Orange County in Business Week
“What you won’t see on fantasy TV shows: a cratered real estate industry, few jobs, foreclosed homes, and empty office space.” The Other Orange County
Los Lobos de Yorba Linda, California
Our friend Gustavo Arellano has a great article in the Orange County Weekly about the quintessetnial East Los Angeles bands migration to Richard Nixon’s hometown of Yorba Linda.
Arellano and Los Lobos paint a nice little sketch of Orange County:
Perez has enjoyed his 16 years in Orange County, and he has experienced all of its insanity, from immaculate Laguna Niguel (”They must have elves who come out at night with toothbrushes or something”) to Laguna Beach gentrification (”The billionaires are moving out the millionaires”) to SanTana (”I just about expected chickens to come crossing the street”). And since this is an Orange County-centric piece, we’ll end it with Louie’s restaurant picks: Thai Brothers in Laguna Beach, Irvine’s Wheel of Life and El Farolito in Placentia. But don’t bother with any restaurants in Yorba Linda, Perez says: “Food-wise, it’s a wasteland.”
The observation about Yorba Linda being a food wasteland is not entirely accurate. I recommend Wing’s Chinese on Yorba Linda Boulevard and Lakeview.
Wing’s Restaurant
18553 Yorba Linda Blvd , Yorba Linda 92886-4135
714-777-2453
Happy New Year
So here we are heading into 2008.
Within the next three months we may have both the Democratic and Republican nominations locked up – and perhaps a clearer vision of what type of immigration policy we can expect from the next Administration.
When we started Orange County Latino, way back in October, 2001 – we had only a vague notion of how 9/11 was going to impact the immigration reform that George W. Bush and Vicente Fox signaled they were working on in the summer of ‘01.
Since then we’ve seen a backlash in the United States against globalization, immigration – making it politically impossible to find a real answer to try to manage the flood of immigrants from Mexico and beyond.
And from what the candidates have said so far – it seems that will continue to be the case.
We’ll watch this issue – and share any insights gleaned on this website.
Happy New Year.
Latino Facts
These are out of date and I do not have the source. But think about the social, economic and political implications of the following facts about Latinos:
1. ½ total population growth in US from 2003 to 2004
2. 85% speak some Spanish at home and will continue to do so
3. From 1990 to 2000 the number of Latinos who speak Spanish at home grew 61% while the Hispanic population grew 58%
4. Spending is project to more than double over the next 10 years, 1.5 trillion in 2015
5. Consumer spending for 2005 was estimated to be 715 billion
6. Households spend more on groceries, clothing and footwear, gasoline and motor oil, cell phone usage and going to the movies
7. Since 1990 the Hispanic population has increased in every state
8. There are 41.3 million Hispanics in the US (2005)
9. 83% is under age 50, 63% are under age 30
Gustavo Arellano in the New York Times
Gustavo Arellano’s Ask A Mexican is reviewed in the Fashion & Style section in today’s New York Times.
My favorite part:
“Part of the joke is the assumption that the reader doesn’t know any Mexicans,” said Ted Kissell, editor of The OC Weekly. Mr. Arellano, he noted, “is a surrogate Mexican for our English-speaking readership.”
Mr. Arellano, born in Anaheim to Mexican immigrants, one of them a father who crossed the border illegally several times starting in the 1960s, doesn’t deny that his satire is not for everyone. “I use the column to give the straight dope but also be as rude as possible to people who deserve it,” he explained. Accordingly, his responses often cite studies and statistics in a flurry of profanity. And he tackles some questions with the gusto of someone who not only wants to set the record straight but also wants to settle scores.
“Gracias for illustrating the great double standard in America’s immigration policy,” Mr. Arellano wrote in response to a reader who suggested that Mexicans stay in Mexico to improve their own country. “Centuries of immigrant waves chose not to improve their homelands and to try their luck in a new land, and we rightfully celebrate their pluck as pioneers. Yet when Mexicans follow in the footsteps of our gabacho forefathers, we accuse them of lacking self-motivation and want to shut down the border.”
Then, in typical fashion, he used an epithet to refer to the reader and challenged him to give up his cheap labor and “taco-and-enchilada combos.”
Here is is some video I took with my Treo at Gustavo’s book tour stop in Pico Rivera, California:
SolArt Gallery Cafe: Arte LatinoAmericano
Event: “Arte LatinoAmericano: From the Figurative to the Fragmented”
SolArt Gallery Café presents a collection of distinguished Latin American artists to kick off its Summer Series. The works included in “Arte LatinoAmericano: From the Figurative to the Fragmented” were first exhibited at Chapman University’s Leatherby Libraries in conjunction with the John Fowles Creative Writing Center’s Spring Lecture Series. The distinguished collection of works was brought together as a part of the center’s efforts to make international artists accessible and available to the Orange County community. The works will be on display from June 2nd-July 31st
Cost: $5.00 donation requested
Date: Opening Reception will be held on Saturday, June 2nd, 2007 @ 7:00 p.m.
Place: The “new” SolArt Gallery Café, 511 E. Santa Ana Blvd. Santa Ana, CA
Website: www.solartgallerycafe.com
MySpace: www.myspace.com/solartgallerycafe
Gustavo Arellano’s Ask A Mexican Book Tour
Gustavo’s book “Ask A Mexican” is out and he is promoting it outside of Orange County on the following dates:
May 7: Borders Pico Rivera, 8852 Washington Blvd., Pico Rivera, (562) 942-9919
May 9: Bookworks, 4022 Rio Grande NW, Albuquerque, (505) 344-8139, 7pm
May 10: Barnes & Noble Webster, 1441 W. Webster Ave., Chicago, (773) 871-3610, 7pm
May 13: Third Place Books, 17171 Bothell Way NE, Lake View (near Seattle), 206-366-3333, 5:30 pm
May 16: Barnes & Noble Westheimer, 7626 Westheimer, Houston, (713) 783-6016, 7pm
Or order it online at Amazon.com
Camilo Romero on KPFK 90.7 FM’s Informativo Pacifico
Camilo Romero was discussing homelessness issues on Informativo Pacifico today. Listen to the mp3 file and the segment begins at 12:30.
Giving Orange County a Brown Face
by Yolanda Morelos Álvarez
contributor
Note: This is an article from 2002. Since the publishinig of this article Ms. Álvarez has become the inspiring force behind the founding of the Orange County Mexican American Historical Society (OCMAHS) which has a growing digital collection of historic photographs of Mexicans in Orange County. The collection strength is in twentieth century images. Of which, undoubtedly contains her collection “Fire in the Morning”. Ms. Alvarez has been featured in National Public Radio. Her writing contributions to Orange County Latino in 2002 are republished here as we prepare for our June, 2007 relaunch.
I used to be good at minding my own business, but not anymore.
I have driven all over Orange County in search of historic Mexican neighborhoods with names like La Conga, Alta Vista, La Jolla, Colonia Juarez, Logan, Delhi, La Manzanilla, La Colonia Independencia, Hollywood. Sometimes I find them and sometimes I am too late; they have disappeared.
What remains of the life of these Mexican-Americans communities plowed under the never-ending Orange County development project are the stories and photographs, intact in the hearts and minds of elderly citizens who have lived through times I can only imagine.
My own attempt at reconstructing this history is assembled in a traveling historical photographic exhibit called “Fire in the Morning.” A portrayal of the lives of Mexican-Americans raised and—contrary to popular thought—often born in this county, it reveals a way of life that was simultaneously rich and poor, joyous and tragic. Stories are included that explain briefly the agricultural strike of 1936, the mass deportation of American citizens of Mexican descent during the Depression, trips over the Grapevine to work in Fresno and Bakersfield, riverside dancing and picnics at Sycamore Flats (by Green River) and Jamaicas, some colonias famous for their grand festivities. These stories add to the historical vision presented.
The photographs, in varying shades of browns and blacks are full of people of all ages, and tell stories waiting to be told. Beaming faces adorn barefoot children standing tall and proud for a class photograph taken in the 1930s, classmates who attended a “Mexican” school, one of fifteen segregated schools operating in Orange County…Segregation here? In the Deep South, something we know of course… but here? In Orange County?
After doing some research on my own, I learned that the immigrants from the Midwest and South brought to Southern California their institutionalized ways of treating the cheap labor force, which included a segregated and unequal education. If someone takes a Chicano Studies course at college, they might learn of this ignominious history. Yet ask a typical grade schooler—high schooler, even—and most likely they would have never heard about this.
Why not? All students learn of the injustices of slavery, the segregated water fountains for example. But why haven’t students been taught that we “Mexicans” (what all of us of Mexican heritage are called, born here or not) were not allowed to use the pool except the last day of use before it was cleaned? Or that “we” were permitted to see movies at the theater as long as “we” sat in the balcony? Or that certain restaurants would not serve us because we were “Mexicans”?
The history of our region becomes so much more interesting when I learned that four school districts were taken to court to end segregation March 2, 1945. The parents of students from the cities of El Modena, Garden Grove, Santa Ana, and Westminster joined forces to end what was an educational system that relegated “Mexican” students to what amounted to a vocational education instead of studies that would have prepared the children for high school. Gonzalo Méndez, William Guzmán, Frank Palomino, Thomas Estrada and Lorenzo Ramírez filed suit against the exclusion of Mexican children solely because they were of Mexican or Latin descent.
These parents, who were represented by Los Angeles attorney, David C. Marcus were victorious in February 1946 when Judge Paul McCormick ruled that the segregation of Mexican pupils was a violation of California state law and of the Fourteenth Amendment. McCormick pointed out that in El Modena, seventh graders scored higher than their contemporaries did in the “white” school in standardized achievement tests. The argument that “Mexicans” would hold back the white students was simply not true. But predictably the school districts appealed the decision.
Many organizations submitted amicus curiae briefs (Friend of the Court) in support of desegregation: Thurgood Marshall of the NAACP, the American Jewish Congress, the Japanese American Citizens League, National Lawyer’s Guild, and ACLU combined to write a third, and California Attorney General sponsored a fourth.
April 14, 1947 the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco upheld McCormick’s decision. This was truly a victory for the Mexican Americans in the state of California. (Although examples exist in California in which school districts did nothing to change the status quo.) It was also an important precedent to the Brown v Board of Education case in 1954 and deserves national recognition.
And yet this story isn’t told in Orange County, much less the nation. Intrigued by such gaping omissions in my own education, I am determined that my children will learn a fuller truth about the existence of Mexican-Americans in Orange County. I do not accept the view of us as docile Mexicans, but it is a stubborn perception that continues to exist among some of the population. It is important that examples in our history highlight a courageous people who fought the dominant majority for justice and won.
In a sense, the exhibit, “Fire in the Morning,” attempts to present a fuller picture of Mexican Americans and the challenges the communities had to face. There is something special about having lived in the scattered Mexican neighborhoods or “colonias” of the county that makes people say with fondness and pride that they are from Santa Anita, or La Paloma, Travelers, or Campo Colorado. In spite of the poverty from very low wages, the richness is in the heritage, the close-knit nature of the people who lived the joys and tragedies life had to offer.
The stories of our elderly can open up an understanding that helps us to appreciate their and our own strength, intelligence and determination. From the story about the second grader (now in his 70s) who gets kicked in the shins by a teacher for speaking Spanish, to the big wedding at Our Lady of Guadalupe Church in Santa Ana, there are thousands more stories waiting to be shared.
No book or file exists in any Orange County library history room that named all or most of the Mexican colonias of Orange County. Because of this, I continue to go about the county to interview Mexican-Americans who have the stories of Orange County to tell from their own viewpoint.
The exhibit has been touring the county for one and a half years and is currently at the Bryant Ranch Museum in Yorba Linda. It then moves to the Orange Library and will continue on to Irvine City Hall which will host it in September. A portable exhibit visits schools and special events.
Of the various comments in the guest book, many are revealing. “I never realized there were Mexicans back in the early years”… “I cried to see the familiar faces …” “it’s about time”…”reminds me of East Los Angeles” and finally from a Vietnamese woman, “nice to see other immigrant stories told, it’s important for us all to stick together.” And one person wrote, “this is only the ‘tip of the iceberg.’”
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