Showing posts with label latin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label latin. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Will Spanish Survive in America?


Among many second and third generation Latinos the answer is, "No," making some wonder if Spanish will survive in America as more and more of us are born here.

Like many children of Latino immigrants, Alberto Padron learned Spanish straight out of the crib. “It was the only language spoken at home,” says the 37-year-old New Jersey native, whose mom and dad arrived from Cuba in the early ’60s. “No one ever sat down and taught me,” he adds. “My being bilingual is the natural consequence of being born bicultural and balancing two languages since day one.”

His teenage sons, on the other hand, had another experience growing up. Even though Padron and his wife, Angela, can easily hopscotch between both languages, the two boys only know English. “When you’re not thinking about it, that’s what you speak at home,” says Padron, who meets resistance when he tries to get them to switch to  español. “Why are you forcing me to do this?” is the usual retort.

“I’m mostly disappointed in myself when my children’s ability to bond with our family is effectively crippled because Abuelita doesn’t speak English and the grandchildren don’t speak Spanish,” admits Padron, whose story points to a larger generational shift among American-born Latinos that raises concerns about the decline of our mother tongue and, as a consequence, the connection to our culture.

According to the Pew Hispanic Center, only 38 percent of third–generation Latinos—United States-born kids with foreign-born grandparents—are proficient in Spanish, compared to 79 percent of the second generation. “Some parents think they’ll be able to buck that trend, but they don’t understand how hard it is to raise a bilingual child in the United States,” says Ana Celia Zentella, Ph.D., a Mexican-Puerto Rican anthro-political linguist who studies the intersection between language and politics. “As soon as children see that there’s no need to talk to their parents in Spanish, they don’t.”

But Dr. Zentella, a professor emeritus at the University of California, San Diego, isn’t pointing fingers. “Parents shouldn’t be expected to do it on their own. They have so many other priorities when it comes to child rearing,” she says. “And many times the second generation feels like their own Spanish skills are weak and they’re reluctant to structure their child’s rearing around it.” The real problem, says Ana Roca, Ph.D., professor of Spanish at Florida International University, is the lack of bilingual education in public schools. “The United States does not give Spanish the importance it deserves,” says the cubana about the historical lack of funding for programs that help students maintain their heritage language. “The message is to learn English and forget about your mother tongue.”

But this loss of language across the generations cuts deeper than simply being unable to communicate with older relatives. It impacts Latino identity as well. “You can’t be  a mexicano if you don’t know Spanish,” says Eugene García, Ph.D., a professor at Arizona State University whose family has lived in New Mexico since before it became part of the United States. “You don’t need to be proficient, but you need to know you can get by,” he adds. “Language is a key indicator that you’re part of a certain culture. Others will look at you and say, ‘You don’t speak Spanish? Then you’re not Mexican.’ ”

García’s controversial statement is something Richard Oceguera, a 42-year-old Californian of Mexican descent, has experienced firsthand. “Native speakers are resentful,” he says. “They’ll treat me like I think I’m better because I’ve become Americanized. Like I’m trying to be white. The way it comes across is as if I’m purposefully looking to slight my entire culture by not speaking Spanish. As if it was a choice for me. It wasn’t. My parents didn’t teach it to me,” says Oceguera, who has been studying the language for years in an effort to reconnect with his heritage, but still feels disconnected. “There’s a sense of separation,” he says.

Still, like Oceguera, many Latinos are embracing Spanish later in life as a way of reclaiming their roots. Among those is Destiny Lopez, a 36-year-old Chicana from Detroit, whose grandparents suffered discrimination when they first arrived from Mexico in the ’50s and didn’t raise Spanish-speaking children for fear that they would be marginalized. Growing up, Lopez had the traditions—mariachi music at family events, tamales during the holidays—but felt more American than Mexican. “There was a divide between those that spoke it and those that didn’t,” she says. “It’s frustrating that there’s something wrong with you, and that you’re perceived as less of a Latina because of that.”

Lopez, who has taken classes on and off for years, renewed her commitment with the birth of her daughter, Carmen. “I want to raise her bilingual, so that she’ll have more access to the culture. I now see the benefit of it in hindsight,” Lopez says. “I also want her to be aware of what the world around her is going to look like,” she adds, alluding to the latest Census reporting that Latinos make up 16.3 percent of the nation’s population at 50.5 million, a number that is projected to double by the year 2050.

Those figures don’t sit well with everyone, however, and fuel the kind of anti-Spanish rhetoric that makes its way into the legal system and exacerbates the loss of the language. Over 30 states have passed laws making English their official language, with Oklahoma persuading voters last year with the iconic military recruiting image of Uncle Sam emblazoned with the words, “This finger wasn’t made to press ‘one’ for English!” Dr. Zentella says, “There’s a big push communicating to all newcomers and people in general that the real American only needs one language.”

But that sentiment is not universally accepted across the United States. There are 440-plus public bilingual immersion schools that teach children English and their mother tongue, as well as how to appreciate both cultures. For example, Coral Way Bilingual K-8 Center in Miami teaches more than 1,500 students to speak, read and write in both English and Spanish, with subjects like math, science and social studies en español. “We’re performing at the same average and, in some cases, above schools that are not bilingual,” says the elementary school’s principal, Josephine Otero. “We have proven that our methods here at Coral Way do work, and that our students are successful and prepared to face the challenges ahead of them,” she recently told NPR.

Unfortunately, not everyone has access to schools like Coral Way—bilingual immersion is outlawed in California, Arizona, Colorado and Massachusetts—making it harder for the third generation and beyond to retain the language. But despite the trends, there is  a steady influx of immigrants who may just keep the language alive. Every day, approximately 3,700 of us arrive in this country. “Their kids will be spoken to in Spanish and will learn Spanish,” asserts Dr. García. The key, he says, is “to override the power of English, which comes in everywhere else.”

Then you have Latinos like Oceguera and Lopez, who, no matter how many generations removed, prove that it’s never too late to learn the language. Perhaps Padron’s sons will follow that same path some day, for as Dr. Zentella says, choosing to become bilingual is  a political act. “We as a community can make a major contribution to the United States by opening its linguistic, cultural and racial frontier,” she says. “[By speaking Spanish] you’re saying that the American dream isn’t dreamt only in English.”

--Grace Bastidas


Wednesday, November 2, 2011

The U.S. Hispanic Market Will Soon Be the World's 11th Largest Economy!


At yesterday's Wall Street Summit in New York City, global CEO and corporate director Solomon "Sol" Trujillo gave a landmark, paradigm-shifting keynote speech called "Follow The Money," which put the $1.1 trillion dollar U.S. Hispanic market into a global perspective.

"The U.S. Hispanic market will soon be the 11th largest economy in the world," Trujillo said.  Putting the Hispanic market in the same category as Brazil, Russia, India, and China (the BRIC countries), he pointed out that U.S. Hispanics actually have more per capita purchasing power than the BRIC countries as well as the Group of 20 (G-20) member nations South Africa, Mexico, Argentina, Korea, Indonesia, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and Australia.

How did the G-20 countries earn their seats at the table?  By growing their economies and creating wealth.  U.S. Hispanics have done the same thing.  By delivering economic growth and driving wealth creation, Hispanics have earned a seat at the table and deserve recognition for contributing to America’s competitiveness and America’s seat at the “global table."  Economic power drives political power, not the other way around – and American Hispanics are amassing political influence by earning it through wealth creation.

Source: Fox News Latino


Tuesday, August 30, 2011

Study: Bilingual Environment Aids Babies' Language Capacity


Young children raised in bilingual homes have a greater ability to prolong their capacity to learn languages compared to other children, according to a study released Monday.

Earlier studies have shown that children have a special capacity for learning a second language, but this ability begins to disappear about when they have their first birthday.

This latest research concluded, however, that children raised in bilingual households prolong the time during which they are especially sensitive to learning a second language.

"The bilingual brain is fascinating because it reflects humans' abilities for flexible thinking - bilingual babies learn that objects and events in the world have two names," study co-author Patricia Kuhl, co-director of the University of Washington's Institute for Learning & Brain Sciences, said.

The scientists who worked on this study are investigating the cerebral mechanisms that contribute to babies' skill in learning languages in the hope that the results can help spur bilingualism in adults.

Some of Kuhl's past studies showed that between the 8th and 10th month after birth, monoligual babies become more and more capable of distinguishing the sounds of their mother tongue, while their ability to recognize the sounds of a foreign language diminishes.

"The infant brain tunes itself to the sounds of the language during this sensitive period in development, and we're trying to figure out exactly how that happens," Kuhl said.

"But almost nothing is known about how bilingual babies do this for two languages," she added. "Knowing how experience sculpts the brain will tell us something that goes way beyond language development."

"When the brain is exposed to two languages rather than only one, the most adaptive response is to stay open longer before showing the perceptual narrowing that monolingual infants typically show at the end of the first year of life," according to the study's lead author, Adrian Garcia-Sierra, postdoctoral researcher at UW's Institute for Learning & Brain Sciences.

Source EFE


Monday, August 22, 2011

Strangers in arms, united by their love of tango

The Argentine Tango Festival gives dance lovers a chance to practise their steps, writes ROSEMARY MACCABE

INSIDE THE Garda Club on Harrington Street in Dublin on Saturday night, you could be forgiven for thinking you were at a birthday party. Perhaps that gentleman over there is turning 50; or this woman here, it’s her 30th, surely. People greet one another like old friends or family reunited.

This is no birthday, although it is a party; this is a milonga and the culmination of the Dublin Argentine Tango Festival, now in its ninth year.

The festival includes workshops and afternoon performances, and this Saturday night is a chance for tango lovers, students and teachers alike, to practise their skills. As Ingrid Blake, who is here with a group she met through the dance, says, “it’s nice to use what you learn”.

Things don’t take off in earnest until 10pm, when Quinteta Tango Extremo, a tango orchestra from the Netherlands, take to the stage. Theirs is a contemporary type of Latin music; beneath the familiar tango rhythm are echoes of familiar tunes – is that Don’t Cry for Me, Argentina?

The first couple to dance wear jeans, and she is wearing trainers. Despite their casual appearance, the dance is bewitching. As they are joined by others, the dance floor begins to take on a theatrical appearance.

The colours of tango are, it seems, black and red, but this is not a rule; one woman wears a pink patterned dress with a long leg slit. Another is dressed in snakeskin – a blouse with matching leggings – while another is wearing a 1920s-style gold sequined sheath.

Everyone appears to know one another. Some people are relative strangers, but united by their love of tango: Carlo Pariset, for example, has travelled from Gloucestershire, and Henry Mathias from Edinburgh, but the two met previously at tango events, and greet one another like old friends.

Similarly, on the dance floor, people swap partners regularly and, in a throwback to the dance halls of yore, men and women can be heard asking one another to dance. The dancing couples, in turn, are relatively mismatched – young and old, short and tall; tango seems the most democratic of activities.

“It’s one of those things you can do at any age,” says Mary Browne, one of the first on the dance floor. “It’s so much fun and there are no limitations.”

See tangofever.net, tangoireland.com, dublintango.com

Meet the dancers . . .

Ingrid Blake , works in finance

What brings you here?

I used to dance salsa and swing. Then I tried tango and fell in love with it.

Who are you here with?

There are five or six of us here, people I’ve met through tango. It’s a really sociable group.

What do you like about tango?

It’s just about your body, and my job is so much about my head . . . it’s nice to switch off.

Alison Ní hAnracháin , works in management

What brings you here?

I’m passionate about tango – I’ve been doing it for three years now.

What do you like about tango?

I took it up for zen meditation – dance trance. I’m into yoga and meditation. I did karate for a long time, and still do yoga. Dance seemed the next natural progression.

Did you go to any of the other events in the festival?

I went to all of the workshops! You end up getting totally addicted, consuming as much as you can.

Who are you here with?

Lots of friends. It’s a great community – everyone knows one another.

There are several people here I’ve never met before, but they’ll be friends by the end of the night.

Catherine McDonnell , nurse

What brings you here?

A friend of mine, who loves tango, invited me along. I’ve done salsa before, but I didn’t keep the

classes up, so I’m kind of trying to get myself re-interested in tango!

What do you think of the night so far?

It’s fabulous, there’s a great atmosphere. It’s very sociable. People are so friendly, which is amazing, really.

Mike Carter , economist

Did you go to any of the other events in the festival?

I did a few workshops in the afternoon – I thought they were brilliant. There were really good teachers.

What is it that you like about tango?

I used to do ballroom, latin, salsa and jive . . . tango is the dance of the moment. It’s very popular and very accessible.

You could dance every night of the week in Dublin. I live in Bangor and there’s not so much tango there, that’s why I come down to Dublin.

What do you think of the evening so far?

It’s fantastic. Great venue, great music.

Carlo Pariset , engineer

What do you like about tango?

It’s fun. I like the music, I like the social aspect, and I like the fact that you can dance tango wherever you go. You meet people, you get to know them.

Do you go to many tango festivals?

I try to travel to festivals as much as I can – I’m living in Gloucestershire at the moment, so I came over for the festival.

What do you think of this evening?

I’ve just arrived, but it all seems good. But I have to dance, then I’ll know.

Henry Mathias, social worker

What is it about tango that you like?

I like the music, mostly, and it’s quite a challenging dance, but if you get it . . . occasionally I do a

good dance, and feel very good.

How long have you been dancing tango?

Off and on for about five years.

Did you go to any of the other events in the festival?

I went to a tango cafe in the Stag’s Head pub. It was a really nice venue.

What do you think of this evening?

It’s good – it was a bit slow to start but it’s getting going now.

Source Irishtimes


Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Recession's Biggest Losers Are Latinos


Blame the housing market. The real estate collapse in 2005 lead to a dramatic decline in Latino wealth to according a Pew Research Center study on wealth in America released Tuesday.

In fact, Pew found that Latinos accounted for the largest single decline in wealth of any racial or ethnic group during the U.S. recession.

According to the study:

Two-thirds of Hispanics' median net worth in 2005 came from home equity. When the housing market collapsed, so did Latino wealth. Median home equity for Hispanics fell by 51 percent in the period of the survey.

Second, Hispanics were more likely to live and buy homes in states such as California, Florida, Nevada and Arizona, which were on the forefront of the real estate bubble, enjoying early gains in home values.

The pursuit of the American dream through the purchase of a new home has now proven to be a major factor into the largest wealth gap between white and minority Americans in over 25 years.

"What's pushing the wealth of whites is the rebound in the stock market and corporate savings, while younger Hispanics and African-Americans who bought homes in the last decade — because that was the American dream — are seeing big declines," said Timothy Smeeding, a University of Wisconsin-Madison professor who specializes in income inequality.

According to the Pew study, the housing boom of the early to mid-2000s boosted the wealth of Hispanics in particular, who were disproportionately employed in the thriving construction industry.

But those gains quickly shriveled in the housing bust. After reaching a median wealth of $18,359 in 2005, the wealth of Hispanics — who derived nearly two-thirds of their net worth from home equity — declined by 66 percent by 2009.

Among blacks, who now have the highest unemployment rate at 16.2 percent, their household wealth fell 53 percent from $12,124 to $5,677.

In contrast, the median household wealth of whites dipped a modest 16 percent from $134,992 to $113,149, cushioned in part by a stock market recovery that began in mid-2009.

"The findings are a reminder — if one was needed — of what a large share of blacks and Hispanics live on the economic margins," said Paul Taylor, director of Pew Social & Demographic Trends.

"When the economy tanked, they're the groups that took the heaviest blows."

The latest data come as President Barack Obama and congressional leaders try to reach a deal to avoid a U.S. default on its financial obligations after Aug. 2.

Democrats and Republicans have been wrangling over proposals that could cut trillions of dollars from programs such as Medicare and Social Security.

They are divided over whether to bring in new tax revenue, such as by closing corporate tax loopholes or increasing taxes for the wealthy.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.


Wednesday, July 6, 2011

Rita Indiana Brings Merengue & Disco at LAMC


Dominican singer Rita Indiana gave her first of many performances, mixed with infectious merengue, an upbeat disco tempo and positive social energy, in advance of the the Latin Alternative Music Conference (LAMC).

The small, private gathering took place at Drom Lounge in New York City’s trendy SoHo neighborhood Tuesday night.

“This song is for all the young, urban people who no one believes something will grow out of them,” Indiana said in Spanish upon performing her hit “Jardinera” (Gardener). “Where no one thinks anything will grow, grass begins to flourish.”

The crowd got an up-close-and-personal feel of Indiana’s vibe, artistic abilities and creativity – a sneak peek of what the Dominican singer and songwriter is cooking up for her performances this week at New York City’s S.O.B.s lounge.

“Sing with me!” Indiana asked her audience as the crowd began chanting with her excitedly.




She'll put on an acoustic show at S.O.B.'s and at Central Park’s Summerstage, where she'll join ChocQuibTown and Tropical Dance Party DJ’s Uproot Andy and Geko Jones.

After finishing her set, Indiana thanked her fans as a screen behind her began rolling the music video of her popular tune “La hora de volvé” (Time to Return). In it, the singer blends traditional Dominican music elements, such as el “merengue ripiaó,” (fast paced, old school meringue) with “la güira,” (metal percussion instrument played with a brush) while urging immigrants to come back home.

Source Alexandra J. Gratereaux


Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Exclusive: Revealing details on Jennifer Lopez and Marc Anthony's new reality show


As you may have heard, Jennifer Lopez and Marc Anthony have created their own musical reality show, called 'Q' Viva: The Chosen'. The power couple will embark in the next couple of months through an extensive 21-country search for the next new talents in music, either it's singing, playing or dancing all over Latin America. For this special mission they are joined by 'American Idol's creator, Simon Fuller, and world-renowned director and choreographer, Jamie King.


King has an impressive resumé working with the brightest, most important names in the business. He's been behind unforgettable world tours for such artists as Madonna, Britney Spears, Pink, Christina Aguilera, Shakira, Avril Lavigne, Ricky Martin and Rihanna, just to name a few. And now he's here to share with AOL Latino further details on what we can expect from 'Q' Viva':

How far are you into developing or filming 'Q' Viva'?
Right now we're really at the beginning stages, getting ready to embark in this journey, which is really in a way a discovery of Latin America and the 21 countries we're about to scout physically, ourselves, Marc Anthony and Jennifer Lopez. Our mission is to discover new, young talent. Actually, young is the not right word, it's about all ages. But if you are in one of the countries and you have someone that you think represents best your country, we want to know about it. We will follow the people in each country to find undiscovered talent. Also, since we're in the beginning stages, you can go to Youtube.com/QViva and upload videos. We're using the Internet as well, because Latin America, as you can imagine, is such a vast region to cover and we want to make sure we don't miss anything. So if you have a friend or someone you want to nominate in terms of creativity, either a best singer, poet, street performer, we will want to see it. We will be watching all those videos ourselves as well.

Have you been watching these videos from YouTube?
Yes! Right now, Jennifer, Marc and myself have been meticulously going through them because we want to make sure that nothing is overlooked. And for us, there's no age limit. We're looking for anything that represents a particular region. But I can't wait to go to each country and search for the talent. I'm so excited and I can't wait to see more.

What interested you the most about taking this job?
I would say it would start with my love of music, dance and culture, live shows. But also, I'm friends with Jennifer and Marc and our other partner, Simon Fuller. They are all great, amazing talents themselves and have created the most successful brands in the world, and that is completely inspiring. For us, it's all about finding the talent.

What makes it different from other shows like 'American Idol'?
Unlike any other show that you have out there, unlike 'Idol' or 'America's Got Talent', we are the talent scouts. We are physically going into these countries not only to find talent but to simultaneously learn about each country and its culture, its similarities and differences with other countries. What makes them unique, what is their voice and the essence of each of the countries. There has never been a show that has really celebrated Latin America this way: the beauty, the splendor, the complexity and all the color that make up Latin America. Our intention is to show that to the rest of the world.

What is it about Latino culture that you find most appealing?
I don't know about you, but I have a background in dance and I LOVE when a good drum song comes on, with the rhythm in the music and also, the fire of the people, their sexiness. The communal kind of love that unites them is so inspiring and I want to learn more about that. I'm not Latin, I'm American, so I'm very much learning as I go in this process. I'm looking to find undiscovered talent but I'm also learning so much about the cultures myself. So the audience watching us will be learning through me, the American who doesn't speak Spanish. I'm looking forward to learning more as I go apart from the things I know and that I have learned from directing shows for Ricky Martin, Shakira, Thalía and Paulina Rubio.


How was it working with them?
For me there's no greater experience every time I have had the privilege to work with a Latin artist. And I've gotta say, I've worked with many, many artists, but each one of them, Ricky, Shakira, Paulina, Thalía, they have a particular fire, soul and energy that comes with the job that I find so inspiring. I must admit all of them have been one of the greatest experiences in my career.

Do you have any specific dates when you're coming down to each country?
Not right now, but we will embark on this journey very soon. You will definitely know when huge stars like Marc Anthony and Jennifer Lopez land in your city (laughs). So I'm definitely looking forward to that happening very soon.

Watch the official teaser and behind-the-scenes footage of '¡Q' Viva! The Chosen.'

Source Gustavo Heredia


Friday, April 15, 2011

Gloria Estefan, Emmanuel To Receive Special Honors At 2011 Billboard Latin Music Awards


Gloria Estefan will receive recognition for her philanthropic work and Emmanuel will be given a career achievement honor at the 2011 Billboard Latin Music Awards in Miami on April 28.

Premios Billboard, airing at 8 p.m./7 p.m Central live on Telemundo from BankUnited Center in Miami, will include an appearance by Estefan, whose philanthropic work is being honored with the Billboard Spirit of Hope Award. Also scheduled to appear is Emmanuel, who will receive the Billboard Lifetime Achievement Award for a career that spans three decades.

The Spirit of Hope Award, created in honor of Selena, is given to artists who have tirelessly given their time to civic, community and humanitarian causes. Estefan is known for her music across the globe and her philanthropic stamp also stands tall through her Gloria Estefan Foundation and many other projects she has personally taken on. The foundation helps abused children, raises funds for their health-related causes and provides scholarships to college students.

Emmanuel was discovered 35 years ago as "La voz del Heraldo," or "The voice of the Herald."  Since then, the singer-songwriter has become internationally renowned for a career that will be honored with the Billboard Lifetime Achievement Award. The crooner was mentored early in his career by tenor Pedro Vargas. Emmanuel went on to record music that for more than three decades has continued to make new fans. His success also opened the doors for other Latin music acts, as he was the first international Latino music artist to have his own concerts in the United States at such places as New York's Radio City Music Hall, Caesars Palace in Las Vegas and the the Greek Theatre in Los Angeles.

Over the years, Emmanuel has received recognition for his work in music including La Voz del Heraldo in 1976, best singer and new artist at Festival OTI, 1979; one Silver trophy (Antorcha de Plata) at Viña del Mar, Chile in 1983 and two in 1989; and seven gold and two platinum albums. He has also lent support and provided awareness and fundraising projects that benefit the environment and other causes.

Winners of the Billboard Spirit of Hope Award and the Billboard Lifetime Achievement Award are decided by an editorial committee, which bases its decisions on virtues related to that specific award. Previous Billboard Spirit of Hope Award honorees include Marc Anthony, Daddy Yankee, Shakira, Juan Luis Guerra, Mana, El General, Ricky Martin, Olga Tañon, Soraya, Ricardo Montaner and Juanes. Previous Billboard Lifetime Achievement Award recipients include Los Temerarios, Vicente Fernandez, Celia Cruz, Joan Sebastian, Marco Antonio Solis, Miguel Bose, Conjunto Primavera and Carlos Santana.

The awards show can be accessed through www.Telemundo.com/PremiosBillboard, the official site of the 2011 Billboard Latin Music Awards Presented by State Farm for the latest information and details of this impressive event. Fans can also follow the event on Twitter: @LatinBillboards and on Facebook: Facebook.com/PremiosBillboardTelemundo.

Head here for more information about the Billboard Latin Music Conference and Awards, taking place in Miami April 26-28.

Source  Justino Aguila, Los Angeles


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