PARANGAL KAY KAROLINA
ni E. SAN JUAN, Jr.
Pambihira ka
Matatag matingkad mabagsik ang luntiang apoy sa iyong mga mata
Habang dumadampi ang hamog ng umaga
Sa iyong pisnging hinog sa pangarap ng masamyong kinabukasan—
Nagliliyab ang iyong tapang, nakapapaso ang dingas ng iyong determinasyon—
Nabighani sa sanghaya ng iyong dangal at sa panaginip
Nangahas ang kaluluwang lumantad madarang, nahimok ng kung anong bagwis
Ng tukso sa bulong ng iyong labi’t galaw, dagling naligaw sa paglalakbay—
Walang sindak mong binaybay ang karimlang mapanganib…
Namumukod sa madla, lumilikha ng landas tungo sa liwanag….
Kahit sumabog ang pulbura sa larangang binagtas ng iyong budhi, wala kang takot
Hawak ang sulo ng katarungan, sumusugod ka--
O mapusok na anghel ng bukang-liwayway, bumabangon sa iyong bisig at kamao ang masa mula
Sa kasawiang-palad upang bawat nilalang ay magkaroon ng pambihirang katangian—
Upang maging pangkaraniwan ang iyong pambihirang giting at kariktan—
O Paraluman ng pag-asa’t pagnanais, sisikapin kong ipagbunyi ang dahas ng iyong kabayanihan
Ang bungang inihasik ng talim ng iyong pagpapasiya
Bagamat baliw akong nakasubsob sa hiwagang masalimuot,
pinagtalik ang kapalaran at tadhana,
Walang makapipigil sa iyo, matatag at mabagsik na luntiang apoy ng himagsikan,
humahagibis ang katawan mong lumalagablab
yapos ang bulalakaw ng katwiran at halimuyak ng kasarinlan.
Without serious action, a sharp drop in government employment, with a loss of a million jobs or more, is what we can expect over the next year. . . . Two intrinsic features of the American system of government come together to threaten a social disaster: the limited capacity of state and local governments to spend beyond their immediate revenues even in the […]
The United States has already lost the war in Afghanistan, just as it has lost the war in Iraq. President Barack Obama's vast expansion of the Afghan war announced Dec. 1, and the extension of the violence into neighboring Pakistan, are intended to camouflage the reality of defeat, as was the Bush Administration's "surge" in Iraq.
The alliance between the PRI and the PAN and the failure of the PRD to oppose the budget shows the limits of electoral liberalization, a liberalization that has allowed the PRI and the PAN to monopolize power in the Legislative and Executive branch in order to favour particular forces within their parties. In this alliance, the PRI, which holds the majority […]
Shia women's public piety is central to their signifying their community's modernity within a transnational discursive field. The status and image of Muslim women is one of the most consistent and contentious issues that arose during my field research, in passionate and often, unsolicited responses to Western discourses about Muslim women. Gender n […]
Neither "left" governments nor "left" social movements can do much more in the short run (next five years) than engage in defensive actions, whose guiding characteristic should be actions that "minimize the pain" of the working strata generally, and the most oppressed and poverty-overwhelmed in particular. All "left" g […]
In the 1980s, as president of the United Mine Workers, you rightly argued that "economic pressure and political isolation of the South African government can hasten the day when justice and freedom reign in that troubled land." Two decades later, the cause of "justice and freedom" for Palestinians requires no less of you as president of t […]
By means of the tropes of freedom and choice which are now inextricably connected with the category of "young women," feminism is decisively aged and made to seem redundant. . . . Thus the new female subject is, despite her freedom, called upon to be silent, to withhold critique, to count as a modern sophisticated girl, or indeed this withholding o […]
Western media commentary continues to depict Iran as having "rejected" the Baradei proposal for refueling the Tehran Research Reactor (TRR), thereby setting the stage for the Obama Administration to pursue, at a minimum, tougher multilateral and unilateral sanctions against the Islamic Republic. . . . Until they are embedded in a serious framework […]
A common explanation for the US presence in Afghanistan is Washington's interest in Central Asian fuel sources -- natural gas in Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan and petroleum in Kazakhstan. . . . If that was the plan, it has failed. Instead, China has landed the big bid to develop a major gas field in Turkmenistan, along with a pipeline to Beijing. . . . I […]
Lenin's famous question "what is to be done?" cannot be answered, to be sure, without some sense of who it is might do it where. But a global anti-capitalist movement is unlikely to emerge without some animating vision of what is to be done and why. A double blockage exists: the lack of an alternative vision prevents the formation of an opposi […]
Impermanence, transiency, evanescence, emptiness--key themes in Zen Buddhism, with snapshots/glimpses on passing phenomena--the fawns in the woods, shiftings of light and
BOOK REVIEW
Racial Formations/Critical Transformations: Articulations of Power in Ethnic and Racial Studies in the United States. - book reviews
Joseph R. Urgo
E. San Juan, Jr. New Jersey and London: Humanitarian Press, 1992. ix + 163 pages. $35.00.
E. San Juan, Jr., is a Filipino nationalist with a strong challenge to the solidification of a theoretical nationalism in the United States. This is not to identify a contradiction but to endorse San Juan's singular insight The definition of nationalism in the United States, unlike that of other nations, is not closed but open. San Juan's point can be carried further. It may be that the closer nationalism in the United States comes to be tied to the modern paradigm of the enclosed state the further it removes itself from its promise--the prospect of post-nationalism.
Racial Formations/Critical Transformations: Articulations of Power in Ethnic and Racial Studies in the United States is a contribution to the groundwork for the next civil rights movement. The model of civil rights in the twentieth century has been that of assimilation. The assimilation paradigm is based upon the phenomenal success in the United States of erasing significant nationalistic distinctions among European immigrants. The problem with this model, however, is that it has not been applicable to racial differences. San Juan argues that the field of ethnic studies has perpetuated the assimilation model with the popularization of such notions as pluralism, multiculturalism, and diversity. However, these ideals, often presented as civil rights achievements, actually impede new immigration patterns. San Juan refers to "the unintentional racism of ethnicity-oriented scholarship" (38) which "cannot distinguish the ethnic from the racial" (67) and so constrains the free movement of arrivals to the United States who come from colonized areas. To counter the ethnicity paradigm, San Juan offers a series of alternative models: "slavery (Africans), colonization (Chicanos), racially based exclusion (Chinese, Filipinos), genocidal pacification (Native Peoples), [and] forced relocation (Japanese Americans), "meant as a set of correctives to the "pseudo-universalism" of ethnic studies (69).
The establishment of ethnic studies as an autonomous academic field and the valorization of the European immigrant, according to San Juan, are developments with overtly racist implications. "The theoretical aggrandizement of ethnicity systematically erased from the historical frame of reference any perception of race and racism as causal factors in the making of the political and economic structures of the United States" (132). The paradigm of the white immigrant has become a mythic one, as applicable to the contemporary migrant as Horatio Alger's stories of success through luck and pluck. Ethnicity studies thus transform the model of the European immigrant into yet another aspect of cultural hegemony, working against the continuation of the processes and promises it once represented.
"Something has gone wrong" (1). San Juan attempts to cast the constraints and opportunities for minorities upon a "larger totality" of United States culture, one in which that totality is "characterized by a continuous decentering of a still disputed national space" (4). Racial Formations reviews current critical approaches in the field of ethnic studies, and includes close readings of representative works of fiction that indicate ways in which the national space is being decentered. The argument that race, and not ethnicity, is "the organizing principle of social relations" (53) in the United States is perhaps overemphasized as antithesis. In the field of American Studies, and even more so in African American Studies, the observation is incontestable. Nonetheless, San Juan's purpose is to point to "the unintentional racism of ethnicity-oriented scholarship" (38) and to the resultant, hegemonic effects of the new celebration of multiculturalism.
Hence San Juan's larger purpose. The solidification of "American Culture" as a fixed concept into which others must either assimilate or live with in pluralistic tandem is an oppressive development which the ethnicity model supports through notions of pluralism and multiplicity. San Juan claims that "a premature methodological unity that can only serve to reinforce and intensify the present relations of domination and oppression" arises under the banner of multiculturalism. At stake here is the divide between assimilation and influence. The European immigrant model is one that stresses assimilation and pluralism, a nation of hyphenated existences. But the model neglects the fact that United States culture has been profoundly altered by eastern and southern Europeans and the culture is not simply "multi" for it, but transformed. The continuum of culture and national identity across the waves of historic migrations to the United States is marked by radical alterations to the idea of "American." The new arrivals to the United States will not simply "become" because there is nothing fixed and immutable for them to become. According to San Juan, those who migrate to the United States from colonized areas will contribute to the evolution of American identity in ways which cannot be predicted by paradigms that have achieved historic closure.
COPYRIGHT 1994 The Society for the Study of the Multi-Ethnics Literature of the United States
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Bu-lat-lat (boo-lat-lat) verb: to search, probe, investigate, inquire; to unearth facts
Vol. VII, No. 9 April 1- 7, 2007 Quezon City, Philippines
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TULA (POETRY)
Tagsibol sa Den Haag, Nederland, 25 Marso 2007
NI E. SAN JUAN, JR.
Inilathala ng Bulatlat
[Para kay CPA]
Mula sa tuktok ng Christus Triumfator sumungaw ang araw
at sa Pax Christi sumikat
ang talim ng hatol:
"Guilty" ang U.S.-Arroyo rehimen--deklara ng Permanent People's Tribunal....
Mainit na ang hipo ng amihan sa iyong pisngi, Carol....
Nagtatangka nang bumuka ang buko ng mga bulaklak
sa pintuan ng Hotel Van Der Valk de Bijhorst
Subalit sina Ka Bel, Satur at limang kasama sa Tagaytay ay nakabilanggo pa rin
Patuloy pa rin ang pagpatay at pambubusabos
Patuloy pa rin, sa kabila ng himagsikan, ang laganap ng kadiliman
Dito sa maaliwalas na lansangan ng Den Haag, walang ugong
ng motorsiklo, walang mga taong naka-bonet
Walang baril na nakaumang sa pagitan ng mga hita ng daffodil
Ngunit bakit hindi panatag ang loob mo, Carol?
Habang pinakikiramdaman ang kislot ng bombilya ng tulip
sa pusod ng lupa
Unti-unting gumigising sa panaginip unti-unting bumubuka
At sa banaag ng pagdamay
masilayan ang iyong ngiti--
Binabaklas ang mga rehas ng bukang-liwayway ng iyong mga labi--
Panahon na ng Christus Triumfator, bayang lumalaban!
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Yasser Shams Khan Dave Renton, Fascism: Theory and Practice (http://www.aakarbooks.com/bookdetail.php?book_id=164), Aakar Books, Delhi, 2007 (Originally published by Pluto, London,...
Tuesday Dec 15 5PM http://www.indybay.org Protest AIPAC, a Lobby for War and Occupation Hilton Hotel, 333 O'Farrell St, San Francisco Near Union Square
NASA Report Highlights Urgent Need to Retire Drainage Impaired Land by Dan Bacher Alarming new space observations reveal that since October 2003, the aquifers for the Central Valley and the Sierra Nevada have lost nearly enough water combined to fill Lake Mead, America's largest reservoir, according to a news release from the Jet Propulsion Laboratory. […]
VICISSITUDES OF THE FILIPINO DIASPORA
• October 4, 2008 • Leave a CommentPosted in COMMENTARY ON CURRENT EVENTS, EXTRAPOLATIONS, SPECULATIVE PROVOCATIONS, UNTIMELY OBSERVATIONS
Tags: deracination, diaspora, Exile, expatriates, Filipinos, immigration, Philippines