Return from Puerto Rico…

As I return from Puerto Rico, I am full of many emotions, many thoughts, and many questions. I think about the things I saw, the stories I heard, the eyes I looked into, and the embraces I exchanged.

 

Returning to the island to assist my communal brothers and sisters and bring my mom back to the land she was born was something that was important to me. The son of a Yong Lord, the air I breathed while being raised was one of social consciousness, cultural pride, and communal responsibility. I have shared this often, but will never share it enough; my mother regularly took me to feed the homeless of New York City in various neighborhoods and when we were done she would ask if I felt we had succeeded in our efforts. When I would answer her “Yes”, she would drive me to another neighborhood, present me to homeless brothers and sisters in that neighborhood and ask me: “Do you think they would feel your efforts were successful?” The point was to understand that our commitment to the people was never ending as the needs of the people were never ending.

 

My mother was born in the Fort Brooke Hospital Installation of El Morro (known as Ballajá station prior to August 31, 1944). The symbol that would become synonymous with tourist propaganda for Puerto Rico, as well as a familiar landmark to Boricuas all over the world, would forever link my mom to her childhood and that connection was transferred to me.

 

We arrived in Puerto Rico with information in hand, commentaries of others in mind, and anxiety in our hearts. We had been prepared to be greeted by a fully functioning airport with souvenir shops selling Yauco Coffee but filled with the smell of Starbucks brand brews.

 

We knew that the area surrounding the airport would be “operational” and “back on track”; so, we went deeper into the island. We went to el campo. However, we also made our stops in the caserios, the urbanizaciones, the homes, the alleys, the blocked roads… we stopped wherever we could. We stood beside our gente wherever the opportunity presented itself.

 

Understand that my mother and I didn’t go to save anyone. We went to help. To do what we could. We understood that whether or not we had previously gone through the formalities of a physical introduction with the individuals we encountered was irrelevant, for they are our family. We are related by culture, heritage, tradition, island, and blood. We don’t need a DNA test to breakdown our connection. We understand that our relation by blood comes simply because we all bleed.

 

It took less than 30 minutes on the island for me to be face to face with the real crisis in Puerto Rico. While hurricane Maria is the focal point for many, I saw the true face of our demise and it returned my stare with a smirk as it extended its arms to accept one of our packages.

I saw the demise of our people in our people. Not all of them, but enough to feel like Roddy Piper’s character in the 1988 movie “They Live”, when he would put on those magical sunglasses and see who was alien and who was human.

 

I saw individuals dismiss the needs of their neighbors and care only about the fact that they had electricity so that they could turn on the Christmas lights. Stepping out of their home only to make sure the individual trying to read a piece of paper or a medicine label with the illumination capitalism was providing via the string of “dancing icicles”, hurried along and didn’t use up to much of their “shine”.

 

I saw people throwing garbage in the street from the soap box they were standing on as they were delivering a sermon on the atrocities of the garbage not being collected. When I asked why the community did not at least pile the garbage in a specific area, I was told that nobody cares. When I offered to bring some people to help me do it, I was told that I should leave it alone because: “Eso lleva tiempo alli y el gobierno tiene que hacer su trabajo”. When I responded that I agree, but we don’t have to live in filth like this, I was told: “Ay mijo… eso es la vida en Puerto Rico. Que se vas hacer”.

 

I saw people walking the streets and looking down on others who were homeless because they were “homeless before the storm and so they don’t matter”. Statements of this caliber were of course followed by accusations of the individual being an alcoholic or drug addict. The very thought that the individual was hungry was never given the light of day. When we would give them a bag or box we put together, we were scolded by those passing by as “wasting what others needed”.

 

I saw road rage come to a boil as intersections became obstacle courses while drivers feverishly fought to get into the mall “para hacer el shopping de navidad”.

 

In the campos, I heard the heart wrenching accounts of how everything was lost. I spoke with families who buried their loved ones in the yard. But standing on that land knowing it had been recently hallowed didn’t hit me as hard as when I was told: “Mijo, aqui estamos viviendo y moriendo. Nuestra familia nos llama a decirnos que no pueden llegar… pero tu llegaste y vives afuera. Ellos viven aquí en Puerto Rico y cuando llamen, tienen que hablar duro porque no se oye encima de todo el ruido de las tiendas”

 

Let me be clear; Not everyone in Puerto Rico is selfish, inconsiderate, or focused on taking what they can from others without reciprocating services, goods, and/or mere courtesy. However, I am not sharing my experience to speak about everyone on the island. I am sharing my experience to speak about the encounters that caused me pain, disappointment, and embrassment. I say embarrassment because when one chooses to proudly wave the flag that represents my culture, my traditions, and my roots while acting in a way that is contradictory to the principles of the afore mentioned, they are providing examples for the oppressive forces to draw from. When those forces move, they will move on all who call themselves Boricua without asking if they are any different than their neighbor.

 

To those who are building on La Isla Del Encanto, I thank you with more than words. I thank you with a commitment to do all I can to assist you and yours today and every day that I am breathing. To the children who are being raised with the warmth of elders who still teach the importance of knowing how to cook in the fogon detrás de la casa, I cherish you. To the elders, I celebrate you. To those who rise each and every day to give 100% to an honest living and treat their neighbors with a kindness and warmth that creates the colors of the Puerto Rico my mother was raised in, I commend you.

 

To the many organizations in the diaspora that are focused on rebuilding/reconstructing the island so that our people are not lost further in the swamp of oppression that can only be created by the imperialist government of the United States, estoy dispuesto hacer lo que puedo cada vez que me llames.

 

As we continue to provide aid and services, let us be sure that we are not feeding the mindset of dependency that plagues Puerto Rico. Let our services serve to plant seeds of self-determination watered by the realization that we are a community with borders that go beyond the islands.

 

Mi gente, in 6 months, when the 2018 hurricane season begins, let’s be better than: “I’m good. I survived Maria”.

 

©Dr William Q Ross 2017

 

#asheintl #puertoricolibre #reflectionsonpuertorico #prselevanta #boricua #community #juntos

Taking Mom Home…

Earlier this week I had the opportunity to watch the screening of “Awake: A Dream from Standing Rock”. Sitting in that auditorium, it was impossible to not feel the pain that permeated through the audience. Tears fell and chills were communally felt. Images of our brothers and sisters being shot with rubber bullets, covered in pepper spray, and hosed down with cold water in below freezing temperatures not only caused many to gasp, but caused all to feel the burns, the cold, the bruises. Everyone in the room was transported to Standing Rock that evening and we traveled on the prayers stated by tribal leaders during the evening’s inception.

 

While the entire documentary was impactful, there was a moment that affected me more than any other. Aside from the obvious human rights violations we were watching, aside from the political stance I am accustomed to taking with my fist high in the air, aside from the desire to continue organizing, supporting, documenting, and fighting… aside from all of this and more, there was one moment that affected me more than any other. This moment was wrapped in the following statement made by the narrator of the documentary: “This is more than the next front line. This is my home. I was born here”

 

Tears filled my eyes and chills consumed me. I immediately thought of my mom.

 

With all of the work being done for Puerto Rico, the efforts being invested in sending items to the island, educating others on what is transpiring (and has been transpiring) politically, organizing in the diaspora, and ultimately praying, focusing, and investing in the reconstruction of the island, I forgot something that is so simple and yet so profound. This isn’t just about my cultural roots, the home of my community, the land of my people… this is about the birthplace of my mother and father. Regardless of how personal the plight of our people and our island is to me, it will never compare to what it means to them.

 

I remember my mother explaining to me that when she was made to leave the island as a teenager, she didn’t feel welcomed in the states because she wasn’t from here. Then when she returned to the island, she didn’t feel as if she was completely welcomed back because she had left.

 

In a matter of weeks, we return to nuestra Isla Del Encanto with suitcases full of supplies for our brothers and sisters, a plan on reaching communities that are not receiving the level of aid other communities are, and spiritual tools to feed the spirits of all we can.

 

But on a personal; in a matter of weeks, I take my mom back home and hold her as she sees a landscape that doesn’t mirror her memories.

 

Luz, Amor, y Àsę.

 

©Dr William Q Ross 2017

Puerto Rican Day Parade 2017

On Sunday, June 11, a young Puerto Rican child will stand on Fifth Avenue in New York City dressed from head to toe in Puerto Rican paraphernalia. Even their face will be painted with a Puerto Rican flag as their small hands feverishly wave the flag that on that day, possibly more than any other day of the year, is a symbol of pride and a commander of emotion.

As the child looks to the adults around them screaming and shouting, a profound emotion will fill their very essence. This unprecedented occurrence will be coupled with images of scantily clad women and rambunctious men. Somehow, at some point, the flag of Puerto Rico will become a bandana, a bikini top, and several other unfathomable items. The child will continue to bask in the warmth created by this emotion that will fill every inch of their body. Their adrenaline will soar as it is fueled by the screams and shouts of the crowd.

“Boricua!!” the child will shout, “Wepa!!”

The beauty that is this child growing with pride in who he/she is, is truly inspiring… but there is a catch.

When the fever of this day is over, how will the pride be nourished? Will it be with the truth and history of our culture and traditions? Will it be with explanations of our Indigenous, African, and Spanish roots? Will it be with the installation of values and morals that have their foundation in the preservation of family and respect? Will the remaining 364 days be filled with as much pride as today?

When the fever of the day is over, will it be nourished in such a way that the child grows to be a strong Boricua who contributes in a positive way to society? Or will the child grow with only the aspirations of being a thug who feels that if he waves his flag on Fifth Avenue once a year and screams out “Boricua”, showing his communal sisters that he respects them by invading their personal space, he will be not only displaying but also living up to Puerto Rican Pride?

On June 11, 2017, the aesthetics of our existence will display their commercial potency. However, this potency does not translate into the progress of the people whose backs have been beaten for the financial well-being of those who define wealth in only dollars and cents.

On June 11, 2017, the Puerto Rican community will either come together and reiterate the fact that we will no longer be taken advantage of, or we will come together to show that we happily accept distractions rooted in the celebration of our culture, but which have evolved to exploitations of our existence.

On June 11, 2017, we will either dance to the tune of complacency or rally around the remix of our revolution.

Luz, Amor, y Àsę.

©Dr William Q Ross 2017