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The
agenda of African-Americans and Latinos diverge on Immigration,
political representation, jobs, and bi-lingual education.
Immigration:
Many Latino immigrants have been displaced from the
land, have little education, and few job prospects in
their native countries, they are "economic refugees."
Survival, not assimilation, is their priority. They
fiercely guard their customs, traditions, religion and
language. Many prefer to live in tight-knit barrios
to better preserve family ties and language. They send
money home to Mexico or El Salvador and return often
to visit relatives and friends. Their faces are turned
as much to their native countries as America.
Jobs:
Many Latinos work at low pay jobs that offer no health,
union or retirement benefits. To many these jobs represent
a marked improvement from the life they left. Many employers
take advantage of their economic plight and hire them
to work the dirtiest and most hazardous jobs in plants,
factories and farms. Previously unskilled or semi-skilled
white and black workers held these jobs. The increased
immigration has come at the worst possible time for
poor African-American communities. They are reeling
from a decade of job, education, and social service
cuts. Immigrant labor competition could further marginalize
the black poor by raising joblessness, decreasing benefits,
and exacerbating the crime and drug crisis.
Bi-lingual
education: African-Americans insist that this benefits
Latinos and hurts them. Cash strapped underserved inner
city school districts can hardly be expected to stem
the astronomical dropout and illiteracy rates among
black students, without adequate funds, materials and
trained staff. Bi-lingual programs could further drain
school districts of those badly needed resources. Latinos
counter that bi-lingual education is crucial to improving
reading and math proficiency skills for their Spanish-speaking
children. Without these programs, they cannot hope to
advance educationally and professionally. The solution
is to spend more on the educational needs of all students.
However, when the money is not there, the problem quickly
is reduced to ethnic squabbling over the scarce dollars.
Political
representation: The tensions have spilled over into
politics. Latinos insist that their bigger numbers have
changed the ethnic make-up of many neighborhoods from
black and white to brown. From the local to the national
level, Latino leaders now demand their fair share of
political office-holders, appointments and positions.
This could erode the newfound political gains and power
blacks have won through decades of struggle. Many African-American
leaders argue that the numbers that count most are the
voting numbers and blacks vote in proportionally greater
numbers than Latinos. To them, power is sharing out
of question.
Government cutbacks in job and social programs have
wreaked havoc on the black and Latino poor. Both have
a vital interest in the fight for low cost housing,
quality education, better health care, police protection
and efficient city services. With blacks and browns
increasingly living together in many residential neighborhoods,
the physical separation has broken down. This has made
dialogue between the groups easier. In some neighborhoods,
community groups have tenuously bridged the culture
and language gap and have joined forces to protest crime,
school and housing deterioration.
The battle over bi-lingual education, redistricting,
and immigration can also be mitigated. National organizations
such as the National Council of La Raza and the NAACP
can keep the lines of communication open through multi-issue
workshops, conferences, meetings, and seminars.
The hard truth, though, is that blacks and Latinos are
undergoing a painful period of adjustment in L.A. and
America. They will find the struggle for unity will
be long and difficult. If enough blacks back Villaraigosa
and there's peace on the streets and in the schools,
that will be a good sign that black and Latino unity
could be more than a pipedream.
Earl
Ofari Hutchinson is a featured columnist for BlackNews.com,
an author and political analyst.
For
media interviews, contact:
Mr. Hutchinson at 323-296-6331 or hutchinsonreport@aol.com
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