Comentario para el día de hoy...Gracias a todos por pasar por mi blog... GRACIAS POR LEER Y DEJAR COMENTARIOS ABRAZOS!!!!

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Nombre: Zen
Ubicación: Lugar Bello, Puerto Rico, Puerto Rico

Tengo 35 yrs. Estoy felizmente casada y tengo un hijo de 7 yr. Trabajo en Aguadilla, PR y me encanta. Por fin tengo un sentido de pertenencia. Soy "Army Brat". He viajado mucho en mi vida y me encantaria que mi hijo aprendiera de este mundo tambien. Soy bilingue y me expreso como tal. AMO a mi Puerto Rico y haria CUALQUIER cosa por la isla y defenderla de agresores fisicos y/o verbales.

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10 junio 2006

Yo Soy Boricua...

Muchas veces me topo con blogs que hablan mucha mierda de Puerto Rico y muchas veces sacan de contexto nuestra historia frente a los "GRANDES del USA". (I'm being sarcastic now so give me some credit) Por lo que vi de este trailer promete ser un eye opener de lo que es PR ante los EU y de la experiencia boricua en los EU. Es algo importante ya que son muchos lo que estan optando por buscar vida mejor en los EU. Paso en los 40's y 50's y la historia se repite. Yo espero que sea lo que yo creo. Animate a verlo! Aqui les envio el site de IFC y se le dan trailer ( presione en las letras rojas) veran mejor de que se trata. LOS QUIERO Y UN BESO!!!!


"Yo Soy Boricua, Pa'que Tu Lo Sepas!" premieres on IFC Monday, June 12 at 9pm
ET/10pm PT. To check for other screenings, click here.

"Yo Soy Boricua,
Pa'que Tu Lo Sepas!" explores Rosie Perez's burning question: why are Puerto
Ricans so damn proud? Her journey through Puerto Rico's history gains
inspiration from the vibrant music, dancing and energy of the Puerto Rican Day
Parade, and she uses this starting point to speak to Puerto Rican people about
their identity and culture. We follow Rosie and her collaborators through New
York, Miami and to Puerto Rico to document what it really means to be "Boricua."

Puerto Ricans live in the United States in a limbo-like status. They are
citizens, but don't vote for President. They've traveled back and forth to the
island freely for a century, but still suffer extreme prejudice and economic
roadblocks. Their ancestral heritage includes Indigenous Taino, Spanish,
African, Irish, Scottish and French, amongst others. Puerto Ricans were the
first Latino group to migrate to the East Coast of the U.S. in large numbers.

In her directorial debut, Rosie Perez ("Do the Right Thing," "White Men
Can't Jump, Fearless") celebrates Puerto Rican pride. Alternately shocking and
humorous, this documentary, which is narrated by Jimmy Smits ("The West Wing,"
"NYPD Blue"), puts the themes of family, language, and racism into a historical
perspective. The film uncovers the complex and controversial history between
Puerto Rico and the United States: Forced sterilizations and birth control
testing in Puerto Rico; the imprisonment and torture of freedom fighter Pedro
Albizu Campos; Pedro Pietri, the pre-eminent voice for Nuyoricans; The Young
Lords, a group of activists agitating for Puerto Rican rights in New York City;
and the protests against U.S. bombing of Vieques. Few Americans know about these
subjects, which are not to be found in American history books. Academy
Award-nominated producer Liz Garbus ("Girlhood," "The Farm: Angola, USA," "The
Execution of Wanda Jean") and Emmy-nominated producer Rory Kennedy ("A Boy's
Life," "Pandemic," "American Hollow") produce.

Comments on "Yo Soy Boricua..."

 

Anonymous Anónimo said ... (7:48 a. m.) : 

gracias por compartirlo en tu blog...ojala sea lo que esperamos!
un abrazo,
la mariposa

 

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