The End of WAR, Fights, Chingasos,
Blows, Catos Trancasos
by antoniosolisgomez 2019
Our world has been dominated
by masculine energy for the past few thousands years, an age characterized by
survival and the need for exclusive groupings to provide the basic life
necessities for their members. Often conflicts between groups were resolved by
violence and war and where the adage “nice guys finish last” was appropriate.
Life in the barrio reflected
this masculine energy in the roles of men and women, in the turf gangs that
characterized neighborhoods, certainly in the manner children were raised. I’m
a pacifist type, never actually been in a fight but all my life I’ve been
surrounded by violence, some quite bloody and I’ll tell you about a few of them
in what follows. My earliest recollection is seeing my stepfather getting home
after a night of drinking, agitated, his clothing torn, yelling that a man
& his girlfriend had beat on him. I was about 6 and quite frightened because
he was going back out to avenge himself.
There were a lot of gangs in
my high school and fights broke out all the time. A favorite time for a fight
was the last day of school before summer vacation. There was a vato from the
Temple Street gang, street smart, unemotional and tight lipped. He chose out
one of my friends, a Chinese boy who liked to strut and act tough. They went
into the boys bathroom by themselves and within a few minutes the Temple Street
vato walked out smiling. When a few of us walked into the bathroom our friend’s
face was covered in blood, trying to clean himself with water at the sink.
Other choice times for fights
were weekends at house parties, the two combatants carefully removing their
nicely pressed Sir Guy or Pendleton shirt
and asking one of the friends to hold it lest the shirt get bloodied and torn,
while they mixed it up.
Although I had a lot of
aggression I was popular, friendly and generally a nice guy, never in a
situation where anger overtook me.
Luckily, I joined the football team and was able to use my aggression to
my advantage. I loved hitting, tackling, blocking, and just being plain nasty.
I was a good football player and after high school and while in college I
played flag football for an all Chicano team at Hazard Park. We called
ourselves the Intangibles and joked after the games at a local bar that we
should really call ourselves the unquenchables.
We had a good team and won
the Los Angeles Flag football Championship a few times. One day we were playing
an all African American team from South Central LA when a fight broke out on
the field. I was sitting out the game because I had suffered a concussion the
previous week and by head was still not right. The fight on the field quickly
escalated and soon both teams had joined in the slugfest. Some of our team were
old veterano gang members and not shy about mixing it up. The police helicopter
finally showed up and peace was restored. Happily no one was seriously hurt
unlike the following incident that took place a few years later.
I was working a summer youth
program at the International Institute in Boyle Heights with youth mostly from
the Aliso Pico Housing Projects where hundreds of families resided. There were
two primary groups in our program. One were the African American kids and the
other were the boys from Tercera, a gang comprised of boys recently arrived
from Mexico. There was bad blood between the two groups and the tension finally
broke when an African American girl claimed that one of the Tercera members had
taken a dime of hers. A friend of hers decided to avenge the wrong done to her
but after a brief scuffle, I and other staff members were able to separate the
principles involved. Unfortunately one
of the Tercera boys couldn’t let it go and he kicked an opponent and then all
hell broke loose. Trash cans, lead pipes, billiard balls, knives appeared from
out of nowhere and within 4 minutes 7 boys had to be taken to the General
Hospital with a variety of injuries.
L to R front Tudi Flores, Sergio Hernandez, moi, Rafas Lopez with guitar, John Figueroa, Magu on hill with giant placa Photo by Oscar Castillo |
Blinding rage, coupled with
machismo can quickly overtake a man and he will behave in a manner that falls
far short of admiration. Two of the altruistic, generous, compassionate men who
worked tirelessly to publish Con Safos Magazine in support of El Movimiento,
the quest for Chicano Civil Rights in the late 1960’s, succumbed to just such a
rage. Sergio, Rafas, Tudi, Rudy, Pancho, Pete and I had piled into Magu’s van
and driven to City Terrace to have our weekly meeting in the East Los Angeles
Big Brother Office where I worked. I had
just unlocked the door and was looking for the light switch when Tudi and Rafas
began yelling at one another and soon both were in a fighting stance. Rafas,
bigger, more muscular and a hell of a good boxer knocked Tudi down two time
before I and others broke them apart. I took a punch in the jaw from Rafas for
my effort.
L to R Standing TudiFlores , Bear Lopez, Rafas Lopez, standing John Figueroa, Pancho Sifuentes Photo by Oscar Castillo |
We entered a new age in 2012,
one where feminine energy is taking its proper place next to masculine energy
and therefore society and individuals
will need to seek a balance with both of these energies. One can already see that women throughout the
world are demanding and attaining rights, long denied them, and have begun to
move into positions of power. We will also begin to understand that violence is
not our real nature, love is and men will harken to that call and violence will
fade into history.
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