, it is crucial that communities are able to fight back and be able to defend themselves if necessary. 

“This toolkit is important because it has in one place ready-made tools for organizers to jump into action to prepare and fight back workplace raids and audits that undermine worker rights.

The toolkit explains the processes and players involved in worksite enforcements, and provides resources and guidance on how to prepare for and respond to a raid or audit. Some topics covered are:

  • What Are the Steps in an I-9 Audit?
  • What Happens if an I-9 Audit Occurs While Workers are Exercising Their Rights?
  • Guidance on the I-9 Process for Organizers and Advocates
  • Frequently Asked Questions About Workplace Raids
  • Preparing for a Possible Workplace Raid
  • Guidance on Social Security Administration “No-Match” Letters
  • Sample Union Contract Language on Immigration Protections
  • Know Your Rights Palm Card – Multiple languages including Spanish

“The future of the labor movement depends on our ability to organize and defend all workers, especially those who face a multitude of attacks through racism, sexism, or xenophobia.”

This toolkit is important because it has in one place ready-made tools for organizers to jump into action to prepare and fight back workplace raids and audits that undermine worker rights,” said, Mijente member and Director of Worker Center Partnerships at AFL-CIO,  Neidi Dominguez. “The AFL-CIO has the largest reach to the labor movement as it is a federation of 56 different unions and represents 12.5 million members so to have this tool be launched here is a big deal. This tool was made by people of color for people of color in an institution that is still lead by mostly white men.

Building collective power and community-centered defense plans is important for movements of resistance.

For Rosa Lozano, “The future of the labor movement depends on our ability to organize and defend all workers, especially those who face a multitude of attacks through racism, sexism, or xenophobia. Fully uniting under this current political environment will be the only way to resist and grow power.”

To download the public version of the toolkit click here. Request the full version of the toolkit here.

Neidi and Rosa made it happen with a team of Gloria Alvarado, Tamara Brummer, Chloe Osmer, Kelly Rodriguez, Matthew Ginsburg, Shannon Lederer and Robin Foster along with contributions from other organizations, check them out in the special thanks section.

Mario Gil Jr. is a second generation Mexican-American from Brooklyn, NY. In his spare time, he writes as a meditation practice, experiments with photography, and walks puppies in New York City. Follow him @gilmario_jr.

10 POWERFUL QUOTES FROM BELL HOOKS’ “ALL ABOUT LOVE”

I feel our nation’s turning away from love…moving into a wilderness of spirit so intense we may never find our way home again. I write of love to bear witness both to the danger in this movement, and to call for a return to love

Bell Hooks (2000)

TO GROUND OURSELVES IN LOVE’S WISDOM…

…is anything but easy. Love takes constant reflection and practice. Lucky for us, Black feminist and activist bell hooks (born Gloria Jean Watkins) writes about how to do just that in All About Love: New Visions– a must-read for feminists, lovers, social justice practitioners, and humankind, period.

It’s one of those books you refer back to for the rest of your life. Because love is necessary work and it is in love that we learn to resist, thrive, and lead under any circumstances.

Use these 10 handpicked quotes from the book’s first few chapters as reminders to nurture and celebrate our gente’s beauty, joy, and power. To ground your heart and body in times of stress and anxiety. To help each other return to love in action…

1.”WE YEARN TO END THE LOVELESSNESS”

Image: Steve Pavey. Defy, Defend, and Expand Sanctuary convening in Philadelphia

“To open our hearts more fully to love’s power and grace we must dare to acknowledge how little we know of love in both theory and practice…We yearn to to end the lovelessness that is so pervasive in our society. This book tells us how to return to love.”

2. “WE DO NOT HAVE TO LOVE. WE CHOOSE TO LOVE.”

Image: Steve Peace. Moral Monday March with Freedom Side in North Carolina

“Will also implies choice. We do not have to love. We choose to love…When we understand love as the will to nurture our own and another’s spiritual growth, it becomes clear that we cannot claim to love if we are hurtful and abusive. Love and abuse cannot coexist.”

3. “THERE CAN BE NO LOVE WITHOUT JUSTICE”

Image: Steve Pavey. Defy, Defend, and Expand Sanctuary convening

“There can be no love without justice…abuse and neglect negate love. Care and affirmation, the opposite of abuse and humiliation, are the foundation of love. It is a testimony to the failure of loving practice that abuse is happening in the first place.”

4. “THE HEART OF JUSTICE IS TRUTHTELLING”

Image: Diego Nacho. Mijente Lánzate 2016, Puerto Rico

“The heart of justice is truth telling, seeing ourselves and the world the way it is rather than the way we want it to be. More than ever before we, as a society, need to renew a commitment to truth telling.”

5. “WHEN WE LOVE WE CAN LET OUR HEARTS SPEAK”

Image: Diego Nacho. Mijente Lánzate 2016, Puerto Rico

“Redeemed and restored, love returns us to the promise of everlasting life. When we love we can let our hearts speak.”

6. “WHEN WE CAN SEE OURSELVES AS WE TRULY ARE AND ACCEPT OURSELVES, WE BUILD THE NECESSARY FOUNDATION FOR SELF-LOVE”

Image: Diego Nacho. Mijente Lánzate 2016, Puerto Rico

“When we can see ourselves as we truly are and accept ourselves, we build the necessary foundation for self-love…whether we learn how to love ourselves and others will depend on the presence of a loving environment. Self love cannot flourish in isolation.

7. “THE LIGHT OF LOVE IS ALWAYS IN US”

Image: Diego Nacho. Mijente Lánzate 2016, Puerto Rico

“Do not expect to receive the love from someone else you do not give to yourself…The light of love is always in us, no matter how cold the flame. It is always present, waiting for the spark to ignite, waiting for the heart to awaken.”

8. “RENEWAL IS AN ACT OF SELF-LOVE”

Image: Diego Nacho. Mijente Lánzate 2016, Puerto Rico

“When we work with love we renew the spirit; that renewal is an act of self-love, it nurtures our growth. It’s not what you do but how you do it.”

9. “LOVE IS AN ACT OF WILL, BOTH AN INTENTION AND AN ACTION”

Image: Dianne Ovalle. Civil Disobedience, Phoenix

“Love as ‘the will to extend one’s self for the the purpose of nurturing one’s own or another’s spiritual growth.’ Love is as love does. Love is an act of will–namely, both an intention and an action.”

10. “WE STILL BELIEVE IN LOVE’S PROMISE”

Image: Diego Nacho. Mijente Lánzate 2016, Puerto Rico

“Everywhere we learn that love is important, and yet we are bombarded by its failure….This bleak picture in no way alters the nature of our longing. We still hope that love will prevail. We still believe in love’s promise.”

…REMEMBER, THIS IS JUST A TASTE!

Whether you borrow a copy, check one out from the library, or get your own– read the whole book to learn about the ethics of love and put love into practice. Then pass it forward.