[Congressional Record Volume 151, Number 92 (Monday, July 11, 2005)]
[House]
[Pages H5630-H5633]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
INTRODUCTION OF RESOLUTION CONDEMNING MEXICO'S ISSUANCE OF OFFENSIVE
STAMPS
The SPEAKER pro tempore (Miss McMorris). Under the Speaker's
announced policy of January 4, 2005, the gentleman from Missouri (Mr.
Cleaver) is recognized for 60 minutes.
General Leave
Mr. CLEAVER. Madam Speaker, I ask unanimous consent that all Members
may have 5 legislative days within which to revise and extend their
remarks and include extraneous material on the subject of my Special
Order.
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Is there objection to the request of the
gentleman from Missouri?
There was no objection.
Mr. CLEAVER. Madam Speaker, I have introduced H. Res. 347, a
resolution that condemns Mexico for printing and distributing blatantly
racist postage stamps; and I am, along with many others, urging Mexican
President Vicente Fox to immediately cease printing and distributing
the postage stamps and recall from circulation those postage stamps
currently on the market.
{time} 2145
Madam Speaker, Mexican-Americans and African-Americans have fought
for decades to eliminate and erase racial stereotypes and depictions
that dominated all forms of media in the early 20th century. On June
29, 2005, the government of Mexico issued a series of five postage
stamps commemorating and celebrating Memin Pinguin, a comic book
character created in the 1940s who was depicted as a dark-skinned Jim
Crow era cartoon. And while this character is depicted as a black child
with dark skin and greatly exaggerated lips, similar Jim Crow
memorabilia referred to when I was a boy as Pickaninny and his mother
Mammy were all over this country. Due to a rise in sensitivity, those
things have pretty much been removed from sight. But this particular
comic book series is interesting because it is now current. Memin
Pinguin is a character who is taunted by white colleagues for his
appearance, his speech and mannerisms. The Mexican postal service has
authorized the issuance of 750,000 of the stamps which may be used in
the Mexican domestic market and the international market. Civil rights
organizations such as the National Council of La Raza, I am proud to
say; the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People,
the NAACP, I am proud to say; the National Urban League; and the
Rainbow/PUSH Coalition have denounced the racist postage stamp series.
I would also say, Madam Speaker, that the Hispanic Caucus of our
Congress has also condemned these stamps. This insult comes on the
heels of Mexican President Vicente Fox's quote last month as saying the
Mexican citizens in this country will work on jobs that even blacks
don't want. Ultimately, he apologized for making that statement, but,
Madam Speaker, he is sticking by the stamps, even though the President
of the United States of America, George Bush, has also condemned the
stamps.
This resolution is aimed at getting the people of Mexico, if not the
president, to demand that this kind of thing be stopped. Ancestors of
Mexican blacks entered that country centuries ago through the Caribbean
port city of
[[Page H5631]]
Veracruz, and they were slave laborers. They worked in the sugar fields
of Mexico. Today, the population of blacks living in Mexico is about 1
million; that is 1 million out of 105 million people. And so they have
a small population. But no person of color can appreciate what they
have done. Madam Speaker, the stamps are insulting hopefully to all
people of good will but certainly to people of color. Memin Pinguin is
depicted as a part man, part monkey or chimpanzee. This character is
presented as some stupid half-animal, half-human person out of the
jungles, and it is very difficult for me to find this amusing in any
way. It is this kind of cultural terrorism that has done damage to the
psyche of little children of color for decades and decades. There is
not a single parent who should feel good about their child growing up
looking at this kind of image of themselves, because this damages their
somebody-ness.
Madam Speaker, there are five stamps in this series, and each one, if
you look at them as they have been released, becomes progressively more
insulting, until the last stamp has Memin standing in front of his
mother, Aunt Jemima, with a towel in her hand. And she too is looked
at, at least projected as a half-woman, half-ape. With her towel in her
hand, she is half bending, and this kind of insult to people of color
seems to happen in Mexico with increased intensity. Mexican President
Fox stated that the stamp is an image in a comic book, and he said that
he has watched this character since infancy, he says, and I quote, It
is cherished here in Mexico; the other minorities or the Afro-Americans
or Latins, I would suggest to them first, read the magazine.
Madam Speaker, I do not need to read the magazine. In my city, in
Kansas City, some of the Native Americans spoke to me during my term as
mayor, saying that the tomahawk chop used at the Chiefs football games
was insulting to them. I had done the tomahawk chop at the games when
the Chiefs scored and did it without any regard to anybody or anything.
But I did not realize that it was insulting to some of the Native
Americans, and eventually, I said to them, if it is insulting to you, I
will stop doing it. I will encourage others with whom I come in contact
to stop doing it. The one thing I did not say to him is, you should not
be upset. If I have a toothache, I do not want a dentist to tell me you
should not hurt. If I hurt, I hurt. And if people respect me, if people
have any sensitivity at all, they will say, he hurts, therefore, I will
not contribute further to his pain.
This, Madam Speaker, is hurtful. It is damaging, and the more it
continues, the more young kids are going to be hurt. My hope, even my
prayer, is that the day will soon pass when this kind of thing will be
something we talk about in the ugly and distant past, something that we
do not have to worry about dealing with now. This is 2005. This is the
kind of thing that many African-Americans experienced living in the
South when they had lawn jockeys out on the greenery in front of large
plantations. No one would have thought just a short while ago that, in
2005, this kind of thing would still be around, this kind of thing
would still stare us in the face to insult us and to do further damage
to our children. To date, 750,000 of these stamps have been purchased.
That racial stereotype will now appear on letters going both inside
Mexico and around the world. This is a total lack of respect for people
of color.
I am also pleased that the Congressional Black Caucus has released a
statement. The chair of the Congressional Black Caucus, U.S.
Representative Melvin Watt from North Carolina, released the following
statement: The members of the Congressional Black Caucus find the
stamps insensitive, racist and an insult to people everywhere, and we
call on President Vicente Fox to recall the stamps immediately and to
issue an apology to all people of African descent. The stamps are
offensive and perpetuate a negative stereotype of people of Africa.
Again, we call on President Fox to repudiate the issuance of these
stamps and to announce his commitment to address the problem of racism,
yes, even in Mexico.
Madam Speaker, growing up, I had to deal with this on a daily basis.
Bug-eyed, big-lipped, half-human, half-chimpanzee hybrids were
portrayed all around us, and there was nothing we could do except to
take it. It was an insult for me to grow up having a teacher read
Little Black Sambo. The only book with people who looked like me when I
was growing up was Little Black Sambo, and the only thing he did of
substance was to eat a lot of pancakes. I hope people understand that
they are hurting other human creatures. This should not take place in
the 21st century.
As President Fox is justifying what has been done, I would like to
remind him that, not long ago, in fact, it was in 1969, there was a
Frito Bandito cartoon character that hit the airwaves here in the
United States. And he was used to advertise some corn chips. But Frito
Bandito was pulled off the air when Mexicans protested, when they came
to the conclusion that this was an insult portraying all of them as
some little shady Mexican character who was actually a thief, bandito.
But the good news is that the Frito Lay corn chip company did pull the
ad. And so there is at least a precedent for pulling back when people
find out they are hurting other people.
Madam Speaker, my request again is for all the Members of this great
body to join in being a sponsor of this resolution to help denounce
something that is wrong, to show that all the people of this Nation,
black, white and brown, are united in their attempt to eliminate
stereotypes. It would be a powerful, powerful move by this Congress if
all of us joined forces to condemn this.
I am also pleased to say, Madam Speaker, that there are a number of
Republicans who have also come in along with a number of Democrats and,
as I have said earlier, the President of the United States has
condemned this, the minority leader and the minority whip are also
condemning what they consider to be something that is degrading and
demeaning, not just to people of color but to the people of the world.
Madam Speaker, I yield to the gentleman from New Jersey (Mr. Payne).
Mr. PAYNE. Let me commend the gentleman, the Honorable Reverend Dr.
Cleaver, for calling this very important special order tonight. He is a
person that speaks the word of God, a man of the cloth, and deals with
people who are anguished daily. They come before him to seek guidance
and advice. I feel the same way as my colleague who has joined us
recently in the United States Congress and is a tremendous addition not
only to the Congressional Black Caucus but, as you can hear, to the
United States House of Representatives in general. I appreciate him
yielding so that we can continue to look at the depiction of what
Mexico feels, or the President of Mexico feels, is just an all right
thing to do.
Madam Speaker, I rise today with my fellow members of the
Congressional Black Caucus to strongly condemn the racist stamps issued
by the Mexican government, Memin Pinguin. Unfortunately, the myth is
still perpetrated in Latin America that race is not an issue, that
racism does not exist in the Latin American, Central and South American
countries.
{time} 2200
But we have seen with the recent anti-discrimination moves of Afro
descendants from countries such as Brazil, which has the largest
population of African descendants outside of Africa, many more than the
United States of America; Colombia, where Afro descendants represent
between 25 and 40 percent of that country's population; Honduras;
Panama; and others, the issue of race has been deceptively
mischaracterized as a nonissue.
In Latin America they say it is class, not race; however, we tend to
see at the bottom of the economic strata people of African descent and
primarily those at the top those who came from Europe and stole the
land from the native Latin and South Americans and brought over slaves
to help build the countries. Meanwhile, those of African descent in
Latin America still find themselves stuck in the lower economic social
strata, suffering from debilitating discrimination or
disproportionately affected by conflict and strive; and, perhaps the
worst of all, their very existence is unknown to the world and
sometimes even to their own countrymen and -women.
Most people assume that there are few or no black Mexicans. This
assumption is false. The region known as
[[Page H5632]]
Costa Chica, southwest of Acapulco, is one of the two regions with a
sizable black population. Veracruz, on the Gulf Coast, is another area
where the black population of Mexico is significant. As a matter of
fact, recently, a year or so ago, a group of Mexicans wanted to be
considered as Afro-Mexicans. The Afro-Mexican population is said to be
about 1 million out of 105 million, but this is far from an accurate
number because the census does not include a category on race; so
people cannot even identify themselves as black even if they wanted to.
With the Mexican post office issuing the offensive stamp depicting a
Mexican character with dark brown skin, exaggerated features, monkey-
like body language, Mexican President Vicente Fox has once again shown
his insensitivity to racial offenses and his lack of concern over
perpetuating dangerous stereotypes of an entire people.
This scandal comes right on the heels of Fox's comments on Mexican
immigrants in the United States who take jobs, as he said, even blacks
will not take. We were all very offended. We were offended, and some of
our religious leaders went and met with President Fox. And he said that
we should try to have an understanding. And we as Members of the
Congressional Black Caucus work daily in our congressional districts to
ask our constituents to understand immigrant people coming to this
country as people have done for waves and waves. Of course, African
Americans were brought here in chains. We had no choice. However, other
Americans came to Ellis Island, and the Irish came and the Germans came
and the Italians came.
So we say this country is large enough for us and for people to
continue to immigrate in that we should try to work on tensions between
new people coming into the community, and the Congressional Black
Caucus has stood up and said that people have a right to have a better
way of life. As a matter of fact, in a community outside of my
congressional district in New Jersey, I have had some discussions with
some Mexicans who have talked to me about the fact that they are being
harassed when they wait in the mornings to be picked up for the van
that takes them to the work projects they are working on and that the
local town officials are harassing them to say they cannot wait here
for the van, and I said that I will try to assist them if they need it
to try to get that community to understand that it is unfair to harass
people like that.
And then I turn around and the president of Mexico says that he is
not ashamed and that this is a proud character, that they love him in
Mexico? This is outrageous. It should not be.
We see that Memin, known by Mexicans as basically a silly, funny, and
simple urban boy who is a prankster and a troublemaker, has been a
popular comic book character for 60 years in Mexico. Those who see no
offense in this character's image have been fooled into thinking that
is a representation of black people and that black people are dumb and
amusing and that has no relationship to racial discrimination.
These are the same people who would describe Little Black Sambo, as
we heard from the gentleman from Missouri (Mr. Cleaver), as simply cute
and funny. As a matter of fact, as he was, I went to a school where I
was one of two black children in the kindergarten. My brother
experienced the same thing 2 years before I did, and the only book read
was ``Little Black Sambo.'' I was offended. I felt ashamed. I felt
there was something wrong with me. The teachers would read it in the
kindergarten and in the first grade. It was about 60 years ago, the
same time that this same character emerged in Mexico. And I thought
there was something wrong with me. I thought, why was everyone laughing
at us? And this character, Little Black Sambo, is exactly the same as
this character here. And I told a representative that I met with last
week, a week or so ago, when he came to meet with members of the
Congressional Black Caucus that I was offended because it brought back
those early days of racial discrimination where I had to be confronted
with white children laughing at the reading of Little Black Sambo.
I heard of no other blacks in my time of coming up. The only other
people of color that we read about in the fourth or fifth grade were
the enslaved people that they called slaves who were shiftless and
happy and had no initiative and no incentive and that Abraham Lincoln
had to free them and white soldiers went to war to free them; but they
never talked about Harriet Tubman and Crispus Attucks. They never
talked about Frederick Douglass. They never talked about the 504
Brigade from Massachusetts that fought for slaves, enslaved people, to
be free. The only person that I heard about during my entire elementary
school who was black was Little Black Sambo.
President Fox should know better. He himself has talked about the
opportunities he had growing up that others did not have and the
poverty that he saw others suffer from. He went on to study business at
the Ibero-American University in Mexico City; got a diploma in an upper
management course taught by Harvard Business School professors; later
became an executive of Coca-Cola, becoming the youngest president of
the corporation's Latin America division before he got into politics
and went to their congress. This is not an uneducated man. This is a
man who knows better, and I do not subscribe to the fact that he knows
no better.
It is especially surprising that President Fox would fail to
understand the offensive nature of the stereotype portrayed on these
stamps in view of the outcry in the recent past over negative images of
Hispanics. As we heard earlier, strong protests were voiced, and
rightly so, over characters created by corporate advertisers, which the
Hispanic community viewed as demeaning to their heritage.
In the 1960s there was an advertisement aired on television featuring
a cartoon character called Chiquita Banana, who wore a hat filled with
fruit and sang with a pronounced Spanish accent. This was considered by
many to be offensive and portrayed an offensive portrayal of a Hispanic
woman, and it was.
In 1967 an ad created by Frito-Lay Corporation, as was mentioned
earlier, portrayed a Mexican male cartoon character with a thick accent
who wore a sombrero and who was called ``Frito Bandito.'' The Mexican-
American Anti-Defamation League Committee called for the commercials to
be pulled, condemning them as racist and accusing the company of
portraying Mexicans as ``sneaky thieves.'' As a result of this
pressure, the ads were taken off the air in 1970, and even though they
had been successful from a commercial point of view, they were taken
off. And rightly so, because they were offensive to a whole group of
people. Both of them were and both of them were taken off.
More recently, Taco Bell came under fire for their ads featuring a
dog named Dinky. Some viewers were insulted by the idea of an animal
scampering for food and speaking Spanish. Those ads have now been
discontinued.
And let me emphasize that these were commercial entities; and
although they were successful, they were taken off. These stamps are an
official act of the Government of Mexico.
A few years ago, a very high official of Japan on two occasions made
an inappropriate remark which offended African Americans; and when the
Congressional Black Caucus protested, on both of those occasions, the
Prime Minister of Japan apologized. They set up a committee. They came
to the Black Caucus. They started to implement programs to enhance
understanding between our two cultures. They started to have some
financial agreements with some of their products because they said we
need to understand each other better. So the Prime Minister of Japan
apologized, and rightly so. And our neighbor to the south saying that
he is not going to apologize is an insult, and President Fox is totally
wrong. And I am offended by that insult. Someone all the way across the
sea, when they saw that they were totally wrong in Japan, they decided
that the right thing to do was to make the apology; and here we have a
person who is benefiting from our NAFTA, which I did not vote for, and
many of the other policies that we have in this country is going to
stand up and tell 43 members of the Congressional Black Caucus that he
is proud of this character, that he is a very popular symbol in his
country, and he refuses to apologize. That is wrong.
Let me just say, sort of in conclusion, that in his inaugural
address,
[[Page H5633]]
President Fox mentioned his desire for a new, different, successful and
triumphant Mexico. The issuing of Memin Pinguin does just the opposite
and highlights the serious race issues that exist in Mexico today. The
Congressional Black Caucus's Working Group on Afro-Latinos will take a
closer look at the issues facing Afro-Mexican communities, and we will
call for a census in Mexico that includes a category on race so that
people can properly identify themselves and so that the black community
in Mexico is no longer invisible. When one is invisible, they do not
have to deal with them. So we would like to know what is the story in
Mexico.
{time} 2215
Other Latin American countries are focusing on racial discrimination
and trying to combat it. President Luiz Inacio da Silva in Brazil has
set up a commission to start affirmative action in higher education.
The government of Colombia has started to look at the racial
discrimination of Afro-Colombians. And here we have a government who is
saying ``we are proud of what we are doing and we refuse to
apologize.''
In April 2005, and I want everyone to listen carefully, the
Department of Homeland Security announced new regulations that require
Americans returning home via air and sea from countries in the
Caribbean, Central and South America to have passports. Starting
December 31, 2005, to get back into our country you will need a
passport.
Most countries that you need passports to go to, you would have them
when you go. Therefore, you have them when you come back. However, this
new Homeland Security law says that by December 31, 2005, countries
that required no passport before for Americans to go there, now
Americans will have to have passports in order to get back into
America.
However, however, Mexico got a pass. Mexico has until December 31,
2006, until this requirement goes into effect. So as a person who is
very interested in the Caribbean, I cochair the Caribbean Caucus, I
wanted to find out what impact will that have on some of those poor
countries in the Caribbean who depend almost totally, now that the
bananas have been taken away from some of those countries by the former
Lome' treaties that they have, the trade organizations said no longer
can there be preferences and no longer can Great Britain buy bananas
from Caribbean countries as they did in the past under their Lome'
treaties with former colonies. Now they do not even have banana trade.
Now Mexico is getting an advantage. So while Caribbean countries such
as Aruba, the Bahamas, Jamaica, Bermuda and others will be impacted by
this rule, they will have to change 1 year earlier, just 6 months from
now, they stand to lose as much as $2.6 billion in visitor export
earnings and could see the loss of more than 188,000 travel tourism
jobs, according to the World Travel and Tourism Council.
Mexico will benefit from an extra year. A family who may just find
out late in the day, a month or weeks earlier, that they need a
passport to get back into the country, they will decide that they may
go to Mexico because you do not need a passport coming back to the
country from Mexico.
Why does Mexico get an extra year? American tourists, who realize
they can travel to Mexico without a passport, will likely choose that
country over Caribbean nations where they need a passport, those
countries that I mentioned. The island nations were drastically hit
hard by Hurricane Ivan last year and last week Hurricane Dennis wreaked
havoc in the Caribbean. If any country needs the tourism dollars right
now, the Caribbean nations most certainly do.
As a person concerned about the Caribbean, I will personally request
that Homeland Security equalize the passport requirement so that
Caribbean nations will be on the same level playing field with Mexico.
If Mexico gets until December 31, 2006, a year-and-a-half from now, I
am going to request that the Caribbean countries get the same December
31, 2006; or if Homeland Security feels that they must remain at
December of 2005, this year, then they should make Mexico also have the
same requirements in December 31, 2005, that poor Caribbean countries
have.
I know one thing: If these are the stamps on letters that people are
going to send from Cancun, African Americans sending a postcard back to
Norton, New Jersey, where I live, saying ``having a great time,'' and
this is the stamp, this is going to cause havoc in our Post Office.
This is going to cause havoc.
I think that until the president of Mexico understands the damage
that he is doing, then perhaps the Caribbean has always been a great
place for me, and maybe that is where we need to spend our dollar,
where African Americans are not taken for as a joke.
Evidently a dollar in Mexico spent by an African American is not the
same as a dollar from anyone else. If this stamp goes out, then our
dollars should stay in our pockets.
Who does he think he is, saying that this makes him proud? I will
spend not another dollar down there until these things are removed.
So my demand is that the president of Mexico voids these stamps
before they are issued and do not allow a single one to be printed. If
they are already printed, they should not to be distributed, and they
should be destroyed. We should not see one single stamp go anywhere in
Mexico, or, even worse, have it find its way here to the United States.
Once again, let me thank the gentleman from Missouri (Mr. Cleaver)
for bringing this issue to the front, as has the gentlewoman from Texas
(Ms. Eddie Bernice Johnson), who called a meeting several weeks ago,
and the Congressional Black Caucus in general. I know that we will keep
the pressure on. If the government of Mexico feels that there is no
regard for African Americans, like I said, then I think we need to look
at where the dollar is being spent, and I think we need to look at a
level playing field so that Caribbean countries will be able to have
the same kind of passport requirements that Mexico has. I do not see
where they deserve any special treatment so far as I am concerned.
Mr. CLEAVER. Madam Speaker, I would like to express appreciation to
the gentleman from New Jersey for his very eloquent and passionate
words concerning something that I am angry about.
Madam Speaker, I have grandsons who are growing up now in this
country who I do not want to be negatively impressed by these kinds of
stereotypes. I do not want my children or my children's children or
anyone's children to be subjected to this kind of insult. This is
outrageous.
Madam Speaker, this is not just a caricature. For many people around
the world it is a belief, and those of us who are sensitive and those
of us who are impacted would like to erase this as a belief.
Some day, caricatures like this will not matter. We will have dealt
finally with this bogeyman race. But this is not that day.
Some day, Little Black Sambo will not matter. We will look back and
laugh at it. But today is not that day.
A recent appointee to the D.C. Circuit has said that using the ``N''
word, even in a workplace when discrimination is also an issue, is
protected speech. I think that is very dangerous. Now, some day, using
the ``N'' word will not matter. But today is not that day.
Some day, the president of Mexico will be outraged that something
like this ever took place. But this is not that day.
Some day, a call for racial sensitivity in this body will not be
needed. But today is not that day.
Some day, the country of Mexico will have a President who respects
the citizens of the entire world. But, sadly, Madam Speaker, today is
not that day.
Mr. CLEAVER. Madam Speaker, I yield back the balance of my time.
____________________