In a Daily Kos posting Denise Oliver Velez relates her personal response to the release of the Hurray for the Riff Raff music video Pa’lante and shares this insight by Christina Colón, posted in Sojourner:
‘Pa’lante’ Is an Ode to Puerto Rico’s Future
For eight sobering minutes, a new Hurray for the Riff Raff music video follows a working-class Puerto Rican family as they try to rebuild physically and emotionally in the wake of Hurricane Maria. Filmed on the island and starring The Florida Project’s Mela Murder, the video — a vibrant backdrop to the band’s new song “Pa’lante,” sung by Riff Raff’s Nuyorican lead singer Alynda Segarra — captures in brilliant colors the pain and strength of the Puerto Rican people.
The video opens with a woman carrying her baby past rows of boarded houses and scrap heaps to the water’s edge. As she looks out, the camera jumps to New York City, where a man is working odd jobs, carrying mattresses and packaging chicken. Their separation is an acknowledgement of the thousands who have fled the island, in what the media has called a mass “exodus.” From cooking to washing hair, the couples’ daily routines set against a backdrop of distress serve as an ode to life after trauma.
“Pa’lante,” a contraction of “para adelante,” is a Spanish affirmation meaning “forward.” In the 1960s, it served as the title of the newspaper produced by the historic Puerto Rican civil rights activist group the Young Lords. The group makes an appearance in the video, black and white footage of their protests flickering in and out as stanzas from Pedro Pietri’s poem, “Puerto Rican Obituary,” are read.
“Pa’lante is a very Puerto Rican mindset,” Kristian Mercado Figueroa, who directed the music video, said. “Be it a family struggling to stay together, or recovering from the hurricane, the Puerto Rican people are strong and they will always stand and move forward.”
Since our platform is about expressing ideas and ideals instead of cash flow, clicks, or fundraising, we have the freedom to include a wide range of topics and formats that might not work elsewhere. We don’t need or want paid content, promotional materials, or story lines designed to please donors.
So the idea here is to present videos one or more of the editors feel speaks to them. Sometimes it will be news. Sometimes it will be history. And a lot of the time it will be culture. You can not and should not separate these things: it is diversity and intersectionality that makes our movement strong.
Feel free to suggest videos at contact@sandiegofreepress.org