Monday, November 11, 2019

Juan Felipe Herrera's Talk 11/6





On Wednesday, November 6, 2019, San Diego State University's Chicana & Chicano Studies brought Juan Felipe Herrera as part of the Chicana & Chicano Studies' 50th Anniversary Commemoration: Celebration, Consciousness-Raising, Sowing the Future. Throughout the fall of 2019 and spring of 2020, they are recognizing the founding of the CCS program and fifty years of engagement with social justice-oriented scholarship and community service.


SDSU president Dr. Adela de la Torre introduced Herrera, the poet laureate of the United States 2015-2017 and the first Chicanx poet laureate in this country. She says Herrera "embodies the experience of many people in the community" and provides a voice for those around him: “the work he does speaks to a community rich in culture." He graduated from UCLA with a B.A. in anthropology and received his M.F.A from University of Iowa. He has published 21 books, written musicals, and is involved in arts leadership for children in migrant communities.

I couldn’t help but constantly notice how Herrera embodied an aura of kindness, standing in front of us in all white and flashing a bright smile. As he stood in front of us, one of the first things out of his mouth was "how beautiful it is to be together and united." It is easy to forget the need to be united, but that night, students and faculty alike were united in our captivation of Herrera. We were united by Herrera.

Herrera strives for a kinder world, saying "it is good to become larger than we think we are…it is good to cast our voices out." He practices what he teaches, as many of his poems reflect current politics.


His first reading was the poem "187 Reasons Why Mexicanos Can’t Cross the Border." Herrera actively engaged the audience, having us shout "because" before every line.

"Because
multiplication is our favorite sport…"

"Because
we’ll dig a tunnel to Seattle…"

"Because
it’s Indian land stolen from our mothers…"

"Because
our passport says we’re out of date…"

"Because
people are hanging Milagros on the 2000 miles or border wire…"

"Because
brown is the color of the future…"

Herrera is a voice for the voiceless, but in this poem, we all yelled for those oppressed by the current political climate. He’s not just a voice for others, in this moment he helped us find our own voices. He reminds the audience through his poems that every voice is important, as we yelled "because" 187 times that night.

Herrera also read a touching poem, "California Brown," which lists the names and ages of the victims of the 2017 Parkland shooting.

His voice is inspiring, and in the audience I saw this inspiration. During the reading I kept noticing a man in a brown jacket and a feather in his hat drawing a sketch of Herrera with his name in the background. 

At the end, someone asked Herrera "What’s the next step for Chicanos?" Herrera answers: “It’s our dedication to assist others." The cause for rights for Chicanx people is never over, and we must allow the movement to blossom, and "we have to generate in ourselves the freedom of thought."

Thank you to the SDSU Chicana & Chicano Studies for making this event possible, and we all thank Juan Felipe Herrera for such an amazing and inspiring event.

 -SS

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