Discrimination and stereotypes prevent many people
from receiving opportunities for advancement. We see evidence of this type of
discrimination towards different cultures in three different poems written by
Martin Espada: “The New Bathroom Policy at English High school”, “Revolutionary
Spanish Lesson”, and “Two Mexicanos Lynched in Santa Cruz California, May 3,
1877”. Many people make racist remarks about other cultures out of sheer
ignorance.
For instance, in the “Revolutionary Spanish Lesson”
the narrator explains how he feels when his name is mispronounced. The people
states how when the author’s name is mispronounced, he gets very angry and
fantasizes about doing things that are against the law. Some of these things
include, hijacking a bus full of people and intimating them with a toy pistol. I
think the reason why Martin Espada wrote the poem this way was to show that you
should not make assumptions about people’s race, color, or creed. When he
starts the poem, “Whenever my name is pronounced,” he states the premise that
he takes it personally when people mispronounce his name. In the poem, Espada says
he would like to hijack a bus load of Republicans and make them chant anti-
American slogans in Spanish. It is perceived that Republicans are the anti-
immigration party and by forcing them to speak against their country in a foreign
tongue, he wants them to feel as uncomfortable as he felt.
Another example of Martin Espada teaching his
readers about discrimination towards cultures is in his poem, “The New Bathroom
Policy at English High School”. The principal, while in one of the bathroom
stalls, over hears some students speaking Spanish. He cannot understand
anything they are saying except he could understand when they mentioned his
name This makes him believe that the
students were talking about him and this intimates him because he cannot
understand what they are saying. He then abuses his power as the principal to “ban
Spanish from the bathrooms” because he now realizes how uncomfortable it is
when you don’t understand what people are saying. Further, this act takes away
the basic right of freedom of speech for the students.
Lastly, the poem “Two Mexicanos Lynched in Santa
Cruz, California, May 3, 1877,” describes how two Hispanic people were lynched
while forty Gringos (Spanish slang, term meaning white people), stood there and
cheered. The thought of people pulling on the rope until their necks snapped
and did not do anything to improve the situation make me realize how
inconsiderate and selfish people are. Espada also indicates the lack of human
sorrow for the “floating corpses” that are before “a high – collar boy smirking,
some peering from the shade of the bowler hats, but all crowding into the photograph.”
What this statement shows is that, forty people would rather fight to be in the
photograph with 2 lynched people rather than show them any human decency. We don’t
even know the reason why the two Mexicanos were lynched in the first place or whether
they had any legal trial. In any case, the forty Gringo Vigilantes should have
extended some type of human concern and empathy toward these men.
Martin
Espada writes three very compelling poems about how people discriminate against
one another because of their race and culture. Espada shows his readers how
disrespectful and judgmental people can truly be. In these poems, Espada
highlights an example of abuse of power, turning the tables on individuals to
make them aware of being uncomfortable and a lack of basic human decency towards
others. He uses these scenarios to show how discrimination and stereotypes
prevent people from receiving opportunities for advancement.
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