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Darkness
cannot drive out darkness; only light can do that.
Hate cannot drive out hate; only love can do that.
--Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr.
Facing
Hate: A Community Responds, an exhibit documenting
the response of the East Bay Latino community to the March
2002 hate-mail incident targeting leaders of the local Latino
community, opened Friday, April 4, 2003, at the Oakland Museum
of California. The exhibit is a prototype designed to test
a possible model for updating the museum's Cowell Hall of
California History and to promote discussion in the community.
The opening
reception for the exhibit took place Friday, April 4, from 6
to 8 p.m. on the terrace at the back of the History Gallery.
This evening of recognition, inspiration and celebration
included comments from people recognized in the exhibit, dialogue
regarding ways to maintain a sense of community in these times,
and a celebration of this community's triumph. Speakers
included Chris Arriola, president of California La Raza Lawyers,
and Alameda County District Attorney Tom Orloff.
The hate
letters, received during last year's national anthrax scare,
contained a white powder that was later determined not to be
anthrax. The letters were addressed to many leading Latino lawyers
and activists, as well as community agencies. The response of
Rocio V. Fierro, president of the East Bay La Raza Lawyers Association,
sums up the feelings of many in the community:
Personal
letters expressing hate may initially disturb one's feelings
of comfort, belonging and clarity of purpose. Then you remember
your family's history of hard work and sacrifices and begin
to appreciate hate expressions for what they are: ignorant
and repugnant. In appreciation of my heritage and in furtherance
of the human spirit, I chose to counter this hateful ignorance
by leading the effort to educate our communities about the
ugliness of ignorance and hate. The Unity Reception, the reception
in honor of California Supreme Court Justice Carlos Moreno
and Justice Emeritus Cruz Reynoso, and this magnificent Oakland
Museum exhibit will forever stay in my mind as triumphant illustrations
of the power of human dignity and respect over ignorance and
hate.
Facing
Hate: A Community Responds was conceived as
a way of educating the community about positive responses
to racism and hate. It includes profiles of some of the letter's
recipients and cites nationally recognized programs designed
to respond to intolerance.
The exhibit
was organized by Evelyn
Orantes,
education projects coordinator, and Aimee
Klask,
history researcher, both of the Oakland Museum
of California, in collaboration with the Unity Council, a community
development organization based in the Fruitvale District of Oakland.
Additional participants include La Peña Cultural Center;
Chicano/Latino Agenda at the University of California, Berkeley;
East Bay La Raza Attorneys and the following community leaders:
Leandro Duran, Rocio Fierro, Lupe Gallegos, Rebeca Mendoza and
Roberto Vargas.
To provide
feedback or for more information please contact Evelyn
Orantes.
Information and teaching materials are also available through
Teaching Tolerance Organization's website: www.tolerance.org.
The exhibit
was made possible in part by the generous support of the Oakland
Museum History Guild. |