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Iris Morales - Through the Eyes of Rebel Women: The Young Lords : 1969-1976

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THROUGH THE EYES OF REBEL WOMEN: The Young Lords, 1969-1976 iTHROUGH THE EYES OF REBEL WOMEN: The Young Lords, 1969-1976 is the first account of women members -- a story within a story told from the inside out. The Young Lords Organization emerged in the late sixties to fight poverty, racial and gender inequality, and the colonial status of Puerto Rico. Women joined to build a peoples movement for justice and fought the revolution within the revolution believing that womens equality was inseparable from the societys progress as a whole.
Written and edited by Iris Morales, THROUGH THE EYES OF REBEL WOMEN consists of essays, interviews, and primary source documents. Morales chronicles the revolutionary rise of the Young Lords, the role and contributions of women, the opening of branches in Puerto Rico, and the groups demise.

Personal interviews with former women members captured for the film Palante, Siempre Palante! The Young Lords have been edited for the book. Photographs and articles from the early 1970s complete the narrative. The entire volume affirms that social movements do not develop in a vacuum but arise to spearhead solutions to the injustices occurring in society.

Dr. Edna Acosta-Beln, distinguished historian and womens studies scholar, writes: These women activists are ... the brave feminist warriors who battled for equality in intersecting (not isolated or separated) arenas of class, race, gender, ethnicity, and sexuality; part of that noble league of defenders of universal human rights.

Ericka Huggins, human rights activist, former Black Panther Party member, and political prisoner, summarizes: As I read this book, I was continually inspired by the history of the Young Lords and the great women within it. Iris Morales writes a story that parallels the story of the women in the Black Panther Party and women throughout the globe. The structural and interpersonal work we must do to uplift humanity always starts from the inside out!

Through the Eyes of Rebel Women is a must-read for everyone interested in the Puerto Rican and grassroots movements of the 1960s and 70s in the United States.

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THROUGH THE EYES OF REBEL WOMEN The Young Lords 1969-1976 - photo 1
THROUGH THE EYES OF
REBEL WOMEN
The Young Lords
1969-1976

Documentaries about the Young Lords
El Pueblo Se Levanta /The People Are Rising (Film 1970)
Produced by Newsreel
Palante, Siempre Palante! The Young Lords (Film 1996)
Iris Morales, Producer, Writer, and Codirector
Film Distributor: Third World Newsreel
www.twn.org
Palante: Voices and Photographs of the Young Lords, 1969-1971
Published by Haymarket Books

THROUGH THE EYES OF
REBEL WOMEN
The Young Lords
1969-1976
Iris Morales
Red Sugarcane Press, Inc.
New York, New York

Through the Eyes of Rebel Women: The Young Lords
Copyright 2016 Iris Morales
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law. For permission requests, write to publisher at: info@RedSugarcanePress.com.
Red Sugarcane Press, Inc.
534 West 112th Street #250404
New York, New York 10025
www.RedSugarcanePress.com
Interior Book Design: Iris Morales
Book Cover Design: Somos Arte, LLC
Art Director: Edgardo Miranda -Rodriguez
www.SomosArte.com
ISBN: 978-0-9968276-2-1
Library of Congress Control Number: 2016931163
First Edition -1
Printed in the United States of America

DEDICATION
For Almida Roldn Reices,
my mother and first teacher
DEDICACIN
Para Almida Roldn Reices,
mi mam y primera maestra
TABLE OF contents
Unveiling and Preserving a Puerto Rican Historical Memory
Edna Acosta-Beln
Iris Morales
Iris Morales
Thirteen-Point Program and Platform (1970)
Iris Morales
Denise Oliver-Vlez
Martha Arguello
Minerva Solla
Gloria M. Rodrguez
Diana Caballero
First Years In The United States: History of the Puerto Rican National Minority
P uerto Rican Revolutionary Workers Organization
YLO Feeds
Connie Morales
Message from a Revolutionary Compaera
Blanca Canales
Young Lords Part y Position Paper on Women
Central Committee
Why a Womens Union?
Women s Union Twelve -Point Program
Womens Union Rules of Discipline
Sterilized Puerto Ricans
Iris Morales
Abortions
Gloria Coln
Free Our Sisters
Mecca Adai
Puerto Rican Racism
Iris Morales
Colonized Mentality and Non-Conscious Ideology
Denise Oliver
World of Fantasy
Jenny Figueroa
Make-Up and Beauty
Lulu Rovira
Call for Demonstration in Ponce
Ponce, March 21, 1971
Information Ministry
Editorial: 1 st Party Congress
Central Committee
Report From the Y.L.P Congress
Puerto Rican Revolutionary Workers Organization
Resolutions of the Puerto Rican Revolutionary Workers Organization
Berets and Barrettes
Lenina Nadal
On the 40th Anniversary of the Young Lords in Chicago
Iris Morales
Appendix
Notes
Index
PREFACE
IN THE FALL OF 1969, the Young Lords, a group of young Puerto Rican activists, approached the pastor of the First Spanish Methodist Church located on 111th Street and Lexington Avenue to request use of its space to provide free breakfast to children in East Harlem, then one of New York Citys poorest neighborhoods. He adamantly refused. The Young Lords returned, determined to speak directly to the congregation, but the reverend called the police to stop them. Eight men and five women were beaten and arrested. Three weeks later, a few days after Christmas, the activists returned. This time, they occupied the church and named it the Peoples Church igniting a public debate about the responsibility of institutions to their surrounding communities. For the next eleven days, thousands of people from all walks of life arrived at the church. They came to offer support, feed children a hot breakfast, receive free health checkups, and attend Puerto Rican history workshops. They arrived to enjoy communal dinners and poetry readings and to hear fiery speeches about justice and freedom. It was a moment of rebellion that sparked a generation.
Forty-five years later on July 26, 2014, people gathered in front of the Peoples Church for New York City s official street naming of Young Lords Way. Former Young Lords from New York, Chicago, Philadelphia, Bridgeport, Newark, and Boston as well as hundreds of young and veteran activists, neighborhood residents, artists, poets, reporters, educators, politicians, and clergy assembled to acknowledge the contributions of the Young Lords and the Puerto Rican community. The street naming celebrated a peoples history and honored the struggles of the Puerto Rican people for social, economic, and racial justice.
The tribute to the Young Lords also renewed interest in the women members. Women joined determined to fight poverty, racism, and inequality. About one-third of the members were women, although most accounts of the organization to date have focused on a few spokesmen ignoring the fact that this was a people s movement profoundly affected by feminist ideals, activism, and contributions. The diverse and powerful roles that women played have generally been ignored, marginalized, or presented in one-dimensional terms. Women s visibility in the historical record has been repeatedly diminishedor erasednot only in the Young Lords, but also in all the great social movements, even to the present day.
The first article about women in the Young Lords appeared in the New York Times a year after the occupation of the People's Church. "Young Women Find a Place in the High Command of Young Lords reads the sensationalized title appearing in the "Food, Fashions, Family, and Furnishings" section on November 11, 1970, then reserved for special interest stories about women. The interviewees, Martha Duarte, Denise Oliver, Olguie Robles, and myself, were then sixteen to twenty-two years old. When asked about our role as women, I said, "We do everything that the brothers do," emphasizing our equality in commitment and action.
In 1971, Newsreel, a group of independent filmmakers, produced El Pueblo Se Levanta/The People Are Rising, a cinema verit documentary that highlighted women's activities in the Young Lords, specifically as community organizers. More than two decades later, I produced Palante, Siempre Palante! The Young Lords revisiting the story of the New York chapter and the struggles that successfully introduced feminist campaigns to the organization. The documentary was broadcast on national public television in 1996 and continues to be screened in classrooms and community venues across the country.
For the fortieth anniversary of the founding of the Young Lords in New York, Erica Gonzlez, a journalist with El Diario la Prensa , wrote the article "Mujeres of the Young Lords" for the newspaper s Puerto Rican Day Parade 2009 edition. The story circulated widely on the Internet and revived interest. Urged on by the renewed attention, I reached out to former members. This might be the last chance for a first-hand women's account, I said, "an opportunity to expand the historical narrative about the Young Lords. Our experiences varied depending on when, where, and why we joined, and the particular work we did. Only a few women had written about their involvement, and memories were rapidly fading. I wanted to document the story as we had lived it, through its ups and downs from the early formative days in New York City through its demise. I began to contact publishers and received several letters expressing interest, but none made a firm commitment, and the project came to a dead end.
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