Gas masks and Falafel making, only in Palestine.
By LAZAR SIMEONOV
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Gas masks and Falafel making, only in Palestine.
By LAZAR SIMEONOV
Jayuya Revolt (Oct. 30, 1950)
Nationalists began preparations for an island-wide revolution slated for November 1950. Police raids and sweeps forced them to expedite the date of the uprising; from October 27th through November 10, 1950, hundreds of Nationalists rose up in arms across Puerto Rico - Ponce, Peñuelas, Utuado, Arecibo, Jayuya, San Juan, Naranjito, Mayaguez, and Washington, D.C. With unexpected police raids the morning of October 27th, Albizu gave the order for the nationwide uprising to take place on October 30th.
In the town of Peñuelas, the nationalists exchanged fire with the police who came to raid their meeting house. In Arecibo, they attacked the local police precinct and tried to make their way to the agreed upon meeting point of Utuado, where other contingents were attacking federal installations as well.
In the town of Jayuya, Blanca Canales led the group of nationalists into town as the group attacked federal installations, battled local police and raised the flag of Puerto Rico (which was illegal to own in those days) over the town. She read the proclamation officially declaring the independence of Puerto Rico from the United States. It was a moment reminiscent of the Grito de Lares of 1868, when Puerto Ricans rose up against Spanish rule and declared independence.
The National Guard and local police were called out to respond to the uprising. Fighter aircraft were scrambled and shot and bombarded the towns of Jayuya and Utuado indiscriminately, destroying 70% of the town of Jayuya and even riddling school buildings with bullet holes. People were shot in the streets by police and Guardsmen as they walked about or attempted to get away. Families were warned to stay indoors with their doors open lest they risk being attacked by the armed forces and their planes. Witnesses describe the scene as filled with chaos and terror once the Guard and the attacking airplanes arrived.
In Utuado, local policemen assassinated several Nationalists who had surrendered and were unarmed. The men were being walked to the local precinct but instead were turned into a side street, and as they held up their pants with one hand (their belts were taken away) and held up the other hand in surrender, they were riddled with bullets and left to die in the street.
In San Juan, a nationalist commando unit attempted to assassinate the governor, Luis Muñoz Marin, who had all but declared his own war on the Nationalist Party and who took credit for the creation and institution of the Commonwealth system. They were unsuccessful in their goal but made it through the main gate and into the main entrance area of the governor’s mansion.
“We knew that we would not be victorious but we had to hit our oppressor hard to show our determination to struggle for the independence of Puerto Rico, to the other countries of the world….We sent these troops to attack the [police] headquarters at noon and there and then the shootout began. We ran out of bullets and then seized the headquarters with molotov cocktails…I raised the flag of Puerto Rico and screamed "Viva Puerto Rico Libre” to establish the fact that we had proclaimed the Republic… I was in jail for 16 years and 10 months, almost 17 years. The empire does not give recognition to the political prisoner. I was treated like a common prisoner. During the first eight months I was incommunicado….Time and time again they tried to destroy my revolutionary spirit and to do away with the love I had for my country and the right to fight for her… The role of the woman is as important as of the man [in the revolution]. The revolutionary woman must act accordingly with the demands of the revolution, be it to arm herself, educate her people, or whatever is necessary.“ —Puerto Rican resistance leader Blanca Canales, a political prisoner after the Jayuya Uprising of 1950, interviewed in 1970
Via Anti-Imperialist League
Films watched in 2015.
Film 147: Funeral Parade of Roses (Toshio Matsumoto, 1969)
Nota: 7.5/10
“I am the wound and the blade, both the torturer and he who is flayed”
Funeral Parade of Roses (1969, Toshio Matsumoto)
EAT SHIT
Brad Rohloff
15 layer Screenprint (14 split fountains!)
18″ x 13″
Edition of 69
2015
Available Now!
Someone buy me this : (
I was not doing the pier justice today, I looked a fucking mess. but it was a nice day to be there.
this is why police cats aren’t a thing
cats are woke
precious angel
Today’s gender of the day is: Bell Pepper
(FYI this isn’t true)
Cis people are so fucking weird, they are like trying to clock bell peppers
White gays: Blacks aren’t that cute + they disappear in the dark lol
White Gays: Asians can’t top
White Gays: Call me Sheniqua that’s my inner black woman
White Gays: Mexicans are cute, but like, only Enrique Iglesias types no beaners
Gay PoC: This is why you’re problematic to the gay community
White Gays:
Crystal Labeija, Founding Mother of the legendary House of Labeija
No matter how much you shame and scare them, women will still come for abortions. Pretty recently I had this young woman, 15 maybe, and we did the procedure. I said, ‘Your uterus is empty, the procedure is over. I have to go check to make sure we got everything,’ and I left the room to examine the tissue. Then I came back and told her, ‘Everything’s fine, your uterus is healthy.’ And she said, ‘So … when are you going to use the steel ball?’ I picked my jaw up off the floor and said, ‘Steel ball?’ She said, ‘Well, I went to the crisis pregnancy center and they told me you’re going to put a steel ball that’s covered with sharp blades into my uterus and twirl it around.’ And this kid still came! I was thinking, How did you ever make yourself walk in the office believing I was going to do that?
Dr. Suzanne Poppema, share hear experience of being an abortion provider. Seven abortion providers told their stories to New York Magazine. (via journolist)
Oh, my fucking god. Anti-choicers. You need to read this and find that empathy with a quickness.
(via harrisongeorge)
We love this series from TODOS In Action!
You know you’re occupied when you don’t understand the back of your cereal box.