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As a high school student, Jose Luis Orozco left Mexico
to escape the economic hardship of his struggling country. He came to
America only to discover another kind of difficulty in what he thought
would be the land of dreams.
"There were so many Latino students trying to swim in the mainstream,
but often they failed because they lacked any kind of positive identity,"
Orozco said. "There was oppression and segregation and these things
still exist. It is a constant struggle."
Now Orozco, a Los-Angeles based artist who will be in Utah this week,
uses music and folk tales from across Latin America to try to combat the
problem.
Ben Ocon, one of the founders of the Latino organization Reforma de Utah,
is trying to use libraries to accomplish the same objective.
"Libraries can change lives," Ocon said. "Our goal for
Latinos is the same that libraries should have for all people -- to come
into the fold and receive information."
This week, Ocon and Orozco's worlds will come together with a series of
events designed to promote bilingual literacy and culturally diverse children's
literature. Latino literacy advocates have dubbed Friday El Dia de los
Ninos/El Dia de los Libros, or The Day of the Children/The Day of the
Books.
Orozco, who has received several awards for his recordings and books,
will perform Wednesday, Thursday and Friday at libraries in West Valley
City, Ogden and Salt Lake City.
Orozco uses folk songs and lullabies learned from his grandmother and
on his travels across Latin America and the Caribbean to teach about valuing
culture -- your own and others'.
"Once children, at an early age, understand other cultures, the more
they appreciate that people are different from each other and that it
is OK," Orozco said. "When there is more understanding, there
is less conflict. It is ignorance that often creates the problems."
Music, Orozco says, is the perfect teaching tool.
And libraries, Ocon believes, are the perfect setting -- for Orozco's
music and more.
"What we've seen is that using libraries empowers people," Ocon
said. "Information is a commodity that allows people to act: In the
political sector it raises consciousness, in the business sector is gives
people a chance to be successful."
Ocon's organization is the state chapter of the national Reforma group
that seeks to encourage Latinos to use the libraries and help libraries
develop Spanish language collections that will be relevant to Latinos.
Latinos, the state's fastest-growing ethnic minority group, account for
about 6 percent of the state's population. From 1990 to 1996, the number
of Utah Latinos grew from 85,329 to 121,000 -- a 42 percent increase compared
to a 14 percent increase of the state's white population during that period.
One of Reforma's mottos has been Leer es Poder, or Reading is Power. It
is bad enough, Ocon said, that many Latinos do not use libraries or feel
comfortable checking out books and other materials. But in an age where
information on computers is so prevalent, and rates of computer ownership
for ethnic minorities are low, libraries are more important than ever,
he said.
"The library has a role to play in society as a gateway for immigrant
communities," said Ocon, a native of Mexico who lived most of his
life in Los Angeles. "Our libraries have to have collections that
are relevant, and many do -- like the English-as-a-second-language materials
to help immigrants learn English."
In an attempt to recognize authors' efforts at authentic portrayals of
Latino life, Graciela Italiano-Thomas established the Americas Award for
Children's and Young Adult Literature. Italiano-Thomas, director of the
Utah Latino social service organization Centro de la Familia, has created
a library -- with the help of a volunteer from Reforma de Utah -- that
features recipients of the award.
Orozco will be on hand Friday for the dedication of the library at Centro
de la Familia, 320 W. 300 South, Salt Lake City.
On Wednesday, Orozco will perform at 7 p.m. at the Hunter Library, 4700
West 4100 South. On Thursday, he will be at Ogden's Weber County Library,
2464 Jefferson Ave., at 7 p.m. And the following day, Orozco will sing
at the Day-Riverside Library, 1575 West 1000 North, at 7 p.m.
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