Los Angeles Times

Publisher takes a stand for Black lives — in Spanish

Ivette Zamora Cruz devotes issue of Latino magazine as ally of movement: Tu Lucha es Mi Lucha ( Your fight is my fight)

- GUSTAVO ARELLANO

As Black Lives Matter protests swept across the country this past June, Ivette Zamora Cruz felt simultaneo­usly proud and embarrasse­d.

She was thrilled to see hundreds of Latinos attend rallies across the Coachella Valley, from Palm Springs to Indio to her hometown of Rancho Mirage. But she saw other Latinos say online that the fight wasn’t theirs, so why bother joining?

Zamora Cruz thought about her own life.

About how family members back in Mexico casually nicknamed darkerskin­ned relatives la negra ( the black girl) or la morena ( the dark- skinned girl). How she didn’t know much about Black history beyond what she learned in high school as a newcomer to the United States. How she had no Black friends, and never bothered to consider why.

“Some Latinos have always tried to look away — ‘ That’s their community, not ours,’ we’ll say,” Zamora Cruz said from the small but wellkept home she shares with her mom and teenage sister. The bohemian sounds of Eydie Gormé and Agustín Lara played in the background. “But we need to start calling out ourselves now. You have to show where you stand.”

So she did so in a very public way: Zamora Cruz devoted the latest issue of her Spanish- language glossy lifestyle magazine to Black voices.

La Revista ( The Magazine) launched last year to showcase Latinos in a region where the media tend to depict them — if at all — as little more than hotel workers or field hands. Stories highlight restaurate­urs, community activists, cumbia bands and other unsung local heroes.

While well- received, La Revista quickly lost money and was on the verge of shutting down until Zamora Cruz had her epiphany.

She began to cold- call Black businesses with offers of free ads, and asked Black writers and photograph­ers via Instagram to submit their work. The issue published in August with profiles of Black artists and activists, and a historical timeline of police violence against Black people in the United States.

Zamora Cruz made sure to also run the stories in English — a first for La Revista. She exerted editorial control only on the blank last page, titled “Tu Lucha es Mi Lucha” ( Your fight is my fight) and with a prompt for readers to selfreflec­t on what they just read.

The 32- year- old worried that Black people — who account for only about 5% of Coachella Valley residents — would take her gesture as opportunis­tic, while her core audience would feel betrayed.

Both fears proved unfounded.

“It’s powerful,” said Neftalí Galarza, a former Coachella Valley Unified School District board member who’s now running for Coachella City Council. “There’s a blind eye to what Black people go through in our community. But by supporting Black lives, we all benefit. That’s what Ivette showed.”

“It makes me feel seen, for sure,” said Nailah Johnson, who contribute­d an essay about growing up Black in the region and also shot the cover image of five young Black girls in leotards running toward Palm Spring’s iconic white windmills. The 29- year- old had seen La Revista around her hometown of Palm Springs but admitted she never picked up a copy “because I don’t speak Spanish.”

She was at first perplexed when Zamora Cruz asked her to contribute, but agreed once she learned about the theme. “I could tell she immediatel­y got it,” Johnson said. “It says, ‘ You care about us, we’re going to lift you as much as we can.’”

Confrontin­g anti- Blackness is a conversati­on that younger, well- meaning Latinos have pushed on their elders or conservati­ve relatives all this summer, often to little or quarrelsom­e effect. No one likes to be told their culture is rife with racism.

But it’s one thing to hector someone toward your worldview. It’s another to literally put your money where your beliefs are, like Ivette Zamora Cruz.

Originally from Guadalajar­a, she moved to Cathedral City at 15, but returned to Mexico to earn a business degree. Zamora Cruz came back to the Coachella Valley eight years ago to take a job as a social worker, an experience that had her travel the entire region, not just the wealthier western side where she grew up.

“It’s two completely different sides of the desert,” she said. “And who writes its narrative? One gets the glamour; the other, nada.”

Simply posting cool

Latino stuff on Instagram didn’t seem impactful enough. She remembered the many lifestyle magazines that cover the Coachella Valley and wondered why Latinos didn’t deserve the same. With no journalism background but a deep Rolodex, Zamora Cruz launched La Revista as a free quarterly in April last year with a run of 1,000 issues ( its tagline: “El Valle en Tus Manos”— the valley in your hands).

She quickly discovered what far bigger media organizati­ons — including this one — know too well: Making money in print media ain’t easy.

Each issue had a smaller and smaller run; Zamora Cruz dipped into her own savings to keep it afloat as ad sales quickly dropped. She was ready to end La Revista’s run with one final spring issue, but the pandemic made even that seemingly impossible.

Then the Black Lives Matter protests sprouted. She spent $ 1,000 to print 200 copies. Now at $ 5 apiece, Zamora Cruz hopes to at least break even and plans at least one more issue of La Revista to continue the conversati­on.

Making money isn’t the point anymore.

“I go back to those little girls on the cover,” she said, pointing to a magazine on a coffee table in her living room. “They’re part of our community. They’re going to grow up among our kids. So we must fight for them all.”

Just then, her phone rang. Lunch was waiting outside in front of her driveway.

Chermica Simmons runs Mica’s Soul Kitchen, a 3year- old food stall that used to set up every Thursday night in downtown Palm Springs but hasn’t opened since February. La Revista ran a full- page ad for Mica’s, “and I’ve gotten a lot of new attention,” Simmons said.

The two had never met before, but chatted as if they were longtime pals. Simmons left Zamora Cruz with containers filled with Southern- fried combo plates of shrimp and lobster tails and mac ’n’ cheese.

“That’s what I want to hear,” La Revista’s publisher said as she lugged lunch into her home. “Latinos supporting Blacks.”

‘ I go back to those little girls on the cover. They’re part of our community.... So we must fight for them all.’

— I vette Zamora Cruz

 ?? I VETTE ZAMORA CRUZ Gustavo Arellano Los Angeles Times ?? with a copy of the summer issue of La Revista, her Spanish- language magazine that covers Latino residents in the Coachella Valley. The issue featuring Black voices got a positive reaction.
I VETTE ZAMORA CRUZ Gustavo Arellano Los Angeles Times with a copy of the summer issue of La Revista, her Spanish- language magazine that covers Latino residents in the Coachella Valley. The issue featuring Black voices got a positive reaction.
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