Return-Path: <nifl-esl@literacy.nifl.gov> Received: from literacy (localhost [127.0.0.1]) by literacy.nifl.gov (8.10.2/8.10.2) with SMTP id i2UH1Rm22652; Tue, 30 Mar 2004 12:01:27 -0500 (EST) Date: Tue, 30 Mar 2004 12:01:27 -0500 (EST) Message-Id: <2E4C6AF1DBBD4B468CC8AD94848F000136FD1D@mail.vnacarenetwork.net> Errors-To: listowner@literacy.nifl.gov Reply-To: nifl-esl@literacy.nifl.gov Originator: nifl-esl@literacy.nifl.gov Sender: nifl-esl@literacy.nifl.gov Precedence: bulk From: "Linda Flores" <lflores@vnacarenetwork.org> To: Multiple recipients of list <nifl-esl@literacy.nifl.gov> Subject: [NIFL-ESL:10137] Re: layers of meaning X-Listprocessor-Version: 6.0c -- ListProcessor by Anastasios Kotsikonas Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Content-Type: text/plain; Status: O Content-Length: 9818 Lines: 250 I agree with you, Eugenio. I was almost in disbelief when reading everything that went on in this discussion. However, let's hope that it serves as a learning tool for all of us. To second on the topic you have posted here: "when was the last time any of you looked at yourselves critically and admitted to yourselves who you really are." I want to add that it is important to check in with ourselves once in awhile and see where we stand. Assess your own views and find the "why" and "how" behind it. Allowing yourself to travel the journey of culture competency can lead you to great self-discovery. Thus, making a better job when addressing cross-cultural issues. I just would like to leave you all with one thought as we could go on and on this discussion. "If you can't see that your won culture has its own set of interests, emotions and biases, how can you expect to deal with someone else's culture successfully?" Arthur Kleinman, Chair, Department of Social Medicine at Harvard University Linda G. Flores Program Assistant Culture Competency & Women's Health Network VNA Care Network 888-663-3688 X-4723 Tel: 781-455-6661 Fax:781-444-5393 lflores@vnacarenetwork.org -----Original Message----- From: nifl-esl@nifl.gov [mailto:nifl-esl@nifl.gov]On Behalf Of Eugenio Longoria Sent: Tuesday, March 30, 2004 7:48 AM To: Multiple recipients of list Subject: [NIFL-ESL:10135] Re: layers of meaning I can't believe this conversation. I never really like to post anything, but I guess today my tolerance level is a bit low. In life you cannot have just one perspective; you have to have many. I am a foreigner and like being one. I like to stand out from the mass of acculturated beings that this country is. But, many times I just like to fit in as well as I can. I walk both roads never at once, but alternately. I have to. It is not that I am living two lives, I am living one. But this life is full of events that I have to navigate through. I navigate through each one as best as I can, sometimes as a foreigner and sometimes as an acculturated being. Putting all personal agendas aside, when was the last time any of you looked at yourselves critically and admitted to yourselves who you really are. Who is playing God here? None of us know more than the person next to us. I am the first to say that I know nothing more that the "Illiterates" Mr. Muro refers to. They are not less literate than you and you not more than them. Everyone reads the world a certain way. Literacy is not a language only of letters; it includes that which is seen, heard, felt, and perceived. We are ignorant to think that progress lies only in the written word. Everyone is a "foreigner" or outsider, including you Mr. Muro and Ms. Tanya and Ms. Sissy. We all don't belong somewhere (whether it is in a certain family, neighborhood, or social club). Don't forget this idea, you are not alien to it. Or has it been so long that you haven't felt like a "foreigner" or outsider in any situation. This is where our faults lie. We alienate ourselves from those experiences we attribute to others. If we thought of ourselves like those we claim to help, then we would be more aware of the rhetoric that Mr. Muro has so attacked. Anyway, I could go on forever, but I have work to do. I am only a student, So I don't claim to be right, but I'd rather be a student for life than a teacher who is not willing to admit when they don't know much. Eugenio Longoria Saenz -----Original Message----- From: nifl-esl@nifl.gov [mailto:nifl-esl@nifl.gov] On Behalf Of Sissy Kegley Sent: Tuesday, March 30, 2004 10:14 AM To: Multiple recipients of list Subject: [NIFL-ESL:10134] Re: layers of meaning Tanya, I heard you say that your intention was not to be offensive. I respect that. I am in agreement with what Andres says. I happen to think that what he says is important enough that I wish he'd made his point differently because, in my opinion, he's opened himself up to an array of accusations. On the one hand, I would not be surprised if you felt his message conveys a lot of assumptions about you and your intention. But, if we take you personally out of his analysis, and look critically at the reality he is describing, he has hit the nail on the head. I can say this based on my own years of experience. And, finally, his closing definition of racism is important. As I said, I do respect your assertion that your intention was not to be offensive. However, in one of my classes last month, there was unanimous consent that certain words, including "foreigner", were offensive; in this case, we can see that regardless of intention, the interpretation is racist. This is important stuff, and in my opinion, both Janet and Andres have each gone out on limb to address it. We all have a lot to learn from them. Sissy Kegley ESOL/Adult Education (301) 588-4333 home office (301) 467-5364 cellular sissy.kegley@verizon.net -----Original Message----- From: nifl-esl@nifl.gov [mailto:nifl-esl@nifl.gov] On Behalf Of AndresMuro@aol.com Sent: Tuesday, March 30, 2004 9:38 AM To: Multiple recipients of list Subject: [NIFL-ESL:10133] Re: layers of meaning .but you are afraid of driving in the same roads with them. I believe that you live in florida, am I right? They are there to pick your oranges. they are recruited from southern Mexico and Central America to work for menial wages. They don't have health insurance, don't collect retirement and work ridiculous hours for nothing. They also go to school because they are making an effort to improve their conditions. Nobody complains about the orange juice that they drink the fresh fruits that they eat, that their tolilettes area clean, they children have caring nannies, that their yards are clean and well maintained or that the kitchens are clean, laundry is done beds are made and dinner is served when they come home from work. In fact, nobody ever mentions that "these illiterates" do all these things. However, people are quick to mention that they don't want to drive on the same roads, or that they refuse to learn "our language", or that they deliver babies in "our hospitals" spending "our tax money", or that they are lazy drunks and all other kinds of racist bs. Well then, if they are so deffective, why are so many wealthy Americans willing to hire them. they could instead, hire US citizens, pay them minimum wage, social security, health insurance and report them in thier taxes. BTW, racism is not defined by the intention of the person spouting racist stuff, but by the interpretation of the oppressed. Andres In a message dated 3/30/2004 6:05:29 AM Eastern Standard Time, ttweeton@comcast.net writes: >Janet, of course I certainly don't mean to be offensive. That is not my intent at all. My ESOL class is a Pre-literate class. In my particular class, most have never been to school in their own countries, never taken up a pencil. "Buying" a driver's licence as well as a social security number has been a common practice around this part of the country. > >Tanya Tweeton >ESOL and GED Programs >Fort Lauderdale, Florida >> Tanya >> >> I'm wondering if you have a sense of the weight and tone of your post >> here. For many, a word like foreigner carries the implication that >> someone doesn't belong in a particular place; and last I knew, >> driving and using a language were two very separate sets of skills. >> >> If you re-read what you've written here, I'm wondering if you might >> see what this strikes me - and maybe others - as offensive and >> anti-immigrant. I don't think that's your intention, but I do >> believe that our words carry weight and deliver messages that may or >> may not convey our intentions. >> >> Janet Isserlis >> >> >> >I would like to leave you all with just a thought about the reasons >> >for teaching English and WHY foreigners need to learn our language, >> >(not just to come to live in our country, living here without it,) >> >as you travel on your way. I have an older student in my class who >> >can neither write her name correctly nor her address. She doesn't >> >remember it, daily I ask....... She can't read period.... However I >> >discovered this week that she has a driver's licence and is driving >> >a car......... I am trying to discover where she drives exactly so I >> >can head the other way!! Aren't you all glad you don't live in our >> >county!! :) >> >Tanya Tweeton >> > -- go here: www.geocities.com/andresmuro/art.html ************************************************************************ ******************* This message and any included attachments are from the VNA Care Network Foundation and Subsidiaries and are intended only for the addressee(s). The information contained herein may include trade secrets or privileged or otherwise confidential information. Unauthorized review, forwarding, printing, copying, distribution, or using such information is strictly prohibited and may be unlawful. Internet communications cannot be guaranteed to be secure or error-free as information could be intercepted, corrupted, lost, destroyed, arrive late or incomplete, or contain viruses. 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This archive was generated by hypermail 2b30 : Thu Dec 23 2004 - 09:46:43 EST