Saturday, October 27, 2007

To protect and serve




Maintenance of law and order is a prerequisite to the enjoyment of freedom in our society. Law enforcement is a critical responsibility of government, and effective enforcement requires mutual respect and understanding between a law enforcement agency and the residents of the community which it serves.

-McCone Commission, Violence in the City: An End or a Beginning?

Funny how after six days of burning, looting, and police brutality, this statement was as close to an apology as the LAPD could get. But over 40 years have passed since the Watts Riots of 1965 and the LAPD still hasn’t seemed to get things right. From the May 1st – Mac Arthur Park melee, to the October 9 report reviewing the LAPD’s conduct at the immigration rally, the department has become significantly better at crafting the apology rather than following through with reform.

Five months of internal investigations have resulted in a surprisingly critical, 100-plus page self-assessment, ultimately assuming the police department’s responsibility over the May Day melee. But for a police department that is infamous for repetitive cycles of misconduct, self-evaluation and “reform,” the lessons learned and apologies made after May 1st don’t necessarily translate into institutionalized change.

Written by Deputy Chief Michael Hillman, and LAPD Consent Decree head, Gerry Chaleff, the “Final Report on the Mac Arthur Park Incident” provides diagrams, training manual excerpts, and an accurate timeline of the march’s progression into chaos. Ultimately, the department accounts itself for six primary factors, or faults rather, that influenced the turn of events: planning; tactics, including force (e.g. baton and less-lethal munitions); command and control; situational awareness; training and lack thereof; and individual responsibility.

In all fairness, the LAPD’s intense self-scrutiny and recognition of blame is unprecedented. But as the police department’s uncharacteristic candor permeates throughout the report, it’s easy for skepticism and doubt to make room in between the lines.

For the LAPD, chaos and controversy have always prompted lessons to be learned and then disregarded once the next phase of social unrest rolls around. But even before the Watts Riots, December 25, 1951 also marks a signifcant moment of police brutality in LAPD history. In what came to be known as Bloody Christmas, approximately fifty LAPD officers brutally beat seven men in their custody, five of which who were of Mexican-American descent. Yet in disregard of the demands of community activists for police accountability, Chief William Parker launched a reform campaign based on a police professional model that stressed police autonomy by means of internal discipline.

Yes, times were different then. In comparison to today, racism during the 1950s was more overtly expressed, enacted, and unpunished under a thin veil encompassing the slightest standards of any “political correctness.” At any rate, events like this one served as a benchmark, helping to shape the LAPD into what it is today.

The fact is that the LAPD is not just a police department extolling a mission to “protect and serve” without much to show for it. Rather the LAPD is a manifestation of a history marked by police brutality, racism and scandal, embodying an organizational culture that values police authority and independence above the rule of law.

We’ve seen this culture in its finest moments during the Rodney King beatings in 1991, the resulting Los Angeles Riots of 1992, the Rampart scandals of the late 1990s and most recently with May Day. Among the footage caught by the media at the march, one officer was recorded yelling, “I don’t care if they’re not throwing stuff at us now…we get to roll.”

Accordingly, what has often been addressed is the apparent lack of common sense, especially among the Metropolitan Division, regardless of the lack of official crowd control training. For these officers, crowd dispersal – even among peaceful protestors – was immediately equated with brutal force. A peaceful rally resulted with police beating media to the ground; using batons to deliver heavy blows on people who were simply standing; and blindly shooting less-lethal rounds into crowds of women and children.

Not surprisingly, the one thing the report could not provide was any explanation for these policing errors, this grave failure in simple reasoning.

But in actuality, the reasoning is rather simple. Even the slightest bit of power can endow a sense of free reign within an insular and arrogant police culture. At Mac Arthur Park, police forces made plenty of room for their authority to be disposed of at will.

And when the subjects to be “controlled” and “subdued” are not just people of color, but immigrants as well, these people exist as an easily identifiable group, automatically labeled and treated as “the other.” With this type of identification follows the LAPD’s seemingly natural disposition toward establishing power and authority over them. Already socially and economically oppressed, their cries are rendered less significant by a police force that looms over them.

But as Angelenos can attest to, cases like these flare up time and time again. Tension brews between police and oppressed communities until finally something snaps, resulting with the LAPD promising to do better next time. But these are the vicious cycles that make people look over the report with weary eyes. It’s what makes Chief Bratton’s words go in one ear and out the other. And ultimately it’s what makes communities doubtful of a police force that they have been conditioned to distrust and fear.

I’m just waiting for the next time something snaps. I think I’ll be able to set my watch to it so I can tune out the apology that follows.

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

8th Annual Festival de la Gente - Día de los muertos

Because there's more to Halloween than dressing up as a...well, you get the point.

Entonces, celebra el día de los muertos.

Good music, good eats, good people.

On the streets of Los Angeles at the historic 6th Street Bridge.

Saturday, October 27, 2007
11 am-10pm

Sunday, October 28, 2007
11am-8pm

For more info check out the website at:
http://www.festivaldelagente.org/



Thursday, October 11, 2007

Father G and the Homeboys


Check out this powerful film on gangs in East L.A., Father Gregory Boyle and Homeboy Industries. I just saw it last night, but it's playing Friday, October 12 at 11:30 at the Arclight (featured in the Los Angeles Latino International Film Festival). If you can't make it then, it will be screened at USC some time this fall. Keep your eyes peeled.

Here's the film's site:

Enjoy.

Saturday, October 6, 2007

Events for this weekend


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 4, 2007
Contact: Tezozomoc
818-892-5248

South Central Farmers Tianguis

Celebrating the Continuing Resistance of Indigenous People Around the World

WHAT:
1) Bringing Food to the Hood- Organic produce
2) Workshops and Food Demonstrations
3) Music and Entertainment

WHEN:
Date -- Sunday, October 7, 2007
Time -- 10:00 am to 5:00 pm

(Also…Please Save the Date for our Dia De Los Muertos Celebration on Sunday, November 4th)

WHERE:
On 41st Street (between Long Beach and Alameda)
The SCFHEF Community Center & Gallery
1702 E. 41st Street
Los Angeles , CA 90058

(Metro: Exit Blue Line Vernon Station and walk four blocks North)

WHY:
The South Central Farmers stand in solidarity with the continuing resistance of indigenous people around the world. Specifically we recognize the up coming Continental Indigenous Encuentro in Mexico, Anti-Columbus Day, and the March Against Police Brutality.

WHO:
  • Traditional Danza Azteca-Chichimeca & Music
  • Children's Workshops and Stories
  • Holistic Care & Products
  • South Central Farmers Cooking Demo
  • And More!
As part of their commitment to keep Bringing Food to the 'Hood , the SCFHEF hosts a monthly Tianguis marketplace in collaboration with various community-based organizations, artisans, and local merchants . Every first Sunday of the month, the Tianguis transforms public space surrounding the original 14-acre farm into a site for healthy eating, healthy economics, and healthy relationships.

Massive sweep deports hundreds...

...more to come on this issue. But for now take a look at this LA Times story that was also featured on NPR-KCRW's "Which Way L.A."

Friday, October 5, 2007

When faith hits the streets in L.A.

Who knew that the Los Angeles Times had a Religion section online? At any rate, in this article, “Religion as a force for good,” opinion writer Ian Buruma expands on the notion that “it is often the faithful who are inspired to do great things.” As seen from the Burmese rebellion, Buruma also draws on this religious inspiration from other faiths and their historic impacts on the international front. At the same time though, Buruma touches on the public intellectual’s tendency to downgrade religion, linking it to “backwardness” and the principle reason for all of society’s ills. Thus, Buruma cites, “It has become fashionable in certain smart circles to regard atheism as a sign of superior education, of highly evolved civilization, of enlightenment.”

Similarly, Stephen Mack illustrates this idea in his article “Wicked Paradox: The Cleric as the Public Intellectual.” Focusing on the makings of American democracy Mack states, “Nearly every significant movement for social reform in American history was either started or nurtured in the church.” But while Mack cites national movements, from labor reform and women’s suffrage to prison reform and Civil Rights, Buruma goes abroad. Thus, he gives credit to Catholicism for “People Power” in the Philippines, in opposition to Ferdinand Marcos’ regime in the 1980s. And after attributing Poland’s communist rebellion to Pope John Paul II in the 1980s, Buruma also cites Islam as a basis of resistance against mostly secular dictatorships in the Middle East today.

But in terms of Los Angeles, it seems that this type of convergence between faith and politics is more obscure in passing. Other than the sexual abuse scandals and millions of dollars in fines that forever stigmatize the Los Angeles Archdiocese, how else can Angelenos come across these poignant moments of faith-based movements and community organizing? However small or large, these events and movements are history in the making, all occurring in our own backyard.

One recent example is this past Saturday. Just a few months before, Mac Arthur Park was the setting of chaos – mothers frantically searching for their children, teenagers trying their best to avoid baton blows from police, and protestors lost in confusion as rubber bullets penetrated into the crowd. But still scarred by the May Day March that ended in mass panic, Mac Arthur Park embodied peace on Saturday.

Over 1,000 people walked and listened to the chanting and singing of monks and nuns in a march led by Vietnamese Buddhist monk, Thich Nhat Hanh. Marchers joined the Nobel Peace Prize nominee in a peace walk that brought healing and “the art of community building” back to Pico-Union, a neighborhood that has recently experienced yet another increase of violence and homicide.

But in this most recent story found in the LA Times, NPR-KCRW and Downtown News, we see once again where faith meets civil action in Los Angeles. After being forced to move his main facility four times, most recently from a fire eight years ago, Father Gregory Boyle finally opened the new headquarters for Homeboy Industries.

Originally started as a job placement program nearly 20 years ago, Boyle and parishioners from Dolores Mission sought to provide gang members with a chance for a new life. Now in a more upscale facility in Chinatown, Homeboy Industries houses a new bakery, cafe, office building and rehabilitation center, still thriving on the same idea that “nothing stops a bullet like a job.” But aside from job placement, Boyle rehabilitates his clients – both female and male – through free tattoo removal, classes, workshops, and counseling. In fact, here’s Tuesday's class schedule: Financial Literacy, Decisions for Healthy Living, Computer Basics, Anger Management, Alcoholics Anonymous and College Corner.

For Father Boyle, a Jesuit priest, it’s a big change from what he painfully recalls as the “decade of death” – the years from 1988 to 1998, when unprecedented gang violence led Boyle to bury 156 of his L.A. gang ministry. Yet at the same time, in the welcoming of the new headquarters, this change entails even more promising ones just around the corner.

Of course, these aren’t the only instances in which significant local, social movements are born from faith (or at the very least, associated with religion). From the South Central Farmers and School of the Americas Watch (SOAW), to the Clergy and Laity United for Economic Justice (CLUE-LA), the list goes on and on. But the process toward social reform remains an ever-long, winding and tumultuous path – after all, movements don’t produce change overnight. So as many of these groups continue to struggle for positive change, it would be foolish to perceive their religious backgrounds as any indication of backwardness.

And yet “certain smart circles” continue to easily throw in the towel, forfeiting faith and (ironically) damning it all to hell. But what is somehow lost in this process is the acknowledgement that for most of the time, it is even more difficult to believe in something rather than nothing at all. Because what is harder than believing in what you cannot see, hear, or touch, is transforming this faith into something tangible. It’s finding the inspiration and strength from the elusive unknown – whatever or whoever that may be – and using it to create something that serves everyone, believers and non-believers alike.

For myself, it’s difficult to imagine Los Angeles without religion – just as it is difficult to imagine American democracy without its religious origins in the English Puritans. Whether I’m in Pico-Union, Boyle Heights or even Hollywood, I always seem to come across social institutions that have been founded first on the premise of a need in the community, but largely on faith as well. From after-school programs to parks, and free healthcare clinics to food banks, the faithful often take it upon themselves to fulfill the community’s void and provide what the government has failed to do.

So Buruma says it best in that the “Moral power of religious faith does not need a supernatural explanation,” nor does it have to be in a supernatural being, “Its strength is belief itself, in a moral order that defies secular or indeed religious dictators.”

Thus, as Buruma clarifies, in circumstances when “secular liberals are impotent,” moral power from religious faith remains. This is when the visionaries, romantics and true believers are willing to take the plunge and sacrifice much more than what politicians can offer in time, money and advisors. These are the thinkers, movers, and leaders that do it because no one else will. And collectively, this is what faith-based organizations and movements can and do accomplish. It’s their specialty.