Dr. Elizabeth “Betita” Martinez: Resource Page

Dr. Elizabeth “Betita” Martinez: Resource Page Eliminating Historical Amnesia: Rediscovering Women's Resistance In New Mexico! Look for a listing of Betita's work and resources on this page!

Honoring the Work of Elizabeth “Betita” Martinez through a yearlong celebration of Betita's life work - December 12, 2011 through December 12, 2012. We encourage groups and individuals across New Mexico (and the world) to organize an event in their community using her works to share. Send your event to this page with adequate details and we will post your event and help get the word out with invit

es and shares through the fb community of friends and supporters and other in our community calendars. ABOUT BETITA:

Borrowed from Betita's fb site:

Elizabeth "Betita" Martínez (born 1925) is a Chicana feminist and a long-time community organizer, activist, author, and educator. She has written numerous books and articles on different topics relating to social movements in the Americas. Her best-known work is the bilingual "500 years of Chicano History in Pictures," which later formed the basis for the educational video "¡Viva la Causa! 500 Years of Chicano History." Her work has been hailed by Angela Y. Davis as comprising "one of the most important living histories of progressive activism in the contemporary era ... [Martínez is] inimitable ... irrepressible ... indefatigable." Martínez began her political work in the early 1950s. She worked in New York for the United Nations Secretariat as a researcher on colonialism and decolonization in Africa. During the 1960s, Martínez served full-time in the Civil Rights Movement with the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) in the South and as a coordinator of its New York office. In 1968, she moved to New Mexico to start a newspaper to support the Alianza Federal de Mercedes. Along with lawyer Beverly Axelrod, Martínez thus founded the bilingual movement newspaper "El Grito del Norte," which she worked on for five years. In 1973, she co-founded and directed the Chicano Communications Center, a barrio-based organizing and education project. Since moving to the Bay Area in 1976, Martínez has organized around Latino community issues, taught Women’s studies part-time, conducted anti-racist training workshops, and worked with youth groups. She ran for governor of California on the Peace & Freedom Party ticket in 1982 and has received many awards from student, community, and academic organizations, including Scholar of the Year 2000 by the National Association for Chicana and Chicano Studies. In 1997, she and Phil Hutchings co-founded the Institute for MultiRacial Justice, which "aims to strengthen the struggle against white supremacy by serving as a resource center to help build alliances among peoples of color and combat divisions." In 2004, she served on the advisory board for the group 2004 Racism Watch. She is also an adviser to the Catalyst Project, an anti-racist political education organization that focuses on white communities.

09/22/2024

MEDIA ADVISORY AND DAYBOOK ITEM FOR SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2024
Contact: Kyle Ann Sebastian, Union of Concerned Scientists, [email protected], 773-941-7919

Albuquerque Send-off Rally:

Indigenous Radiation Victims Depart on Cross Country Road Trip to Save RECA

On Sunday, September 22, Representative Gabe Vasquez (D-NM) and New Mexico residents will hold a send-off rally for roughly 50 members of the Navajo Nation, Laguna Pueblo, Acoma Pueblo and Hopi tribe departing for Washington, D.C. to urge Congress to restore and reform aid for victims of radiation from nuclear weapons, uranium mining and nuclear waste. The journey will take 30 hours by bus.

After arriving in D.C., the tribal members will gather on the U.S. Capitol lawn September 24 to 26 to sing, dance, drum, pray and call on House Speaker Mike Johnson to bring the Radiation Exposure Compensation Reauthorization Act to the House floor for a vote.

WHO:
Rep. Vasquez, representatives from Senator Ben Ray Lujan, Rep. Leger Fernandez and Rep. Stansbury’s offices, New Mexico residents and roughly 50 members of the Navajo Nation, Laguna Pueblo and Zuni tribe, including former uranium miners, veterans and downwinders from New Mexico and Arizona.

WHEN:
8:30 a.m. MT, September 22. The bus will depart at 9 a.m.

WHERE:
National Hispanic Cultural Center
1701 4th St SW, Albuquerque, NM 87102

Address

Albuquerque, NM
87107

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