Young Filmmaker Gets Kudos from First Lady & Oprah Winfrey
by Nicole C. Brambila • January 2, 2009
The Long Beach
girl who worked on a documentary about the Purépecha
Indians who live in Duroville received letters from Oprah
Winfrey and First Lady Michelle Obama.
As a sixth-grader, Stephanie Maldonado
spent a summer exploring the lives of migrant farmworkers
in the Coachella Valley. Her 30-minute documentary, “The
Purepecha: Poorest of the poor,”
was produced and directed by L.A.-based filmmaker Cheryl
Quintana Leader and has been screened several
times in the valley.
The documentary traces the struggle of these Mesoamerican
people who settled in a dilapidated trailer park known
as Duroville on the Torres-Martinez Reservation in Thermal,
about 30 miles east of Palm Springs.
Both Obama and Winfrey wrote letters to Stephanie in June
congratulating her on her work.
From the first lady: “Thank you for writing!
Your letter was so kind and I appreciate the effort you
put into it. As I say to my daughters, it's important
to always do your best. I want you to know that you can
make a difference.”
From Winfrey: “I truly applaud your creative
ambitions and I hope that your efforts working with migrant
farmworkers is the first of many future works for you.”
Duroville emerged in 1999 after a county crackdown on
substandard housing. Facing eviction, many fled to Indian
land.
The Purépecha Indians began migrating to the valley
from Michoacan, Mexico, more than two decades ago. Most
work in the fields and earn minimum wage.
|
In 2007, the Purépecha sent back
to Mexico roughly $1 million in remittances used to pave
roads and build schools, according to city officials in
Ocumicho, Mexico.
The documentary chronicles the struggle of the Purépecha
to maintain their community in the U.S. even as the U.S.
District Attorney's Office unsuccessfully attempted to
shutter the park.
To read the letters in full, go to www.indivision2000.com/purepecha_letters.html
|
Filmmaker Examines Living
Conditions
of Indigenous Tribe in 'Purepecha'
by Nick Ingram • December 4, 2009
Cheryl Quintana
Leader always wanted to help people.
She didn't quite follow the path she planned as a child
- to be a heart or eye surgeon - but in a way, she came
close.
Leader considers herself a surgeon in a different way.
"I'm an eye surgeon with what I’m able to make
people see, and a heart surgeon with how I make them feel,"
said the filmmaker.
Seeing and feeling went hand-in-hand in Leader's latest
project, the documentary "The Purepecha:
Poorest of the Poor," which examines the
living conditions of an indigenous American Indian tribe
in Duroville, a mobile home community on the Torres-Martinez
Indian Reservation in Thermal.
The majority of Duroville residents are farmworkers earning
less than minimum wage in a location adjacent a defunct
toxic waste dump.
Sister Gabriella Williams of the Diocese of San Bernardino
inspired the documentary, which will be screened Saturday
for the Coachella Valley Latino International Film Festival
at the Indio Performing Arts Center.
"I read an article in the L.A. Times that intrigued
me," said Leader, who produced the film. "Sister
Gabi was actively involved in creating better conditions
for the families and their children and I told her, 'What
you need is a visual tool to progress this mission."'
This visual tool looks through the eyes of Stephanie Maldonado,
now a seventh grader at Hill Classical Middle School in
Long Beach.
"She was the most outspoken one," said Leader,
who visited Roosevelt Elementary when Maldonado was in
the fourth grade, looking for students to participate
in another film project. "She has insight. Some kids
are just kids, and some are thinkers. She inspired me."
Maldonado is one of the main outsiders looking in on the
Purepecha.
"When we first started, I thought it was a grassy,
pretty park," she said of Duroville. "I didn't
know what to expect."
What Maldonado saw was a slum trailer park community with
dirt roads, in a big agricultural area of the Coachella
Valley. She saw dogs running loose and children looking
sad.
Leader, who owns INDIVISION2000
Productions, the Mar Vista-based production company behind
the documentary, also was caught off guard by what she
witnessed.
"I was shocked this was happening," she said.
Leader, a 1978 graduate of South Torrance High School,
said she is motivated by doing educational work for the
community, especially young girls and women.
"When we are helping those who are less fortunate
than ourselves then we’ve made a positive difference
to balance things out," said Leader, who comes from
a middle-class Jewish Caucasian/ Mexican-American family.
"Once you create a story, it can become real."
|
Stephanie Maldonado (left) is an
outsider looking in at an indigenous American Indian tribe
in the documentary, "The Purepecha:
Poorest of the Poor," by Cheryl
Quintana Leader (right).
The story Leader creates in "The Purepecha:
Poorest of the Poor" is one in which California
is the richest state in one of the richest nations in
the world, yet with Third World conditions in its own
backyard.
"I don't care if you are American born or not, those
working for our food should at least be able to be provided
the basics," she said. "Good water, good living
conditions, good working conditions, good education. In
the end, it all comes back at us."
INDIVISION2000, formed in 1992,
primarily works with non-profit organizations, and creates
‘triangles’ of funding either through corporate
mandates or grants that lends for a ‘win-win’
situation for everyone involved.
"This is my passion," she said. "With the
support and help of others, I’m able to create the
message that will bring about positive change."
The documentary has been selected to screen this year
at the Palm Springs International Short Film Festival,
HollyShorts Intl. Film Festival, and AFTRA.
"I would have loved to spend more time with the Purepechan
families and do an intense, more documented documentary,"
Leader said of the Duroville community. "However,
we didn't have time to go too in depth and had to move
quickly."
Ultimately, Leader wanted the documentary to show how
the residents of Duroville face living and working conditions
similar to those encountered by farm workers decades before
them.
"I’m a big believer on how our future is going
to look if we are not helping our youth," Leader
said. "They can either choose to be our doctors,
lawyers, social activists - or they can become our welfare
recipients, invisible down trodden or criminals."
Nick Ingram is a freelance writer
based in Lawndale.
|
12-year-old Helps Document Migrants' Plight
By Greg Mellen, Staff Writer • 12/04/2009
LONG BEACH - Stephanie Maldonado
doesn't look like your typical community activist.
For one thing, she's just 12 years old.
But this spring and in the summer of 2008, the seventh-grader
at Hill Classical Middle School spent time with destitute
migrant farming families in the Coachella Valley. And
that experience awakened something within her.
Maldonado is no stranger to hard times. She is the youngest
of four children and her mother works two jobs: in a cafeteria
and as a cook at a restaurant. Her father, she says, is
"not in the picture."
She lives in a neighborhood on Elm Street in the gritty
heart of Central Long Beach.
When the idea of helping poor children was first proposed
to Maldonado, it didn't immediately register.
"She said 'Why do we have to give to the poor when
we're poor?"' recalls Cheryl Quintana Leader, the
filmmaker and activist herself. "She didn't grasp
that there were levels of poverty."
But when Maldonado met the farm families, she realized
there was a kind of poverty below anything she had known
or lived.
"I think it helped me mature," Maldonado said.
"When I got there I realized, this is real. I put
myself in their situation."
Maldonado was introduced to the farmers by Quintana Leader,
who first met Maldonado when the girl was in the fourth
grade at Roosevelt Elementary.
At the time, Quintana Leader was doing a film for Long
Beach's Department of Health and Human Services.
Soon after, Quintana Leader became a friend and mentor
to Stephanie and a friend of the Maldonado family.
Quintana Leader had read about the plight of the migrants
in the Coachella Valley and decided to do a film.
She recruited Maldonado to be the voice and face of that
film.
The outcome of that project is "The Purepecha:
Poorest of the Poor." The half-hour documentary,
produced and directed by Quintana Leader, plays today
as part of the Coachella Valley Latino International Film
Festival at the Indio Performing Arts Center at 1 p.m.
The tale and plight of the Purepecha people is heartbreaking.
An indigenous Indian tribe from Central Mexico, the Purepecha
built a thriving ancient society known for its military
prowess and beautiful artisan work with precious metals.
The Purepecha were one of the few societies able to repel
Aztec incursion.
The tribe has its own language of unknown origin that
lives on today. However, Spain and a smallpox epidemic
crushed the Purepecha empire in the 16th century and the
tribe became impoverished and later shunned by Mexican
society.
In the 1970s, the Purepecha began migrating from Mexico
after deforestation destroyed hillsides and ruined once
fertile farmland.
Many Purepechas moved to the small unincorporated area
of Thermal near Palm Springs. |
Most of the Purepecha now live in a dilapidated trailer
park called Duroville on the Torres-Martinez Indian Reservation.
Located near a toxic dump, many of the mobile homes are
also contaminated with asbestos and lack air conditioning.
The community's water is drawn from a well that has been
polluted by pesticides and toxins from the now idle dump
and the sewer system is in disrepair.
Maldonado learned firsthand about the deplorable living
conditions and the challenges and obstacles the families
face.
In the summer of 2008, Maldonado, her sister Sammy and
Quintana Leader were part of a contingent that delivered
backpacks and school supplies to the children of these
families.
Quintana Leader and Maldonado returned to conduct interviews
and Maldonado wrote portions of the film script which
she narrated.
The documentary has been shown at the Palm Springs International
Short Film Festival and the HollyShorts International
Film Festival. It was also screened for the American Federation
of Television and Radio Artists in Los Angeles.
With the screenings, Quintana Leader brings in panelists,
activists and civic leaders to discuss the Purepecha issue.
A UCLA graduate, Quintana Leader is the founder and president
of INDIVISION2000 Productions,
which produces educational media in English/Spanish for
the Latino community.
Throughout the film, speakers such as Arturo Rodriguez,
President of the United Farm Workers, a court-appointed
receiver in Duroville and other activists describe the
hardships of the Purepecha and the irony that they live
on the outskirts of exclusive areas around Palm Springs.
"We all have the responsibility to help out the people
making sacrifices to feed us every single day," Rodriguez
says in the film. Tamara Damante, a news anchor and reporter
from KESQ-3 has reported on the Purepecha and provides
news and context.
The film was inspired by the work of Sister Gabriella
Williams, a Dominican Sister of Oakford with the Diocese
of San Bernardino, who is providing services, childcare,
computer and educational resource programs to the Purepecha
families.
Since the film was first aired, improvements have been
made in Duroville, in part because of a judge's orders
requiring changes. But the process is slow and painstaking
and requires vigilance. On a personal level, Maldonado
learned that despite the tough circumstances of her own
life, she can make a difference.
"No matter whether you're rich or poor, you can give
to society," Maldonado said.
|
|
December 27, 2011 |
CHI OMEGAS FLOURISH
Award-winning Documentary Director Has New Release
Award-winning documentary film producer/director Cheryl Quintana Leader, Gamma Beta/UCLA, has a new release, “The Purepecha: Poorest of the Poor.” The film, designed to create awareness of the plight of California's migrant farm workers and their families, features a young Latina who always thought she was "poor" until she discovers first-hand the conditions under which these workers and their families live.
Created and released through INDIVISION2000 Productions, a producer of educational programming for the Latino community, and with praise by First Lady Michelle Obama and Oprah Winfrey, the film has been invited to screen by AFTRA during Hispanic Heritage Month, the Palm Springs International Short Film Festival, the HollyShorts International Film Festival, UC Irvine's Latino Medical Student Association, and the Indio Performing Arts Center for the Coachella Valley Latino International Film Festival. It is airing on TimeWarner Cable On-Demand.. |
by Ana Madrid • May 2011
Young Latina
Documents Migrants of Duroville
The Purepecha: The Poorest
of the Poor, subject of a documentary by
Cheryl Quintana Leader
By Ana Madrid - October
18, 2010
|
|
In support of the San Jose Community &
Bea Main Learning Center (www.ikidsj.com),
a non-profit providing high quality services and educational
program opportunities toward better futures for our
harvesting families led by Sister Gabriella Williams,
a short documentary, "The Purepecha:
Poorest of the Poor," by filmmaker, Cheryl
Quintana Leader of INDIVISION2000
Productions, specializing in creating educational media
in English/Spanish for the Latino Community, has been
successfully screening and providing panel presentations
to educate and bring awareness throughout communities
within southern California.
Through the eyes of Stephanie Maldonado,
a young Latina youth from a disadvantaged neighborhood
in Long Beach, the film sets out on a hot summer day
where she discovers the world of our hard-working migrant
families at Duroville, a dilapidated and broken down
trailer park in the Coachella Valley.
Just minutes from one of the wealthiest tourist destinations
and provider of a billion dollar crop industry, third
world living and working conditions are witnessed within
a 21st Century United States. This cinematic exploration
takes place among the lives of an indigenous Indian
tribe of close to 6,000 seasonal migrant farm working
families, some known as the Purepecha, who originate
from Michoacan, Mexico.
Now residing just southeast of Los Angeles, these families
are highlighted through co-host, anchor/news reporter,
Tamara Damante (KESQ-CH 3)
and interviews with Arturo S. Rodriguez III
(UFW President), who cites that "we
all have the responsibility to help out the people making
sacrifices to feed us every single day," and
several other community leaders, like Sergio
Carranza (www.pucdc.org)
teaming together to bring light to this American issue.
And, in an historic decision, U.S. District Court
Judge, Stephen Larson rules that
the trailer park housing these families in third world
poverty conditions be repaired or be provided alternative
humane living conditions. He astutely observes, "on
the one hand, the U.S. portends that the undocumented
workers lack legal status while at the same time predicating
the economic efficiency of an agricultural industry
on their hard work. It appears that the U.S. has once
again, established a rather 'peculiar institution' to
service our agrarian needs."
Having been praised by First Lady, Michelle
Obama and Oprah Winfrey, the
film has been invited to screen and present panel forums
hosted by AFTRA during Hispanic Heritage Month,
the Palm Springs Intl. Short Film Festival, the HollyShorts
Intl. Film Festival, the Indio Performing Arts Center/Coachella
Valley Latino Intl. Film Festival, as well as, several
college and universities such as, UCLA's Chicano Studies
Research Center, UC Irvine's Latino Medical Student
Association, CSULB's Latino Student Union, and Cerritos
College Social Justice Class, among others.
Mid-October, the film will be screened and paneled for
the Palm Springs Human Rights Commission, early November,
for the Venice Family Clinic, which provides free, quality
health care to people in need, and February 2011 for
Geogetown University's Amnesty Film Festival.
|
Festival to Screen
Duroville Film
by Nicole C. Brambila • November
28, 2009
Immigration advocates and a former federal
judge who handled a case involving the Purépecha
Indians in Duroville will participate in a Coachella Valley
documentary screening about the group.
The 30-minute documentary, “The Purepecha:
Poorest of the Poor,” was produced and
directed by Los Angeles filmmaker Cheryl Quintana Leader
and is being screened at the Coachella Valley Latino International
Film Festival.
The documentary also was screened this year at the Palm
Springs Intl. ShortFest.
“The importance of the film, ‘The
Purepecha: Poorest of the Poor' is bringing
forth the awareness that there's a problem in our community
and that our help is needed to those most in need,”
Quintana Leader has said.
“If others are serving us, we all should be willing
to serve them with equal social justice.”
The documentary traces the struggle of these Mesoamerican
people who settled in a dilapidated trailer park known
as Duroville on the Torres-Martinez Reservation in Thermal,
about 30 miles east of Palm Springs.
Since 2003, the Bureau of Indian Affairs has attempted
to shut down the park, owned by Harvey Duro, for health
and safety issues that include open, raw sewage.
The park emerged in 1999 after a county crackdown on more
than 200 illegal trailer parks following the electrocution
death of a 14-year-old Mecca boy.
Fearing eviction, many fled onto Indian land, where county
building and safety codes have not applied.
Depending on the season, an estimated 2,000 to 6,000 predominantly
migrant farmworkers and their children live in squalor
in dilapidated mobile homes. The Purépecha Indians
migrated to the Coachella Valley from Michoacan, Mexico
more than 20 years ago. Many were artisans. Most earn
minimum wage, $8 an hour.
In 2007, the Purépecha sent back to Mexico roughly
$1 million used to pave roads and build schools, according
to Ocumicho city officials. The documentary chronicles
the struggle of the Purépecha to maintain their
community in the United States even as the U.S. Attorney's
Office unsuccessfully attempted to shutter the park.
Among those expected to attend the film festival are Stephanie
Maldonado, a Long Beach middle school student who participated
in the film; Sister Gabriella Williams, who works with
the poor in the east valley; and former federal Judge
Stephen G. Larson, who ruled the park should remain open
until alternative housing is available.
“It is not nearly as safe or as healthy as we would
want it to be. It is, nonetheless, home for a community
of people who are poor, undereducated, disenfranchised,
and, in many respects, exploited,” Larson wrote
in his order. |
Thumbs
up for Nov. 14
Indio Raises Curtain on a Fine Idea
by Marilyn Chung
The Indio Performing Arts Center is getting into the act
with the inaugural Coachella Valley Latino International
Film Festival.
The festival will be held from Dec. 4-6, coinciding with
the 18th annual Indio International Tamale Festival —
another great annual event.
“El Bola,” a domestic abuse drama from Spain
that won four Goyas, the Spanish Oscar, kicks off the
festival. In addition to eight movies, there will be seminars
and an appearance by Gregory Cruz, an actor from TNT's
“Saving Grace.”
The final day of the festival will feature a film by
Christian Sesma, a Palm Springs High School graduate.
His film, “I'm Not Like That No More,” stars
Paul Rodriguez. |
Director/Producer Cheryl Quintana Leader
discusses her films,“The Purepecha:
Poorest of the Poor” and “Tanto
Tiempo” during a press conference at the
Indio Performing Arts Center.
The Festival will raise money for the Performing Arts
Center and the National Hispanic American Educational
Fund. It's good to see Indio celebrate the Latino culture
on celluloid. |
The Coachella
Valley Latino International Film Festival
Announces Filmmakers, Panelists & Upcoming Press Conference
October 30, 2009
News Anchor, Tamara Damante of KESQ Ch.3 will moderate
the panel discussion to follow after the screening of
Cheryl Quintana Leader’s film, “The
Purepecha: Poorest of the Poor”
on Saturday, December 5th at 1:00 PM as a part of the
Coachella Valley Latino International Film Festival. Joining
Ms. Damante as guest panelists are: Mexican Consulate
San Bernardino, California -Carolina Zaragoza, former
U.S. District Court Judge Stephen G. Larson, LA Times
correspondent - David Kelly, among others.
“The Purepecha: Poorest
of the Poor is a short documentary unveiling the
journey of a young Latina from a disadvantaged neighborhood
who explores the plight of the Purepecha migrant farm-working
families in the Coachella Valley,” said the film’s
Director, Cheryl Quintana Leader.
Television star, Gregory Cruz from the TNT- TV hit series,
“SAVING GRACE” (also starring Holly Hunter),
will be present and participate along with CVLIFF Spokesperson(s)
for the Latin Market, Juan De Lascurain, and for the English
market, Kimberly Roberts, Radio Personality Cirenia Guerrero,
Filmmakers Cheryl Quintana Leader (writer/director/producer)
for “Tanto Tiempo” and “The
Purepecha: Poorest of the Poor,”
and Christian Sesma (writer/director) for “I’m
Not Like That No More,” (starring Paul Rodriguez),
along with the Presenting Sponsor, Q3 Telecom’s
Janie Hughes and David Clinton-Reid, and General Business
Manager for IPAC at the Official Press Conference for
the Film Festival to be held at the Indio Performing Arts
Center at 12 Noon on Monday, November 9, 2009.
The First Annual Coachella Valley Latino International
Film Festival will be held on December 4-6, 2009 at the
Indio Performing Arts Center in Indio, California. The
event will be a fundraiser to benefit two Non-Profit Organizations:
The Indio Performing Arts Center, under the Direction
of Manager, David Clinton-Reid and the National Hispanic
American Educational Fund. International Latino films
and documentaries, Special Events, with the participation
from Latino filmmakers and entertainers will be a part
of the first year’s 3-day event, with a Special
Guest presenting the Audience Favorite Award, decided
upon the Festival’s attending audience on Sunday
evening, the close of the Film Festival.
The complete line-up of the film schedule will be announced
at the Press Conference. IPAC is located at 45-175 Fargo
Street, Indio, Ca. 92201.
# # # |
"THE PUREPECHA: POOREST OF THE POOR"
Documentary Screening & Panel Discussion - Thursday, October
1, 2009
In celebration of Hispanic Heritage Month, AFTRA
presents a short documentary
unveiling the journey of a young Latina from a disadvantaged
neighborhood who
explores the plight of the Purepecha migrant farm-working families
in the Coachella Valley.
Moderated by David Kelly, Los Angeles Times
Panelists: Roman Pinal, United Farm Workers
Tom Flynn, Court Appointed Receiver
Sister Gabi Williams, Dominican Sister
of Oakford
San Jose Community & Bea Main Learning Center
Chandra Gehri Spencer, CGS Law
Sergio Carranza, Pueblo Unido CDC
Cheryl Quintana Leader, Film Maker
September
2009 Newsletter
Duroville Judge Resigns
September 16, 2009
Riverside-based federal judge who presided over several
high-profile cases, including one about the conditions
at the Duroville trailer park in the east valley, is calling
it quits, saying he is not being paid enough.
U.S. District Judge Stephen G. Larson, one of two judges
assigned to the Central District of California’s
Riverside courthouse, announced this week that he will
be stepping down from the bench Nov. 2 to begin working
in a private law practice.
‘‘Given that the much-discussed and anticipated
judicial salary restoration has not occurred and is now
not likely to occur any time soon, that even minimized
COLAs are uncertain at best, and coupled with our primary
responsibility to our seven children, we can no longer
afford for me to continue my public service,’’
the judge said in a statement.
‘‘The costs associated with raising our family
are increasing significantly, while our salary remains
stagnant and, in terms of its purchasing power, is actually
declining,’’ he added. ‘‘The short
of it is that I know I must place my family’s interest,
particularly the future of my children, ahead of my own
fervent desire to remain a federal judge.’’
Larson did not indicate for which firm he will be working.
In June, he joined the faculty at the University of La
Verne’s College of Law in Ontario as a Distinguished
Jurist in Residence.
The judge, who was appointed to the bench by President
George W. Bush and unanimously confirmed by the Senate
in March 2005, presided over the highly publicized civil
trial last year pitting toy giant Mattel against family-owned
MGA Entertainment Inc., in what became known as the ‘‘Barbie
versus Bratz’’ lawsuit.
Around the same time, Larson handled the precedent-setting
criminal trial of former U.S. Marine Sgt. Jose Luis Nazario.
It was the first known instance of an ex-serviceman being
prosecuted for actions allegedly committed in combat.
Nazario was acquitted.
Earlier this year, Larson presided over the Duroville
civil trial, during which the U.S. Attorney’s Office
argued for the judge to shut down a dilapidated 40-acre
mobile home park on the Torres-Martinez Desert Cahuilla
Indian Reservation.
### |
The Purepecha: Poorest of
the Poor
USA, 2009, 30 Minute Running Time
Short Documentary – English/Spanish-Subtitles
A young Latina girl, (Stephanie Maldonado)
ventures out one summer day to discover that Coachella
Valley's Duroville trailer park is home to many Purépecha,
a Mesoamerican people with a proud and ancient history.
She unveils the social injustice against migrant farm
working families who harvest America’s fruits
and vegetables in one of the wealthiest tourist destinations
and provider of a billion dollar crop industry.
The Purepecha: Poorest of
the Poor
USA, 2009, 30 Minute Running Time
World Premiere
Topics: Documentary, Environment, Latino, Woman Director
The Coachella Valley's notorious Duroville trailer park
is home to many Purépecha, a Mesoamerican people
with a proud and ancient history. This is the story
of their struggle to maintain their community in the
face of the government's attempts to close the park
down, and an owner who has let the park deteriorate
to a dangerously unhealthy state.
Documentary
on Purépecha Indians Today, Panel Discussion
by Nicole C. Brambila • June
25, 2009
Immigration advocates will screen a documentary
today about the Purépecha Indians after a panel
discussion about farmworker housing and work conditions.
The 27-minute documentary called “The
Purepecha: Poorest of the Poor”
was produced and directed by LA-filmmaker Cheryl Quintana
Leader.
The screening is at 5:30 p.m. today following a panel
discussion at the Marriott Palm Springs, Room A at 1300
Tahquitz Canyon Way.
“The importance of the film, 'The Purepecha:
Poorest of the Poor' is bringing forth the
awareness that there's a problem in our community and
that our help is needed to those most in need,”
Quintana Leader said. “If others are serving us,
we all should be willing to serve them with equal social
justice.”
The documentary traces the struggle of these Mesoamerican
people who settled in a dilapidated trailer park known
as Duroville on the Torres-Martinez Reservation in Thermal,
about 30 miles east of Palm Springs.
The Purépecha Indians migrated to the Coachella
Valley from Michoacan, Mexico more than 20 years ago.
Many were artisans. Most earn $8 an hour stooping over
the crops picking the food Americans put on their tables.
In 2006, the Purépecha sent back to Mexico roughly
$1 million in remittances used to pave roads and build
schools, according to Ocumicho city officials.
The documentary chronicles the struggle of the Purépecha
to maintain their community in the U.S. even as the
U.S. District Attorney’s office attempted to shutter
the park for unsafe living conditions.
Documentary
on Purépecha Indians in Duroville Plays at ShortFest
by Nicole C. Brambila • June 23, 2009
The Palm Springs International ShortFest
is screening a documentary tomorrow about the Purépecha
Indians who settled in the east valley.
The 27-minute documentary called “The
Purepecha: Poorest of the Poor”
was produced and directed by LA-filmmaker Cheryl Quintana
Leader.
The screening is tomorrow at 11 a.m. at the Camelot
Theaters in Palm Springs.
The documentary traces the struggle of these Mesoamerican
people who settled in a dilapidated trailer park known
as Duroville on the Torres-Martinez Reservation in Thermal,
about 30 miles east of Palm Springs.
The Purépecha Indians migrated to the Coachella
Valley from Michoacan, Mexico more than 20 years ago.
Many were artisans. Most earn $8 an hour stooping over
the crops picking the food Americans put on their tables.
In 2006, the Purépecha sent back to Mexico, roughly
$ 1million in remittances used to pave roads and build
schools, according to the city of Ocumicho.
The documentary chronicles the struggle of the Purépecha
to maintain their community in the U.S. even as the
US District Attorney’s office attempted to shutter
the park for the unsafe living conditions so prevalent
in Duros.
Documentary
on Purépecha Indians Today, Panel Discussion
Immigration advocates will screen a documentary
today about the Purépecha Indians after a panel
discussion about farmworker housing and work conditions.
The 27-minute documentary called The Purepecha:
Poorest of the Poor was produced and directed
by LA-filmmaker Cheryl Quintana Leader.
Palm Springs
Short Film Festival Turns Lens on Coachella Valley
by Steven Cuevas | June 23,
2009 | KPCC
Of the 300 or so short films screening
at this year’s international “Short Fest”
in Palm Springs, there are several that turn their lenses
on the Coachella Valley. KPCC’s Steven Cuevas
has a preview.
Steven Cuevas: The rugged desert backdrop seems to attract
a certain kind of film – like a road trip gone
wrong. That’s “Bottled Up.” It’s
a modern film noir about a married couple, Charles and
Myra, who head to the Valley for a weekend getaway.
Charles stops to help out a pair of stranded desert
rats. Bad idea.
Man: Better be careful, man. The desert heat will sneak
up on ya, take ya down for the count.
Cuevas: several other films explore real life issues
in the Coachella Valley. “The Purepecha:
Poorest of the Poor” documents life at
“Duroville,” the Valley’s notorious
shantytown that’s home to several thousand migrant
farm workers.
Palm Springs folk artist Jack Elias is the focus of
a nine-minute short called “Jack Elias: Life of
a Sephardic Artist.”
[Jack Elias playing harmonica]
Cuevas: The 87-year-old artist and harmonica player
talks about his life and his colorful abstract creations
that often resemble intricate pieces of stained glass.
Jack Elias: I was compelled to make them from something
within myself. And that’s it. That’s my
idea of art.
Cuevas: More than 300 short films will screen at the
International “Short Fest” through next
week at the Camelot Theatre in Palm Springs.
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