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You will know the truth, and the truth will set you free.” John 8:32

 

 


Happy New Year - Feliz Año Nuevo!

 

¿What? ¿Me Worry?
t has been said that there are two days that people worry most about but should actually worry least about: Yesterday and Tomorrow. We worry about yesterday - the mistakes we've made and what we would like to do over or differently. Yet, there is nothing we can do to change yesterday. Our worries are wasted. We also worry about tomorrow - the problems it may bring and the challenge we may face. Yet, we cannot control tomorrow. It is out of our grasp. So again, our worries are wasted. "Therefore do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about itself. Each day has enough trouble of its own." —Matthew 6:34  READ MORE


Find more about Weather in San Juan, PR
Click for weather forecast

 

The Black Eye!

by Don Jíbaro Wackytee

The Black Eye Syndrome is simple.... Say, you have an uncle who's in jail for burglary, that's a "black eye" to the family. You have a sister who wears red and works the street corners... that's a "black eye" to the family. If any of the above is caught on T.V., Radio or Newspapers... that's a BIG "black eye" to the family. If they're on the Internet, that's a HUGE "black eye". Get the idea?" READ EYE


50 Scriptures for
Inner Peace


Happy New Year - Feliz Año Nuevo!

Don Jibaro's Daughter

Frances' Missionary
Trip to Cuba

(Update by Don Jíbaro)
When my daughter Frances told me that she was going to be part of  a Missionary Trip to Cuba, I though of the sinister dangers and urban legends that has turned Cuba into the "don't go there" place. The case of the Cuban people is a most impacting one... as we have all seen and read what goes on there... how the arrogant pride of the affluent Executive leadership keep the populace virtually in squalor poverty. Enter Frances' Team from the Light and Life church of Downey, California...
READ MORE

 

 

 

YOU KNOW You're Puerto Rican IF...
You have been spanked with "chancletas"
You know your mom is sneaking up on you cause you can hear her "chancletas" flapping on the linoleum floor.
Your mother yells at the top of her lungs to summon you to dinner and you only live in a one bedroom apartment.
You have ever called linoleum floor a "rug"
You can get to your house blindfolded by the smell of the "chuletas"
You say "Vamo' pa' encima" instead of "Let's get started"
You get scared whenever someone mentions "el CUUUCO"!!!
You remember every Christmas those "aguinaldos" that abuela used to sing for you.
 MORE HERE

 


Analysis of the Conga Drum
Purloined by Don Jibaro
The conga is a tall, narrow, single-headed Cuban drum of African origin, probably derived from the Congolese Makuta drums or Sikulu drums commonly played in Mbanza Ngungu, Congo. A person who plays conga is called a "conguero".  Although ultimately derived from African drums made from hollowed logs, the Cuban conga is staved, like a barrel. These drums were probably made from salvaged barrels originally. They were used both in Afro-Caribbean... religious music and as the principal instrument in Rumba. Congas are now very common in Latin music, including salsa music, as well as many other forms of American popular music. READ MORE

 

Les Rivera

is a freelance writer, covering New York-Puerto Rico-Cuba style salsa/mambo music, and the sport of boxing.

Who Is Don Jibaro?
by Les Rivera

One of his quotes from jibaros.com reads: “A Puerto Rican shall not be boring.” so, to describe Don Jibaro as anything less than riveting would be an understatement of his own philosophy. Don Jibaro is the owner/operator of some of the world’s busiest Puerto Rican websites, Over the years, Orlando (his real name) has also left a legacy of volunteer work in the Los Angeles community. Among those... READ MORE

 

The Best on What's Next in the World


LP
Flag Mini Conga...

Compact at 11" high...
Buy it

 

Cinco Siglos
de Historia

Book Review by Don Jíbaro
CLICK HERE
About 10 yrs ago I visited La Universidad de Puerto Rico. At their bookstore I asked for the BEST book in Puerto Rican history they had. "Cinco Siglos de Historia" inSpanish, by Francisco Scarano from Fajardo now teaching at the Univ. of Wiconsin-Madison)...I own it... I READ IT, loved it, now my brother in law asks me "What's good in PR Hist?"  --- HEY, DON'T LET THE PRICE FOOL YOU,there's none BETTER, in real Academic SPANISH" Read for yourself  
GO HERE

 


Get Mini Bongos, too!

 

✿¸.•*¨`*•..¸✿ ═══════════ ღೋƸ̵̡Ӝ̵̨̄Ʒღೋ═══════════ ✿¸.•*¨`*•..¸✿
We call each other Boricuas but others don't call us that... they call us Puertorrique~os. I believe the Taino blood has been so diluted thru the centuries that it is hard to tell by inherent (not adopted) behavior.


A study funded by the U.S. National Science Foundation years back, shows (averages) that 61 percent of all Puerto Ricans have Amerindian mitochondrial DNA, 27 percent have African and 12 percent Caucasian. (Nuclear DNA, or the genetic material present in a gene's nucleus, is inherited in equal parts from one's father and mother. Mitochondrial DNA is inherited only from one's mother and does not change or blend with other materials over time.)

So we have Taino blood but we don't go around dancing around the fire; We drive SUVs. In our minds we call ourselves Tainos and Boricuas because the HONOR it carries. Borinquen is a POETIC name, not Political. What happened to our Tainos was a tragedy, a cruel and not uncommon tragedy.

Let's live, therefore to lift up the reputation of our culture through GOOD works... The culture that others sadly continue to defile. It's up to US to thrive and bring back the honor. Think about it. HONOR.

----------------------------------------------

Watch this Puerto Rico Historical video
Only if you have an extra 90 min to spare

The Ponce Massacre of 1937
was a police slaughtering over a peaceful civilian march, taking place in 21 March 1937 at 3:15 pm, in Palm Sunday, Ponce, Puerto Rico, that killed 19 people and wounded over 200 others. It is the largest massacre in Puerto Rican history. The march had been organized by the Puerto Rican Nationalist Party to commemorate the abolition of slavery in Puerto Rico by the governing Spanish National Assembly in 1873. The march was also protesting the U.S. government's imprisonment of the party's leader, Pedro Albizu Campos, on alleged sedition charges.



An investigation by the Hays Commission put the blame squarely on the U.S.-appointed Governor of Puerto Rico, Blanton Winship. Further criticism by members of the U.S. Congress led President Franklin D. Roosevelt to remove Winship in 1939 as governor. Governor Winship was never prosecuted for the massacre. No one under his chain of command - including the police who took part in the event, and admitted to the mass shooting - was ever prosecuted or reprimanded. READ MORE

Puerto Rico National Guard begins cleanup work on Vieques
(JAN 23) FINALLY... A group of 30 experienced Puerto Rico National Guard engineers has launched a cleanup effort focused on areas of ecological and tourist interest on the island of Vieques, which the U.S. Navy used as a bombing range for more than 40 years.

Lt. Col. Ruth Diaz Calderon, spokeswoman for that military force, a component of the U.S. National Guard, told Efe that the group of experts began working Tuesday on the project and that their goal is to establish an eco-tourism project in a 393-hectare (970-acre) area of the island-municipality.

"Our goal is to improve quality of life and help with this project. We want the residents of that island to know that we want to restore its splendor" as a tourist attraction, Diaz said of the small island, located just east of the mainland of the U.S. commonwealth. Brig. Gen. Juan Medina Lamela hailed the cleanup effort, saying that Vieques' residents "deserve the best quality of life" and that the National Guard's support would help restore an area with great eco-tourism potential.

The U.S. Navy used much of Vieques and the nearby island of Culebra as a bombing range for nearly 40 years until May 2003, and it also leased those areas to other countries for their own military live-fire training exercises. The four decades of military maneuvers left munitions debris in waters off the island, an area of great ecological value.

Local groups say the high incidence of diseases and conditions such as cancer, diabetes, hypertension and respiratory ailments on Vieques relative to mainland Puerto Rico is attributable to the U.S. military activity. The U.S. Navy, however, says there is a lack of objective studies to link the health problems to the military exercises. EFE

The Arecibo Observatory to Reopen
San Juan, Jan 19 (EFE).- The Arecibo Observatory, located on Puerto Rico's north coast and the site of one of the world's largest radio telescopes, will reopen this week after a review undertaken as a result of the earthquake that hit the northern part of the Caribbean island last week, officials said Sunday.


"What we're inspecting is a cable that suffered some kind of damage. The cable is one of the ones that supports the telescope ... which is very heavy," Carlos Padin, chancellor of the island's Metropolitan University, told Efe.

The radio telescope's facilities were closed last Thursday after inspectors from New York's Ammann & Whitney Bridge Construction, who have been tasked with inspecting the Arecibo observatory site since 1972, took a close look at the facility.

The magnitude-6.4 earthquake occurred at 12:01 a.m. on Jan. 13 and its epicenter was located under the ocean 60 kilometers (37 miles) northwest of Arecibo and 98 kilometers (61 miles) northwest San Juan.

The observatory is administered by the Metropolitan University, which forms part of the Ana G. Mendez University System, or SUAGM, in conjunction with SRI International and the Universities Space Research Association (USRA).

"The inspectors found that the cable did not suffer in any significant way, but as a preventive and safety measure the test will be performed. Tomorrow they will do a test to determine if the the damage is superficial and on Wednesday the observatory will reopen," Padin said, adding that this type of inspection is also conducted after hurricanes hit the island.

With a single curved dish with a diameter of 305 meters (about 1,000 feet), the radio telescope is visited annually by thousands of tourists and its facilities are used by hundreds of scientists, especially on projects connected with planetary astronomy and atmospheric studies.

The radio waves collected by the gigantic dish are captured by 12 antennae that are attached to a 900-ton platform suspended by heavy steel cables some 150 meters (about 500 feet) above the dish.


 Who in The World Was Juan Tizol?
Juan Tizol, The Puerto Rican Trombonist
that Made up Duke Ellington's Band


Duke Ellington - piano, composer - Fred Guy - banjo - Wellman Braud - double bass - Sonny Greer - drums - Arthur Whetsol, Cootie Williams, Freddy Jenkins - trumpets - Joe "Tricky Sam" Nanton - trombone, Juan Tizol - valve trombone (behind the bass) - Johnny Hodges, Harry Carney, Barney Bigard - reeds - Freddie Washington - dancer READ Juan Tizol Story

 

Is It Possible to be Positive in Anytime?
eeling good and being positive isn’t about saying your affirmations or looking at cute animal pics on the internet for 10 minutes—especially when your intent is to shift your dominant vibration (although that’s certainly a good start). It’s really about what you’re thinking and feeling, how you’re responding to your Now experience in the other 23 hours and 50 minutes of your day. READ MORE

   USE at YOUR OWN DISCRETION

LECHON ASAO a la vara SEE RECIPE HERE

The Importance of Jesus Christ
by Don Jíbaro
Is Jesus Christ really part of our lives
or is He just an Icon at Easter and Christmas?

We "talk the talk" and more often than not, we "walk the walk."  It's consequently and imperative that we get to know that part of our culture that our ancestors staked the essence of their existence on... their faith in The Lord Jesus!

Yes, Jesus Christ is Lord to at least 2.35 BILLION humans throughout the world, even respected by those who don't even know Him. There's no doubt, we distinguish The Lord Jesus from other "deities". Your grandma knew that!

So, why do you think that most people do not have this peace and abundant life that God planned for us to have? Simply it is separation from God. Admit it. your own WICKEDNESS has separated you from God; so much that he won't hear you. The Cross, however, is the one symbol that talks to you. Jesus Christ really died on the Cross and rose from the grave JUST like the Bible says. That might be a mystery to you but the Scriptures are true...
READ MORE

The Empty Bed
or The Fallacy of Friendship

few years ago I was playing my guitar at home. I came upon this old tango my Dad used to quote... La Cama Vacía" (The Empty Bed). I remembered the lyrics and went on to sing it as I played. Half way through the song I began to weep. I didn't stop playing, and my singing became a cry of sadness.

With tears in my eyes, I stopped! The words were too sad, so sad that I had the image flashing in my head while my heart was pounding in my chest. I was "living" the story... the empty bed... I was so brokenhearted that I had to translate this tango into English and share it in my website. The sadness lies in "the fallacy of friendship" and the fact that the words of the song are so true... so moving that you can't avoid "living" the story. ►Read More


"It's better dry bread in peace, than a
feast in a house full of fighting." Prov.17:1

Them PHONIES
by Don Jibaro

• Pho·ny/fōnē/ Adjective: Not genuine; fraudulent.
Noun: A fraudulent person or thing.
• Synonyms: adjective. phoney - false - spurious - sham - counterfeit - bogus -- noun. phoney - fake - sham - forgery

any Puerto Ricans who are born outside of Puerto Rico get a real thrill when they finally get to visit the island for the first time. It's like "seeing the bride that you've been betrothed to all your life." READ MORE

The history of a country. . .
 is generally written by the conquerors. The "conquered" seldom writes a thing. Many things contribute to the correct and accurate depiction of historical data. Sponsorship by the wealthy was one of the favorite incentives. Such history tends to carry a partial or one-sided view of the facts.

It is, consequently, up to the passionate historian to do his or her own research to verify the facts. This leads to documentation which will totally eradicate any pre-conceived notion acquired during the student's whippersnapper elementary history education. Puerto Rico, more than perhaps any other nation, may fall victim to this phenomenon due to the simple fact that Puerto Rico is the oldest colony in the world today! Over 500 years, compadre! ... Yikes, sez me!


When I was a kid in the 50s, street funerals were common. Hearses were used by the
wealthy. People walked all the way from the Funeral Home to the cemetery, men often
taking turns carrying the coffin. This one is a smaller casket, probably a young person.
See Photo History

DJ's GIMME SOME O' DAT LOVE DEPT.
What Is Love?

We all make mistakes and then we HURT inside; pain that we cause ourselves by not knowing how to LOVE one another. YES, not knowing. You might say, "Nonsense".... but what I might not know in practice, I do know in theory. Love is the gracious (unmerited to others) self-giving of ourselves as unselfish human care. NO debate needed. Love is not sex, friendship, nor displays of affection... love is giving without expecting anything in return... and that's not easy, not for you, me or anybody. That's what makes it so volatile and fragile. We expect, we don't get, we get mad and hold grudges because of it. We all have failed to be patient and kind; we all have become jealous, conceited and proud to the point of being ill-mannered, selfish, irritable, and often-times curse at each other. READ LOVE

Breeding  Boricuanism in USAricans
By Irene Frances Vázquez

hen I saw the movie, “My Big Fat Greek Wedding”, I realized how other cultures can identify with it. A group of people can immigrate to another country and still bring their culture with them, bring up the next generation, their kids to be like them… loving the food, the language and marrying into their own race.

Now, those who’ve seen the movie, know that the parents seemed to overdo their culture by ignoring the ways of the land that they live in or looking at the other ethnic groups in a negative way. The heroine of the movie seemed to look into the American way of life wistfully rather than into her Greek’s family’s. Yet, she recognized and understood the traditions … she spoke the language and ate the food. She knew the folkloric ways that identified them. She marries a non-Greek who embraces her culture, seeing the uniqueness of it and makes it his own. READ MORE



“Live in such a way that no one blames the rest of us
 nor finds fault with our work.” --2 Corinthians 6:3

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"Don’t visit your neighbors often, because they’ll hate you after a while." — Proverbs 25:17
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