¡Justicia!:
Sotomayor and the Long March of Puerto Rican History
By Roberto Lovato
New America
Media
June 18, 2009
Inside the red brick walls of the
Bronxdale housing projects, 24-year-old mother of two Geisha Sas
says she still hears echoes of music from the 1950s, when her
building's most famous former resident, Supreme Court nominee
Sonia Sotomayor, lived there. "Older people still listen to Tito
Puente and Eddie Palmieri inside their apartments," said Sas, a
salsa and hip-hop fan. Before morphing into the embodiment of
urban decay that they became in the 60s and 70s, these public
housing projects provided the young Sotomayor the new,
lower-middle class housing that facilitated her early pursuit of
justice. For Puerto Ricans of Sas's generation living here, the
Bronxdale experience of justice is quite different.
"I've also heard gunshots and saw a boy killed on that grass,"
said Sas, looking at a large patch of grass surrounded by
several seven-story buildings. Asked what expectations for
justice she has from fellow Bronxdale Boricua (Puerto Rican)
Sotomayor, Sas declared, "I hope she knows how to tell the
difference between justicia and injusticia. I hope she does the
right thing and that she doesn't forget where she's from."
Sas's clamor for justice echoes the very particular concerns
expressed by many Nuyoricans (Puerto Ricans in
New York). Lost in debates about
Sotomayor's "ethnic allegiances" and what they consider the
story of her rise from poverty, are the contributions of the
silenced majority living in and beyond the Bronxdale projects:
the Puerto Rican community whose political thought and action
made Sotomayor's rise possible.
"The media keeps telling
us that she (Sotomayor) has a 'one in a million' story," says
Miriam Jimenez Roman, a visiting scholar in Africana Studies at
NYU and director of the Afro-Latino Project. "But what they
forget to tell us is how the million made the one possible. Many
people struggled so that she might become the first
Latina
on the Supreme Court." Roman notes that, for example, most news
reports and commentaries about Sotomayor frame her life as an
up-from-the-bootstraps story of individual accomplishment. This
story, says Roman, is partial, at best, in that it excludes
mention of the many and ongoing efforts of Puerto Ricans in the
Bronx and other areas who fought to improve
educational, health, employment, electoral, and other
institutions.
Most importantly, says Roman, Sotomayor
was very likely exposed to a broad spectrum of political thought
about "justicia" that is not mentioned in the current national
discussion surrounding her nomination. "I suspect that she heard
and was influenced by the Puerto Ricans who were fighting for
social justice," said Roman. "We're all glad about the
nomination. But collapsing the story of an entire people into
the story of a single individual is extremely problematic."
Groups like United Bronx Parents, ASPIRA and the Puerto
Rican Student Union organized for improved educational
opportunities for young Puerto Ricans like Sotomayor, who
herself was active in student access and curriculum issues while
at Princeton. More militant groups like the the Young Lords, the
Health Revolutionary Unity Movement and the Think Lincoln
Committee took over Lincoln Hospital -- one of the only health
facilities in the Bronx -- and forced it to provide better
services and greater access to the community when 16-year-old
Sotomayor lived in Coop City.
A long line of Puerto Rican
independistas (those who support ending what they consider
the colonial status imposed on the island by the United States),
from Pedro Albizu Campos and the Puerto Rican Nationalist Party
to the activists who took over the Statue of Liberty, have kept
the issue of Boricua identity in the minds of many like
Sotomayor, who wrote her graduate thesis about Luis Muñoz Marin,
the former nationalist who went on to become the island's first
elected governor. And the hometown associations that doubled as
political organizations -- fighting housing discrimination,
racism and police brutality -- were the first to organize the
annual Puerto Rican Day parade that took place last weekend
along Fifth Avenue.
Beneath the signs marchers in last Sunday's parade were
holding in support of Sotomayor was the long march of Puerto
Rican political history, a history many believe helped raise the
judge to the pinnacle of legal and political power as much as
her much-lauded personal efforts. "There were many institutions
that have helped her (Sotomayor) and many others," said Angelo
Falcon, director of the National Institute for Latino Policy.
"Different people took different routes to social
justice," said Falcon, who knows Sotomayor and supports her
nomination. "She took the legal route, but is still a product of
her community."
Roman, who is around the same age as
Sotomayor, agrees. She says she hears the workings of Puerto
Rican political struggle in the music heard in Bronxdale since
the 50s. "Back then," said Roman, "even listening to boogaloo
and salsa -- Spanish language music created in the United States
by the children of immigrants -- was a statement, an assertion
of our history and culture. It was normal for us to listen to
it, but, in the larger context of an English-speaking country,
it was radical in a way."