Archive for the ‘Culture’ Category

Schools Confuse People about Holiday Culture

Monday, November 1st, 2010

People who go through the typical U.S. education are pretty confused about Hispanic culture. Our schools teach some things that don’t really exist or don’t matter. The result is that people tend to think of foreign culture in terms of holidays, and in ways that aren’t accurate. I’m happy to give examples at this time of year.

1. Spanish classes teach that Las Posadas are a central religious Christmas tradition in Mexico. But people in Mexico will tell you that the tradition is no longer widely observed in the way our schools tend to teach. In fact, I just listened to two well-educated men in Mexico say: “Las posadas ya no son nada.” (Las Posadas are nothing anymore.) They were referring to the way the tradition has turned increasingly into parties and dancing. It’s not that nobody observes the tradition in its religious form, but its meaning continues to disappear from Mexico’s cultural landscape. Schools just need to keep things in perspective and up to date when they teach about holidays.

2. Día de los Muertos is another Mexican tradition that our schools teach as the BIG deal in Hispanic culture. In most places in Mexico, the holiday is still celebrated, but in different ways and with different theologies. On the other hand, almost all Mexicans who come here leave the holiday behind, except as a memory. It is pretty doggone hard to find many immigrants who still celebrate it the way our schools describe and reenact it. Whether I check in with Hispanic bakeries, party supply stores, or individuals as I travel around the U.S., I get this answer: “Really, I don’t know of anyone who is actually celebrating the holiday anymore.” This doesn’t mean schools are wrong to teach about it, but they should stay up to date on it. For instance, there are very interesting reasons why most Mexican immigrants do not continue the tradition, and these are sometimes the same reasons why many people in urban centers in Mexico have a difficult time continuing the tradition.

3. I’ve said it before, and so have Mexicans: Hardly anyone in Mexico celebrates or cares about Cinco de Mayo. Yet our schools continue teaching it as a point of cultural contact with our neighbor to the south. Cinco de Mayo is not a Mexican national holiday. Somehow it has stuck like glue to the curriculum, whether in regular schools or homes.

There are many other Hispanic countries and customs to talk about. Max and Max Spanish lessons give kids all kinds of insights into daily life. Holidays, whether accurately portrayed or not, are a relatively small piece of culture. Students like to learn about the several hundred other days of the year too.

Illegals Remind Me of Citizens

Friday, July 9th, 2010

You know those character banners that decorate school hallways and classrooms? Well, I realize the U.S.-Mexico border is way out of control, but I’m so tired of people complaining to me about illegal immigrants that I have decided to create a video series on the painful similarities between citizens and illegals. I want to do this with those character banners in mind. Here are some:

Respect (no putdowns)
Caring (treating people with dignity)
Fairness (allowing people to have what is due them, and not taking what is not yours)
Citizenship (playing a wholesome role in your society and country)

When we take an honest look at how citizens behave, we find plenty of illegality along with bad citizenship and other character flaws. It’s good to examine our own behavior before despising others. Maybe we have a lot in common.

By the way, even the immigrants who cross illegally tell me that the border is out of control. Most of them are just plain desperate.

The series will appear in the Batch 3 and Batch 4 Cultural Insights, which are for 6th grade and up, including the adults who are with them. I think subscribers will enjoy the lessons and take another look at their feelings. We will not agree on an effective solution to our border issues, but at least we can try a little harder to live up to those character banners.

Pennsylvanian Accents

Wednesday, June 2nd, 2010

Pennsylvanians talk with a wide variety of accent. As I was exiting a toll road in that state a few days ago, the woman in the toll booth greeted me, and I asked her where she was from. I meant what part of Australia. I have been planning a trip to that continent to collect fun recordings of the way people there speak English. That trip is now canceled. The Australian in the toll booth told me she is a native Pennsylvanian and lives a mile or so down the road. I just could not believe my ears. However, I noticed other Pennsylvanian accents several months ago that are strange to my ear, not to mention Dutch and its influences.

I’m going to miss the trip I never made to Australia.

Cinco de Mayo–Whose Holiday?

Wednesday, May 5th, 2010

A Mexican entrepreneur who attended one of the cultural sessions I conduct for small businesses said, “We adopt Cinco de Mayo when we come here.” She does not celebrate it in her homeland. She never saw it celebrated in Mexico.

Another Mexican gave an extended amount of time during her Spanish radio program last year to wonder out loud how people in this country have come to make such a big deal of Cinco de Mayo. “You go around to the cities of Mexico and nobody’s celebrating it,” she said. “It’s incredible, it’s just incredible how the people here in the U.S. make such a big deal of it!”

Only a few minutes ago I received an email telling me about a local Mexican-American woman who had to calm down a friend who wanted to decorate the woman’s car in a Cinco de Mayo theme. The woman told her friend, “It’s not even a holiday.”

Schools in the U.S. continue to think Cinco de Mayo represents a significant part of Hispanic tradition and history. The day is not on Mexico’s list of national holidays. In fact, all the hoopla here confuses a lot of Mexicans and other Hispanics, who mistake it for Mexico’s day of independence from Spain. Mexicans are forever telling fellow Mexicans in the U.S. that Cinco de Mayo is NOT their independence day. (The town of Puebla, Mexico, where the people initially overwhelmed the invading French, still celebrates May 5.)

There is nothing wrong with celebrating Cinco de Mayo. It’s just remarkable that May 5 is given the priority it has in our schools. This is what I tell my students: If you miss on something like this, imagine how much more you don’t know about our neighbors to the south.