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Concientización y Liberación is the section of ¡LA VERDAD! in which we publish our analysis on specific questions facing the struggle for Raza National Liberation. We understand that only by bringing clarity to the struggle through criticism and self-criticism will we be able to advance as a movement. David Sanchez and Jeronimo Blanco VS the Brown Berets de Aztlán:
Unión del Barrio is pleased to print this criticism of David Sánchez and his side-kick, Jeronimo Blanco, who have formed a clique of "self-proclaimed"
leaders of what they call the "re-commissioned National Brown Berets."
For one, it allows us to struggle against a most reactionary ego-tripping
clique whose claim to fame is their brief participation in the anti-colonial
struggle of Mexican people during the "Chicano Power Movement"
of the late 1960s and early 1970s. Secondly, it provides us an opportunity
to sum-up what principled struggle and unity is all about; exposing in particular,
how this reactionary clique is using the colonial (gringo) judicial/police
system to attack and eliminate righteous Raza liberation fighters (specifically
the Brown Berets de Aztlán). Thirdly, it enables us to win back the
heritage of struggle of Mexicanos as something that belongs to nuestra gente
and not the "property" of any one individual. And, fourthly, it
enables us to advance the politics of national liberation by comparing it
to the decadent tio-taco politics (brown democrats) pimped to our young
Raza by Sánchez and Blanco.
As an organization deeply rooted in the "Chicano Power Movement,"
(our founders and some of our current members were active in La Raza Unida
Party, Brown Berets, CASA, United Farm Workers Union, M.E.Ch.A., and other
movement formations) our political objectives have, and continue to be,
that of the Chicano Movement: the liberation of all Raza and our lands occupied
by gringo colonialism. It is therefore Unión del Barrio's political
responsibility to expose those charlatans (falsos) who, because of a short
"stint" in the movimiento, go around claiming every progressive
action and victory of the people as their own "private onda".
This criticism, therefore, is our attempt to uphold our responsibilities
and move our struggle forward.
We are conscious of the need to always bring up criticism in an "above
board" political fashion, because by doing so, we make these differences
useless to the police who would otherwise utilize them to spread rumors,
slander, and misinformation. Moreover, those involved in the movimiento
can see for themselves the contradictions which exist within our movement.
With this knowledge, they can then make a conscious decision as to which
side they stand on an issue (For more on this question, read "Handling
The Differences And Contradictions That Arise Among Movement Forces",
¡LA VERDAD!, Oct.-Dec. 1993.).
Brief History Of The Brown Berets
The Brown Berets have their origins in an East Los Angeles group called
the "Young Citizens for Community Action" (YCCA). The YCCA, sponsored
by an inter-faith church group, was co-founded in 1967 by David Sánchez
and several other young Chicanos, including Alberto Rivera, Tolin Enciso,
Hank Rivera, Carlos Montez and Manuel Parsens. As some of its members began
wearing brown berets (berets were typical attire of militant formations
during that time) they came to be "popularly" known as the Brown
Berets, a name which became common, not only within the community, but even
with the police as well. By 1968 the group officially took on this name.
Its logo or "beret patch", which depicts two rifles and a cross,
was designed by Manuel Parsens (who died last year in San Diego). The Beret
slogan, La Causa, was appropriated from the United Farm Workers Union. Initially
set-up as a group whose main function was to address problems facing youth
using a peaceful-mainstream approach (problems such as police brutality,
lack of social activities, and so forth), by 1968 it quickly attained the
militant politics of Chicano Liberation.
This political transformation did not come about in a vacuum. The 1960's
were a period of tremendous upheaval, both internationally and nationally.
There were revolutionary movements taking place in Asia (most notably Vietnam),
Africa, and throughout Latin America. The writings of great revolutionaries
such as Mao Tse-tung, Amilcar Cabral, Che Guevara, Fidel Castro, Frantz
Fanon, Malcolm X, and others were raising the consciousness of the oppressed
masses throughout world. In México, Lucio Cabañas and Genaro
Vasquez were leading revolutionary guerrilla movements, and hundreds of
Mexican students were massacred at Tlateloco in 1968 while protesting against
the neo-colonial Mexican government and yanqui imperialism. Within the borders
of the U.S., the Crusade For Justice (in Denver) and the Alianza (in Nuevo
Mexico) led by Corky Gonzalez and Reies Lopez Tijerina, respectivally, were
organizing Raza in the barrios and the campos for self-determination and
Chicano Power, while the Black Panther Party, under the leadership of Huey
P. Newton, was taking the struggle against white-capitalist power to the
streets of the African communities. Even within their own ranks, the U.S.
ruling class was having its internal contradictions as Martin Luther King
and Robert Kennedy were assassinated, and the organization, Students for
a Democratic Society rioted outside the Chicago National Democratic Convention.
It was their existence within this tremendous political atmosphere that
transformed the Berets (and other formations) from a pacifist-reformist
grouping - to one calling for the national liberation of the Chicano Mexicano
people.
Brown Berets Become A Leading National Mexican Liberation Organization
By 1970, the Brown Berets had developed a "13 Point Political Program
- To Unite All Our People Under The Banner Of Independence." Concentrating
its organizing in the barrios and colonias (where most Raza live), their
"fuck the marrano" and "mi Raza primero" militant politics
attracted the most oppressed sector of the Mexicano community; the homeboys
and homegirls. Soon they had grown into a national organization with 90
chapters and over 5,000 members, making it the largest Chicano Mexicano
liberation-oriented organization that has ever existed. The Berets published
a national newspaper called La Causa, which was disseminated throughout
Aztlán. It led or supported "student blow-outs" (walk-outs)
throughout southern Califas and other parts of Aztlán. It organized
the Chicano Moratorium Committee and was central to the formation of the
National Chicano Moratorium Committee which organized a massive anti-Vietnam
war march on August 29, 1970. This march was viciously attacked by the Los
Angeles pigs, killing three, injuring dozens, and arresting hundreds; one
of the dead was a 16-year old Brown Beret named Lynn Ward. The Berets organized
a take over of Catalina Island, claiming the land for México. They
organized a "Marcha de La Reconquista" (1971) from Calexico to
Sacramento as a way of raising the consciousness of La Raza and winning
the people to the struggle for self-determination. In Casa Blanca (Riverside),
the Berets shot down a police helicopter. Literally hundreds of demonstrations
were organized, from Califas to Tejas by the Brown Berets, many leading
to clashes with the pigs, resulting in deaths and injuries of many of its
members.
In San Diego, the Brown Berets were central (along with M.E.Ch.A. and
other movement forces) to the take over of Chicano Park in April of 1970.
Also during 1970, the Berets took over a social service center and turned
it into the "Chicano Clinic" and assisted in the take over and
founding of the Centro Cultural de La Raza. They published a newspaper entitled
El Barrio which consistently jammed-up police mistreatment of La Raza and
called for people to defend themselves by any means necessary.
Terrified By The Struggles Of The Masses, The U.S. Government Unleashes
All Its Military-Police Forces Against The Movement
Like all liberation oriented organizations of that period, the Brown
Berets were targets of the FBI's Counter Intelligence Program (COINTELPRO).
Fearful of the mass uprising of colonially oppressed people, the gringo
ruling class unleashed its police pigs to attack and destroy any organization
that adhered to liberation of the oppressed people, or those opposed to
the U.S. system of capitalist exploitation.
In 1986, in order to get a grasp of the causes that led to the decline
of the Chicano Power Movement (and other liberation movements), we summed-up
our understanding in the following way:
"Any analysis of the history of the Chicano Mexicano struggle for
liberation must include, as central to its continuing inability to achieve
its objectives, the overt and covert role of the colonial state [U.S. government].
The relationship of these forces to the movimiento during the last period
[1965-1975] was their successful destruction of the militant Chicano Power
Movement. Thus, it is of critical importance that today's activists thoroughly
understand the tactics and strategies, overt and covert, of the CIA, FBI,
etc. in order to counter the type of attacks that destroyed the movement
in the last period of struggle. Key here, is the basic understanding of
the various forms of colonial military repression, e.g. frame-ups, killings,
beatings, intimidations, dis-information, and slander. Particularly effective
was the counter intelligence program or COINTELPRO - with its "special"
investigation units in police departments in every major city in occupied
America (U.S.).
"Aside from the overt role the U.S. colonial military agencies have
played in the destruction of the Chicano movement, we must also consider
the covert warfare waged upon the struggle by the state. It is largely due
to this mode of attack that we find that the movement was riddled by infighting,
disinformation, and intimidation which resulted in mass confusion and demoralization.
The bourgeois print and electronic media contributed tremendously to the
undermining of the Chicano Movement through its consistent falsification
of the objectives of movement forces. At this time we also witnessed the
emergence of the Chicano petty bourgeoisie/vendido individuals and "tamed"
agencies who quickly became the "legitimate" and "mainstream"
representatives of the Chicano movement community. These opportunist perros,
on the leash of the neo-colonial white power structure contributed in no
small way to the suppression and neutralization of the liberation forces,
by their siding with the colonial bourgeoisie in their attacks against the
Chicano Nationalist movement." (see "Summing Up The Last Period:
The Chicano Movement 1965 To 1975", Unión del Barrio pamphlet,
June 1986)
David Sánchez Is Expelled From The Brown Berets
By 1972, many chapters of the Brown Berets had been infiltrated by the
various police agencies. This infiltration led to the arrests of many of
the Brown Beret's members as well as causing divisions between members and
chapters of the organization. Some of the Brown Beret membership who lacked
political maturity (didn't adhere to revolutionary ideology and practice)
or brought with them into the organization petty-bourgeois (middle class)
tendencies (ego trips, individualism, elitism, etc.), fell prey to the manipulation
and confusion created by police infiltrators or informants. It is during
the period in which these conditions occured that we must analyze an article
in the Los Angeles Times which covered David Sánchez's resignation
and unilateral (without consulting the central committee or its general
membership) dissolvement of the Brown Berets:
"The leader of the Brown Berets - once called the shock troops of
the Chicano movement - announced Wednesday that the organization is dissolving.
"David Sánchez who helped found the group in 1967, said that
the more than half of the national organization 'is involved with a dissolution
plan.'
"He said he expected the entire organization - 90 chapters with
a membership of 5,000 - would be dissolved within three months.
"He announced the phasing out of three Los Angeles-area chapters
with a membership of 150, said the state forces is closing itself out, and
said he was resigning as prime minister of the national group.
"The 24-year-old veteran of scores of demonstrations and confrontations
with police said the Brown Berets were disbanding chiefly to avoid strife
within the Chicano movement.
"He said different groups had been seeking to use the Brown Berets
'as a vehicle for their own purposes.' He said he feared violence between
Chicano factions - violence he said he would disband the berets to avoid.
Dangerous Situation Cited
"Sánchez, who made his announcement at a news conference,
would not elaborate. 'It is a dangerous situation,' he said.
"The Brown Berets, like the Black Panthers of the black community,
were a paramilitary group highly vocal in complaints of alleged police mistreatment
of members of minority groups.
"The Berets wore distinctive head gear and khaki and brown uniforms.
Their membership was mostly youth in their teens and 20s.
"He said Wednesday, 'it is time to go into a new phase of organization,
but didn't say what kind of organization might be developed.
"He answered most questions with rambling discourses filled with
the dialectic of the militant Chicano. Newsmen were unable to get special
details of why the organization was being dissolved." (see "Brown
Berets Leader Quits, Dissolves Units," Los Angeles Times, Nov. 8, 1972)
Why did David Sánchez "quit" the Brown Berets and "publicly"
dissolve the organization without consulting (therefore disrespecting) the
rest of the leadership or members of an organization, to which hundreds
of young Mexicanos had committed themselves to, and were prepared to die
for? Was he "physically threatened" by other forces within the
organization? Did the FBI or some other police agency, as part of COINTELPRO,
force him to "publicly" call for the disbanding of the Brown Berets?
Or was it a case of him losing control of the organization because of his
ego-tripping and elitist tendencies many had come to notice? Whatever the
answer, David Sánchez was not to associate himself again with the
Berets or the movement until he surfaced 20 years later demanding to speak
at a march organized in commemoration of the 20th anniversary of August
29th Chicano Moratorium held in Los Angeles in 1990. In the meanwhile, Jeronimo
Blanco would be seen every couple of years wearing a Brown Beret uniform,
usually when he would approach active chapters to claim that he was the
national leader because Sánchez "anointed" him so, and
to demand such recognition. Jeronimo did this in San Diego in 1977 and in
El Paso in 1978. Needless to say, no one took him seriously.
What Happened To The Brown Berets After The David Sánchez Press
Conference? What Did Other Berets Have To Say Regarding This Situation?
Two months later, a newspaper printed the following article:
"Just recently, former Prime Minster for the National Brown Berets
announced to the news media that all Brown Beret Chapters had been disbanded.
Since the time of his announcement, many people have expressed queries as
to the reasons for the disbandment. Many rumors have circulated that the
Berets would go underground; or would exert their efforts more toward political
involvement.
"The Indio Chapter of the Brown Berets has authorized the following
information to be released in order to shed more light on the issue. According
to local spokesmen, David Sánchez was "kicked out" from
his position. Reasons given were: David Sánchez was prostituting
the Brown Beret movement for self advancement; David Sánchez repeatedly
displayed cowardice in the face of the enemy; and finally that David Sánchez
was grossly guilty of creating disruption, chaos, alienation and polarization
in his own chapter as well as in all national chapters. The decision to
oust Mr. Sánchez was made in a series of meetings held in Sept. and
Oct. [of 1972] in the Los Angeles and San Joaquin areas. In these meetings
the administrative structure was also set up. It consists of a cabinet of
ministers: Minister of Self Defense; Education; Correspondence; and Minister
of Discipline. The old position of National Prime Minister was eliminated."
(read Ideal, January 1973)
In a document entitled "Twenty-Fourth Anniversary of the National
Chicano Moratorium Held In East Los Angeles" [published in 1994] which
gives a chronology of major events of the National Brown Berets Organization
de Aztlán (1967 to 1994), the question of David Sánchez and
his role as Prime Minister of the organization is summed up in the following
manner:
"With all that the Brown Berets de Aztlán have done to move
La Causa forward, there remains one dark cloud which hangs over the Brown
Berets de Aztlán to this day, this is [in reagrds to] the actions
of ex-Prime Minster David Sánchez. In 1972, Sánchez committed
acts of treason by allowing the infiltration into the organization of the
Brown Berets by federal agents; the recruiting of "instant" Berets,
and the unauthorized occupation of Catalina Island and its subsequent surrender
to the enemy which caused dissension and division amongst the organization
which is demonstrated to this day. When the Central Committee brought out
all the allegations against their Prime Minister for conspiracy, murder,
drugs (LSD), and exploitation in the name of La Causa, Sánchez did
not show to defend himself.
"At the tenth Anniversary of the Chicano Moratorium March and Rally
held in Los Angeles, National Brown Berets de Aztlán Minister of
Defense, Seferino Garcia, addressed the issue of the acts of treason committed
by Prime Minister David Sánchez to set history straight:
"Sánchez, like a reactionary coward, moved on one of the
Brown Beret's most important issues - our land - the occupation of Catalina
Island. Catalina was our fist target of reoccupation. The Brown Berets worked
and researched the land rights of our people. Sánchez thought by
getting national recognition he would be able to control and dominate his
puppets that he had along his side. We don't want to have disrespect towards
any of the soldiers that were real on that island. Here is a quote from
the National Brown Beret organization's Central Committee: 'We will occupy
Catalina Island no matter what it takes; if it rains we will stay; if we
run out of food we will starve; if we have to use force against the invaders
of our land then we will.'
"The Central Committee had support from the Mexican Embassy and
the Berets from Long Beach, Wilmington, San Pedro, and segments of the surrounding
area of the islands had endorsed and supported our occupation. But knowing
the history of David Sánchez, they did not support this reactionary
act.
"After staying on the island for over three weeks, Sánchez
was given two hours to leave. Within an hour, eating McDonald's hamburgers
and drinking Coors beer, he and his followers packed up their belongings
and left the island.
"When he came off the Island, the following day, this make believe
hero called a press conference and announced that 'he' disbanded the Brown
Berets and that he was available for a leadership role for another organization.
"Several Oakland Brown Berets who were on the Island, [while] not
knowing the Central Committee's plan, knew there was something wrong with
the action. Chuey Mendoza and other Oakland Berets went to the Norwalk Brown
Berets de Aztlán and made a full report of the actions on the island.
They stayed for over a month to learn the concept of community organizing
at a grassroots level.
"His [Sánchez's] actions put the darkest cloud over the heads
of the true revolutionary brothers and sisters and supporters of the National
Brown Berets Organization de Aztlán.
"Downey's The Southeast News writer Steve Comus was the only one
that covered the true events of what happened in Catalina Island and Sánchez's
grand stand play to grab center stage from the real organizers of the Brown
Berets de Aztlán.
"Ministers Albert Rivera, Tolin Enciso, Catarino Hurtado, Eddie
Fernandez, and Minister of Defense Seferino Garcia, along with the Field
Marshals and Commanders and the Troops of the Brown Berets de Aztlán,
were invited to the Congreso de Aztlán, a national conference in
Albuquerque, New Mexico in 1972. Over 5,000 leaders from all over Aztlán
and the Black Berets rose to their feet when it was announced that David
Sánchez was denounced and ousted as prime minister of the National
Brown Berets. There was a five minute standing ovation," concludes
Garcia. (for more on this Congreso, read El Grito del Norte, 1973,
were they report the spirited support given by those in attendance of the
Brown Beret ousting of David Sánchez).
Newspaper Makes Fun Of The David Sánchez's Berets
In another newspaper article, a reporter reminisces about his coverage
of the Catalina Island takeover:
"As a news service reporter assigned to cover the 'occupation,'
I can still recall watching some Berets eat corn flakes with milk, on flat
paper plates. These guys may have been militants but I realized they weren't
as tough as they led others to believe.
"The Berets peacefully left the island after 26 days when they were
declared to be in violation of camping ordinances.
"I admit that those plates of corn flakes came to mind when Jeronimo
Blanco, the Berets' national leader and a participant in the Catalina invasion,
and three others came by the newspaper. The uniformed men seemed out of
place, and perhaps lost in time, as they walked in single file into the
newsroom.
"Drawing on a group of about 20 former members, the Berets have
decided to resurrect themselves with a new twist to their message of Chicano
power: Gang violence is a threat to L.A.'s burgeoning Latino population
that must be stopped.
"'We have to stop killing ourselves,' Blanco said. 'If we can help
out, by showing kids there are other things to do, that will help our community.
We want to work within the political system'.[our emphasis]
"Even Sánchez, who was no longer active with the group, has
come full circle. The one time president of former Mayor Sam Yorty's youth
advisory council, who wrote one manifesto after another as founder of the
Brown Berets, is now an aide to an L.A. County supervisor and teaches Chicano
history at East Los Angeles College." [our emphasis] (see article "Brown
Berets Are Back, With a New Mission for '90s", Los Angeles Times,
July 12, 1993)
Without David Sánchez, The Brown Berets Continue The Struggle
(1972 To 1996)
From 1972 to 1974 most Brown Beret chapters, without the leadership of
David Sánchez who had publicly quit the organization, continued to
exist and be active in the barrios throughout Aztlán. As we have
summed-up many times in ¡LA VERDAD!, the police-colonial war (COINTELPRO)
waged against our movimiento had, by 1975 destroyed or neutralized the great
majority of the liberation forces. Nevertheless, Brown Berets chapters (as
well as other groups such as CASA, Crusade for Justice, Committee On Chicano
Rights, some M.E.Ch.A. chapters, etc.) continued to struggle in defense
of nuestra Raza throughout the late 1970s. The few Beret formations that
survived into the 1980's usually played a supporting role to other organizations
engaged in struggle during this period. Many former Berets, who never denounced
La Causa, worked as individuals to better the conditions of la gente. Among
these were camaradas Seferino Garcia and David Rico.
David Rico, who was incarcerated for activism as a Brown Beret, never
gave up the principles and objectives of the Brown Berets. In fact, everywhere
he would go, he would defend the history of the Berets and jammed-up those
so-called "ex-Berets" who had given up the struggle and yet still
claimed the history of the organization. In every organization he would
work with, David Rico would struggle vigorously to win over people to the
political line of the Brown Berets. He would often put his life on the line
and his financial situation would suffer because of his ideals. As a member
of Unión del Barrio, David Rico had a profound influence in its development
and political orientation. Because of his uncompromising stand in support
of Mexicano liberation, the glorious history of the Brown Berets, and his
refusal to "keep quiet" in his criticism of the "ex-militants"
and now vendido-hispanic poverty pimps (social service agency directors,
brown democrats, token government officials, etc.), David Rico has been
a constant target of police agents and their lackeys, the vendidos.
It was David Rico and the San Diego Berets, M.E.Ch.A., and other movimiento
activists (who are to numerous to mention in this article) who were central
to the take over of Chicano Park, the Chicano Clinic, establishment of the
Chicano Federation, and assisted in the take over and establishment of the
Centro Cultural de La Raza.
While we personally do not know much about camarada Seferino Garcia,
we understand that his history has paralleled much of that of David Rico's.
As the last Minister of Defense, Seferino Garcia assisted in keeping the
Brown Berets active years after the ousting of David Sánchez. For
decades, he has been central to politics in the Orange County area and has
been instrumental in keeping the ideals and objectives of the Brown Berets
and the movimiento alive.
In 1987, David Rico along with a core group of young gente (Hector Muro,
Froilan Mercado, Ismael Avilez, and other good camaradas) from San Diego's
North County area, re-established a Beret chapter. Calling themselves the
"Brown Berets de Aztlán", adhering to the same basic objectives
and principles of the original Berets. By 1989 they had been joined by new
chapters (or regroupings of former members) in Riverside, Coachela, Orange
County, El Paso, Los Angeles, and other areas. Since then, much of their
work has centered in providing support to the work of other organizations
such as Unión del Barrio, National Chicano Moratorium Committee,
Chicano Park Steering Committee, and some MEChAs. They have played a significant
role in the organizing of the 20th Commemoration of August 29th (1990),
the 500 Years of Raza Resistance Marcha (1992), the mass youth demonstrations
against Prop 187 (1994), and the 25th Commemoration of August 29th (1995).
It was precisely in 1990, that the movement was to hear from Sánchez
again.
After Hiding For 20 Years, David Sánchez Demands To Be Recognized
As A Leader Of Our Movement
During his 20-year absence, David Sánchez had no relationship
to the movement. Sources close to ¡LA VERDAD! explained that
he was working with Jane Fonda and Tom Hayden, former white "radicals"
who created an organization called the Campaign For Economic Democracy (CED).
After the defeat of the national liberation struggles in 1975 (Chicano Movement,
Black Power Moment, American Indian Movement, etc.), most white left-radical
groups, who survived on the backs of the colonized peoples struggle, gave
up radical politics and searched for space and assimilation into the mainstream
capitalist-colonial system; the CED was one of them. We also learned that
David Sánchez had ran, unsuccessfully, for some government office
pushing Democratic Party-type politics. He also took "time off"
to get his "Ph.D." which enables him to call himself "Dr.
Sánchez" and wrote a book entitled Expedition Through Aztlán,
in which he glorifies himself, giving no credit whatsoever to other Berets
or movement organizations; a classic example of bourgeois egotism.
It was not until 1990, during the march to commemorate the 20th anniversary
of the Chicano Moratorium of Aug. 29th that David Sánchez surfaced.
During one of the meetings of the L.A. region of the NCMC, David Sánchez
showed up and demanded that he be one of the keynote speakers of this historic
event. The majority of the activists present at the meeting, knowing the
negative history of David Sánchez, refused to recommend him as a
keynote speaker to the national body of the NCMC. Sánchez angrily
told the L.A. Committee that he was going to speak at the march no matter
what (see L.A. NCMC minutes or speak to members for more information on
this issue). Later, at a national meeting of the NCMC, it was decided that
because of the historical significance of his past work, that David Sánchez
should address the 20th Commemoration of Aug.29th. During the actual event,
David Sánchez was scheduled to speak during the morning rally - but
he failed to show up. Later in the afternoon, Sánchez arrived accompanied
by a group he had recently formed, called "The Mexican American Peace
Corps" (who wore brown uniforms with yellow berets), demanding to speak.
In order to avoid a confrontation and not give the police an excuse to attack
the march and rally (which had close to 7,000 participants, and included
many children), David Sánchez was allowed to go up to the stage alone
and give a brief message. The fact that David Sánchez was able to
break ranks with the rest of the Mexican American Peace Corps (who wanted
to go up to the stage with Sánchez), and go up to the stage alone
to speak, again demonstrates the individualist-egotistic approach that he
has towards struggle; a personality trait that puts oneself above all others.
After the 20th Commemoration, the Mexican American Peace Corps disappeared
and Sánchez paraded out a new group called the "Brown Berets
of America". Later, around 1992, he was to change the name to the National
Brown Berets. The leadership role Sánchez has played with the "national"
Berets smacks of someone with a psychological problem as he has been quoted
in the media as claiming to be the "Master of Ceremony", "Advisor
General", "Prime Minister", and "Chief" of the
organization. (see Brown Berets split in factions; sense of unity lost",
East Los Angeles College Campus News, Feb. 16, 1994)
It was around 1992 that Sánchez began to demand that the Brown
Berets de Aztlán (and other active Berets) either join his organization,
under his leadership, or stop using the name "Brown Berets". The
Brown Berets de Aztlán refused this command for several important
reasons: One, David Sánchez had been expelled (or "quit"
as Sánchez claims) from the organization in 1972, therefore he had
no right to tell any Beret what to do. Second, Sánchez's absence
for almost 20 years from any kind of movimiento work gave him absolutely
no authority or legitimacy to tell "anyone" what to do. Third,
that the current work he and Jeronimo Blanco were doing had nothing to do
with liberation struggle, but in fact iwas nothing but "brown Democratic
Party" style of work; a politic that is clearly contrary to the Brown
Beret Political Program .
Proof of the hispanic politics of Sánchez and Blanco can be seen
in statements they have given to the media; and even in their own publications:
They push a line that calls for working within the system, with the police,
etc. (see "Brown Berets set caps against gangs", San Diego
Union-Tribune, "Una Casa Divida" in L.A. Village News,
9/18/95, The Brown Book, By Dr. Sánchez, Chief B.B.N.O., etc.)
David Sánchez And Jeronimo Blanco Use The Gringo Judicial/Police
System To Attack Other Raza
On January 26, 1996, David Sánchez and Jeronimo Blanco did the
most reactionary, traitorous, and "rata-like" act that anyone
can do: they used the gringo colonial Judicial-Police System to attack David
Rico and all of the righteous liberation fighters of the Brown Berets de
Aztlán. In a suit filed in the gabacho court system, David Sánchez
and Jeronimo Blanco, beg the gringo judicial system that they be paid for
"medical expenses," "loss of earnings," "cost of
suit," and "other relief the court deems just and proper,"
allegedly caused by the use of the name "Brown Berets" (see Summons,
Superior Court of California, County of San Diego, case #696675, filed Jan.
26, 1996). How can these two vendidos claim to have any relationship to
the Brown Berets when they have clearly violated the "Brown Berets
13 Point Program", specifically Point #5 which states:
"We want all Chicanos being held in all political jails released.
No Chicano has ever had a fair trail in the racist US. Judicial system.
All Chicanos being held are political prisoners" (see brown beret 13
point political program)
Why are David Sánchez and Jeronimo Blanco now using (and violating
the Beret code of honor) the racist U.S. Judicial System to attempt to jail
other Raza? Do they believe that the system is no longer racist or anti-Mexicano?
How do they justify using the gringo Judicial-Police system on other Raza
to the thousands upon thousands of Raza (and their familias) doing time
in la torcida? How do they explain their actions to those Mexicanos doing
tiempo in Soledad, San Quentin, Folsom, Pelican Bay, Susanville, Calipatria,
Indiana State Prison, Ironwood, Donovan, Florence Arizona, Tennessee Colony-Texas,
Gatesville-Texas, Corcoran, and the dozens of other pintas where nuestra
Raza is locked down? We're sure the homeboys and homegirls in las calles
(barrios) and in la torcida want to know why David Sánchez and Jeronimo
Blanco are calling the pigs on their own Raza. We're sure those in the movimiento
(the MEChAs, Crusade for Justice, the Movimiento de Liberación Nacional,
La Raza Unida Party, Mexicanos Unidos, the Chicano Press Association, etc.)
would like to know why David Sánchez and Jeronimo have become ratas
and are calling the pigs on other Raza and still have the nerve to call
themselves "Brown Berets".
Furthermore, we question who is behind the actions of Sánchez
and Jeronimo? In our critique of Sánchez and Jeronimo, we must not
let the hispanic lawyer, Carlos E. Castañeda off the hook. Castañeda,
who claims he took the case "free of charge", must think the movement
is stupid. Everyone knows how difficult it is to get a lawyer for "free
of charge" no matter what the case might be (just ask any Raza in la
torcida). This makes us believe that someone else "encouraged"
Castañeda to take on this particular case. Knowing the history of
Castañeda, who all the way through law school lived off of "poverty
pimp jobs" (social service agencies who are supposed to help the poor,
yet the only ones who benefit are the ones who administer the programs),
it would not surprise us if a former supervisor pushed him into working
against the movimiento. History has proven, that the major enemy of the
people have been the sell-out neo-colonial puppets (lawyers, parole officers,
wardens, principals, teachers, etc.) who do the "dirty work" for
the gabacho ruling class.
So-Called Activist Who Wants To Instill Respect And Create Unity Among
Raza Youth Practices The Most Sick-Vulgar Language And Police Style Rhetoric
To Attack A Movimiento Organization
Not satisfied with snitching on Raza to the judicial-police system, Jeronimo
Blanco spews the most foul and degenerate language (No tiene respeto o vergüenza)
when communicating with movement organizations. In a letter sent to Unión
del Barrio, dated April 29, 1996, and titled "Your Holy Redness Has
Chorro of the Mouth", this hypocritical low-life, while going around
to the gringo media explaining how the main objective of the '"national"
berets is to instill respect in youth, turns around and uses trash to explain
some silly problem he claims comes from our "camp" (see copy of
this letter below). But worse than talking trash to explain his concerns
was Jeronimo's reference to "communism" and "red", as
these are the very same terms that the police used (during the Chicano Power
period 1965-75) against the Brown Berets, La Raza Unida Party, Crusade for
Justice, M.E.Ch.A., etc., as a way of "neutralizing" and keeping
them from struggling in defense of La Raza. If Jeronimo is against "communism",
then he must be for capitalism; the same system that is responsible for
the occupation of Aztlán, the killing and raping of millions of Raza,
the poverty in which most of our pueblo exists, and for the imprisonment
of thousands of Mexicanos.
Unión del Barrio is not afraid (and never has been) to explain
where we stand. We stand for the liberation of all Raza and our lands; the
reunification of Aztlán-Mexico, the establishment of a socialist
society based on the cultural and historical realities of the Mexican people;
a society where there is no rich or poor, oppressor or oppressed, and everyone
shares the wealth of the nation. If Jeronimo Blanco has a problem with this
stance, then he should lay it out - as this is the fundamental question
Unión is fighting for; not someone calling someone "Very White"
(see letter written by Blanco), or "pendejo", and so forth.
The Issue Of Sánchez And Jeronimo Blanco Has Nothing To Do
With Unity, It Has To Do With The Struggle Between The Forces Of Mexican
Liberation And Mexican Oppression
It is clear, by the action of David Sánchez and Jeronimo Blanco,
that the whole issue between them and the Brown Berets de Aztlán,
has nothing to do with a "split" in the movement or the question
of unity, or a struggle between the National Brown Berets and the Brown
Berets de Aztlán. Rather, it has to do with a struggle between two
opposing forces. On one side you have the so-called National Berets (which
is really Sánchez-Blanco) who push working with and assimilating
within the system that is oppressing nuestra Raza; and on the other hand
you have the Brown Berets de Aztlán, which see the system as the
main cause of our oppression and who are committed to the total liberation
of La Raza. Whether Sánchez and Blanco are cognizant or not, they
are working with the system against La Raza. In the real world, Sánchez
and Blanco as individuals mean little to us, since, unfortunately, all oppressed
people have had their share of Vendidos. The problem for us, is that this
reactionary tendency is rampant throughout our movement. We specifically
feel for those young hermanas y hermanos who are blindly following these
vendidos. We hope that after reading this article they can challenge Sánchez
and Blanco and begin by asking them two important questions: "who elected
them to the leadership of the National Brown Berets?", and "why
are they using the sistema to attack other Raza?
In closing, we call on all progressive and revolutionary forces to expose,
denounce, and expel David Sánchez and Jeronimo Blanco from the movimiento.
If you are about self-determination and liberation struggle, this is the
only principled approach to this question.
¡Abajo Con Los Vendidos!
April 29, 1996
YOUR HOLY REDNESS HAS CHORIZO OF THE MOUTH:
Greetings, Comrades!!!
I write to you these few lines hoping that all of you in La Union del
Barrio; or quite appropriately: La Cagazón Del Barrio, are feeling
just fine.
I just recently heard something that is very amusing because it comes
from your camp; and I couldn't wait to let you know and it goes like this:
I heard that La Cagazón Del Barrio is calling me "Very White".
That's because my last name in Blanco, so it's "White"; and
my first name is Jeronimo, so it "Jerry"; but you don't want to
call me "Jerry White"-so you call me "Very". Get it?
"Very White".
Now-I wonder. Based on what I know about your Communists in La Cagazón
Del Barrio, you most certainly deserve the title: "Very Red".
Right, Comrades? I also thought of other titles, such as "Your Holy
Redness" because you walk around like the god of the Chicano Movement
and like your caca doesn't stink.
There's nothing Chicano about your organization because the Movimiento
is really about La Raza, and not about Russia. In case your head has been
stuck somewhere the sun don't shine, communism has not worked anywhere,
so what makes you think that it's going to work for La Raza?
I take it that you think you know everything about me because of your
incessant chorro of the mouth, and that's why you baptized me "Very
White". I will put my commitment and my involvement in the Chicano
Movement before any of you. Any time. Any place.
Some of your old "Very Red" members of La Cagazón Del
Barrio might remember the first letter that I sent to you back in 1982 when
your verbal diarrhea accused those of us who were hired in the San Diego
Street Youth Program of having sold out and that we'd be working with the
cops.
We proved to you that all you had to back that up was your chorro of
the mouth. Nevertheless, you had the huevos to talk shit, but you did not
have the huevos to retract when you half-ass admitted you were wrong.
I deal with the facts, not chismes, fabrications or straight-out lies.
What do you "Very Red" deal with? What are you instilling your
youngsters? That you want them to start a revolution and when they get their
ass shot or in other deep shit you will wash your hands off like if you
had nothing to do with it? Bola de pendejos.
What have you accomplished in all those years that you have been walking
around like the god of the Chicano Movement? How many of you are not working
with the gabacho system of live off of it in one way or another?
How many ideas have you stolen from my organization, such as La Causa
name and now; la Verdad, an affiliate of the San Diego unit of the Brown
Beret National Organization in the late 60's and early 70's? And how about
the Chicano Moratorium Committee, an invention of the Brown Berets?
What is your motive to make me look bad before La Raza? What is your
motive to spread ideas that are not Chicano Movement ideas? Are you some
kind of U.S. government agents that have been sent to destabilize the Chicano
Movement?
I am ready, willing and able to put my cards on the table to show that
I am playing straight, but I doubt that you have your "Very Red"
huevos to show yours.
"La Cagazón Del Barrio has a bad case of chorro of the mouth".
Sinceramente,
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