Activists, politicians mark anniversary of Ecuadorian immigrant's death

Michael K. Lavers READ TIME: 2 MIN.

Dozens of activists, politicians and relatives of hate crimes victims were among those who turned out earlier today at Make the Road New York in Brooklyn to mark the anniversary of Jos� Sucuzha�ay's death.

"I'm here today with much sadness," Diego Sucuzha�ay said in Spanish. "This is the season we lost our beloved brother. He was the leader of our family."

Sucuzha�ay further spoke about the impact his brother's murder has had on his young niece and nephew.

"This year, Jos�'s kids will not receive the merry Christmas their dad always gave them," he said.

Hakim Scott and Keith Phoenix allegedly used anti-gay and anti-Latino slurs as they beat Jos� Sucuzha�ay with a baseball bat and broken bottles on Dec. 7, 2008, as he and his brother Romel walked arm and arm near the corner of Bushwick Avenue and Kossuth Place. The Ecuadorian immigrant died in a Queens hospital two days later. And hundreds of people marched down Myrtle Avenue less than a week after Jos� Sucuzha�ay's death to demand justice.

"Hate in my community is entirely unacceptable," City Councilmember Diana Reyna [D-Bushwick] said.

Congresswoman Nydia Vel�zquez agreed as she spoke of the need for the White House to pass what she described as comprehensive immigration reform.

"This is our moral obligation," she said. "I cannot look in the eye the mother Jos� or [Marcelo] Lucero, who was killed on Long Island [in Nov. 2008]... and say I'm sorry this is not the right time. It is the right time."

This vigil came less than a week after news two bouncers at a Jackson Heights bar attacked a prominent gay activist broke. And it also comes roughly a month after Puerto Rican authorities found Jorge Steven L�pez Mercado's decapitated, dismembered and partially burned body along a remote roadside near Cayey.

Mario Vega suffered serious brain injuries after three men attacked him near his Bushwick apartment in late September. And police maintain Daniel Aleman and Daniel Rodriguez, Jr., nearly beat openly gay College Point to death outside a College Point deli on Oct. 9.

Diego Sucuzha�ay told EDGE he feels immigrant and LGBT advocacy organizations have a responsibility to work together to end hate crimes

"We maybe have different priorities, but we are two groups being targeted by hate right now," he said. "We are suffering the same. We are fighting for human rights. We need stop being treated as second class citizens."


by Michael K. Lavers , National News Editor

Based in Washington, D.C., Michael K. Lavers has appeared in the New York Times, BBC, WNYC, Huffington Post, Village Voice, Advocate and other mainstream and LGBT media outlets. He is an unapologetic political junkie who thoroughly enjoys living inside the Beltway.

Read These Next