FYI
 


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Roberto Rodriguez <xcol...@gmail.com>
Date: Sun, 
Jan 15, 2012 at 6:48 PM
Subject: Tucson schools bans books by Chicano and 
Native American authors
To: Roberto X Rodriguez <xcol...@gmail.com>



Tucson schools bans books by Chicano and Native American authors CENSORED NEWS

Tucson schools bans books by Chicano and Native 
American authors
Posted by Brenda Norrell - January 14, 2012 at 11:53 
pm

Banned books fuels calls for revolution in Tucson

Native 
authors in banned book include Leslie Marmon Silko, Buffy Sainte Marie and 
Winona LaDuke

By Brenda Norrell

Breaking news: Updated Sunday with 
response from banned author Roberto Rodriguez

TUCSON -- Outrage was the 
response to the news that Tucson schools has banned books, including 
"Rethinking 
Columbus," with an essay by award-winning Pueblo author Leslie Marmon Silko, 
who 
lives in Tucson, and works by Buffy Sainte Marie, Winona LaDuke, Leonard 
Peltier 
and Rigoberta Menchu.

The decision to ban books follows the 4 to 1 vote 
on Tuesday by the Tucson Unified School District board to succumb to the State 
of Arizona, and forbid Mexican American Studies, rather than fight the state 
decision.

Students said the banned books were seized from their 
classrooms and out of their hands, after Tucson schools banned Mexican American 
Studies, including a book of photos of Mexico. Crying, students said it was 
like 
Nazi Germany, and they were unable to sleep since it happened.

The banned 
book, "Rethinking Columbus," includes work by many Native Americans, as Debbie 
Reese reports, the book includes:

Suzan Shown Harjo's "We Have No Reason 
to Celebrate"
Buffy Sainte-Marie's "My Country, 'Tis of Thy People You're 
Dying"
Joseph Bruchac's "A Friend of the Indians"
Cornel Pewewardy's "A 
Barbie-Doll Pocahontas"
N. Scott Momaday's "The Delight Song of 
Tsoai-Talee"
Michael Dorris's "Why I'm Not Thankful for 
Thanksgiving"
Leslie Marmon's "Ceremony"
Wendy Rose's "Three Thousand 
Dollar Death Song"
Winona LaDuke's "To the Women of the World: Our Future, 
Our Responsibility"

The now banned reading list of the Tucson schools' 
Mexican American Studies includes two books by Native American author Sherman 
Alexie and a book of poetry by O'odham poet Ofelia Zepeda.

Jeff Biggers 
writes in Salon:

The list of removed books includes the 20-year-old 
textbook “Rethinking Columbus: The Next 500 Years,” which features an essay by 
Tucson author Leslie Silko. Recipient of a Native Writers’ Circle of the 
Americas Lifetime Achievement Award and a MacArthur Foundation genius grant, 
Silko has been an outspoken supporter of the ethnic studies 
program.

Biggers said Shakespeare’s play “The Tempest," was also banned 
during the meeting this week. Administrators told Mexican-American studies 
teachers to stay away from any class units where “race, ethnicity and 
oppression 
are central themes."

Other banned books include “Pedagogy of the 
Oppressed” by famed Brazilian educator Paolo Freire and “Occupied America: A 
History of Chicanos” by Rodolfo Acuña, two books often singled out by Arizona 
state superintendent of public instruction John Huppenthal, who campaigned in 
2010 on the promise to “stop la raza.” Huppenthal, who once lectured state 
educators that he based his own school principles for children on corporate 
management schemes of the Fortune 500, compared Mexican-American studies to 
Hitler Jugend indoctrination last fall.
http://www.salon.com/2012/01/13/whos_afraid_of_the_tempest/singleton/

Bill 
Bigelow, co-author of Rethinking Columbus, writes:

Imagine our 
surprise.
Rethinking Schools learned today that for the first time in its 
more-than-20-year history, our book Rethinking Columbus was banned by a school 
district: Tucson, Arizona ...

As I mentioned to Biggers when we spoke, 
the last time a book of mine was outlawed was during the state of emergency in 
apartheid South Africa in 1986, when the regime there banned the curriculum I’d 
written, Strangers in Their Own Country, likely because it included excerpts 
from a speech by then-imprisoned Nelson Mandela. Confronting massive opposition 
at home and abroad, the white minority government feared for its life in 1986. 
It’s worth asking what the school authorities in Arizona fear today.
http://rethinkingschoolsblog.wordpress.com/2012/01/13/rethinking-columbus-banned-in-tucson

Roberto 
Rodriguez, professor at University of Arizona, is also among the nation's top 
Chicano and Latino authors on the Mexican American Studies reading list. 
Rodriguez' column about this week's school board decision, posted at Censored 
News, is titled: "Tucson school officials caught on tape 'urinating' on Mexican 
students."http://drcintli.blogspot.com/

Rodriguez responded to 
Narco New about the ban on Sunday.

"The attacks in Arizona are 
mind-boggling. To ban the teaching of a discipline is draconian in and of 
itself. However, there is also now a banned books list that accompanies the 
ban. 
I believe 2 of my books are on the list, which includes: Justice: A Question of 
Race and The X in La Raza. Two others may also be on the list," Rodriguez 
said.

"That in itself is jarring, but we need to remember the proper 
context. This is not simply a book-banning; according to Tom Horne, the former 
state scools' superintendent who designed HB 2281, this is part of a 
civilizational war. He determined that Mexican American Studies is not based on 
Greco-Roman knowledge and thus, lies outside of Western Civilization.

"In 
a sense, he is correct. The philosophical foundation for MAS is a maiz-based 
philosophy that is both, thousands of years old and Indigenous to this 
continent. What has just happened is akin to an Auto de Fe -- akin to the 1562 
book-burning of Maya books in 1562 at Mani, Yucatan. At TUSD, the list of 
banned 
books will total perhaps 50 books, including artwork and posters.

"For us 
here in Tucson, this is not over. If anything, the banning of books will let 
the 
world know precisely what kind of mindset is operating here; in that previous 
era, this would be referred to as a reduccion (cultural genocide) of all things 
Indigenous. In this era, it can too also be see as a reduccion."

The 
reading list includes world acclaimed Chicano and Latino authors, along with 
Native American authors. The list includes books by Corky Gonzales, along with 
Sandra Cisneros’ “The House on Mango Street;” Jimmy Santiago Baca’s “Black Mesa 
Poems,“ and L.A. Urreas’ “The Devil’s Highway.“ The authors include Henry David 
Thoreau and the popular book “Like Water for Chocolate.”

On the reading 
list are Native American author Sherman Alexie's books, “Ten Little Indians,“ 
and “The Lone Ranger and Tonto Fist Fight in Heaven.“ O’odham poet and 
professor 
Ofelia Zepeda’s “Ocean Power, Poems from the Desert” is also on the 
list.

DA Morales writes in Three Sonorans, at Tucson Citizen, about the 
role of state schools chief John Huppenthal. "Big Brother Huppenthal has taken 
his TEA Party vows to take back Arizona… take it back a few centuries with 
official book bans that include Shakespeare!"

Updates at www.bsnorrell.blogspot.com

brendanorr...@gmail.com 

________________________________
 _______________________________________________
Naipc-list mailing 
list
naipc-l...@lists.nativeweb.org
http://lists.nativeweb.org/listinfo.cgi/naipc-list-nativeweb.org

From: Rosalee Gonzalez 
Sent: Sunday, January 15, 2012 8:55 PM

Reply via email to