Thursday, October 26, 2006

Profile: Rosa Rosales, LULAC National President

Bloglink=
http://key-profiles.blogspot.com/2006/10/profile-rosa-rosales-lulac-national.html

http://www.lulac.org/about/president.html



Profile: Rosa Rosales, LULAC National President
National President
League of United Latin American Citizens

The League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC) elects its new LULAC National President Rosa Rosales with over 70% of the vote by the delegates at the LULAC National Convention in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

“I am elated at being elected the new President of LULAC and I am ready to work with all groups to take LULAC to the next level of activism. I want to thank LULAC and all the past Presidents for all the work they have done. I want to thank all of the volunteers because that is what LULAC is all about. What makes LULAC so special is because not only do the volunteers work for free but pay dues,” said Rosa Rosales, past Vice President of the Southwest and the newly elected LULAC National President.

Born April 7, 1944, in San Antonio, Texas, Ms. Rosales was among the first Mexican American women to become labor organizers in recent times. Active in LULAC, she was the first woman to hold the position of State Director of that organization. She received her B.A. in Liberal Arts from the University of Michigan. Rosa was recently on the National LULAC Board of Directors holding the position of National Vice President of the Southwest.

LULAC INVOLVEMENT

• National Vice President for the Southwest (2002 2005)
• Member of LULAC Council #649 since 1978
• Held positions as President of Council #649
• Deputy Youth Director LULAC District XV
• State Officer of Labor Affairs, Texas LULAC
• First Woman Director LULAC District XV
• LULAC State Director for four years (1991 1995)
• LULAC National Vice President for Women (1996 1997 & 2001 2002)
• LULAC State Chairperson for Civil Rights (1995 1999)
• Member of LNESC (1996 1997 & 2001-present)
• Past member of Local and National SER, San Antonio Boy's Club Advisory Council, Target EEO, Mayors Commission on the Status of Women, Our Casas Resident Council, Inc., MANA, Coordinadora 2000, and numerous other boards, and community organizations.

PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE

• Founder and Director of the National Association of Public Employees (NAPE), 1999-Present)
• Office Director of the SEIU (1997-1999)
• Regional Director of the National Association of Government Employees, (1995-1997)
• National Labor Representative and Field Supervisor for the National Association of Government Employees, (1983-1995)
• Co-Founder and Charter Member of the United Public Employee Association and Field Supervisor in the Neighborhood Anti-Crime Program (a federally-funded local program based in the west side of San Antonio), (1978-1980)

HONORS AND AWARDS

• La Causa Special Recognition Award Cesar Chavez March for Justice, March 25, 2006
• El Premio Lider Nacional Hispana, Comision Nacional de Mujeres Region del Sureste, San Juan Puerto Rico April 2004
• Dr Anita Del Rio Award for Latina Leadership and Women's, Advocacy, 2003 LULAC National Convention, Orlando Florida, June 2003
• Arkansas State Director's Diamond Award 2003
• The Anheuser-Busch Companies Awards as prominent Latina Women in Action, March 2000
• SI SE PUEDE Cesar Chavez March for Justice Award March 30, 2001
• Image outstanding Hispanic Women Award for 1999
• Emma Tenayuca Award, La Prensa Salute to Latina Women in Action, March 2000
• LULAC Puerto Rico Community Award, 1999
• Amiga de Los Bomberos Award, Texas Association of Hispanic Firefighters Convention, Dallas, Tx, June 16, 1995
• Women of the Year Award LULAC District XV Convention, San Antonio, Texas April 4, 1998
• Women of the Year Award, LULAC District XV Convention, San Antonio, Texas April 30, 1998
• Certificate of Appreciation of “Substantial contributions to CRS and the Citizens of Texas for participating in the First Annual LULAC National Civil Rights Symposium, Dallas, Texas, March 1995
• Certificate of Appreciation for support of the women of Fuerza Unida, Inc., San Antonio, Texas March 8, 1995
• Certificate of Appreciation, LULAC Council 5014, Norte Dame University, South Bend, Indiana, October 6, 1994
• Head start Volunteer Program in San Antonio, Texas April 27, 1994
• Public Service Champion Award, Quality of Life Champions, Southwest Community Center January 28, 1994
• State Director of the Year Award 63rd LULAC National Convention, July 4, 1992
• National Association for Chicana and Chicano Activist Award for “Unselfish contribution to the Political Destiny of the Chicano Community,” National Association for Chicana and Chicano Conference, San Antonio, Texas, March 28, 1992
• Palo Alto College Resourceful Women Award, “Recognition for Contributions to Empowerment and Improvement of the Lives of Women of the South side of San Antonio,” San Antonio, Texas, March 2, 1992
• LULAC State Certificate of Recognition and Appreciation, LULAC State Convention, Waco, Texas, June 1, 1991
• LULAC Women of the Year Award, LULAC District XV Convention, April 1991
• Award for Outstanding Contribution towards Equal Opportunity for All Rangel & Rangel Law Offices, San Antonio, Texas, October 1990
• Civil Rights Award for “Promoting and Defending the Rights of the Less Fortunate Americans,” LULAC Council #692, San Antonio, Texas June 2, 1990
• President's Award in “Appreciation for Devoted Services as President,” M.H. Calderon Boys Club Advisory Council, San Antonio, Texas January 1985
• NAGE Award for “Largest Contribution of Membership in Field Organizing,” National Office Association of Government Employees, Boston Massachusetts, May 20, 1984
• Chairperson Service Award for “Tremendous Progress Hard Work, Love, and Devotion,” San Antonio SER, Jobs for Progress, Inc., San Antonio, Texas 1982 to 1983
• M.H. Calseron Boys Club Advisory Council, President's Award, 1983
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LULAC l 2000 L Street, NW, Suite 610 l Washington, DC 20036 l (202) 833-6130 Fax: (202) 833-6135
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    Profile: Brent A. Wilkes, LULAC National Executive Director

    http://www.lulac.org/about/director.html



    Brent A. Wilkes
    National Executive Director
    League of United Latin American Citizens

    Brent A. Wilkes is the National Executive Director for the League of United Latin American Citizens this country's largest and oldest Hispanic organization. Wilkes manages the operations of the LULAC National organization with primary focus on national policy and legislative advocacy, membership development, program development, and resource development.

    A graduate of Dartmouth College in 1988, Wilkes majored in Government and Philosophy and studied Spanish in Morelia, Mexico. He has worked in various capacities for LULAC since 1988 including Special Projects Coordinator, Resource Developer, and Director of Policy & Development. He went to work for the LULAC National Office in 1996 and assumed the newly created position of National Executive Director in April of 1997.

    As the LULAC National Executive Director, Wilkes is working hard to improve the quality of life for Hispanic Americans by guiding LULAC on its way to becoming a million-member organization with extensive legislative, public policy, and service activities in Hispanic communities throughout the United States.

    Wilkes is widely credited with strengthening LULAC's programs, advocacy efforts, staffing, events and revenue since opening LULAC's National Office in Washington, DC in 1996. Since that time LULAC's revenue has tripled, staffing has grown from one to over twenty and the organization has taken a leadership role on key issues affecting Latinos in Washington and throughout the country.

    In 2004, Wilkes helped launch the LULAC Leadership Initiative to strengthen LULAC's programs and serves at the grass-roots level. The initiative has already resulted in the establishment of 23 community technology centers, 26 housing counseling programs and 10 middle school science programs.

    Wilkes currently serves as chair of the civil rights committee of the National Hispanic Leadership Agenda a nonpartisan coalition of the major Hispanic national organizations which develops a consensus policy agenda and promotes public awareness of the principal issues facing Latinos. He is also an active board member of the Hispanic Association on Corporate Responsibility which advocates for the inclusion of Hispanics in corporate America at a level commensurate with Hispanic economic contributions.

    As a LULAC spokesperson, Wilkes frequently is quoted in national newspapers and publications and has appeared on radio and television shows including CNN, CSPAN and Fox News. A recipient of numerous acknowledgements and awards, he is most proud of his LULAC Youth Advocate of the Year award presented in 2003.

    Brent and his wife are proud parents of two boys.
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    Saturday, October 14, 2006

    Mandela= Freedom Fighter

    URL Bloglink
    http://key-profiles.blogspot.com/2006/10/mandela-freedom-fighter.html


    Mandela



    http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/peace/laureates/1993/mandela-bio.html

    Biography

    Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela was born in Transkei, South Africa on July 18, 1918. His father was Chief Henry Mandela of the Tembu Tribe. Mandela himself was educated at University College of Fort Hare and the University of Witwatersrand and qualified in law in 1942. He joined the African National Congress in 1944 and was engaged in resistance against the ruling National Party's apartheid policies after 1948. He went on trial for treason in 1956-1961 and was acquitted in 1961.

    After the banning of the ANC in 1960, Nelson Mandela argued for the setting up of a military wing within the ANC. In June 1961, the ANC executive considered his proposal on the use of violent tactics and agreed that those members who wished to involve themselves in Mandela's campaign would not be stopped from doing so by the ANC. This led to the formation of Umkhonto we Sizwe. Mandela was arrested in 1962 and sentenced to five years' imprisonment with hard labour. In 1963, when many fellow leaders of the ANC and the Umkhonto we Sizwe were arrested, Mandela was brought to stand trial with them for plotting to overthrow the government by violence. His statement from the dock received considerable international publicity. On June 12, 1964, eight of the accused, including Mandela, were sentenced to life imprisonment. From 1964 to 1982, he was incarcerated at Robben Island Prison, off Cape Town; thereafter, he was at Pollsmoor Prison, nearby on the mainland.

    During his years in prison, Nelson Mandela's reputation grew steadily. He was widely accepted as the most significant black leader in South Africa and became a potent symbol of resistance as the anti-apartheid movement gathered strength. He consistently refused to compromise his political position to obtain his freedom.

    Nelson Mandela was released on February 11, 1990. After his release, he plunged himself wholeheartedly into his life's work, striving to attain the goals he and others had set out almost four decades earlier. In 1991, at the first national conference of the ANC held inside South Africa after the organization had been banned in 1960, Mandela was elected President of the ANC while his lifelong friend and colleague, Oliver Tambo, became the organisation's National Chairperson.

    From Les Prix Nobel. The Nobel Prizes 1993, Editor Tore Frängsmyr, [Nobel Foundation], Stockholm, 1994

    This autobiography/biography was written at the time of the award and later published in the book series Les Prix Nobel/Nobel Lectures. The information is sometimes updated with an addendum submitted by the Laureate. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.

    Selected Bibliography
    By Mandela
    Mandela, Nelson. Nelson Mandela Speaks: Forging a Democratic, Nonracial South Africa. New York: Pathfinder, 1993.
    Mandela, Nelson. Long Walk to Freedom. The Autobiography of Nelson Mandela. Boston & New York: Little Brown, 1994.
    Mandela, Nelson. The Struggle Is My Life. New York: Revised, Pathfinder, 1986. Originally published as a tribute on his 60th birthday in 1978. Speeches, writings, historical accounts, contributions by fellow prisoners.

    Other Sources=
    Benson, Mary. Nelson Mandela, the Man and the Movement. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1994. Updated from 1986 edition. Based on interviews by a friend of Mandela since the 1950s.
    de Klerk, Willem. F. W. de Klerk: The Man in His Time. Johannesburg: Jonathan Ball, 1991. By his brother.
    Gilbey, Emma. The Lady. The Life and Times of Winnie Mandela. London: Cape, 1993. Most comprehensive biography.
    Harrison, Nancy. Winnie Mandela: Mother of a Nation. London: Gollancz, 1985. Authorised favourable biography.
    Johns, Sheridan and R. Hunt Davis, Jr., eds. Mandela, Tambo and the ANC: The Struggle Against Apartheid. New York: Oxford University Press, 1991. Documentary survey.
    Mandela, Winnie. Part of My Soul. NY & London: Norton, 1984. Edited by Anne Benjamin and Mary Benson.
    Meer, Fatima. Higher Than Hope: The Authorized Biography of Nelson Mandela. NY: Harper, 1990. By family friend, with Mandela’s corrections. Foreword by Winnie Mandela.
    M Meredith, Martin. Nelson Mandela. A Biography. New York: St, Martin’s, 1998. By an authority on South Africa. Recommended reading.
    Ottaway, David. Chained Together. Mandela de Klerk, and the Struggle to Remake South Africa. New York: Times Books, 1993. Critical treatment by well-informed journalist.
    Sparks, Allister. Tomorrow Is Another Country: The Inside Story of South Africa’s Road to Change. New York: Hill & Wang, 1995. By a distinguished South African journalist.
    Waldmeir, Patti. Anatomy of a Miracle: The End of Apartheid and the Birth of a New South Africa. London: Viking, 1997.

    From Nobel Lectures, Peace 1991-1995, Editor Irwin Abrams, World Scientific Publishing Co., Singapore, 1999

    This autobiography/biography was first published in the book series Les Prix Nobel. It was later edited and republished in Nobel Lectures. To cite this document, always state the source as shown above.

    For more updated biographical information, see:
    Mandela, Nelson. Long Walk to Freedom: The Autobiography of Nelson Mandela. Little, Brown and Co., Boston, 1994.


    Nelson Mandela
    http://www.irr.org.uk/faces/mandela.html

    Nelson Mandela had a traditional childhood as a member of the Tembu ruling family in the Transkei where he herded sheep and learnt to plough. From his Methodist school he went on to study at Fort Hare college, but was suspended for organising the students.

    To complete his studies and to avoid a threatened arranged marriage he went to Johannesburg where he met Walter Sisulu - a self-educated fighter against apartheid in South Africa. Sisulu arranged for Mandela to study law.

    In 1944, when he was 26, Mandela joined the African National Congress (ANC) and with Sisulu and Oliver Tambo helped to form its Youth League. Mandela, with his determination to rid the people of a sense of inferiority after years of oppression, was elected its General Secretary. By 1949 the League had persuaded the ANC to adopt a more militant programme of strikes, boycotts and civil disobedience.

    From then on the government played cat-and-mouse with Mandela - imprisoning him for his politics, outlawing him, forcing him to go underground and into exile. "I found myself restricted and isolated from my fellow men, tailed by officers of the Special Branch wherever I went... I was made, by the law, a criminal, not because of what I had done, but because of what I stood for."

    On 26 June 1955 at Kliptown 3,000 people adopted the Freedom Charter of the ANC. There, Mandela and other members went out of their way to include everyone in their vision: "South Africa belongs to all who live in it, black and white". But the government did not like the growing support of the ANC and its ability to attract a mass membership. In 1956 Mandela and 155 others were arrested and charged with treason - an alleged Communist-inspired coup. After an investigation taking four and a half years, the Treason Trial failed; nothing was proven. It was during this time that Mandela met and married Nomzamo Winnie Madikizela, a social worker. Despite the fact that for most of their married life, Mandela was either forced into hiding or in jail, she herself was subject to frequent restrictions and house arrests by the government.

    The Sharpeville massacre in 1960 was a watershed in south African politics. Groups like the ANC realised that peaceful protests were not enough. In 1961 Umkhonto we Sizwe (Spear of the Nation), the armed wing of the ANC, was created. And Mandela had, once again, to go into exile. He returned to South Africa and, in 1962, was captured and charged with inciting Africans to go on strike. He used his time in court to make political speeches which he knew would be conveyed not merely to his own people, but across the world. And at the famous Rivonia Trial in 1963 he spoke for four hours in his own defence. "The ANC has spent half a century fighting against racialism. When it triumphs it will not change that policy...It is a struggle of the African people, inspired by their own suffering and their own experience. It is a struggle for the right to live..." Mandela and seven other activists were sentenced to life imprisonment. He served 27 years, most of them on Robben island, off Cape Town.

    But Mandela's influence continued to grow. His vision for a just and democratic South Africa - as expressed in his speeches and writings - became widely circulated around the world. And his release became the focus for the international anti-apartheid movement. In 1990, at the age of 71, he was released from prison and made a dignified return to the political arena. In 1994 his life-long ambition was achieved when South Africa became a country in which blacks and whites had equal political freedom. At his inauguration as President of the new regime in 1994 he said: "Let there be justice for all. Let there be peace for all. Let there be work, bread and salt for all. The time for the healing of the wounds has come." Through the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, he has tried to get those responsible for apartheid's atrocities to admit to their past mistakes.

    His speeches and writings have been published in a book called The Struggle is My Life and his autobiography called Long Walk to Freedom is also available.
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    Find out more about the people who made a difference on the HomeBeats: Struggles for Racial Justice CDROM.


    Mandela: Bodhisattva

    http://www.jessepal.com/mandela.html


    In this post 9/11 world, there is much for us Americans to learn from others who have been victimized. "Bodhisattva" is a Buddhist term for "compassionate being."

    Nelson Mandela makes a return visit to his cell on Robben Island. Jürgen Schadeberg. 1994

    I never could have done it
    I'd be filled with too much rage
    I'd extract a pint of blood
    For each trapped in that cage
    I'd tell it all to Oprah
    Scream it night and day
    "Those dirty bastards raped my soul,
    There's gonna be some kind of hell to pay."

    Mandela, bodhisattva
    Revenge would be the fashion
    You breathe in the pain of the world
    And you breath out compassion
    Who wouldn't be bitter
    For all the whips you tasted
    They came begging, "Bail us out"
    I'd have spit in their faces
    Where'd you find the grace
    Refuse your tooth for a tooth
    Finally got your freedom
    Who could ever give you back your youth

    So many presidents
    Feed the corporation
    You give half your salary
    To the children of your nation
    In this upside-down kingdom
    The fat cat's foiled again
    Again the so-called savage
    Shames the so-called "civilized man"


    Mandela Links=

    Mandela Speaks: Selected Speeches, Statements and Writings of Nelson Mandela
    http://www.anc.org.za/ancdocs/history/mandela/

    The Mandela Page
    http://www.anc.org.za/people/mandela/

    Nelson Mandela Children's Fund - UK
    http://www.mandela-children.org.uk/
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