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By MELANIE DABOVICH, Associated Press Writer Melanie Dabovich, Associated Press Writer – 1 hr 39 mins ago

TAOS, N.M. – Larry Whitten marched into this northern New Mexico town in late July on a mission: resurrect a failing hotel.

The tough-talking former Marine immediately laid down some new rules. Among them, he forbade the Hispanic workers at the run-down, Southwestern adobe-style hotel from speaking Spanish in his presence (he thought they'd be talking about him), and ordered some to Anglicize their names.

No more Martin (Mahr-TEEN). It was plain-old Martin. No more Marcos. Now it would be Mark.

Whitten's management style had worked for him as he's turned around other distressed hotels he bought in recent years across the country.

The 63-year-old Texan, however, wasn't prepared for what followed.

His rules and his firing of several Hispanic employees angered his employees and many in this liberal enclave of 5,000 residents at the base of the Sangre de Cristo mountains, where the most alternative of lifestyles can find a home and where Spanish language, culture and traditions have a long and revered history.

"I came into this landmine of Anglos versus Spanish versus Mexicans versus Indians versus everybody up here. I'm just doing what I've always done," he says.

Former workers, their relatives and some town residents picketed across the street from the hotel.

"I do feel he's a racist, but he's a racist out of ignorance. He doesn't know that what he's doing is wrong," says protester Juanito Burns Jr., who identified himself as prime minister of an activist group called Los Brown Berets de Nuevo Mexico.

The Virginia-born Whitten had spent 40 years in the hotel business, turning around more than 20 hotels in Texas, Oklahoma, Florida and South Carolina, before moving with his wife to Taos from Abilene, Texas. He had visited Taos before, and liked its beauty. When Whitten saw that the Paragon Inn was up for sale, he jumped at it.

The hotel sits along narrow, two-lane Paseo del Pueblo, where souped-up lowriders radiate a just-waxed gleam in the soft sunshine as they cruise past centuries-old adobe buildings. One recent afternoon, a woman slowly rode her fat-tire bicycle along a cracked sidewalk, oversized purple butterfly wings on her back and a breeze blowing her long, blonde dreadlocks.

The community includes Taos Pueblo, an American Indian dwelling inhabited for over 1,000 years, and an adobe Catholic church made famous in a Georgia O'Keeffe painting.

After he arrived, Whitten met with the employees. He says he immediately noticed that they were hostile to his management style and worried they might start talking about him in Spanish.

"Because of that, I asked the people in my presence to speak only English because I do not understand Spanish," Whitten says. "I've been working 24 years in Texas and we have a lot of Spanish people there. I've never had to ask anyone to speak only English in front of me because I've never had a reason to."

Some employees were fired, Whitten says, because they were hostile and insubordinate. He says they called him "a white (N-word)."

Fired hotel manager Kathy Archuleta says the workers initially tried to adjust to his style. "We had already gone through four or five owners before him, so we knew what to expect," Archuleta says. "I told (the workers) we needed to give him a chance."

Then Whitten told some employees he was changing their Spanish first names. Whitten says it's a routine practice at his hotels to change first names of employees who work the front desk phones or deal directly with guests if their names are difficult to understand or pronounce.

"It has nothing to do with racism. I'm not doing it for any reason other than for the satisfaction of my guests, because people calling from all over America don't know the Spanish accents or the Spanish culture or Spanish anything," Whitten says.

Martin Gutierrez, another fired employee, says he felt disrespected when he was told to use the unaccented Martin as his name. He says he told Whitten that Spanish was spoken in New Mexico before English. "He told me he didn't care what I thought because this was his business," Gutierrez says.

"I don't have to change my name and language or heritage," he says. "I'm professional the way I am."

After the firings, the New Mexico chapter of the League of United Latin American Citizens, a national civil rights group, sent Whitten a letter, raising concerns about treatment of Hispanic workers. Whitten says he sent them a letter and posted messages on the hotel marquee, alleging that the group referred to him with a racial slur. LULAC denied the charge.

The messages and comments he made in interviews with local media, including referring to townsfolk as "mountain people" and "potheads who escaped society," further enflamed tensions.

Taos Mayor Darren Cordova says Whitten wasn't doing anything illegal. But he says Whitten failed to better familiarize himself with the town and its culture before deciding to buy the hotel for $2 million. "Taos is so unique that you would not do anything in Taos that you would do elsewhere," he says.

Whitten grew subdued as a two-hour interview with The Associated Press progressed. He said he was sorry for the misunderstanding and insisted he has never been against any culture.

"What kind of fool or idiot or poor businessman would I be to orchestrate this whole crazy thing that's costed me a lot of time, money and aggravation?" Whitten said.

Whitten should have dealt with the situation differently, especially in a majority Hispanic town, said 71-year-old Taos artist Ken O'Neil, while sipping his afternoon coffee on the town's historic plaza.

"To make demands like he did just seems over the top," he says. "Nobody won here. It's not always about winning. Sometimes, it's about what you learn."

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/us_trouble_in_taos

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Perfect example of the clash of cultures.

The 71 year old artist Ken O'Neil said it best in the article when he said "Nobody won here. It's not always about winning. Sometimes, it's about what you learn."

Let's be fair. I do not believe that Mr. Whitten is racist or hateful, just naive and ignorant. The owner has made an investment of 2 million dollars in this hotel. It is his, he wants it to suceed. His success will mean that the local people can have jobs. Jobs are good! What I think he didn't understand is the fact that the city has a long history of Hispanic influence and culture. He didn't see that the culture was an asset to his business. In trying to Americanize a name like Marcos into "Mark" he was imposing his idea of what it means to be "American". As long as Marcos and Martin were acting professional in their jobs, it wasn't necessary to Americanize their names. No one is telling Larry Whitten "Look, this is a Hispanic majority town. The name Larry Whitten is not Hispanic enough. You need to go by the name Luis Wittenez now." He would be offended if someone asked him to do that. Your name reflects not only who you are but your family past and culture.

We as a nation are a melting pot but that doesn't mean we abandon our history. There used to be a time when we were pressured to change our names to "fit in" in Anglo influenced society.
For Example: The famous singer Ritchie Valens, singer of "La Bamba" was really Ritchie Valenzuela. His agent told him to change his last name to sell more records. But we don't live in the 1950's anymore, it's a new day, and our names are just a American as Mr. Whittens. We can't all be Johnsons and Smiths, and that's OK!

Hopefully, he will see that in Taos, the 3 centuries of Hispanic culture that proceeded his business venture is an asset, not something to try to erase and cover up. Maybe he will learn this soon, or else his time and money will be lost due to ignorance....

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Strange though it may seem, the process of evolving as human beings requires that we seek out points of contrast in our lives. This occurs mostly on a subconscious level, although those who are more advanced in their journey, may do so consciously. What does this mean? Perhaps I can illustrate this with a series of questions...

How would we know what is dark, if we have never been exposed to anything but light? How would we know what is bad, if all we have ever known is good? How would we know to treat another with dignity and respect, unless we have experienced what it is to be treated without dignity and respect?

While we can spend time judging and labeling Mr. Whitten's actions as wrong, bad, racist, or ignorant, I think the better exercise is to look within ourselves to identify those areas where we must become more tolerant, understanding, and more loving. The more that we evolve into loving and understanding beings, the less that we will have to experience the kinds of actions such as that displayed by Mr. Whitten. The more of us that evolve into loving and understanding beings, the less likely that we will need the Mr. Whitten's of the world to surface to teach us a lesson.

We created Mr. Whitten. He lives within each of us. Let's forgive Mr. Whitten.

Stevie G.
Dallas, Texas

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