Help for Elizabeth (Betita) Martinez.
On International Women’s Day, let’s help someone who has done so much for all our
communities…
Please distribute widely!
Help for Elizabeth (Betita) Martinez.
Dear Activists, Educators, students, friends and community members,
One of the Chicana/o community’s most important living treasures, Elizabeth Betita
Martinez, the author of “500 Years of Chicano History in Pictures, and of other
important books like “Viva La Causa” and over 500 articles since the early
50’s, had a stroke a few days ago, and has been left with several physical problems,
like a difficulty walking and seeing. She just made it to her 80’s, and was working
as hard as usual, speaking at colleges, community centers and k-12 schools about
Latina/o issues and many other subjects. She is in need of much help right now,
as she is supposed to be resting, so any donations of any funds to help her rest
and regain her health would be greatly appreciated. Even gifts of a few dollars
would be of use at this time, but definitely your letters of well-wishes and support
will brighten up her day. She has contributed so much to the Chicano/Latino, Women’s
and People of color movements in the US and internationally (has written about China,
and the Cuban Revolution, among other themes)Â that it is time for those of us who
can to contribute back to her even if it is just a note that her books and writings
inspired us and to wish her well.Â
Those of you who are able to, can send her your letters and well-wishes to:
Elizabeth (Betita) Martinez
Institute for MultiRacial Justice
3311 Mission St., #170 SF, CA 94110 or
email Imrj@aol.com.
Her home address is:
3545 24th St.
San Francisco, CA 94110
When asked what she needed the most she stated funds and speaking engagements in
the future to help her make ends meet. Please think of including her as a speaker
at your institutions the near future. She can be contacted at that address for
possible speaking engagements. For more info. on her speaking topics, please go
to your favorite search engine and look her up as Elizabeth (betita) Martinez.
Here is an article on her that many people have found useful:
Towards Social Justice: Elizabeth ‘Betita’ Martinez and the Institute for MultiRacial
Justice
by Chris Crass
“Elizabeth ‘Betita’ Martinez is a national and international treasure. Her
life and work provide a model of internationalism and solidarity, as well as local
organizing. ‘Think globally, act locally’ was her practice long before the slogan
was created. From work for decolonization at the United Nations, to the Civil Rights
Movement, to pioneering the women’s liberation movement, to local organizing in
New Mexico and California, to top-rate journalism and political theory, Betita continues
to blaze trails and create priceless legacies, mentoring countless social activists,
young and old, male and female, people of all colors, gay and straight, always with
astonishing patience and intelligence.” This is how Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz describes
her friend of 30 years. Dunbar-Ortiz has been involved in radical politics and activism
since the sixties. She founded one of the first groups of the Womens Liberation
Movement, Cell 16 and helped edit their journal, No More Fun and Games. She is the
author of Red Dirt:Growing Up Okie and she’s a regular reader at the Anarchist Cafe
nights in San Francisco.
Elizabeth ‘Betita’ Martinez lives in the Mission District of San Francisco, where
she is involved in many different projects and campaigns. Her main project is the
Institute for MultiRacial Justice, which she co-founded in 1997. She serves as the
co-chair of the Institute and edits the Institutes publication, Shades of Power.
The Institute aims to “serve as a resource center that will strengthen the
struggle against White Supremacy by combating the tactics of divide-and-control
and advancing solidarity among people of color” (from the group’s Mission Statement).
The Institute serves as a clearinghouse of information about joint work done by
communities of color locally, regionally and eventually on a national basis. The
Institute provides educational materials to help build greater understanding and
respect between people of color. Working to build solidarity between communities
of color, the Institute holds educational forums on topics and issues that are not
only important to communities of color, but that have divided people of color. Forum
topics have included immigrant rights and bilingual education and the these events
bring together organizers from various groups to have a dialogue about the issues.
These forums and other work done by the Institute try to provide a site for people
from different communities of color to meet with each other and find ways to support
one another.
In October of 99, Martinez and the Institute put together the Shades of Power Festival:
Alliance Building With Film and Video. The festival’s program stated, “the
movies show how different peoples of color in the U.S. have related and worked together
in common struggles for social justice. A few of the videos focus on a single group
whose struggle continues today and needs support from other people of color.”
The festival featured movies about Ethnic Studies student strikes in 69-69, the
Puerto Rican Young Lords Party, Angela Davis, June Jordan, Yuri Kochiyama, the Japanese
Internment Camps during WWII, housing struggles by Latinos, Filipinos, African-Americans,
repression and resistance at the U.S. Mexico border, labor organizing and envirnomental
justice campaigns. In all, about 20 films were viewed. Between movies, there were
four discussion panels with organizers from various groups on gentrification in
San Fancisco, immigrant rights and environmental justice. Hundreds of people went
to the festival.
The other main project of the Institute is publishing Shades of Power. It is published
as a step in the direction of creating an anti-racist, anti-capitalist ideological
climate. Shades of Power, which is currently on its 6th issue, is full of articles
on organizing around environmental justice issues, police brutality, violence in
public schools, workers’ rights, immigration and incarceration - to name a few.
All of the articles focus on pro-active campaigns and positive activism with special
attention paid to alliance building among people of color.
Shades of Power helps the Institute work towards their long-term goals. According
to their mission statement, the Institute is “committed to linking the struggle
of Third World unity with struggles to build a new society free of class relations,
sexism, homophobia, environmental abuse, and the other diseases of our times”.
Working with women’s groups is a special focus of the Institute, “because women
have often taken the lead in building alliances among people of color”. Organizing
with youth is also a major focus of the Institute with the goal of developing autonomous
youth initiatives. The Institute was active in the youth led campaign against Proposition
21 in California. Prop 21, the juvinile crime initiative, makes it easier to prosecute
children as adults, broadly defines gangs and gang membership to include most aspects
of hip-hop culture and criminalizes it and plays on social fears of crime committed
by young people of color - regardless of the fact that violent youth crime has declined
significantly in the last few years. When youth organizations like Third Eye Movement,
Homey Network and the Critical Resistance Youth Task Force mobilized and organized
thousands of young people, the Institute offered support and solidarity. As Roxanne
stated earlier, Betita is a mentor to countless activists and organizers. Her years
of experience, her firm dedication to radical social change and her wisdom and insights
into organizing have influenced and inspired many who are active today, especially
young women of color organizers.
In addition to the Institute, Martinez is also involved with many different organizations
in the Bay Area, such as the Women of Color Resource Center and Media Alliance.
Betita is also the author of the book De Colores Means All Of Us: Latina Views of
a Multi-Colored Century, published by South End Press in 1998.
Betita’s book, De Colores Means All Of Us, which hit the shelves last year is a
chronicle of organizing and alliance building throughout her years of work. The
book is a collection of essays that range from discussions on attacks against immigrant
rights and affirmative action to contemporary struggles for Ethnic Studies lead
by Latina/o youth. Betita’s book is full of essays that develop a radical Chicana
perspective and analysis on society, race relations, history, dynamics between men
and women in past and present activism and on the future of building a multiracial,
feminist, anti-capitalist movement. The essays are packed with stories, examples
of past activism, models of past and present organizing and inspiration to implement
lessons in the book into our organizing efforts.
Elizabeth Martinez traces her political consciousness back to her childhood. Her
father had moved from Mexico into the US and after quite a few years of financial
hardship ended up working in Washington DC as a secretary in the Mexican Embassy.
She remembers growing up with stories of the Mexican Revolution, Zapata and US imperialism.
Also, Martinez grew up in a middle-class white suburb of DC and was the only person
of color in school, which made her painfully aware of racism and white supremacy.
After World War II, Martinez went to work at the United Nations as a researcher
on colonialism decolonization efforts and strategies. During the McCarthy Era, her
section chief and other co-workers at the UN were fired for having past or present
connections with Communism. In 1959, three months after the Cuban Revolution claimed
victory, Martinez went to Cuba to witness a successful anti-colonial, socialist
struggle. This trip to Cuba had a profound impact on her.
In addition to Cuba, Martinez later traveled to the Soviet Union, Poland, Hungary,
Vietnam (during the war) and China to witness and observe how people were implementing
socialism.
When the sit-in movement swept across the South in 1960, a new and exciting form
of direct action organizing was taking shape which soon lead to the formation of
the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee. SNCC was one of the most important
organizations of the 1960’s as it successfully experimented with various forms of
community organizing, direct action tactics, radically democratic decision-making
and an egalitarian vision that inspired and influenced countless other groups and
projects in that 60’s and into today. While SNCC, along with the Southern Civil
Rights Movement, is generally remembered as a Black led struggle with the involvement
of whites - Betita was one of two Chicanas working full-time for SNCC; Maria Varela
was also a SNCC organizer. Martinez origianlly served as the director of SNCC’s
office in New York. Betita edited the photo history book, The Movement, which not
only raised funds for SNCC, but also brought graphic images of the Civil Rights
movement into homes across the United States. Martinez was an organizer with SNCC
in 1964 during the Mississippi Summer project (often referred to as Freedom Summer).
In 1968, a year of revolution and repression around the world, she moved to New
Mexico to work in the land grant movement of Chicanos/as struggling to recover lands
lost when the US took over half of Mexico with the 1846-48 war. There she launched
an important movement newspaper, El Grito del Norte (The Cry of the North), and
continued publishing it for 5 years along with other activism. El Grito reported
on international activism and sought to show connections between different struggles.
At the Chicano Communications Center, which she co-founded in Albuquerque, she edited
the bilingual pictorial volume 500 Years of Chicano History at a time when almost
no books existed on the subject. The pictorial became the basis of her educational
video Viva La Causa! which has been shown at film festivals and classrooms across
the country. In all of this activism, she worked with and trained many young Chicanas/os.
In the late 60’s when the Women’s Liberation Movement exploded across the country
with feminist groups, publications, protest actions, manifestos and speakers everywhere,
Elizabeth Martinez was in New Mexico helping shape the newly developing movement.
In her essay, “History Makes Us, We Make History” from the anthology,
The Feminist Memoir Project: Voices From Women’s LIberation, Betita talks about
developing a Chicana feminism that confronts race, class and gender inequality.
In that essay she writes about the whiteness of the Women’s Liberation Movement
and the sexism in the Chicano Movmement and the need to struggle against all forms
of oppression. During this time, Betita was made an honorary member of WITCH (Women’s
International Conspiracy from Hell).
Since 1976 she has been living in the Bay Area. Betita became deeply involved in
leftist party building politics for 10 years. In 1982 she ran for Governor of California
on the Peace and Freedom Party ticket; the first Chicana on the ballot for that
office. She has also taught courses in Ethnic Studies amd Women Studies at Hayward
State University. Martinez has traveled all across the United States speaking on
colleges and in classrooms about race, class, gender issues and organizing. She
has teamed up with longtime activist Elena Featherston, also a co-founder of the
Institute, and they have done joint speaking tours called “Black and Brown
- Get Down”, which aim at building alliances between people of color. She has
consistently been a mentor over the years to new and long-time activists and organizers
helping transfer skills, knowledge and experience in effort to build our movements.
In addition to editing Shades of Power, she is also a regular contributor to Z Magazine
and other publications.
The Institute for MultiRacial Justice is just the latest project in a long list
of efforts to make the world a better place. Like her other projects, the Institute
works to develop long-range goals and vision to guide activists from one struggle
to the next. As we move from one crisis to the next - from welfare reform, to the
ending of afirmative action, to the bombing of Kosovo, to Mumia’s execution - we
become worn-down and burned-out. Betita reminds us that we must remember that we
are part of a movement, we are part of something much bigger than ourselves and
we are not alone in the struggle. She reminds us that while we confront budget cuts
in Ethnic Studies programs or new attacks against the civil rights of homesless
people, that we must hold onto our goals - solidarity, community, revolution, egalitarianism,
a new world. She reminds us that as activists, as organizers, we have a responsibility
to teach and train others - that we have a responsibility to actively build a new
world.
Martinez also has much to say to us about how we build movements for social change.
After the massive resistance to the World Trade Organization in Seattle, Martinez
wrote the widely distributed and highly influencial essay, “Where Was the Color
in Seattle? Looking for reasons why the Great Battle was so white”. She writes,
“Understanding the reasons for the low level of color, and what can be learned
from it, is crucial if we are to make Seattle’s promise of a new, international
movement against imperialist globalization come true.” Through interviews and
observations she writes about the lessons that organizers - people of color and
white - must learn. We must connecting the issues of globalization to local community
issues. White radicals need to develop and put forward an analysis of corporate
domination that understands racial oppression in the third world and in the United
States. Radicals of color need to be networking and connecting their work with a
global framwork. White radicals need to go beyond their familiar circles and form
coalitions with people of color with an understanding of how white activists in
the past have betrayed people of color. White radicals need a strong race, class
and gender analysis and it should be central to their political worldview.
Martinez also has much to say in her writings about the day-today organizing work
that we engage in. She stresses that we must take education and training folx seriously.
If we are to become a participatory, radically democratic, feminist, multi-racial,
anti-capitalist, queer liberationist, internationalist movement - then we need to
work at it. We need to teach each other skills, tactics, and political analysis
so that we can all be leaders in a movement for our collective liberation.
Martinez and other radicals of her generation have much to teach the younger generation
of today. It is important that we listen and learn.
For more information about the Institute for MultiRacial Justice or to receive Shades
of Power write: 3311 Mission St., #170 SF, CA 94110 or email Imrj@aol.com. For an
inspiring read, pick-up De Colores Means All Of Us.

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