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Liga de Las Americas
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Going to bat for 21: Roberto
Clemente
By Arooj
Ashraf, La Prensa Cleveland Correspondent
Roberto Clemente, a legendary Latino
baseball player, mesmerized fans as a Pittsburgh Pirate during a
career that spanned from 1955 to 1972. During that career,
Clemente collected 3,000 hits, 12 Gold Glove Awards, a National
League Most Valuable Player Award in 1966, and led his team to two
World Series victories in 1960 and 1971. |
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Clemente died in a plane crash in 1972 trying to fly food and
medical supplies to victims of a Nicaraguan earthquake from his
native Puerto Rico.
However, it was off the field where he
won many hearts with his humanitarian work and genuine desire to
help his community and society. To honor his legacy a small
campaign to retire Clemente’s number 21 is quickly gaining
momentum among Latinos and béisbol fans.
Julio Pabón, CEO of Latino Sports, a
South Bronx company, is one of the leading forces behind the
movement. Pabón is the producer of the film, “Legacy of 21,” which
highlights Clemente’s outstanding baseball career, impeccable
character, and humanitarian work. The film is a tool to educate
people about Clemente’s life and convince Major League Baseball to
award him the greatest honor in baseball and retire his number 21.
Jackie Robinson, the first
African-American to play major league baseball during the modern
era, is the only player whose number has been retired for
overcoming racism and opening the doors of equality in
U.S.-American sports.
Pabón said by retiring number 21,
baseball will set an example of an extraordinary man who excelled
beyond the field to help his community and create a better
society. |
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“It is interesting that a man who died in ‘73 is still influencing
us in 2007,” he told a small audience gathered at the Hispanic
Youth Center in Cleveland on Friday August 10, 2007. “The number
21 is a symbol of respect, dignity, and humanity,” said Felix
Muñiz, director of the Hispanic Youth Center. The film screening
was sponsored by the Hispanic Urban Minority Alcoholism and Drug
Abuse Outreach Program Inc. (HUMADOP), and the Sister of Charity
Foundation.
“This is a project of love,” Pabón
said of the film, which received a standing ovation from the
audience. The movie was completed in seven months with the help of
many Latino musicians, translators, and talented volunteers who
contributed their time, cutting the budget from $80,000 to
$40,000.
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“I guarantee you, we will retire this
number because there is something special here,” he said.
Pabón has traveled to a dozen cites
showing the movie and getting petitions signed. The signatures
have not been tallied but Pabón has a vision. “I would like to see
so many petitions that we would need a van to deliver them,” he
said.
Members of the New York Yankees
solidified their support for the movement by personally signing
the petition. “I made copies and framed the original,” said Pabón.
He likes to show it to competing teams to rally their support for
the Retire 21 Movement.
Clemente’s Pirates have not gotten
involved with the campaign. Nor has there been a screening of this
film in Pittsburgh.
All film screenings are free but
donations from $2.10 to $21,000 are welcome to support the ‘Going
to Bat for 21’ campaign. The money is used to create promotional
materials and to compensate contributors who made the film
possible.
“If we as a community can come
together to retire a number, then we can do something to fight
AIDS, combat teenage pregnancies, and the high school dropout
rate,” he said.
The Clemente family is not part of the
campaign but they support the movement, said Pabón. He plans to
take the campaign to a national level and is negotiating an
advertorial in the New York Times Oct. 2007.
To learn more about the campaign and
to sign petitions visit
www.retire21.org
¡“Ya, es Tiempo”!
Editor’s Note: In the photo on page 1
in La Prensa are, L-R: Carlos I. Ramos, Executive Director of
HUMADAOP, Julio Pabón, C.E.O. of Latino Sports, and Luis. A. Gómez,
Congressional Staff for Dennis Kucinich.
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