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"I Was the One Percenter": Manny Diaz and the Beginnings of a Black-Puerto
Rican Coalition
SONIA S. LEE and ANDE DIAZ
INTRODUCTION: THE DILEMMAS OF A NEW ALLIANCE
On the morning of February 3, 1964, Manny Diaz woke up wondering how many
Puerto Rican students would not go to school that day. Puerto Ricans were
known for having the highest high school drop-out and suspension rate
in New York City, but the reasons for students' absences that day were
deliberate, premeditated, and voluntary. For more than two decades since
urban renewal projects segregated them into increasingly poor and racialized
neighborhoods, hundreds of thousands of Puerto Rican migrants had witnessed
their children's schools deteriorate under the leadership of racially
prejudiced white teachers and administrators. By 1964, however, their
moral indignation ripened, and they were ready to publicly voice their
anger. Diaz, who had been leading a juvenile delinquency program with
Puerto Rican youth in the Lower East Side, and Gilberto Gerena-Valentn,
who had been organizing Puerto Ricans in the city through labor and community
organizations, decided to join hands with black educators who had been
fighting racial segregation in the city for many decades. They allied
with black civil rights leader Bayard Rustin, who aimed to dramatize black
children's inferior education in the city by boycotting the entire public
school system one day.
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