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Tía Chucha's Centro Cultural & Bookstore

The mission of Tía Chucha’s Centro Cultural is to transform community in the Northeast San Fernando Valley and beyond through ancestral knowledge, the arts, literacy and creative engagement.

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4 Submitted Ideas

  • CONNECT ·2024 Grants Challenge
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    🎉 Winner

    TransformArte: Reentry through Art and Healing Practices

    TransformArte embraces formerly incarcerated individuals and provides them with a community of healing, learning and connectedness at Tia Chucha’s Centro Cultural. Through the Indigenous practices of talking circles and artistic expression, participants will create safe spaces to better understand themselves and align with others in their community. Guest speakers will also be brought in to shine light on creative arts industries and other potential employment opportunities to facilitate a successful, holistic reentry.

  • CONNECT ·2020 Grants Challenge

    Indigenous In Us: Embracing Ancestral Knowledge and Sharing the Beauty of Practice

    The Indigenous in Us: Embracing Ancestral Knowledge and Sharing the Beauty of Practice, showcases community-based indigenous wellbeing practices of Native Mexica groups (with links to Nahuatl-speaking indigenous ancestors from central Mexico) and our local Native American Tataviam nation group, whose combined teachings connect the Northeast San Fernando Valley to the past and present United States, Mexico, and Central America. Over a 12-months, a series of free public cultural events will focus on ancestral knowledge/arts for social well being.

  • CREATE ·2015 Grants Challenge

    Poetry is Life Poetry is Story

    The arts are a powerful means to heal, transform, and revitalize persons, families, communities, economies, political structures, and environments. We propose to offer 30 poetry/story workshops to multi-generational residents at libraries across L.A.. Within each of the 15 L.A. City Council districts there will be two 2-hour weekly workshops lasting 4 weeks, each culminating in a community open mic. Each district will feature one workshop for English speakers, and another for Spanish speakers.

  • 2013 Grants Challenge

    Tia Chuchas Centro Culturals Arts Transforms Community A Multimedia Wellness Project

    Poor communities are usually portrayed as fonts of violence, stagnant thinking and deficit outcomes. But we at Tia Chucha's Centro Cultural see the poor as rich with talents, skills and imaginations. Every person, even without outside resources, is by nature regenerative. The concept behind arts-based healing workshops is to tap into and draw out this abundant capacity to establish healthy lives, families, and culture – even in a faltering economy. A new currency of restoring and transforming from one's own gifts opens up a new imagination of how to relate by giving and getting, with healing practices and disciplines. This is about renewing community rooted in caring and sharing.

    The objective is to get everyone to live out their passions, their innate story, the "dream" they were born with. These yearlong weekly workshops in 2013 will pull from this largely indigenous concept and set up the nexus where people are expressive in modern times. There is enough evidence and anecdotal illustrations of how the arts transform lives and communities.

    Presently we are held in the paralysis of a market driven scarcity society. Mortgages, the wage system, and money are man-made illusions that have blinded us to the true source of our liberation – the abundance in nature, in our imaginations, and in the proper relationships between our natures and the nature around us. The goal is to reclaim the personal authority and autonomy for every person so they can properly intertwine with and grow from community on a basis of cooperation.

    The Northeast San Fernando Valley is made up of indigenous rooted people, primarily from Mexico and Central America, with significant numbers of African Americans, Asians, and European Americans. The majority are Christians/Catholics; Arts Transforms Community workshops are not meant to challenge or change anyone's belief systems. Through the arts and imaginative practices, everything gets renewed and reaffirmed. Still we go back to indigenous sources of knowledge because of their perennial quality across time, places and circumstances.

    Our complex industrial world has disconnected us from these and many people are lost as a result. Our basic premise is that the healthy well-being of each is dependent on the healthy well-being of all – and the inverse: the healthy well-being of all is predicated on the healthy well-being of each. The goal of Tia Chucha's arts workshops – including music, dance, theater, writing, puppetry, photography, painting, and more – is to create a new basis for wellness with indicators and outcomes not clinical or bureaucratic.

    We aim to be the example that a whole community approach to addressing trauma and economic instability utilizes the arts to heal and revitalize. Tia Chucha's Centro Cultural & Bookstore has seen such possibilities whenever people are given spaces to learn, to create, and to deliver. We use a process of turning original ideas to execution with research/study, mentorship and organization. The arts are not just a “nice thing to do,” but vital to the new economy and digital world we are all entering. We need a new imagination – with new content and new forms – to align to the possibilities in this world.

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