[1696] in peace2

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Friday Night: C'mon Out!

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Jeff Duritz)
Wed Apr 24 13:38:46 2002

Message-Id: <200204241738.NAA03420@duspcom6.mit.edu>
To: peace-announce@MIT.EDU
Cc: shpe-request@MIT.EDU, pangaea-exec@MIT.EDU
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
Date: Wed, 24 Apr 2002 13:38:38 -0400
From: Jeff Duritz <jdu@MIT.EDU>


Something fun and different for a good cause.... 

                    {{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{{ 

                    An Evening of Jazz and Dance 
                    to benefit indigenous communities in Chiapas, Mexico 

                    Featuring: 
                    * Renowned singer/composer Mili Bermejo 
                    and partner Dan Greenspan, celebrated for 
                    weaving together Jazz and Latin American music 
                    * Harvard Ballet Folklorico de Aztlan 
                    * Beautiful Mexican crafts for sale 
                    * Hot coffee and tea from Equal Exchange 

                    Friday, April 26, 7:30 PM 
                    Cambridge Multicultural Arts Center 
                    41 Second St., Cambridge, MA 
                    Admission: $15 

                    Proceeds will go to indigenous communities rebuilding 
                    from civil conflict in southern Mexico. 
                    See below for information on how to donate. 

                    CMAC is near the Lechmere T/bus stop, green line 
                    Parking on street and in paid lot next to Cambridge 
Galeria Mall
                    For directions call CMAC, 617-577-1400 or visit 
www.cmacusa.org
                    CMAC is wheelchair accessible 

                    Sponsored by: 
                    * Tonantzin: Boston Committee To Support the Native 
Peoples of Mexico
                    617-629-2449, annalee@igc.org 
                    * Cambridge Multicultural Arts Center, www.cmacusa.org 
                    * Equal Exchange, www.equalexchange.com 

                    ******************************** 
                    Dear friends of Tonantzin, 

                    We are excited to let you know that a group of Tonantzin 
members is going to
                    Mexico this May. During our time there we will visit 
Tzotzil indigenous
                    communities in the highlands of Chiapas. In recent months 
these communities
                    have faced new and difficult challenges, so Tonantzin is 
raising funds for
                    them. We will deliver the funds during our trip, and we 
invite you to help!

                    Many of you remember the December 1997 Acteal massacre, 
when paramilitary
                    gunmen murdered 45 unarmed indigenous women, men and 
children. Acteal
                    victims were members of Las Abejas ("The Bees"), an 
indigenous organization
                    that supports the Zapatista movement but organizes through 
non-violent
                    means. After the massacre thousands of Las Abejas and 
other indigenous
                    families were displaced by continued paramilitary threats. 
Since then they
                    have lived in makeshift camps with limited access to clean 
water, healthcare
                    and farm land. 

                    Last summer Las Abejas camps lost reliable access to clean 
water. This
                    forced families to make the risky decision to return to 
their communities of
                    origin, where paramilitaries still posed a threat. Despite 
the danger, 256
                    Las Abejas families (about 1,410 people) returned home 
this past fall. Since
                    paramilitaries burned their homes and stole their animals 
and tools they are
                    now struggling to rebuild. As rainy season approaches, 
families need tin
                    roofing for permanent housing immediately. They also need 
machetes and hoes
                    for spring planting. 

                    Many Tzotzil families in highland autonomous 
municipalities are also coffee
                    farmers. The autonomous municipalities form the backbone 
of the Zapatista
                    movement for local, indigenous participation in 
decision-making regarding
                    education, use of resources and traditional election of 
community-based
                    leaders. Coffee farmers in the higlands have formed a 
successful cooperative
                    called Mut Vitz (Tzotzil for "Bird Mountain") and have 
recently attained
                    organic certification. Over the past year, however, world 
coffee prices
                    have plummeted to historic lows. This has devastated the 
farmers' livelihood, and over 200,000 small
                    farmers in Chiapas have lost their land 
                    due to the huge fall in world coffee prices. Tonantzin is 
raising money to
                    fund a loan pool to help farmers through this crisis. 

                    Please give generously! Every dollar you give will 
directly help Las Abejas
                    families rebuild and plant their crops and will fund a 
loan pool for the
                    coffee farmers. Funds will be distributed through 
Cloudforest Initiatives, a
                    Chiapas and US-based non-profit organization that works 
directly with these
                    communities. 

                    To contribute see the coupon below. Thank you for your 
support!
                    Sincerely, 
                    David Amdur, Kevin Batt, Nora Ortega, Rosalba Solis, Anna 
Utech, Glenda Yoder
                    Tonantzin: Boston Committee to Support the Native Peoples 
of Mexico


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