Mexican flag with the BLM flag. Mexican Americans in Atlanta joining #GeorgeFloydProtestspic.twitter.com/7722IE39T3
@AP reporter in US Southwest, #immigration #latino #race #poverty #travel. #MFA @ColumbiaSOA @UHouston grad. Writing #JFK book #typewriter fan rcontreras@ap.org
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Mexican flag with the BLM flag. Mexican Americans in Atlanta joining #GeorgeFloydProtestspic.twitter.com/7722IE39T3
For historical perspective, this isn’t the first time black and Latino activists have come together to protest police violence. Here’s Bobby Seale of the Black Panthers and Chicano leader Reies Tijerina and Oakland’s Brown Berets at Defremery Park in West Oakland in 1968pic.twitter.com/lMlTQPDBPa
And for one historic perspective on black and Latino civil rights struggles, checkout my high school/undergraduate classmate @HistoryBrian’s book “Fighting Their Own Battles: Mexican Americans, African Americans, and the Struggle for Civil Rights in Texas” #GeorgeFloydpic.twitter.com/Bn82ZFEsyj
Chicano leader Reies Lopes Tijerina and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. were planning a Poor People’s March with united black and Latino activists in DC before King’s assassination. The march was also to focus on police violence #GeorgeFloydpic.twitter.com/I5cdyrokRv
Also unknown to most: Mexican American scholar and civil rights advocate George I Sanchez once received a letter from NAACP lawyer Thurgood Marshall about a California desegregation case Sanchez worked on. Marshall wanted some ideas for a case in Kansas #GeorgeFloydpic.twitter.com/HUncQRx1Hj
Before there was Brown v Board of Education (1954), there was Mendez v Westminster (1947), and far before that there was Tape v Hurley (1885), a case that was brought forth by an American Chinese family. We must remember the historic moments of POC.
Yep. Sanchez helped with the Mendez case!
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