8 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, February 7, 1997 Award-winning fiction writer visits A2 Accomplished and acclaimed' fiction writer Lorrie Moore, author of "Like Life," "Self- Help" and "Who Will Run the Frog Hospital?" will give a rare public reading in Ann Arbor this afternoon. Moore Is one of the top fiction writ- ers in America, and she was recently named by Granta magazine as a "Top Young American Novelist." Luckily, the will join the University's creative writing faculty next fall. Catch her at Rackham kIs,~ Amphitheatre today at 3 p.m. Like all other University: Visiting Writers Series e v e n ts, a d m issio n is fre e. SUNDAY EVENING FOR UM "Who Cares? A Christian Response to Welfare Policy" Speaker: Dr. Wendell Primus Economist who resigned his office in the Department of Health and Human Services in protest of Pres. Clinton's signing of welfare reform bill. Sunday, February 9 Supper 6:00 pm Talk and discussion: 7:00 pm Campus Chapel 1236 Washtenaw Ct. 668-7421 /662-2402 one block south of CCRB Parking in the Church Street parking structure Rodriguez urges youth to dream By Eugene Bowen Daily Arts Writer Continuing the weeklong Chicano History Week celebrations, University student organization Movimiento Estudiantil Chicano/a de Aztlan (M.E.Ch.A) sponsored a visit by distin- guished poet/author Luis Rodriguez. Well-known for his two books of poet- ry and his painful R autobiography Lu "Always Running: La Vida Loca Gang East Days in LA," Rodriguez capti- vated his audience of hundreds of University students and faculty - as well as dozens of visiting Detroit middle-school students - with stories of his personal experiences, poetry readings and interactive discus- sions. "Stories are the most critical things we can give to people," Rodriguez said. "It's what connects our young people to something larger." The focus of his talk was American youth. A former gangbanger from the age of 11 and now a peacemaker among Chicago gangs, Rodriguez connected with his audience through a both acad- emically sound and emotionally tug- ging discussion. "I really feel that when young people are honored and the elders are respect- ed and honored, then you have commu- nity," Rodriguez proclaimed. "The E iz H problem with society today is that we've lost that meaning of community." And when community is lost and society turns a blind eye, the children are the ones who truly suffer. "Our kids are being set up" Rodriguez warned. "We're telling them that if they get an education, they'll be successful. But V E Ewe're wrong, and we know that. All Rodriguez our children want to learn. We all all Auditorium have this innate Feb. 5, 1997 need to know. But it's hard when everything in the schools doesn't relate to you. "In school, I was made to believe that being Mexican means nothing because nothing was being said in the books about my history, my customs. And those textbooks are still being used in schools, still teaching our children that we're a history-less people. "All our kids are gifted, but our soci- ety is saying that only a few of our kids have gifts," Rodriguez continued. "The government is, in short, punishing chil- dren for the failure of the system. So now, too many of our kids are having to do things they should not have to do to survive. I'm telling you, there's nothing more devastating than youth with dreams crying out to be something, yet with every door of opportunity closed." Currently, Rodriguez's 21-year-old son - also a former member of the Luiz Rodriguez, author of "Always Running: La Vida Loca Gang AJA EKLE VA- Days in LA," spoke to students on Wednesday night. fo orVaetn v-r vAndicand~ visvrvrv rvrv ~ ~ 1 ~ v } ~isic cir ilLS c~~! l ~elcr i J PIvcLJlujr((1i u \'lniesIojsu. JutCl sLJFLUPJ1t i 6-57 Iijre us $6 Av ii z 4 a 1~~~Wi iFru jlow ers(11 .* f ~loiri our Vlent .o ine iPIOC dA ndeanys ~" (~.)~ ( is ae ... 4 C.....~ Chicago gang culture - is incarcerat- ed, fighting for one more chance in a period of "three strikes" popularity. "Whatever mistakes my son has made, he doesn't deserve to have his life taken from him. That's how our society is. Society says if you make a single mistake, you must pay for it with your whole life." But Rodriguez's disdain for the United States prison system extends far beyond his familial hurt. "Prisons redirect social energy. It's like what the guy said in 'Field of Dreams:' 'If you build them, they will come."' Rodriguez reminded the audience + that, in California alone, which has the+ largest prison system in the world, more than 60 percent of all inmates are of Latin American heritage. He talked about Chicago's overcrowding school system, which forces more than 20,000 youths to not have a classroom in which they can learn. Yet the city recently spent millions on a new prison facility,+ including an atrium, an inside garden and a new juvenile detention wing. "This is where our future leaders are being taken," he warned. "And of course the rest are African American.1 I'm telling you, those prisons are for our children.".+ And yet Rodriguez's message was far from being one of despair. In fact, he+ informed the crowd that what hurt him most was not the suffering that many endure daily, but rather the hopeless-1 ness the suffering causes. "We have a sense that we can"t- change things - that it's the way it's always been, so it's the way it's always1 going to be. I've made it a point to fight this type of hopelessness. You see, I am a revolutionary; I've bee one since I was 13. And when I say revolutionary, I'm talking about myself as someone who sees further and deeper, who sees change is neces- sary and who devotes his life to that change." As a writer and poet, Rodriguez knows the spiritual healing that comes from immersing oneself in the arts. "Everyone needs to have a metaphor- ical life," he said. "I'm talking about a* inner-life. Through art, you can bring out your pain and your hurt, so that you can deal with them without hurting any- one else. Most of our greatest artists are behind bars now," Rodriguez continued. ,What is it about hip hop, breakdancing, graffiti that makes so many youngsters with painful lives turn to them? It's the constructive creativity that draws thenf Creativity is the one thing that distir guishes us as human beings. It's what connects us with our Creator." Rodriguez explained that individual-. ly the ability to overcome the still- prevalent problems of racism and clas- sism lies in people's abilities to hold onto their biggest dreams. "You must have big dreams," he pro- claimed. "That's the only way to live. If you're going to die for something, die for the big mountain, not for the litt* hill. "I'm willing to die for my people, for our children, for our hopes, for our future. And if I die for my people, my life would have been great." C o f 0 M *1 tne new school thought ,. in wirele s s Co m munications rnr