Wednesday, October 30, 2013

DO TORTILLA AND CHIPS SALES HERALD THE RECONQUISTA?

DO TORTILLA AND CHIPS SALES HERALD THE RECONQUISTA?
By Juan Montoya
Esther Cepeda, the columnist from the Washington Post, had a tongue-in-cheek (or is it tongue-in-tummy?) editorial published today which triggered a few thoughts.
Cepeda wrote on a food-industry finding that tortillas now outsell hamburger buns and tortilla chips outsell potato chips.
In her argument Cepeda states that despite the fears of non-Hispanics or the "Hispanic Hype Machine," that it signals the Hispanization of the U.S.,  the food-industry numbers do not reflect that American society is reaching the majority-minority tipping point that will mean the end of life as we know it. Rather, she says, what it does signal is the growing popularity of ethnic foods (now Hispanic) as it was once with Italian food (pizza) and German foods before that. In fact, she wrote, the ratio of the racial majority (white) to minorities remains at  63 to 37 percent.
When I attended Olmito Elementary in my first year in school, it was during the days when the school districts used to prohibit (and punish) children who spoke Spanish at school. Now, I know I'm dating myself, but many of us went through that experience at different times at different places.
And I'm not making a plug for language immersion because I know one linguistic size does not fit all, but in that sink-or-swim setting, I was one of the ones who made it. My first-grade teacher was an elderly teacher in her 70s. I was a young boy who lived in a household where Spanish was spoken. How many more were discarded by the system and ended up in manual labor or the migrant stream we'll probably never know. I shudder to think how many lives were negatively impacted by these rigid educational polices.
But along with the prejudice toward language, at Olmito there was also a corresponding stigma attached to eating homemade tacos prepared for local Mexican-American students by their moms. The large Anglo-farmer contingent in the student body displayed their intolerance in such derisive terms when kids pulled out the tacos prepared lovingly by their moms that after a while my own mother sent me and my sisters with a lunch of baloney and bread, foods alien to out dinner table to stop the bullying.
The teasing stopped and the girls fit in with the culturally-correct culinary status quo at Olmito Elementary.
I was, I confess, a taco aficionado even back then, as were the majority of the other kids who rode with us in the bus from the outskirts of Olmito. Soon, they – in the tradition of kids everywhere – wanted to trade lunches. These were rural Mexican-American kids who wanted a taste of bread and baloney they were unaccustomed to eat and were willing to trade some of the succulent tacos their moms sent with them to eat at lunch.
That played right into my hands. I looked through the taco buffet offerings on the bus and finally settled on a kid whose mom was a master making tasty homemade flour tortillas wrapped around the softest diced potatoes cooked in bacon bits and drippings. Houston, we had liftoff!
The kids, like my sisters, didn't want to put up with the nasty bullying by the townies and farmers at taco-munching Mexican kids. So we chose a mesquite tree by the railroad tracks on the east side of the school by old 77 and each noon we'd sit under the tree – and yes, talk Spanish to our hearts' content – and partake of the forbidden food. That tree still stands. I learned  how to ask the teacher how to be excused to the bathroom from the kids there.
That was many years ago. Now, as we learn that the food that was the object of scorn and derision is now enjoyed by large numbers of Americans of all races and ethnicities, it seems like pendulum has changed and that, indeed, the way to a people's heart is through their stomach.      

17 comments:

Anonymous said...

Juan, when you say you were "one of the ones who made it," what do you mean? you made it to being a bad blogger at age 60?

BobbyWC said...

Everyone knows I hate distractions and the first comment is bs - Juan it is sad you do not write more like this - it was very enjoyable. Oh do I remember those times. Eventhough I had a full scholarship to UTEP it was not announced at graduation like it was for every Anglo - I was told I was to go to a technical school to learn to use my hands - times have changed.

My mother feared retaliation if she spoke Spanish to us. She was in this country less than a week when in Houston my father was told to leave the restaurant because she was a dark woman.

The first poster missed the story - how sad - and how sad rather than appreciate a good story he turns to insults - it is truly sad you do not write more like this -

Mildred Taylor wrote many short stories such as this using black children as the theme. They are read in middle schools all over the US.

You could easily turn this cultural experience into a 50 page short story which would and should rightfully sell.

Again - this is your true skill - it saddens me we do not see more of it.

Bobby WC

Diego lee rot said...

tortilla chips saved my life!

Anonymous said...

Juan,

Notice that your fellow depravado dedicated 90% of his left-handed complement to his own self-aggrandizement.

By the way, great man of letters, the standard length for a short story is between 1,000 and 7,500 words (30 pages).

Anonymous said...

Nachos got me into medical school!

Panuchos got me into law school!!

Empanadas got me into Cal Tec!!!

Menudo got me a Rhodes Scholarship!!!!

But, panocha got me the best one!!!!!

Anonymous said...

Memories, I attended la "Migrant School", now Josephine Castañeda, back in the early seventies. They practiced total immersion later they had a special class to teach English, way before "bilingual education" reared it's ugly head.

Anonymous said...

(Again - this is your true skill - it saddens me we do not see more of it.)

Whoa! Please keep it up, you two!
Dags.

Anonymous said...

Bobby Wightman kissing up to you, Juan. just like him. That dude has no idea it makes him look like a suckASS!

Tin Tan said...

I attended Bonham school in Harlingen, and it's true you were subject to scorn for eating tacos. In middle school, they use to call Hispanics who ate tacos, taco benders. How times have change.

Anonymous said...

At Russell Elementary (Brownsville) in 1960 there was a large contingent of students from Las Prietas who came with their wonderful tacos. I made sure my mom made bologna sandwiches so that I could barter for them. To this day I would rather have a taco to a Subway or Penn Station. A fond memory which tends to obscure the blatantly unfair track system and language denigration of the time. Indeed many such as Juan overcame the obstacles created by such policies but untold others gave up or were pushed out in anger, frustration, and confusion. Van

Anonymous said...

Para que veas que los pendejos de la frontera no son tan pendejos:

http://www.eleconomistaamerica.mx/actualidad-eAm-mexico/noticias/5267895/10/13/La-nina-Jobs-participa-en-el-Campeonato-Nacional-de-Calculo-Mental.html

Yo nunca he visto un gabacho de Olmito ganar nada!!! Pero si conoci ha un guerito que contrajo los chatos en el Golden Palace.

Anonymous said...

Tortilla chips are bad for you. Look what they did to Letty Garzoria's hair!

Joaquin said...

Great story! When I started school, we still had immersion but I don't recall getting punished for speaking Spanish. But when speaking to the teacher, we were forced to use English. By the time I left first grade, I was very comfortable with my English. Although I agree with your statement that "one linguistic size does not fit all," it has been proven the current system doesn't work. Our students are not learning English and whether we like it or not it is essential to their success. Again, this was a great story. Thanks.

Anonymous said...

Why do you allow that pinche gordo culo guango post here Juan? The idot says on his blog that he is not protecting the Hernadez family. He is a liar. He is just as bad as the people he is protecting. He himself says that people that advertise on your blog are just as guilty as you for giving you money. Then he has no shame posting on your blog?! What a hypocrite and a liar he turned out to be. He says on his blog that he is opposed to people driving people to vote in vans, that whoever does that will feel his wrath. There were vans taking people to vote in Cameron Park last week by the Hernandez Family,...I posted this on his blog and he rejected it with no comment. He is protecting them. He is a liar. He is a joke. How can he go after you and people that advertise with you so hard on his biased posts and not only read your blog, but also comment on it? Isn't reading and posting on your blog a sign of support for RRun RRun? You are a joke Cervantes,....a big fat joke!

Anonymous said...

Kids will not learn to swim by holding on to the edge of the pool. You have to let go of the pool to learn to swim.

When they let go, some will learn to swim and some will not. It is not the pools fault or the water's fault. Some folks have what it takes and some folks do not.

We have a population where a large percentage of the people are semi-literate at best in two languages. What is going on now, sure as hell isn't working any better than what happen in Olmito back in the day.

Anonymous said...

I went to West Brownsville Elementary School and what there when it became Russell Elementary. That places me older than Juan Montoya. We had kids from Las Prietas even then and many brought tacos to school with them and we all ate lunch together, played together and learned together.

Nobody looked down on tacos or kids who ate them. I think folks are filtering their history through their politics to come up with such bs.

I have always enjoyed Mexican food of all kinds and always will. The fact that more of it is being eaten, just means folks recognize good food when it hits their mouth.

Now, just why and the hell do folks have to shoe horn the simplest things into their political/racial agenda?

If the Mexican people are as proud of their history and culture as they say they are, then why is it necessary to feel so picked on by the gringos. Stand tall, be proud and move on! Stop the damn whining and sobbing about how you have been done wrong. Most of it is in your head anyway.

Anonymous said...

To Anonymous October 31,2013 at 2:08pm. Blacks cry about Slavery, White People cry that they are dominate and Us Mexicans cry because they want our Tacos. Damn it let us cry if we want to. You want to take that from us to? Mendigo Gabacho quiere mi taco de papas con huevo y fiojoles. Que se levanter to ama en la mañana temprano a masar harina guey. Mira mira Political. Go eat your bologna sandwhich. I'm sure Los de la Prietas te dieron un patadon en el culo por apestoso.

rita