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SOCC Mission

The SOCC seeks to re-establish the Centro Cultural de la Raza as a relevant and dynamic community cultural Center that is open and responsive to the aspirations of the Chican@ / Mexican@ / Indigena community; that supports the free expression and liberating qualities of our culture; and that embraces all races, ages, genders and sexual preferences.

The Save Our Centro Coalition is a member of the National Association of Latino Arts and Culture


We Support the SOCC!


Join the following individuals, artists, activists, Centro founders, former Centro Board members and groups in their efforts to return the Centro Culltural de la Raza to the community.

Ramon "Chunky" Sanchez
Richard Lou
Robert Sanchez
Lalo Lopez Alcaraz
Tomasa "Tommie" Camarillo
Corky Gonzales Presente!
Irene Mena
Carmen Kalo
Valerie Aranda
Javier Francisco
Patricio Chavez
Eloise de Leon
Carmela Castejon
David Rico
endy
Leticia Talvera
Sal Barajas
Teresa Caballero
Bill Caballero
Victor Ochoa
Nuvia Crisol Guerra
Isaac Artenstein
Jorge Mariscal
Christina Ruiz Goldberg
Carlos C. de Baca
Perry Vasquez
Mario Torero
Victor Payan
Pocha Peña
Ernesto Bustillos
Andi Brandenburg
Irene Castruita

Mariajulia Urias
Monica Hernandez
Theresa Mill
Brent Beltran
Luz Camacho
Richard Gomez
Kathy Espitia
Marco Anguiano Presente!
Alma Felan
Rick Felan
Michel Madrigal
Ricardo Pozos
Daniel Pozos
Bob Rob Medina
Elsa Velarde
Howard Hollman
Laura Irene Arvizu
Rebecca Romani
Ryan Trammel
Carlos Pelayo
Roberto Rodriguez
...and many more!

The following groups also support the boycott and the effort to return the Centro to the community:

Able Minded Poets
Activist San Diego
Arabs Anonymous/No Hay Moros
Besos Not Bombs
Brown Berets de Aztlan
Chicano Park Steering Committee
Chicano Perk Cafe
Calaca Press
Cuachambiente
Evolution of the Brown
FUERZA
Hot Monkey Love Cafe
Keep on Crossin'
Loko Artz Collective
MYM Entertainment
Pocharte
Radioactive Future
Raza Rights Coalition
Red CalacArts Collective
Teatro Izcalli
Union del Barrio
Voz Alta

 

Contact Us!

Email us your thoughts at :

community@saveourcentro.org

Save Our Centro Coalition

SEVEN YEAR BOYCOTT OF SAN DIEGO’S
CENTRO CULTURAL DE LA RAZA ENDS

Members of the SOCC/Centro Transition Team, the Save Our Centro Coalition and the National Conflict Resolution Center announce the end of the seven year boycott of the Centro Cultural de la Raza at the 37th Annual Chicano Park Day celebration.

For Immediate Release

Contact:

Carole Ravago
Centro Cultural de la Raza

Sandra Peña-Sarmiento
Save Our Centro Coalition

 

 

E-mail: community@saveourcentro.org

SEVEN YEAR BOYCOTT OF SAN DIEGO’S CENTRO CULTURAL DE LA RAZA ENDS

SAN DIEGO – May 7, 2007 – The seven-year-old boycott of the Centro Cultural de la Raza, San Diego's historic Chicano/a community arts center, has ended after the adoption by popular vote of a comprehensive and dynamic boycott resolution agreement.

The Save Our Centro Coalition, initiators of the boycott, announced the end of the boycott on April 21 at the 37th annual Chicano Park Day celebration in Barrio Logan. The announcement came after 18 months of negotiations between representatives of the Centro’s Board of Trustees and the Save Our Centro Coalition.

As a result of the negotiations, which were mediated by a team from the National Conflict Resolution Center, a boycott resolution agreement was adopted which guaranteed the addition of SOCC members to the Centro Board, re-established the Centro's Arts Advisory Committee, created a Community Advisory Council and enacted several new policies to address perceived conflict of interest issues and to stimulate transparency and community participation in the Centro.

Additionally, two newly-appointed SOCC-related Centro Board members will serve on the screening committee for the hiring of the organization's new Executive Director, and a committee will be formed to review, restore and catalogue the Centro’s historic art collection.

The boycott of the Centro was launched in May 2000 by a large group of artists, activists, educators, students, cultural workers, Centro founders and former staff members who believed that policies enacted by a new management were exclusionary and removed mechanisms for transparency and accountability at the Centro.

Since the beginning of the boycott, both the Centro and the Save Our Centro Coalition have continued to serve San Diego's diverse community and to uphold the mission of the Centro Cultural de la Raza through projects and programs throughout the region.

“We are excited to have reached an agreement which addresses the issues of the boycott and restores the Centro as a home for our community at a time when its mission is more important than ever," said SOCC member Victor Payan. "We thank all those who have worked with us during the years and look forward to using our creative resources to make the Centro bigger and better than ever."

“The transition team has done an excellent job focusing on the Centro's mission and its future goals," said Maria Cervantes, President of the Centro’s Board of Trustees. "We must continue to keep the core values that created the Centro as a place for the community, while extending our culture to include additional attributes necessary for our future growth.”

A joint transition team, comprised of members of both organizations, has been formed to reunite the Chicano/a arts community into the Centro, its historic home in Balboa Park. The first project the transition team will work on is the Legacy Initiative, which will celebrate and document the Centro’s 37-year history with an exhibition of works by early Centro artists, including Guillermo Rosette Chavez, Guillermo Aranda, Victor Ochoa, Sal Torres, Yolanda Lopez, Elida Chavez, David Avalos, Teresa Hoyos and others. The exhibition is expected to open this summer, and will be the first time many of these artists have exhibited at the Centro in seven years.

The Centro Cultural de la Raza’s mission is to create, promote, preserve and educate about Mexicano/a, Chicano/a, Latino/a and indigenous art and culture. Its legendary circular facility at Park Blvd. and Inspiration Point Way is known for its vivid murals and its 300-seat, 6,000 sq. ft. performance/exhibition space. The Centro is home to the Ballet Folklorico en Aztlan. Founded in 1970 by Chicano/a artists, the Centro Cultural de la Raza achieved international prominence as an important center for the creation and expression of innovative works which celebrated the richness of a dynamic culture.

The Save Our Centro Coalition was formed to re-establish the Centro Cultural de la Raza as a relevant and dynamic community cultural center that is open and responsive to the aspirations of the Chicano/a, Mexicano/a and Indigena community; that supports the free expression and liberating qualities of the Chicano/a, Mexicano/a and Indigena culture; and that embraces all races, ages, genders and sexual preferences.

For more information, visit www.centroraza.com and www.saveourcentro.org.

# # #

 

 
SOCC

COMMUNITY VOTES ON BOYCOTT
RESOLUTION AGREEMENT

• Board Seats
• Arts Advisory Committee
• Community Advisory Council
• Conflict of Interest Policy
• Review and Cataloguing of Art Collection
• Staff Performance Review
• Bylaw Revisions
• Participation in E.D. Selection Process

Click Here To Read Agreement

   
 

CENTRO WELCOMES SOCC CANDIDATES

New Centro Board Members

• Annie Ross
• Carlos Jaime Martell
• Mateo Camarillo

New Arts Advisory Committee Members

• Berenice Badillo
• Brent Beltran
• Patricio Chavez
• Saul Cruz
• Eloissa Leonna
• Victor Payan

 

For More Information, please e-mail: community@saveourcentro.org

 

2006 SOCC Year in Review

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