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9780312267018

We Took the Streets : Fighting for Latino Rights with the Young Lords

by ;
  • ISBN13:

    9780312267018

  • ISBN10:

    0312267010

  • Edition: 1st
  • Format: Trade Book
  • Copyright: 2003-06-14
  • Publisher: St. Martin's Press
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List Price: $24.95

Summary

The Young Lords were one of the most provocative and controversial organizations to arise during the tumult of the late 1960s. Inspired by the wave of protest movements sweeping the country, and the world, as well as organizations like the Black Panthers, the Brown Berets, and the American Indian Movement, the Young Lords became the most respected and powerful voice of Puerto Rican empowerment in the country. In 1968 Miguel "Mickey" Melendez was a college student, developing pride in his unique cultural identity as Cuban and Puerto Rican, while growing increasingly aware of the lack of quality health care, education, and housingnot to mention respecthis people endured for the sake of the American Dream. He was not alone. Bringing together other like-minded Latino student activists, like Juan Gonzalez, Felipe Luciano, David Perez, and Pablo "Yoruba" Guzman, Melendez helped to form the central committee of what would become the New York branch of the Young Lords. Over the course of the next three years, the Young Lords were a force to be reckoned with. From their storefront offices in East Harlem, they defiantly took back the streets of El Barrio. In addition to running clothing drives, day-care centers, and free breakfast and health programs, the Young Lords became known for their bold radical actions, like the takeovers of the First People's Church and Lincoln Hospital. Front-page news, they forced the city to take notice of their demands for social and political justice and make drastic policy changes. Melendez was part of it all, and describes the idealism, anger, and vitality of the Lords with the unsparing eye of an insider. For the first time, he reveals the extent of the clandestine military branch of the organization and his role coordinating and arming the underground. The fall of the Young Lords was as swift and as public as their rise. Fractured by internal ideological differences and plagued by infiltrators, the Young Lords imploded in 1972. The underground was disbanded and for many, like Melendez, the group they had dedicated their lives to vanishedbut not its mission. Many former Young Lords continue to fight for Latino rights, including Melendez, who in 1977 led a takeover of the Statue of Liberty to dramatize the plight of Puerto Rican nationalists languishing in prison and continues to fight for peace in Vieques. 0Although they were active for only a brief period of time, the legacy of the Young Lordstheir urban guerilla, media-saavy tactics, as well as their message of popular power and liberation, civil rights, and ethnic equityis lasting. We Took the Streets is one man's passionate and inspiring story of the Puerto Rican struggle for equality, civil rights, and independence.

Author Biography

Miguel “Mickey” Melendez has a master's degree in public administration and has held executive positions in the New York City Health and Hospital Corporation, Housing Authority, and Department of Education. Melendez has also taught in the Hispanic Studies Department at Baruch College. He remains a committed activist for Puerto Rican rights, most recently against the resumption of bombing on Vieques. He lives in Bronxville, New York.

Jose Torres has been a journalist since the 1950s. He was the first Hispanic to write a regular column for the New York Post, and his work has appeared in New York magazine, Details, Parade, The New York Times, and Playboy, among many others. Currently, he’s a Spanish-language boxing columnist for ESPN and a political columnist for El Diario/La Prensa in New York. Since winning the 1956 Olympic Silver Medal in Melbourne, and the World’s Light-Heavyweight Crown in 1965, Torres has stayed active first as president and then member of the World’s Boxing Organization’s Board of Directors. He was also chairman of the New York State Athletic Commission for five years. His books include Fire and Fear: The Inside Story of Mike Tyson and Sting Like a Bee: The Story of Muhammad Ali.

Table of Contents

Foreword by Jose Torres xi
1 After Thirty Years 1(19)
2 Beginnings 20(34)
3 Opening My Eyes 54(34)
4 Nobody Likes Garbage 88(24)
5 The First People's Church 112(18)
6 The Underground 130(18)
7 The Hijack 148(14)
8 "The Butcher Shop"-Lincoln Hospital 162(17)
9 The Second People's Church 179(10)
10 The Rise and Fall of the Young Lords Party 189(10)
11 The Seizure of the Statue of Liberty 199(14)
12 Sleeping with My Eyes Open 213(10)
Epilogue 223(8)
Appendix
Rules of Discipline of the Young Lords Party
231(3)
The Young Lords Party: 13-Point Program and Platform (October 1969)
234(4)
The Young Lords Party: 13-Point Program and Platform (revised May 1970)
238(4)
Acknowledgments 242(5)
Index 247

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