Commentary: Conscience of a community activist

                                by Carlos J. Lice, amigos805.com
May 23rd 2011                                                                   
                                                                                
         

/ Amigos805.com

Recently I shocked a fellow worker and a few others by outing myself as a 
Latino community activist. An “Activist,” he said accusatorially. “You cannot 
be a Latino community activist and an advocate for other causes.”  Some people, 
he added, may object to a person who has a strong commitment to a particular 
group.

His response both surprised and offended me.  While there is a good point in 
the sense that there is a negative side to being obsessive about commitment, we 
cannot forget that both he and I are committed to making sure the Civil Rights 
legislation of 1964 benefits all Americans – regardless of the word preceding 
the hyphen that precedes the word American and that is used so often and 
divisively  in our diverse society.

I am reminded that while some may color the word “activist” with a subjective 
shade, activism is at the core of the evolutionary rather than revolutionary 
change in our society.

Let’s consider my personal hero: Martin Luther King Jr., the driving force 
leading activism in the struggle against bigotry and hate. He was a man of 
great wisdom and failings, a minister and orator and most definitively a man of 
God who refused to “leave things alone” in the United States of America and 
made it his life calling — and ultimately his martyrdom — to make sure people 
were not judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their 
character.

He had a dream and we aim to see that dream a reality and reach the promised 
land of equality that he showed us from the steps of the Lincoln Monument one 
hot summer afternoon in 1968.

Dr. King was criticized by some in the civil rights movement for his expression 
of support for the peace groups who opposed the war in Vietnam.  The cause, 
they said, was not the ending of fighting in Asia but rather civil rights at 
home.  Dr. King wisely pointed out that black men were fighting and dying while 
their rights were being denied at home and that made natural allies of the 
antiwar groups and the civil rights group, because all Americans have to march 
together for a common purpose whether it is in war or in peace.

Many more activists have followed that dream and made sure the dream not die or 
be subjugated to a single cause or group.

Richard Pimentel, the driving force behind the Americans with Disabilities Act 
is another. Building upon the foundation laid down by Dr. King, he is another 
activist who made sure people with disabilities are not left behind on the road 
to that dream.

Some of us labor in the dream of equality in our respective communities. We 
aim, respectfully and persistently, to make sure that equality is here for the 
35 million Latinos who are an integral part of this society. As UFW leader 
Cesar Chavez pointed out, “My people are of many colors” — hence his favorite 
church hymn was ‘de colores’ because the catchy tune means Latinos come in many 
colors, races and origins, reflecting the colorful tapestry of the American 
nation. And disability does not make an exception when it comes to our 
ethnicity and race.  Disability comes in many colors and languages.

I am a Latino with a disability. I cannot separate one part of me from the 
other because my disability is wrapped under my skin and speaks with the accent 
of a proud, hard-working immigrant who is not afraid to speak out and will 
not meekly accept the scraps on the table I have set the food of freedom and 
justice for all. When I see a wrong, just like MLK, Pimentel and Chavez, I will 
point it out and actively seek to peacefully change it so that those who follow 
me in the pursuit of the American dream are able to share equally at this 
table.  We do it just like Dr. King taught us, with peaceful persistent 
determination, and listening, like Pimentel did, to our music within.

That means that when I see  a half-hearted effort to reach this portion of the 
disability community that is close to my heart I will speak on their behalf 
with the same passion as I do for the others because my interest lies in 
justice for all.  The same way we reach out to any group, I want to see it done 
on an equally respectful level, tone and voice because that is the  best way we 
can be equal.

Our conversation must always be at the same level and tone. Let’s do it at the 
same level, tone and meaning. I do not take kindly to unwarranted patronizing 
or misguided paternalism. Conversation is, after all, a two-way street between 
equals.

A Latino community activist is no better and no worse than a disability 
activist or as the South Chicago community organizer Barak Obama was at the 
start of his political career that led to the White House.

My aim is that a Latino kid from Santa Paula will pick up my baton and wind up 
in the White House some day. I have been up in the mountains of Ventura County 
and have seen that same promised land Dr. King saw.

I may not see it, but I know a Latino kid from the barrio will get there — one 
whose father picked strawberries in Oxnard or whose grandfather was a bracero; 
a kid who may even have been derisively called “anchor baby” by some.

This is my dream.

— Carlos J. Licea has previously worked with such publications as the Ventura 
County Star’s Mi Estrella weekly newspaper, the Daily Press in Ashland, Wisc., 
El Nuevo Herald in Miami, La Prensa in Orlando, Fla., El Mundo in San Juan, 
Puerto Rico, The Orlando Sentinel, the Miami News, the Miami Herald and the 
Tampa Tribune. The views expressed by Carlos J. Licea do not necessarily 
represent the views of Amigos805.com

                                                                                
                                                                                
                                                        

Original Page: http://amigos805.com/?p=4770

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