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Puerto Rico: A History of the People

This collection contains documents detailing the various struggles of Puerto Ricans against foreign invaders from the arrival of Spanish Conquistador Juan Ponce de Leon in 1493 to the current occupation by the United States of America. Beginning in 1898, the U.S. invaded Puerto Rico and established a colonial government that intended to destroy Puerto Rican identity by replacing the people’s history, language, and culture with its own.  This occupation caused widespread unemployment and stimulated a massive migration of Puerto Ricans to the U.S. People of the Puerto Rican diaspora were made to feel ashamed of their culture as they were pressured to become “American” and leave behind the language, culture, and history that unite Puerto Ricans as a sovereign nation. Often, these materials were some of the first and only exposure that the diaspora had to its own history. These documents were meant to unite Puerto Ricans through exposing this history of oppression in hopes of inspiring solidarity with the independence movement.


“Once we begin to see ourselves and our oppressed condition in the clear light of our own truth, then the process of change, revolutionary change, which leads to a revolutionary struggle, begins to take place.” –Puerto Rico Our People’s History


Documents

The Other Side of U.S. Policy Towards the Caribbean: Recolonization and Militarization The Other Side of U.S. Policy Towards the Caribbean: Recolonization and Militarization
Author: Jorge RodrPublisher: Caribbean Project for Justice and PeaceYear: 1988Volume Number: Dossier Series No. 7 JuneFormat: MonographCollection: Puerto Rico: A History of the People
Two essays about how the militarization of various Caribbean islands during and after the Cold War was an attempt to settle the popular movements that weakened the power of the U.S. in the region.
Militarization and the Caribbean Basin Initiative Militarization and the Caribbean Basin Initiative
Author: Jorge RodrPublisher: Caribbean Project for Justice and PeaceFormat: ReportCollection: Puerto Rico: A History of the People
An essay about how the Caribbean Policy began during the Carter administration in response to the threat of Nationalist movements and how the militarization of Puerto Rico is implicit in that plan as the site for training of other Caribbean nations police force.