Thursday, June 5, 2008

A Simple Message: Leave the Puerto Rican Flag Alone

A Simple Message: Leave the Puerto Rican Flag Alone



----------------- Bulletin Message -----------------
From: taino ray
Date: Jun 5, 2008 7:53 AM


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Fellow Boricuas

Its Puerto Rican Day Parade time again.. I know I shouldn't have to say this but I will anyway, I must.





Wave your flag with pride this weekend

Mount it on a flagpole, present it with dignity

Show the world our BORICUA PRIDE


Remember always where you come from & pass it on to your children

Be Boricua always ( don't forget after the parade is over)

NOVEMBER is Puerto Rican Heritage Month ( you can look it up)

Please don't desecrate our flag.





Don't drape on the hood of your car because it gets dirty from your cars emissions.



( a dirty, oily flag is not cool)

Men stop wearing it as skirts or capes, (Keep it real!!!! )

Women stop wearing it as a Bra.



(keep it real!!!)

Don't buy any flags with Roosters, Coquis, Bikini Women etc
(You got to be kidding me right)

IF WE DON'T RESPECT OUR FLAG NO ONE ELSE WILL!!!!!

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We honor our Taino Hands, because they worked
We honor our Spanish hands, because they worked
We honor our African hands, because they worked

All of those hands make us FAMILY
All of those hands make us

BORICUAS!!!!

A Simple Message: Leave the Flag Alone




By DAVID GONZALEZ
Published: May 31, 2005
Jaran Manzanet is not a happy man these days. That is never a good thing since he is a big man with rock-hard hands and a steely attitude, traits that served him well over four decades in the ring as both a boxer and trainer.



So who is foolish enough to darken his mood?

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Librado Romero/The New York Times
Jaran Manzanet has set out to stop people from embellishing the Puerto Rican flag, whether with Tito Puente or a tree frog.






Librado Romero/The New York Times
Caps with faces in front of the flag are a gray area, Mr. Manzanet says; they're not exactly flags, but are not quite respectful. Still, he must pick his battles.




Tito Puente, for starters. Plus fighting cocks, conga drums, palm trees, tree frogs and 70 other characters that by his count are emblazoned on those Puerto Rican flags that flutter everywhere as the Puerto Rican Day Parade, on June 12, approaches. All of them - even the one with the boxer Félix "Tito" Trinidad - are not some happy combination of national symbols, Mr. Manzanet said, but a desecration of the island's flag.





As his own business card declares, Mr. Manzanet is the Bronx's own Defender of the Puerto Rican Flag - a self-imposed title that he nonetheless carries like a champ. A poster taped to the side of his car urges people not to denigrate the flag. He has led protests outside garment district stores that sell all sorts of flag trinkets. He even goes as far as to hand out simple, unadorned flags to people he sees on the street who might be waving an offending banner.





"In our community there is a lot of ignorance, and we have to awaken them," he said, sitting inside a clubhouse on East 142nd Street in Mott Haven. "People from other countries tell me, they always see the Puerto Ricans with the flag. I know we're proud.



But why do we need to buy these flags with drawings on them?"

He said he had first been troubled by the misuse of the flag in the ring, when the Puerto Rican flag was turned into boxing trunks. Then came the flags people waved at parades or stuck in their windows, the ones with cartoon characters. Since then, he has amassed a collection that includes all sorts of characters, from the ubiquitous homeboy to one in which a naked woman holding two pistols stands against the flag.





Two years ago, he wrote to every mayor, representative and senator in Puerto Rico, urging them to support his campaign to uphold the honor of the flag. Only two replied. Last month, he telephoned the city's Puerto Rican politicians to try to enlist their support for a protest outside a store that sold the offensive flags. Only one sent a representative.





Nonetheless, Mr. Manzanet and a few supporters protested on April 21 outside Boricua City, a store on West 29th Street in Manhattan that is among the country's biggest suppliers of Puerto Rican flags, T-shirts, caps and jewelry. Ricky Perez, a manager at the store, told the group that the flags with cartoon characters on them were leftover inventory that would no longer be sold. Mr. Manzanet was pleased.





"He said he was going to get rid of it," Mr. Manzanet said. "As long as the flag has nothing on it, that's good.



"

Inside Boricua City - which despite its Puerto Rican name is owned by a Korean businessman - the place was jammed with boxes upon boxes of Latin American flags and caps, almost all of which are made in Taiwan or China.





Although other flags are sold at the store, Puerto Rican items are the most popular, said Kevin Young, who said he was "a backup person" at the store. He said the Puerto Rican customers were different from other Latin Americans.





"They're not picky," he said. "When they purchase, it's easy. They do not complain. It's easy to do a sale.



"

Above him, beach towels and flags covered the ceiling. One of them featured three thong-clad women facing the Puerto Rican flag, a tableau whose patriotic tenor Mr. Manzanet failed to appreciate.





"That's not a flag," Mr. Young insisted. "That's a towel.



"

There were also various caps in which Puerto Rican icons like Tito Puente appeared against a backdrop of the flag.





"Tito, the flag is behind him," Mr. Perez said. "All the protesters said was you should not put anything on the flag. We try to accommodate everybody.



"

Still, Mr. Manzanet is skeptical about the caps.





"If he wants us to stop something like that, good luck," Mr. Perez said. "It's floating. It's a 3-D illusion. Anything with 3-D is the money.



"
To some extent, Mr. Perez wondered why all the fuss over a flag that he said was not the island's true colors. He personally prefers the nationalist flag that flew over Lares, P.R., during a 19th-century rebellion against Spanish rule. He also sells that flag, which he has tucked into a place of honor in a corner of the store.





"That's our flag for real," Mr. Perez said, pointing to it. "The nationalist flag. Notice, it's first in line and there is nothing on it.



"

The fight against Spanish rule led to the current flag, which was designed in 1895 by exiles living in New York City. Some think its popularity in New York speaks to a national identity that refuses to vanish even if the island is not a sovereign state.





"The historical situation of Puerto Ricans, whether on the island or in the diaspora, is they are without a nation in terms of traditional definitions," said Arlene Davila, an associate professor of American studies at New York University. "So culture becomes a pivotal space to claim that, and cultural symbols become even more politically loaded.



"

Juan Flores, a professor of Puerto Rican studies at Hunter College, has mixed feelings about the flags.





"I'm glad this national culture is being preserved and not going away," he said. "But at the same time I always hated flag wavers. The symbol becomes more important than what Puerto Rican identity is about.



"

Making sure that identity is declared with an unadorned flag will continue to be Mr. Manzanet's mission. A few days ago, he was standing by his car when Jose Lanausse, an elevator repairman, saw the poster urging people to boycott the altered flags.





"I understand his reasoning," Mr. Lanausse said. "It takes the glory out of the flag. When I was younger, it was only the flag. Now you go to the Puerto Rican Day Parade and you see all these other things on them.



"

Mr. Manzanet asked Mr. Lanausse where he was from. New York, he said, but his parents were from Salinas, P.R . Mr. Manzanet shouted across the street to his friend Angel Alvarado, who was also from that town. Mr. Alvarado came over.





"Tell him your name and where your family is from," he said to Mr. Lanausse.





The young man complied. Within seconds, Mr. Alvarado was reeling off names.





"I know a Jorge, Franklin and Jenny Lanausse," Mr. Alvarado said. "She was a teacher and a very elegant woman. The Lanausses were known.



"

The young man seemed stunned.





"I am from the most popular neighborhood in Salinas," Mr. Alvarado explained. "Next to the cemetery. If you did not visit when you were alive, you would pass by when you were dead.



"

Ms. Manzanet beamed at how this chance encounter over a flag led to someone learning some long-lost family lore. That was why he was determined to continue his defense of the flag, vowing to go to this year's parade with friends to hand out fliers.

3 comments:

José M. López Sierra said...

Why does Puerto Rico have a higher voter turnout than USA?
Puerto Ricans have a voter turnout of about 80%. The United States (US) citizens have a voter turnout of about 50%. What accounts for this 30 % disparity? Could it be that Puerto Rican believe in democracy more than US mainland citizens?
Puerto Rico is a colony of the United States since 1898. Since that time, Puerto Ricans who have wanted to decolonize their country have been either assassinated or imprisoned. Many Puerto Ricans are terrified of independence for Puerto Rico as a result of 116 years of repression.
Since colonialism is always for exploitation, there are no opportunities in Puerto Rico for Puerto Ricans. That is why there are now more Puerto Ricans out, than in Puerto Rico. Therefore, Puerto Ricans are desperate to find a political solution to our eternal colonialism!
Most Puerto Ricans believe that decolonization can be achieved through the electoral process. But the electoral process is ultimately under the control of the government of the United States. Since the US government has ignored 33 United Nations resolutions asking it to immediately decolonize Puerto Rico, and it has maintained incarcerated Puerto Rico political prisoner Oscar López Rivera for 33 years despite worldwide support to free him, there should be no doubt that the US government will never allow decolonization via the electoral process. If it were possible to do it that way, we would not have it!
The better way to decolonize is for that 80% of the Puerto Rico voter turnout to instead protest in the streets to demand our inalienable right to self-determination and independence, and insist that the UN do the decolonization in conformity to international law. After all, colonialism is within the jurisdiction of international law and never under national law. That is why it is a crime against humanity to have a colony under international law, but not so under US law.
José M López Sierra
www.TodosUnidosDescolonizarPR.blogspot.com

José M. López Sierra said...

The Second Oscar – Mandela March in New York City 2015

We will be having our 2nd Oscar – Mandela Protest March on Monday, June 22, 2015. We will start marching peacefully at 9 AM from Hunter College on East 68th Street and Lexington Avenue, to East 43rd Street and Lexington Avenue. We will then go East (turning left) to end up at the Ralph Bunche Park on First Avenue (across from the United Nations).

We will be at the park until 5 PM. We will be giving out flyers and talking to people about who Puerto Rican political prisoner Oscar López Rivera is. We will also be educating the public about Puerto Rico’s colonial relationship with the government of the United States (US).

Most people don’t know that every year, usually on the Monday after Fathers’ Day, the United Nations holds its hearing about the decolonization of Puerto Rico. The petitioners will usually join our protest after this meeting.

The UN determined in 1960 that colonialism is a crime against humanity. Since then, the UN has issued 33 resolutions asking for the US government to immediately decolonize Puerto Rico. The US government has ignored these resolutions. What kind of democracy is that?

The US government tries to keep these hearings a secret. What we are trying to do is to get them out of the closet. The UN is in its 3rd decade trying to make the world colony-free. Please help us!

Most people also don’t know that the United States government takes out 14 times more money than what it invests in Puerto Rico. But, that is what colonies are for!

This savage exploitation impedes Puerto Rico’s ability to provide opportunities for Puerto Ricans in Puerto Rico. That is why there are now more Puerto Ricans living away from Puerto Rico than in their homeland.

Oscar López Rivera has been incarcerated for 34 years for his struggle to decolonize Puerto Rico. Since colonialism is an international crime, international law gives Oscar the right to use whatever means necessary to decolonize his homeland. Nelson Mandela was incarcerated for 27 years for doing the same thing as Oscar. This is why we say, Oscar López Rivera is our Nelson Mandela!

United Partners for Puerto Rico Decolonization invites the public to be part of the tsunami of people that will be necessary to make the US government comply with the UN resolutions. These annual protests in Puerto Rico and at the UN are absolutely necessary, because, those who maintain colonies, don’t believe in justice for all!

José M López Sierra
787-429-1981
www.TodosUnidosDescolonizarPR.blogspot.com

José M. López Sierra said...

Why the US lies to the world about Puerto Rico?
The governor of Puerto Rico Alejandro Garcia Padilla recently wrote a letter to the secretary general of the United Nations (UN) Ban Ki-moon about the White House’s position regarding the Puerto Rico v. Sánchez Valle case where it said that Puerto Rico is a colony of the United States (US). The governor said in his letter that either the US lied to the UN in 1953, or it is lying now.
In 1953, the US told the UN that Puerto Rico had obtained self-government in 1952 through its new government called the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico. The US petitioned the UN to remove Puerto Rico from its list of colonies. Since then, Puerto Rico does not appear in the UN’s list of colonies.
In 2008, the then governor of Puerto Rico Anibal Acevedo Vila spoke before the UN’s annual hearing on Puerto Rico decolonization, because he was upset about President Bush’s report on Puerto Rico. The report said that the US government could sell Puerto Rico to any country it wants, if it desires. He also asked the UN the same question. Either the US lied to the UN in 1953, or it is lying in President’s Bush’s report. Still, the US lies some more!
Our Puerto Rican political prisoner Oscar López Rivera has been in prison for 34 years for “seditious conspiracy to overthrow the US government in Puerto Rico”. This is yet another lie!
This law was made during the US Civil War to make it a crime for the South to secede from the Union. The law is for first class US citizens. After the war, it was never used again until it was used against Puerto Ricans who fought for Puerto Rico independence.
The United States invaded Puerto Rico militarily in 1898. After the October 30th, 1950 Nationalist’s Insurrection that focused the world’s attention to the fact that Puerto Rico was a colony of the United States, the US decided to create another lie to mask that fact. The Commonwealth of Puerto Rico was that lie.
Despite the fact that Oscar is the one in jail, it is the US government that is the real criminal. The US is violating the 1960 international law (UN Resolution 1514 XV) which prohibits colonialism, because it is a threat to world peace. In fact, colonialism is considered by the international community as a crime against humanity. President Bush asked, why do people hate us? People do because the US government goes around committing crimes against humanity all over the world! This is also why the world believes that the US government is the biggest threat to world peace! The fact of the matter is that Oscar has the right under this law to use any means necessary to decolonize Puerto Rico.
The UN in 34 resolutions has asked the US to immediately decolonize Puerto Rico. Since it refuses, in order to perpetuate its illegal relationship, it promotes plebiscites, supposedly so that Puerto Ricans could decide what they want. This is, once again, another lie. It doesn’t matter what Puerto Ricans want. Colonialism is illegal, and Puerto Rico must be decolonized. Once she is, Puerto Rico could do what she wants.
The US government lies, because it wants to keep Puerto Rico as its colony forever. It’s time that we realize this, so that we could protest peacefully and permanently for Puerto Rico decolonization. The protests are necessary, because those who lie to keep their colonies don’t believe in JUSTICE FOR ALL! www.TodosUnidosDescolonizarPR.blogspot.com