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Radio Zapatista

Letter to Alexander Mora Venancio

San Cristóbal de las Casas, Chiapas. 10 December 2014.
By: Eugenia Gutiérrez
Radio Zapatista

Alexander_Mora

ALEXANDER

Allow me, young man, to address you with new words. Receive them with the freshness of your age. Welcome them without restraint. They are a brief greeting from someone who knows you without having met you, because she finds you in the memory of a wounded people, because she identifies you in the indignation of a planet united today in favor of its basic rights. They are, additionally, a request and a proposal.

You don’t know about me, so let me introduce myself. I am any Mexican mother of a student and teacher as determined and young as yourself, as enthusiastic about soccer as yourself. I am any teacher who is excited and nervous in front of fifty pairs of restless eyes like yours. I write to you from my privilege of someone who is fully alive in a graveyard nation. I sit down to write this message in a nation wounded by deadly governments. I write to you because your family and colleagues inform us that you have departed, that murderous hands have cut your life short. I hear in the voice of your father Ezequiel that you are already at the side of your mother Delia. I then read that your sisters and brothers weep. But, inexplicably, you are still here. As here as Chilango, as Julio César, as Daniel, as Gabriel and Jorge Alexis, as a woman, a man, and a sportsman who have presumably departed. Your words gather coherently in your colleagues’ facebooks and they inform us that you’re still here. As here as Andrés and Aldo, but no longer in so much pain. I watch your face looking at me from the raised arms in the avenues. I watch your face looking at me from the seats you occupy in auditoriums, conferences, and colloquiums. With you are forty-two friends who, with the force of silence, speak up one by one.

I want to ask you something, dear colleague. I write to you from my privilege as a professor who never slept on the floor to be able to study. You and I were born under the same sky, forged by the same history. For nineteen years, we walked without meeting on the same land, that of a tricolor banner that is losing its balance. On this land, with its majestic mountains and formerly crystal-clear waters, hundreds of thousands of other shattered lives pile up. You know it. Your colleagues know it too. Not for nothing did they choose to get an education in the schools where the poorest children study, those who can die incinerated. Not for nothing are all of you always remembering the fallen. But I write to you, Alexander, because an unexplainable fate chose you to shake up lethargies in this wounded Mexico. I want to ask you to help us sow in green and white all those disjointed lives in sierras that may once again become mothers, to refresh them in ancestral lakes, to pronounce them in immutable deserts, without screams. I dare ask you this because you’ve already met the fire, the air, and the water that will take you back to the land sowed by your father, because you move around nimbly in the stardust we once were, we are and will be again.

Finally, dear teacher, a proposal. I write it from my privilege as a woman who has not yet been raped, nor tortured, nor cut down in this region of femicides. I no longer speak to the youth; I speak to the man. I propose to you that we struggle together for the immediate reconstruction of our shredded rights. That you gracefully assume the role of inextinguishable light assigned to you by history, that you remain unscathed beside those who think you and feel you. I resort to your memory, Alexander, because remembering you reconstitutes us, strengthens us, because it rearranges our unhinged will and gives us new boundaries, because your friends call you “The Rock.” Let us gather around your presence so that the burdensome absences produced by this genocidal system may disappear.

Those are my request and my proposal. I bid you farewell without doing it and I prepare myself, with you, for whatever is to come. I hope my words do not bother you. Accept them now that we feel so determined to inhabit a country and a planet of well-deserved freedoms.

We do not forget, Alexander. Let us not forget.

With respect,

Eugenia.

Normalistas_en_la_UNACH

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Regeneración Radio

Hasta la victoria, Alexander.- Carta de los padres de Alexander Mora Venancio

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Espoir Chiapas

Caravana de Madres Centroamericanas llega a Chiapas

[showtime]

San Cristobal, Huixtla, Tapachula

Después de llegar al albergue para personas migrantes “la 72” en Tenosique y a la “casa del Caminante J’tatic Samuel Ruiz” de Palenque la décima caravana de Madres Centroamericanas visito a varios estados del País (Veracruz, Tabasco, Hidalgo, San Luis Potosí, Jalisco, DF, Oaxaca) llegara a San Cristóbal, Chiapas el día Martes 2 de diciembre.

Empezaran a las 18.30hrs, tras el recibimiento, por una ceremonia Maya con asociaciones y organizaciones Locales. El día 3 por la mañana tendrán reunión con el comité de familiares de migrantes desaparecidos, Junax Kotantik. El mismo día viajaran para Tapachula, para encontrar a las 7pm, organizaciones local y el Centro de Derechos Humanos Fray Matías de Córdoba. El día siguiente, el 4 visitaran la “casa parroquial de Huixtla” y al Padre Heyman Vazquez y migrantes en transito.

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Radio Zapatista

An almost universal story

The series “An almost universal story” includes 14 narrations from the book “Espejos. Una historia casi universal” by Eduardo Galeano (2008) in the voice of 19 readers from México, Cuba, El Salvador, Honduras, Venezuela, Colombia, Bolivia, Chile, Argentina, and Brasil. The right road is our destination…

(Descarga aquí)   Abuelos (Cuba; ”40 seg.)

(Descarga aquí)  El diablo es pobre (México, Honduras y El Salvador; 1 ”29 min.)

(Descarga aquí)  Guerras disfrazadas (Colombia; 1”30 min.)

(Descarga aquí)  Te muestro el mundo (Brasil; 1 min.)

(Descarga aquí)  Objetos Perdidos (Chile; 1 ”28 min.)

(Descarga aquí)   Fundación de la belleza (Venezuela; ”46 seg.)

(Descarga aquí)  Las edades de Ana (Colombia; 1”10 min.)

(Descarga aquí)  Alí (México; 1”07 min.)

(Descarga aquí)  Peligro en el camino (México; ”37 seg.)

(Descarga aquí)  Don Quijote (Argentina; 1 ”56 min.)

(Descarga aquí)  Continuidad del camino (Bolivia; ”46 seg.)

(Descarga aquí)  Fotos: el trono (México; 1 ”47 min.)

(Descarga aquí)  Breve historia de la civilización (México; 1 ”22 min.)

(Descarga aquí)  Caminos de alta fiesta (México; ”40 seg.)

Latinoamérica, Diciembre 2014

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Ya nos cansamos solidarity network

Online dialog between Ayotzinapa and universities and community organizations in the US and Mexico – Dec 2

Mexico Speaks: Ayotzinapa students and parents of the 43
2 Dec 2014 – 19:30 to 22:30 (Eastern Time)

WATCH LIVE
Español: http://www.ustream.tv/channel/yo5oymexico
English: http://www.ustream.tv/channel/c5m-usa


The Ayotzinapa students and parents of the 43 take the podium & speak up, in an international dialogue with university & community organizations in Mexico and the USA.

AGENDA:

1) 7:30 pm – 8:30 pm. Art Workshop with artists (looking for more artists)

Beginning of international call

2) 8:30 p.m. – 8:40 p.m. Introduction by Juan Carlos Ruiz

3) 8:40 p.m. – 8:50 p.m. Introduction of Ayotzinapa context and “Plan Mexico”

4) 8:50 – 9 pm. Introduction to the Ferguson Context and the militarization and police violence in the U.S. (10 min)

5) 9 pm – 9:30 pm. Voices of Mothers and Fathers of Ayotzinapa and Ferguson

6) 9:30 pm – 10:30 pm. Mics open to students and organizers of the actions on Dec. 3 – What does Solidarity look like? How do we organize December 3rd and beyond?

Tuiteen sus preguntas! | Tweet your questions!
Tuiteen sus comentarios! | Tweet your comments!
Español: http://www.ustream.tv/channel/yo5oymexico
English: http://www.ustream.tv/channel/c5m-usa

Brought to you by the YA NOS CANSAMOS SOLIDARITY NETWORK
Cover art by Jess X. Chen www.jessxchen.com #justseeds #illustration #MX43

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#UStired2

The US mobilizes for Ayoltzinapa – 3 Dec 2014

43 cities, 43 students
In the United States We’re Tired Too

http://ustired2.com

This December 3, 2014, more than 43 cities in the US will mobilize in solidarity with the 43 students dissappeared and 3 murdered from the Escuela Normal Rural de Ayotzinapa. The mobilization aims not only at expressing support and solidarity with the students from Ayotzinapa and their families and denouncing the Mexican state’s responsibility. The goal is also to demand the US government to stop the Plan Mexico or Merida Initiative, which has supplied billions of dollars in military and political support to Mexico’s security forces. For more information, visit www.ustired2.com and in facebook, twitter, instagram, and tumblr; using and followint the hashtag #UStired2.

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Agencia SubVersiones

Liberación y declaración de Sandino Bucio y su madre / 29 nov 2014

By: Agencia SubVersiones


Video por Cráter Invertido

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Asamblea General de Posgrado UNAM

Estudiantes del Posgrado UNAM responden a Peña Nieto #YaMeCansé


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Eugenia Gutiérrez

Mujeres y violencia en México. Numeralia desde un país en guerra.

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EZLN - CNI

Program of the First World Festival of Resistance and Rebellion against Capitalism

First World Festival of Resistance and Rebellion Against Capitalism

General Program

Inauguration: San Francisco Xochicuautla, Municipality of Lerma, Mexico State

Saturday December 20, 2014:

  • 4pm: Registration beings; arrival of delegates

Sunday December 21, 2014:

  • 8am: Breakfast, registration continues
  • 1-2pm: Lunch
  • 2-4pm: Inaugural Event for the First World Festival of Resistance and Rebellion Against Capitalism
  • 4-9pm: Cultural Event.

Note:

  • 6pm: Delegates depart for Amilcingo
  • 9pm: Arrival to Amilcingo and delegate registration begins at this Sharing site.

(Continuar leyendo…)

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