Afro-Latino Arts
Hope you will be able to join us for an Art exhibit celebrating the Afro-Latino Culture through the arts. Live drumming, poetry and dance accompany the visual arts of over 10 artists ranging from Puerto Rico to Cuba and the Domincan Republic.
Artists: Dylica Pagan, Yasmin Hernandez, Helene Ruiz, Nia Andino, Amanda Mathews, Marthalicia Matarrita, Mia Roman Hernandez, Juan Carlo Suazo, Jose Rios, Pete Rodriguez, Ezequiel Jimenez
Drums by: El Maestro Angel Rodriguez
Dance by: Carmen Mojica Fabian
Poetry by: Peggy Robles Alvarado
Sweets provided by: Boos Bakes
FREE ADMISSION
Where: Clemente Soto Velez Cultural and Educational center
107 Suffolk street
2nd floor Abrazo Interno Gallery
Nwe York NY 10002
February 16, 2011
Time: 7 - 10PM
Inspiration......
Inspiration: "in" to create inclusion...."spir" Latin word "spiritus" means "breath" breath life into something, fill it with spirit. We cannot see inspiration, but like air it is there surrounding us.
Wednesday, February 9, 2011
Momma's Hip Hop Kitchen Vol. 4
Turn Up the Heat and Let the Soul Simmer, as We Stir this Hearty and Healthy Soup for the Hip Hop Soul!
LIVE MUSICAL PERFORMANCES, POETRY, AND VENDORS
Saturday, March 5th, 2011
@ the Hostos Center for Arts and Culture
450 Grand Concourse (at 149th St.) Bronx, NY
(Main Theater)
(You can take the 2,4,5 to 149th Grand Concourse or buses: BX1, BX19)
Time: 2-5pm
This event is FREE and open to all ages.
For more information about the event, please
Visit our website @ http://www.mhhk.org
Or email mhhk@mhhk.org
Description of Event:
Momma’s Hip Hop Kitchen Volume 4, “Let’s Get Active!” will be honoring International Women’s Month by addressing some of the health disparities that affect women of color. Our goal this year is to use hip hop to initiate dialogue and inspire action in supporting healthier nutrition, more physical activity, and increased community involvement among women and their families.
How many children and adults do we know in this city that buy the red quarter juice, the fifty-cent honey bun, and use their last quarter for more candy? We can name a whole bunch, and let’s not front, most of us have indulged in that world!
The South Bronx is one of the poorest counties in the nation, economically and nutritionally. It was just ranked the UNHEALTHIEST of New York’s 62 counties. It is plagued with ridiculous poverty, diabetes, high unemployment, hunger, obesity, dirty bodegas, lack of access to good fruits and vegetables, to schoolyards, playgrounds and gym classes in school.
When we think of poverty, most of us think of those super sad commercials that show malnourished children in third world countries surrounded by flies. Being in the South Bronx, poor and hungry, doesn’t mean that you will look like those children. In fact, research shows that obesity is the new way that hunger is showing up in our communities. One in 4 adults is obese, 8 in 10 teenagers and more that 9 in 10 adults say they eat fewer than 5 servings or fruits and vegetables per day. More children are developing type 2 diabetes, once diagnosed exclusively in adults. Can you believe that 47% of Head Start participants in the South Bronx are obese or overweight?
Check it mi gente, we live in a community where 37% of South Bronx residents say that they have lacked money to buy food at some point in the past 12 months. What happens to your body when it is not sure if it will be fed again? It goes into starvation mode and stores it as fat– hence obesity prevails. Most recently, the movie Precious depicted this reality through the life story of a young black woman whose social conditions (ie. poverty) contributed to her weight, which as a consequence led to low self- esteem, teen pregnancy, illiteracy, sexually transmitted diseases, and an intergenerational cycle of abuse within the women in her family.
Unfortunately obesity is being blamed on the individual and their self-control. What is not being taken into account is the actual living conditions and quality of life of the person. It is not being looked at as an institutional problem. What are our politicians doing to decrease the root causes of this disease? WHERE ARE OUR ELECTED LEADERS?
We at Momma’s Hip Hop Kitchen believe that it is a problem that demands our attention. We want healthier alternatives for our families and communities. We believe that hip-hop is one of the tools that can be used for mental, emotional, and physical wellness. Become a b-girl, deejay, emcee or graffiti artist who wants to disseminate information and create a more holistic culture.
Please join educators, students, environmentalists, health advocates, doctors, nurses, food co-ops, DJ’s, emcees, b-girls, poets, artists, dancers, healers, organizers and activists at Hostos Community College in the South Bronx. We will come together through a hip-hop showcase to express our solidarity with women’s rights!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)