Diamond Member Pelican Press 0 Posted August 24, 2024 Diamond Member Share Posted August 24, 2024 This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up Liza Colón-Zayas’s Medallion Connects Her to Her Puerto Rican Heritage Liza Colón-Zayas used to ride her bike between the living room and kitchen of her grandmother’s apartment in the Bronx. Her Puerto Rican grandmother didn’t speak English, and Ms. Colón-Zayas, a Bronx-native Nuyorican, didn’t speak Spanish. But the two found other ways to communicate: through her grandmother’s patience as she rode her two-wheeler around the tight space; through hand gestures and homemade Puerto Rican food. “As I look back, it breaks my heart that we couldn’t have conversations,” Ms. Colón-Zayas said. She’s now the guardian of her grandmother’s ornate ********* medallion, a talisman given to her grandmother by Ms. Colón-Zayas’s grandfather when her grandparents moved back to Puerto Rico. The medallion is kept safe in a drawer. Ms. Colón-Zayas last wore it when she made the Puerto Rican dish arroz **** gandules for a cooking segment of “The Bear.” “I wore it for her,” she said. In an interview, the actress, who was nominated for an Emmy for her role in “The Bear,” took out the medallion once again. This interview has been edited and condensed. Tell me about this piece of jewelry. This was my grandmother’s medallion. She was born in 1904, she came to this country in 1948. And then my grandparents moved back to Puerto Rico in the 1970s. And when they moved back, [my grandfather] got her this beautiful medallion. She was very *********. Then she handed it down to my mom, and then my mom gave it to me. She handed it to me when she moved out of her apartment in the Bronx, upstate. That was about 10 years ago. When you wore the medallion during the cooking segment you filmed, did it give you confidence or comfort? Was it symbolic? It’s all of those things because my grandmother’s love language was food. She didn’t speak English, and I didn’t speak Spanish as a **** because I was born and raised in New York. And my parents were pretty brutalized for being Latino, so they wanted us to speak English. I didn’t like food, but I loved her food. So that was her way of caring for me, and being affectionate. She was very affectionate and very sweet and very patient with me because I was a handful. How would you describe the medallion to someone who hasn’t seen pictures of it? Like John Travolta’s medallion in “Saturday Night Fever.” Grandma was rocking it before the rest of the world, before they realized how cool it was. It’s ornate, and it has ****** on one side, and Mother Mary on the other and the baby ****** engraved on each side. Did your grandmother actually wear it? She wore it all the time. She was very *********. She couldn’t read, she didn’t go to school up in her mountain town. But she was very religious with her prayer. She had an altar, which used to scare the living ***** out of me. I’d wake up in the middle of the night, and there’d be the shadows from the candles, and all the pictures hung up. But she still held on to her Santeria beliefs as well. I saw a couple of rituals with her, and I didn’t understand anything that was going on, I was in awe and in *****. But today I have a newfound respect for that other side, the Santeria beliefs, which are nothing like you see in the movies. Is there someone in particular who you want to pass down this medallion to someday? I haven’t decided who, but I feel like the energy is female. So I would give it to a female-identifying family member that I love. Does having the medallion help you speak to her now? It just makes me miss her, but I feel like I want to share the pride, a deeper sense of pride for my roots, to the population of Nuyoricans, Puerto Ricans born and raised here. I lost so much in terms of my culture, and my history and my language. And so, I just hope to encourage people like myself to reach back and to look deeper, and to cherish it. Because there’s such a beautiful, rich history, so many contributions that will enrich us personally, individually, and as a collective if we hold onto it. This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up #Liza #ColónZayass #Medallion #Connects #Puerto #Rican #Heritage This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up This is the hidden content, please Sign In or Sign Up 0 Quote Link to comment https://hopzone.eu/forums/topic/108165-liza-col%C3%B3n-zayas%E2%80%99s-medallion-connects-her-to-her-puerto-rican-heritage/ Share on other sites More sharing options...
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