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Friday, February 11, 2011

New School talk on Bolivia, 22 February 2011

THE JANEY PROGRAM AT THE NEW SCHOOL FOR SOCIAL RESEARCH AND THE CENTER FOR LATIN AMERICAN AND CARIBBEAN STUDIES AT NYU [CLACS] PRESENT:

Whither Bolivia: A Conversatorio

February 22, 2011 8 p.m. The New School 6 E 16th Street, New Wolff Room [1103]

Under President Evo Morales’ government, Bolivia has transformed itself---despite its grinding poverty, its relatively frail political institutions and a legacy of ethnic exclusion that dates all the way back to the colonial period, into the most egalitarian, participatory and inclusionary democratic regime in Latin America and, arguably, in the western hemisphere. The aim of this Conversatorio is to explore how this was accomplished, without ignoring some of the obstacles that continue to undermine the spread of civic democracy in Bolivia.

Instead of an academic conference in which each speaker presents a formal paper and responds to a discussant, all three participants have agreed to engage each other and all the members of the audience in a lively and critical discussion.

This event is also sponsored by the Departments of History and Sociology—NSSR and the New School for General Studies.THE JANEY PROGRAM AT THE NEW SCHOOL FOR SOCIAL RESEARCH AND THE CENTER FOR LATIN AMERICAN AND CARIBBEAN STUDIES AT NYU [CLACS] PRESENT:

Whither Bolivia: A Conversatorio

February 22, 2011 8 p.m. The New School 6 E 16th Street, New Wolff Room [1103]

With the participation of :

Pablo Stefanoni, Editor of Le Monde Diplomatique, La Paz, Ex-Adviser to President Evo Morales. He is the author of “Qué hacer con los indios y otros

traumas de la colonialidad “(2010), among others.

Javier Sanjinés, Professor in the Department of Romance Languages, University of Michigan. He has published several books on Bolivia, including

“Rescoldos del pasado. Conflictos culturales en Sociedades Poscoloniales” (2009).

Sinclair Thomson, Associate Professor of History, NYU. His most recent book is “Revolutionary Horizon: Past and Present in Bolivian Politics” (2007).

This event is also sponsored by the Departments of History and Sociology—NSSR and the New School for General Studies.

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Bolivia's Thalia

Years ago NY had two Thalia movie theatres where I spent many happy hours watching vintage films. Now, sadly, those halcyon days have slipped by. But I know where to go to get my fix! La Paz, Bolivia. This and other cities in Bolivia are becoming slowly cultural centres. In preparation a NY acting troupe is gearing up to do skits in Santa Cruz, including comedy, sitcoms and live music. It will be NY without the muggers!
Check out the posting below about the La Paz theatre...

Competitive movie-watching for Bolivia's cinephiles
(AFP) – 23 hours ago
LA PAZ — A Bolivian cineplex on Tuesday announced a film marathon competition likely to test the endurance of even the most avid cinephile.
The challenge is to watch the most uninterrupted movies without leaving the theater and without falling asleep, said organizers of the contest sponsored by the Megacenter cinema concern.
"We're trying to measure the endurance of people watching movies without stopping," Megacenter's chief executive Jose Luis Gomez, who told AFP that the competition gets underway on February 19.
Gomez said that his cineplex would show continual screenings of movies from various film genres and that any contestant leaving the theater for more than five minutes at a time would be eliminated.
More than 50 movies will be screened during the marathon, organizers said -- enough for four days of continuous film viewing.
The lucky winner is to receive one-year free pass for more unlimited movie viewing at Megacenter, the company said.

Bolivia

Competitive movie-watching for Bolivia's cinephiles
(AFP) – 23 hours ago
LA PAZ — A Bolivian cineplex on Tuesday announced a film marathon competition likely to test the endurance of even the most avid cinephile.
The challenge is to watch the most uninterrupted movies without leaving the theater and without falling asleep, said organizers of the contest sponsored by the Megacenter cinema concern.
"We're trying to measure the endurance of people watching movies without stopping," Megacenter's chief executive Jose Luis Gomez, who told AFP that the competition gets underway on February 19.
Gomez said that his cineplex would show continual screenings of movies from various film genres and that any contestant leaving the theater for more than five minutes at a time would be eliminated.
More than 50 movies will be screened during the marathon, organizers said -- enough for four days of continuous film viewing.
The lucky winner is to receive one-year free pass for more unlimited movie viewing at Megacenter, the company said.

Thursday, January 13, 2011

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At this time of the year, you’d expect to find a piece extolling the virtues of this sparkling wine or that Champagne, right?

Well, I’m not gonna do it this year. I found something else that might contribute to the merriment of ringing out the Old Year as the clock strikes midnight. After all, it’s New Year’s Eve.

A few weeks ago, I was contacted by a public relations firm eager to have me sample a liqueur with origins in Bolivia that is being promoted in various U.S. markets. My interest was piqued when she referred to it as “the original and only coca leaf liqueur.”

Well, I had to give that a try, so we arranged for a tasting with a few people in the hospitality trade, including chefs and others from the front-of-the-house and bar teams at a local restaurant.

First of all, the facts. Agwa de is a 60 proof (30 percent alcohol) herbal liqueur made with coca leaves and 32 other herbs and botanicals that adheres fully to the rules and regulations of the authorities both within the EU and U.S., and has been sold in this country, the UK and more than 25 other countries for more than a decade.

Since first showing up in bars and liquor stores a couple of years ago on the Left Coast, Agwa de Bolivia has built a reputation as a mystery liquor that’s intoxicating, yet somehow energizing, too. It’s not the tastiest thing to drink straight, but seems to mix well with almost anything. It’s being hailed as “the new absinthe” by some hipsters, “the new Jägermeister” by party animals and being touted as everything from an alleged booster of sexual prowess to a substitute for illegal drugs.

The coca leaf was an important crop in the Andes of Bolivia. The Andean culture and the coca plant have thrived for centuries. And coca leaves even made an inroad into American culture in the 19th century.

In 1886, John Pemberton, of Atlanta, Ga., introduced a tonic called Coca-Cola which contained cocaine. Cocaine was removed from Coca Cola in 1904; however decocainised coca leaves are still used. Spirits and wines that contained cocaine were finally banned in the United Stages in 1912, with officials noting that cocaine is an extremely dangerous narcotic with significant health hazards.

It’s ironic that this same plant that is used as a curative and everyday stimulant in its homeland is the source of so much abuse and misunderstanding in many parts of the world.

In checking with an Agwa de Bolivia company rep, I was informed that “the finest handpicked wild Bolivian coca leaves are shipped to Amsterdam under armed guard where they are first de-cocainised before being infused with alcohol and 36 other natural herbs and botanicals to enable the maximum effect.”

Based on a 200-year-old recipe, Agwa de Bolivia is handcrafted in Amsterdam.

The company offers any number of drink recipes, including one that neither I nor the assembled tasters wanted to drink — mixing Agwa de Bolivia coca leaf liqueur with an energy drink, such as Red Bull. They call this drink a Short Fuse, served as an Agwa Bomb. A Long Fuse is a tall glass of the liqueur and energy drink with 2 lime wedges on the rocks.

To make an Amsterdam martini, add the liqueur, vodka and lime wedges, squeezed, to a shaker filled with ice. Shake and strain the liquid into a chilled martini glass, garnished with a slice of lime.

For a Chica Bomba, make a mojito with Agwa de Bolivia and add a splash of rum.

Popular with a young bar crowd, the Bolivian Kiss is “the ultimate Agwa ritual — bite the wedge of a lime, down a shot of chilled Agwa de Bolivia, now feel the buzz...”

Locally, all but one of our tasters the other evening picked a very simple drink as the favorite. That one person preferred the Agwa-made mojito to the drink the rest of us preferred.

Our favorite was a glass of crushed ice, squeezing in the juice of a couple of lime wedges and then topping all with a generous pour of Agwa de Bolivia. It was chilled and refreshing, the lime giving the herbal flavor quite a boost on the palate. That’s all there is to it — crushed ice, freshly squeezed lime juice and the coca leaf liqueur. The manufacturer has a name for the drink (one of the words is “madre”), but it’s not a term used in polite company, let alone in print. That’s why we gave you the formula.

Cost of Agwa de Bolivia is somewhere between $30 and $32.

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Bennett Hennessy speaking on Bolivian macaws

On 7th and 8th October this year, Dr. Bennett Hennessey spoke on the Bolivian macaws. He is a conservationist in Santa Cruz, which is the largest departamento in Bolivia. His work takes him all over the country, including Pando, where rare macaws have become an icon.
A write up of his appearance Fauna, New York's largest exotic pet shop was made by Diana Hubert of the Epoch Times, and is available at http://www.theepochtimes.com/n2/content/view/44461/



Monday, December 13, 2010

Wikileaks material is hosted by the Bolivian government

Proof that the US is spying on us
Thu Dec 09 2010, 09:46

THE BOLIVIAN GOVERNMENT is so miffed at what the US government has been saying about it in diplomatic cables, it has decided to host some of the Wikileaks cables itself.

The leaked cables are being shown on Vice President Alvaro Garcia Linera of the State of Bolivia's own website .

According to Linera's website the use of the official website was approved by both the Bolivian President and the Presidency of Legislative Assembly Multinational.

Linera said that is important that people know the level of infiltration, intervention, conspiracy and espionage by the US on Bolivia.

The cables prove that US diplomats have been spying on Bolivia for at least two years.

The quality of the information that has been flowing back to the US was total rubbish with most of the intelligence being based on gossip, rumours and assumptions, Linera said.

There is a lot of bad blood between the Bolivian government and the US. Bolivia expelled the US ambassador in 2008, accusing him of conspiring against it.


(THE SITE IS LISTED AS www.vicepresidencia.gob.bo - but safari did not open it for me)



Read more: http://www.theinquirer.net/inquirer/news/1931124/wikileaks-material-hosted-bolivian-government#ixzz182CwCccr
The Inquirer - Computer hardware news and downloads. Visit the download store today.

Saturday, December 4, 2010

NYU speech about Bolivian immigration in the 1940s

A friend attended the NYU speech yesterday (3 December) on Bolivian immigration policy in the 1940s, and was moved to write about it, which he did - posting it first to the Jewish Chronicle site - under the title:

What South American country saved thousands of Jews in WWII?

The answer to that title is Bolivia. And it is an answer to an urgent question inside of me, one I have been asking myself for some time; why am I so supportive of Bolivia? Well, yesterday at New York University I found out something that almost never gets discussed while attending Laura Gotkowitz's speech on Bolivia in the 1940s. The nation had a major upheaval due to an immigration issue - when it opened its doors to Jewish refugees in 1938. And wide were they opened; the visa applications were so simple that almost anyone could fill out their name and come, without even visiting an embassy or consulate or having means; some visas were rather vague, admitting a hundred people at a time. As they needed to be. With this policy, many were saved, some even from the camps, where the rules dictated that those who had a place to go could leave. So many poor Jews did just that. Up to 35,000 made their way to Bolivia. Leo Spitzer writes of this miraculous exodus in Hotel Bolivia.
Gotkowitz, noting that title in her speech, said that Bolivia was more than a hotel to many of them - though most have since emigrated - she told me there were only
10 Jews in Cochabamba today. And her research noted that upon arrival not all was a bed of roses; nazi instigators went so far as to write letters into the papers to instigate the crowds against the immigrants. The Bolivians expelled the German ambassador over it all. But it was not only the national socialists who caused problems, ironically, Polish Jews were barred from entry - on orders of one of the leading tin magnates - Mauricio Hofschild - a German Jew who insisted only German speaking Jews need apply. Thus 60% were from Germany, 20% from Austria, and only 15% from Poland.
The minister in charge of such generous policies was to lose his post over it all, Diez de Marina.
Today few know about this bit of history. Bolivia ultimately influenced other nations including the US to take Jews - the only other nation to act in time was the Dominican Republic, but that was not so desirable, as there they were told to take Latin names and attend Mass. They live on today as Garcias and Morenos and living on the north side of Santa Domingo.
The Jews of Bolivia have kept their identity but moved on, mostly to Argentina, Israel or the US. Gotkowitz is continuing her research and quite likely will publish a book on the subject. I am grateful for her already, and look forward to more on the matter. I am now more determined to work for Bolivia and promote its image in the press, a tough task as most journalists like to do stories by cutting and pasting! I will get on a few of them soon and get them on to the task, sending them such information as the discovery of new orchids and passion flowers (which can be seen at www.cuentasdebolivia.blogspot.com).