Chicago Sun-Times

Museums join forces to unite city’s black, Latino population­s

- BYMAUDLYNE­IHEJIRIKA Staff Reporter Email: mihejirika@ suntimes. com Twitter: @ maudlynei

African- American and Latino relations.

It’s long been the elephant in the living room; in Chicago, manifestin­g in unspoken tension over jobs and city contracts as one population increased and the other decreased.

Nationally, it’s played out in the relative silence ofmany African- Americans on immigratio­n reform, a hot- button issue for Latinos; and in the similar relative silence of many Latinos on police brutality, a hot- button issue for African- Americans.

Two Chicago museums and a major foundation are joining forces to wrestle with that elephant, in a town hall Thursday, titled: “Straight Talk: Black/ Brown Unity in a Changing America.”

“A few of us have moved between both communitie­s and have worked on many, many issues, trying to bring people together and effect change for both communitie­s. But there have just been so many headlines and so many things that have kept us apart,” says Billy Ocasio, CEO of the National Museum of Puerto Rican Arts & Culture, partnering with the DuSable Museum of African American History on the groundbrea­king initiative.

“When Harold Washington ran for mayor, there was a common interest, a common theme that brought us together, and that was ‘ moving forward,’ ” recalls Ocasio, a former Chicago alderman. “That’s been lost for decades now, and it’s time for our communitie­s to come together and talk about how do we bridge that gap? The only way to do that is to understand­wherewe are today, our commonalit­ies.”

Washington won that 1983 election with 98 percent of the African- American vote; 56.7 percent of the Latino vote; and 17 percent of the white vote.

Conversely, when a Latino candidate forced Mayor Rahm Emanuel into an unpreceden­ted run- off last year, Jesus “Chuy” Garcia could not coalesce African-AmericanLa­tino unity, garnering 44.3 percent of the vote to Emanuel’s winning 55.7 percent.

The 2010 Census placed Chicago’s African- American and Latino population­s at 33 percent and 29 percent, respective­ly.

The Thursday night event is the first in recent years to bring leaders of both communitie­s together in an effort to address a rift called real by some, imagined, by others. It’s being held at DuSable, 740 E. 56th Pl.

“It’s time, because the black and brown communitie­s, we’re all suffering, not in the same ways, but by the same root causes, and it’s something we need to communicat­e to ourselves and to the majority,” says Perri Irmer, President/ CEO of DuSable.

Organizers say the event is spurred, in part, by a political climate that has seen a presidenti­al candidate denigrate Latino immigrants early in the campaign, which was viewed by some as someone else’s problem — until other groups became his target.

“When you look at theway a candidate started a campaign for the highest office in the land by insulting and degrading Mexicans and Latinos, now women, and black people, and the handicappe­d, and Muslims, it just goes on and on,” says Irmer.

“Black people are involuntar­y immigrants. We were forced here. And yet, our stories, our experience­s can be reflected in the stories of any other group, to an extent,” she says. “While the black community has suffered in different ways and deeper ways and continues to suffer, it’s still the same root cause targeting Mexican immigrants, Muslims, others. Pain is pain. Racism is racism. And discrimina­tion is discrimina­tion.

The town hall will be led by nationally known Puerto Rican civil rights activist and author Felipe Luciano.

“I have traveled to and fro in this nation arguing with, cajoling with and pleading with both communitie­s for the necessity of a united front that goes beyond simple politics, beyond tolerance, to the necessity of being family,” says Luciano, an expert in Latino/ African- American multicultu­ralism.

Luciano was an original member of the Last Poets, the Black Power- era artists mentored by literary icon Amiri Baraka, whose politicall­y charged live- music and spoken- word poetry performanc­es in the ’ 60s prefigured ’ 70s hip- hop and rap. He also led New York’s Young Lords Party, a Puerto Rican counterpar­t to the Black Panther Party founded in ’ 60s Chicago; and is an Emmy Awardwinni­ng former radio andTV talk show host.

“We will discuss on Thursday the realities, the romance, the possibilit­ies and the prayer for unificatio­n that’s so desperatel­y needed now between the two communitie­s. The legacy we leave behind has to be directed to our youth. Whether we’ve gotten it together or not isn’t important. What is important is that our children have a fighting chance for survival,” he says.

 ??  ?? Felipe Luciano
Felipe Luciano
 ??  ?? Perri Irmer
Perri Irmer
 ??  ?? Billy Ocasio
Billy Ocasio

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