ICE agents used tear gas in Elgin as hour-long standoff ends in man’s arrest.
Look for new opportunities for action, education, community, and solidarity here every week.
Anti-ICE Protests. Contrary to what many say and believe, ICE “special enforcement” activity has not gone away. Nearby Elgin found out Monday during an hours-long stand-off with community members including tussles in the snow and heavy use of tear gas. Only one person was confirmed as detained in the operation at an apartment complex. Daily protests continue at the Broadview receiving/detention center, in and around the Loop, and in communities across the region. Be aware of local alerts from the McHenry County Rapid Response Team on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/groups/252228846373447.
AT&T/ICE Protest. ICE and Border Patrol are terrorizing our communities, and AT&T is profiting multimillion-dollar contracts with those agencies while they do so. We need to go on offense against the corporations profiting off of ICE’s work tearing apart our families and communities. We need to make it more costly for AT&T to keep working with these agencies than it is for them to drop the contract.
What the Public Can Do: Sign the petition and pledge not to buy or upgrade any AT&T products or plans this holiday season until AT&T drops these contracts and pledges not to sign new ones. Visit https://actionnetwork.org/petitions/att. Sponsored by the Unitarian Universalist Action Network of IllInois (UUANI) and its allies.
National Alliance to End Homelessness Petition. The United States policy on homelessness just changed. It is bad. Really bad. It will absolutely cause homelessness (especially street homelessness) to skyrocket in 1-2 years. (Federal policy changes take a couple years to be felt.) The basics:
Beginning in 2004, federal homelessness policy started being guided by research. The impact was clear and immediate. I can tell you from first-hand knowledge, everything changed for the better! HUD just released a new funding plan that reverts to the failed policies of the 1990’s. There is still a little time to fix this before it goes into effect. (Not much, but a little).
Mañamites a la Virgen de Guadalupe by Luciero y Pedro Fernandez-Gema.
Today is the Feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe, Queen of Mexico and Empress of the Americas, Patroness of the Americas, and most recently Patroness of the Unborn. An image of her preserved on clothin a Mexico City Basilica is the object of almost universal adoration in Mexico and among the large Mexicandiaspora in the United States. She has been called the “rubber band which binds this disparate nation into a whole.” Mexican literary icons have attested to her importance. Carlos Fuentes said that “you cannot truly be considered a Mexican unless you believe in the Virgin of Guadalupe” and Nobel Literature laureate Octavio Paz that “the Mexican people, after more than two centuries of experiments, have faith only in the Virgin of Guadalupe and the National Lottery.”
The origin storygoes like this.
On December 9, 1531, just ten years after the conquest of Mexico by Hernando Cortez, Juan Diego, an Indian peasant, and a particularlypious convert to Catholicism, was walking by the Hill of Tepeyac then outside of the capital city. A templeto Tonantzin, the Aztec goddessof loveand fertility, had surmounted the hill but been razed in the Church’s campaignto obliterate traditional worship. When he glanced up the hill he beheld a maidenwho bade him in hisnative Nahuatl language to build a churchon the sitein her name. He surmised that she must be the Virgin Mary although she did not identify herself.
A reproduction of Our Lady of Guadalupe as she appears today.
Juan Diego hurried to Fray Juan de Zumárraga, the Archbishop of Mexico, with his tale. The Franciscan was impressed with his piety but skeptical of the story. He instructed Juan Diego to return to the hill and ask theapparition for proof of her identity. The peon returned three more times to the hill over the next two days and the Virgin spoke to him each time.
He first asked for amiraculous sign. When he returnedhome he found that his uncle, who wasdying, was healed.
On his final tripto the Hill the virgin commanded him to gather flowers at the summit. These were not nativeflowers, but red Castilian roses blooming out of season. Juan Diego gathered them in his tilma orcloak and took the bundle to the ArchbishopZumárraga. When he opened his cloak on December 12, the flowers fell to the floor, and on the fabric was the image of the Virgin.
The Indio peon Juan Diego presents his tilma with the image of the Virgin to Fray Juan de Zumarraga, Archbishop of Mexico.
This was enough to convince Archbishop who ordered a chapel to be built at the base of the hill where the cloak could be displayed. Juan Diego, his wife, anduncle were given leave to build a hovelnext to the hermitage of Franciscan fathers sent to attend the shrine and to act as their servants. He reportedly diedthere in 1548.
Therevered imagehas been alteredover the years, although not the central imageof the Virgin on the tilma. The figure of a dark-skinned Virginis four foot eight inches high. Her gown has a tawny rose tint said to recall the Mexican landscape. She is girded by a thin black sash which is taken as a sign of pregnancy. She wears a blue mantle traditionally associated with Mary. Sharp beams radiate from her suggesting that she is “brighter than the Sun.” Onefoot rests on the Moon and the other on a snake’s head. This has been interpreted as her victory over darkness and triumphover the pagan Aztec feathered serpent god Quetzalcoatl and/or the serpentof temptation from the Garden of Eden.
She may have originally had a crownon her head or that might have been added later. Still later the crown was gilded with gold which deteriorated over the years. In 1899 the crown waserasedeither because of the deterioration or to bring the image more in line with the republican sentiments of the people. The tilma was reframed with the top brought down just above the Virgin’s head to disguise damagein the process of the erasure. Other additions over time includedstarspainted on the inside of her mantle representing the constellations of the Northernand Southern Hemispheres, a supporting angel below her, and silver decoration which has also deteriorated. However, despite being centuries old on an unstable medium that central image remains remarkably bright.
The peasant army called to arms by Father Miguel Hidalgo and El Grito de Delores marched behind this banner depicting Our Lady of Guadalupe.
Aside from its singularreligious significancethe image of Our Lady of Guadalupe became arallying pointfor the national aspirationsof the Mexican people, particularly for the Indios and mestizos. The peon army of Father Miguel Hidalgo after El Grito de Delores marched behind a bannerpainted with a representation of Our Lady and many soldiersof the Mexican War of Independence in 1810 fought with printed cards of her image stuck in their sombreros.
Although anti-clericism ran deep among many in the 20th Century Mexican Revolution, Emilio Zapata’s armyof southern peasents and Indians entered Mexico City in triumph behind a Guadeloupian banner. More recently, the contemporary Zapatista National Liberation Army (EZLN) also in the south named their mobile city Guadalupe Tepeyac in honor of the Virgin.
In the United States banners of Our Lady appeared in and during the marches and strikes of the United Farm Workers, whose leader Cesar Chavez was deeply religious. More recently it has been carried in demonstrationsin support of immigration reform and against the Federal detention of refugeesand asylum seekers.
Pilgrims wait for hours in all sorts of inclement December weather to approach the National Shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe in Des Plaines, Illinois. Some will even crawl or walk on their knees.
The traditional all-night vigil in Des Plaines, Illinois at the National Shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupewill go on despite snow, ice, Arctic cold, and concerns that ICE agents may try to pick off victims as theyapproach the pilgrimage.More than 200,000 are expected to visit the Shrine over two days for the largest such venerationin the U.S.
Mañamites a la Virgen de Guadalupe as performed by Luciero y Pedro Fernandez-Gema on a nationally televised broadcastfrom the Shrine in Mexico City in 2015.