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Jennifer
Waleska Coguox Barrios and Rogelio
Hernández León
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En
Lak Etch: Guatemalan
Youth Activist Tour Stops at Center for
Latin American Studies
GusTavo Adolfo Guerra Vásquez, Comparative Ethnic
Studies
On
Tuesday, February 25th, the Center for Latin
American Studies hosted a talk by Jennifer
Waleska Coguox Barrios and Rogelio Hernández
León, both Guatemalan youth activists.
They are in the Bay Area on a speaking tour
titled “K’exam K’aslem
En Resistencia, Exchange of Cultural Resistance,
Life Experience and Struggle.” During
their tour, the activists seek to foster
exchange with Bay Area youth and raise awareness
about issues that young Guatemalans face
in the shantytowns around Guatemala City
and in rural areas such as Santa María
Tzejá. Discussing topics ranging from
gang violence to state violence, bilingual
education to the current teachers’ strike,
Coguox Barrios and Hernández León
gave an honest and articulate portrayal of
the situation of present day Guatemala from
young peoples’ perspectives.
The
speakers represent a coalition of Guatemalan
youth organizations. Jennifer Waleska Coguox
Barrios is a member of Iqui Balam, a youth
group that addresses issues such as H.I.V.
that impact young people through popular
theater and other creative practices. Rogelio
Hernández represents the Santa María
Tzejá Student Association Kemb’al
No’j, which has implemented scholarships
for young people from Santa María
Tzejá. Recipients of the scholarships
fulfill a service commitment after graduation
to repay the community for its support. The
third organization that is involved in this
effort is H.I.J.O.S. Guatemala, a group of
children of the disappeared. These Guatemalan
young people have come to speak on behalf
of globalization, but not the globalization
of sweatshops and exploitative conditions.
They seek to globalize “a struggle
for a different América,” the
América that José Martí dreamed
of and Rigoberta Menchú Tum, Mayan
Nobel peace prize winner, continues to struggle
for. These organizations seek to create a
youth culture of resistance that transcends
boundaries.
En
Lak Etch is a Mayan expression that
roughly translates as, “you are my
other self.” It is an expression
used not only by people coming from Mayan
lands, but also by Latino youth activists
in the Bay Area who empathize with indigenous
struggles in the Américas. Participants
in the tour hope to organize with youth
from the San Francisco Bay area to sponsor
travel between the two communities. Their
goal is to show youth on different sides
of geopolitical borders how much they have
in common.
Although
the challenges facing youth in the Bay Area
are different in many ways from those faced
by their counterparts in Guatemala, the participants
were able to draw parallels between them.
For example, both countries spend astronomical
sums on the military while education programs
face cutbacks and inadequate funding. This
disproportionate spending shows that the
priorities of both governments are similar.
Additionally, programs that directly benefit
youth are either minimal or non-existent
in poor areas of both nations. Youth in Guatemala
and the Bay Area also share concerns about
violence, health care and the lack of employment
training and opportunities for young people.
Despite
their differences, youth from Guatemala and
the San Francisco Bay Area have much to share
and discuss. For this reason the steps taken
by these organizations should be met with
enthusiasm. The young people that created
this cultural exchange have shown that no
matter how many difficulties they face, they
will continue to struggle for a brighter
future for all. The young people who participate
in these exchanges stand to learn a lot about
themselves and their “other selves.”
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Mr.
León talks with an
attendee after the event.
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