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You are here: Home / History / LATINOPIA HERO DR. ANTONIO RÍOS-BUSTAMANTE (1948-2024)

LATINOPIA HERO DR. ANTONIO RÍOS-BUSTAMANTE (1948-2024)

May 31, 2024 by wpengine

Dr. Antonio Ríos Bustamante — historian, academic, writer, intellectual, loving husband and supportive companion to my mother, for over thirty years — passed away this weekend, on April, 19 2024.

Antonio will be greatly missed by his wife, family, friends and community. This is a personal reflection to honor his memory.

Antonio departed peacefully, at home, in Tucson. He suffered from a neurological illness that affected his body, mind and overall health. He faced his illness as he did other challenges in his life—doing research, rebelling against the authorities that gave him five years to live, refusing to let his sickness take away his dignity. He looked to a sometimes indifferent healthcare system for answers, desperately wanting to known what was the disease weakening his muscles, his ability to move, or breathe freely.

Dr. Ríos defined for himself what being Chicano meant. He loved his community and his city of El Pueblo de Nuestra Señora la Reina de Los Ángeles. He wrote several books about the towns and rancherías that make up the Mexican city of Los Angeles. Antonio dedicated his life to preserving and researching the history, and struggles of Chicanos and Mexicans in the Southwest and the Borderlands. An internationalist, Dr. Ríos Bustamante linked the processes of dispossession, displacement, exploitation and marginality, experienced by his people to the colonial and post colonial experiences of peoples in the Global South.

Personally, I want to thank him for all the stimulating conversations, ideas, the articles and books he shared with me. For his interest in my own work when I was a student More importantly, I want to thank him for the love, tenderness and support he had towards my mom and her projects. I want to apologize for not always understanding the effects of the horrible illness that afflicted him.

I hope his colleagues and friends who shared his interests and experience will demand that the institutions where he taught, will honor and preserve his legacy and work. That they will demand for his archive to be preserved. For his unfinished work to be published and, for his completed research to guide younger generations wanting to understand their histories.

Gracias Antonio. Descansa tranquilo y con el orgullo de haber sido un ser noble, caballeroso, atento y valiente. ¡Chicano Power!

_____________________________________________________________________

This remembrance was written by Oscar Leon Bernal, stepson to Dr. Ríos-Bustamante, and appeared on the Facebook page of Martinez Funeral home. It is republished here, along with the photograph of Dr. Rios-Bustamante,  with their permission and under the fair use proviso of the copyright law.

Filed Under: History, LATINOPIA HERO Tagged With: Chicano scholar passes, Dr. Antonio Rios-Bustamante, prominent historian passes

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The title of the documentary, The Need to Grow by Rob Herring and Ryan Wirick,  is suggestive. Its abstract character is enough to apply in a general and also in a particular way. The Need to Grow applies to both the personal and to so many individuals. At the moment, the need for growth in […]

BURUNDANGA DEL ZOCOTROCO 5.16.25 PELIGRO INMINENTE

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Peligro Inminente En 2012, en Puerto Rico habían 13 mil granjas; en el censo agrícola reciénte se registran entre 8 y 10 mil granjas; una disminución sustantiva de la cifra reportada para 2012. Al presente, el sector agrícola de la economía puertorriqueña reporta aproximadamente 0.62% del producto bruto interno, que produce el 15% de la […]

RICARDO ROMO’S TEJANO REPORT 5.23.25 MAYA BLUE EXHIBIT

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Maya Blue Exhibit Incorporates the Artwork of Latino/a Artists A new exhibit, Maya Blue: Ancient Color, New Visions, at the San Antonio Museum of Art [SAMA], brings together for the first time pre-Columbian crafted clay figures, the art of Mexican modernist Carlos Mérida, and works by contemporary Latino/a artists Rolando Briseño, Clarissa Tossin, and Sandy […]

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