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Thursday, May 22, 2008

Latino Alumni Gathering NYC

Latino Alumni Association of Tufts University
Third Annual Latino Alumni Gathering in New York City

Description: Join the LAATU, a chapter of the Tufts University Alumni Association, for the third annual Latino Alumni Gathering in New York City. Visit the neighborhoods of Hamilton Heights and Inwood for a day that begins with a chance to give back to the community. We’ll be volunteering at the Columbia University Head Start Street Fair, an event coordinated by the parents of children participating in the early childhood program. Opportunities to assist will range from set-up to face painting and pony rides.

Later we’ll head up to Inwood to meet with local graffiti artist, historian, and publisher Alain Maridueña (a.k.a Alan Ket). We will observe the creation of his new mural and learn more about his work promoting hip hop and graffiti culture. Finally we'll finish off this day of service and culture with a reception at Mamajuana Café.

Date & Time:
Saturday, May 31,
10 – 7 pm

Specific Event Locations

Service project, 10 – 2 pm
Columbia University Head Start Street Fair
Hamilton Place between West 142nd and 43rd Street

Meeting with artist Alan Ket, 3 – 4 pm
www.supportket.org
4979 Broadway (at West 211th Street)

Reception, 5 -7 pm
Mamajuana Café
247 Dyckman Street

Cost:
$20 per person
Proceeds from this event will go to the Emergency Fund for Tufts Latino Students

RSVP:
Please register online.

Contact:
Please contact Diana Caba, A05 at Diana.caba@gmail.com for additional information.

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

radical jewish events nyc

1. Domestic Workers & JFREJ take Albany!
Today, JFREJ organized a contingent of more then 70 people to go up to Albany as a part of a 300 person lobby day effort by the Domestic Workers Rights Coalition to lobby for passage of the Domestic Workers Bill of Rights. This bill if passed, will be the first of its kind to offer fair wages, benefits and dignity to over 200,000 domestic workers in the NY metro area.


JFREJ mobilized employers from 3 synagogues and Jewish communities, rabbinical students from Hebrew Union College, Jewish Theological Seminary and Yeshivat Chovevei Torah, college students from NYU and the Hebrew University in Jerusalem, and high school students from Washington Irving High School.

We are sorry you couldn't join us today - but you can still be a part of it.
Please take a minute to call your assembly member right now.

Ask them to contact Susan John, Chair of the Labor Committee, and ask her to support bill #A628B (the Domestic Workers Bill of Rights) being approved by the labor committee as soon as possible, before the end of the legislative session.



To find the phone number for your State Assembly Representative, click here.
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2. Radical Culture: JFREJ hosts Radical Jewish Walking Tour
Sunday June 8th- 5pm
The JFREJ Housing campaign is pleased to invite you to join us to celebrate Shavuot, a spring harvest holiday by learning together about the history of Jews organizing for change and the links to struggles for justice today on the Lower East Side. Learn more about Lower East Side history and enjoy eating ice cream or some other dairy/yummy treat to celebrate the spring-time.

For details and meeting location, click here.

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3. Go and Learn- great events by JFREJ allies:
1-- Cornell West and Susannah Heschel-- Wednesday, May 21st
Can There Be a Prophetic Spirit in America Today? This conversation commemorates the legacy of Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel and will delve into utilizing Jewish values (as well as the Jewish prophetic tradition) to promote social action in 20th and 21st century America.

For more information, go to: http://www.mjhnyc.org/safrahall/visit_safra_17.htm#heschel
2-- NYC Premiere of a Jihad for Love- May 21st - June 4th
Muslim gay filmmaker Parvez Sharma travels the many worlds of this dynamic faith, discovering the stories of its most unlikely storytellers: lesbian and gay Muslims.

For more information go to: http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=13988012751&ref=mf

Support Bishop T in Boston

Tufts Progressives in Boston: I know Bishop T. and I personally helped out one day to build the structure in his back yard that he is using as a church. The work that he does in the community is invaluable. He is an honest and gentle man who always speaks up on behalf of oppressed communities. If you can go support him, please do!!!
Thanks,
Eva

TUESDAY, MAY 20

9:00 A.M.

BROCKTON HOUSING COURT
215 Main St, Brockton

PEOPLES PRIEST BISHOP FILIPE TEIXEIRA TO BE ARRAIGNED ON CRIMINAL CHARGES FOR REFUSING TO GIVE UP THE SERVE THE PEOPLE Peoples Church he and his congregation have built in Brockton. BE THERE to support Bishop Teixeira!
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Calling all progressives! Defend the Peoples' Church in Brockton! This exceptional church is led by Bishop Filipe Teixeira, who has made the church a center for immigrant rights in Brockton and Massachusetts, used the church as a base to fight for workers rights and to fight against racism wherever it appears, including in the case of the Somerville 5. Bishop T has also used the church to provide serve the people programs including childcare, healthcare and food programs.

Because of his unflinching stance against racism and advocating for the poor, the racist power structure in Brockton is doing everything in its power to shut down the Peoples' Church. When they went so far as to get the church removed from a building provided by the Episcopal diocese of Boston, Bishop T mobilized help from progressive forces and physically built a church space in his back yard to continue the work. He has successfully fought off repeated attacks on the church based on petty regulatory requirements that are all clearly a smokescreen for the continued racist attack on the important community based anti-racism and immigrants rights work the church is doing.

NOW THEY ARE TRYING TO TRY BISHOP T ON CRIMINAL CHARGES FOR CONTINUING TO SERVE THE PEOPLE. He is to be arraigned in Brockton Housing Court at 9 am Tuesday morning, May 20th.

BE THERE TO STAND UP FOR BISHOP T AND THE PEOPLES CHURCH!
COME OUT THIS TUESDAY AT 9 AM AND SAY NO! TO THE FORCES OF RACISM IN THE BROCKTON ESTABLISHMENT!

SPREAD THE WORD!

International Action Center Boston
www.iacboston.org
617-522-6626
iacboston@iacboston.org

Solidarity with Hunger Strikers of the Alliance of Guest Workers for Dignity

Hi MA community,
Here are some updates on the Indian worker strike.
We will be sending out a notice about local/Boston based solidarity action shortly
But Save the Date: Wednesday 21st at 7pm - Central Square, Cambridge.
Meet in front of Harvest Co-op Supermarket.
(inside in case of rain)

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: NNIRR
Date: Fri, May 16, 2008 at 9:00 PM

Three items from the Hunger Strikers of the Alliance of Guest Workers for Dignity, a grassroots project of the New Orleans Workers' Center for Racial Justice [NOWCRJ]

Visit: www.neworleansworkerjustice.org

[1]

From: Stephen Boykewich [mailto:spboykewich@gmail.com]
Sent: Friday, May 16, 2008 5:42 PM
To:

Subject: hungers strikers to picket first-ever Indian Embassy cultural day in DC

Ladies and gentlemen,

The Indian hunger strikers and dozens of supporters who broke Signal International's labor trafficking chain in March will be picketing the Indian Embassy in Washington, DC, tomorrow, Saturday May 17, during the Embassy's first-ever official Cultural Day, which begins at 11:30 a.m. (See info from embassy website below.)

Saturday will mark Day Four of the water-only hunger strike protesting Indian government inaction in the workers' quest for justice against a US-Indian labor trafficking racket.

We expect the picket will a great embarrassment for the embassy, which shut out 5 of its own citizens, including 2 of the hunger strikers, when they attempted to deliver a collective statement about the hunger strike's goals on the day of the launch, Wednesday, May 14. (See photo coverage of the incident at www.flickr.com/photos/nolaworkerscenter)

The story is developing very quickly, with support for the workers growing rapidly among US organized labor and social justice communities. On Wednesday, May 21, 12 more hunger strikers plan to join the original 5.

The collective statement the workers attempted to deliver to the Indian Embassy on May 14 is attached. Please let us know how we can help with your coverage, and thank you again for your time and attention!

Best,

Stephen Boykewich, Media Director

New Orleans Workers' Center for Racial Justice

Mob. 504-655-0876

--- [2]

May 17, 2008

On 17th of May 2008, the Embassy of India will host its first official cultural day in conjunction with Cultural Tourism DC's Passport Week. Featured performances include IDEA Dance, a consortium of classical dancers performing Bharatnatyam and Kathak, as well as Dhoonya Dance, a Bollywood-inspired South Asian Dance company who will be performing bollywood-fusion and pop bhangra. The event will begin at 11:30 a.m. and end at 3 p.m. Inside the Embassy will be informational sessions on India, as well as snacks and refreshments. The event will allow the Embassy to share its rich cultural traditions with the community, while providing entertainment for people of all ages.

Time: 11:30 a.m to 3:00 PM

Venue: Embassy of India, 2107 Massachusetts Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20008

[3 Hunger Strikers' Statement]

"We Will Not Be Silent"

Statement of Indian Workers' Congress at Launch of Hunger Strike

May 14, 2008

We represent over 550 Indian guestworkers who were trafficked to the United States Gulf Coast in late 2006. Eighteen months after we first started organizing for our dignity, we have reached our last resort: the hunger strike we are launching today. We want to bring our employer, Signal International, to justice for holding us in forced labor in the land of liberty. We want US Congress to hold hearings that will show the world the realities of the US guest worker program. And we want our own Indian government to take action to protect future workers coming to the US from India.

We risked all we had to come to the United States: our families, our homes, our life savings. We gave everything for a chance at the American Dream, and instead we woke up in an American nightmare.

We took another great risk in escaping from Signal's labor camps and exposing the crimes of the company and its recruiters to the world. We walked in the footsteps of Mahatma Gandhi and the path of US freedom fighters, through Mississippi and Alabama and Georgia, to tell our story at the White House gates.

But today, after all this, we are the ones who are being treated like criminals. We are told we must turn ourselves in for deportation procedures before we can participate in an investigation into our case. We know this is what Signal wants—for us to disappear back to our homeland to drown in an ocean of debt. But they cannot silence us so easily.

We paid $20,000 each for green cards that never existed, but we are not fasting for green cards. We gave up our life savings for the chance to bring our families to the land of opportunity, but we are not fasting to have them at our sides. We are conducting this hunger strike for one thing: the chance to help justice be served. We know that if we remain silent the way Signal wants, our brothers and nephews and neighbors will be next. We have sacrificed everything we had, so now we are laying down our lives.

We ask the US government to grant us Continued Presence in the United States under the Trafficking Victims Protection Act so we can participate in the investigation into our case—with dignity and without fear. We ask the members of US Congress who have heard our story and supported our struggle to call for hearings on abuses in the guest worker visa program. We ask the Indian government to take action on our behalf and convince the United States that it must grant us Continued Presence and hold Congressional hearings. If we, the workers of India, can have the courage to talk to US Congressman and US federal authorities, then surely the Indian government can do the same, so that no other Indian worker suffers as we did.

www.neworleansworkerjustice.org

In Defense of Student Who Pied Friedman

***Forward Widely***

In Defense of Student Who Pied Friedman
<http://www.petitiononline.com/422buml/petition.html>

To: The Administration of Brown University

On April 22, Brown University student Molly Little threw a pie at New
York Times columnist Thomas Friedman in protest of his pro-war,
pro-corporate views, and the prominence he receives in promulgating
those views while others are suppressed. Friedman received no injuries
from the fluffy pie, and resumed his full lecture after five minutes.
Due to the harmlessness of the incident, no legal charges were pressed
by any party.

Nevertheless, on May 15, after a hearing conducted by Brown's Office
of Student Life, the administration sentenced Molly to a
'suspension'--in fact an indefinite expulsion. As a result Molly is
unable to enroll at Brown in the fall semester, or even set foot on
the campus. She is not guaranteed readmission, but must reapply to the
same administration which has committed this miscarriage of justice.

The punishment imposed on Molly is severely disproportionate to the
incident to which it supposedly responds. It is not compatible with
Brown's mandate as an educational institution. The University has put
its desire to draw 'marquee' speakers--regardless of their
intellectual value--and control student activism above its mission to
teach.

Further demonstrating Brown's abandonment of responsibility to
students is its indifference towards the actions of Assistant
Professor Stephen Porder, who physically attacked and detained Molly
in an absurd act of self-righteous vigilantism. The dean who is
supposed to be investigating the matter simply refuses to return
calls.

We, the undersigned, categorically reject the so-called 'suspension,'
actually indefinite expulsion, of Molly Little. We demand her
unconditional readmission to Brown University without fines, fees, or
red tape.

Monday, May 19, 2008

Exibit: We Shall Not Be Moved

We Shall Not Be Moved, May 22, 2008 – July 18, 2008

International Graphics on Gentrification, Homelessness and Resistance



Posters from around the world, curated by the Center for the Study of Political Graphics, on exhibit at the Henry Wong and You King Yee Memorial Gallery



Exhibit and all events located at W/Y Gallery, One Nassau Street, Unit 2, in Boston Chinatown.

Hours: MTW 9:00 am to 5:00 pm, Saturdays 10:00 am to 12:00 noon, and by appointment.

For information, call (617) 357-4499 or email justice@cpaboston.org.


Exhibit Opening Thursday, May 22nd 5:00pm – 8:00 pm

Roundtable Discussion: Our Right to the City

Thursday, June 5th 5:00pm – 8:00 pm

- Organizing to reclaim our right to the city - What is the role of art in grassroots organizing?

- With Alternatives for Community & Environment, City Life/Vida Urbana, Centro Presente, and Chinese Progressive Association



Workshop: Political Poster-Making with The Design Studio for Social Intervention

Saturday, July 12th 11:00 am to 2:00 pm

- Produce a poster to help your community get organized!

Advance registration required (email justice@cpaboston.org).

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Saturday, May 10, 2008

Janitor Negotiations.


Support Tufts Janitors in their campaign to earn a living wage and decent health care.

> Sign the Petition

> Get Updates

> Jumbo Janitor Alliance

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