By Juan Montoya
As
a former agricultural migrant, I know what Chavez must have felt as a
kid when he looked at the unending rows in the fields and felt his body
ache after a day of good labor in the soil.
He was born in Sal Si
Puedes, Arizona on March 31, 1927, and worked in the fields as a
youngster. In 1944 he joined the Navy and was honorably discharged two
years later.
From there on, he led his life organizing farmworkers
with the help of Saul Alinsky's Community Services Organization. Over
the course of his lifetime he helped organize the United Farmworkers
Union, led boycotts against grape and lettuce farmers in California, and
eventually led to the adoption of legislation guaranteeing better wages
for farmworkers there.
His activism also helped to protect farmworkers in Texas, Ohio, and all over the Midwest and Southeast.
But
he didn't stop there. Recognizing that pesticides in the fields ended
on consumer dinner tables, he organized across the country to limit the
amount of pesticides and other poisons that the agricultural industry
used on fruits and vegetables.
I met Cesar Chavez when he made a stop in Saginaw, Mich., where I worked as a reporter for the Saginaw News.
His stop was sponsored by the local UAW and he spoke passionately (but
softly) about the dangers of pesticides on everyone, not just
farmworkers.
Dressed in jeans, a flannel warm-up and a down
jacket, he exuded a messianic air not lost on his listeners. You knew he
wasn't going to blow you over with his rhetoric, but at the same time
one felt the force and strength of the man who almost single-handedly
proved those wrong who said farmworkers could not be organized.
Saginaw,
a labor union town, embraced the farmworker leader warmly and the
rank-and-file members, many of them resettled Mexican-Americans who had
transitioned from the field to the factory floor, greeted him like a
brother.
We have a day dedicated to a bunny, one to a turkey, and
others to black rights leaders like Martin Luther King, and presidents
dead long ago. Today we honor someone who not only embraced the same
principles that King and Gandhi did to bring about positive social
change to their respective countries, but that also dedicated his life
to making this nation better for all of us.
Si se pudo, Cesar!
Thursday, March 31, 2016
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11 comments:
Marxists of a feather, flock together.
I met Cesar in 1976 at the state Democrat mid-term convention also known as the nuts and bolts" convention where work on the next terms platform was the major topic. Cesar Chavez was there speaking specifically to the banning of the short handled hoe (El Cortito). He was quite the gentleman in the face of some nasty opposition. Several of us from Brownsville were seated next to a group of Hill County farmers who were vocally opposed to what he had to say. I am no fan of Alinsky and his motives but were it not for the UAW farm workers kives would still be short lived and miserable and the American dinner table would be laden with pesticide
What's Jerry Seinfeld doing in that picture with Cesar Chavez?
Sal Si Puedes is a BARRIO in San Jose, CA.
Cesar Chavez was born in Yuma, Arizona.
As a child, I remember my two aunts, an uncle and my mom talking about "El movimiento". My aunts and my uncle would tell me stories about walking to Sacramento, California in the 1960's, about sitting in a room filled with labor workers and listening to a soft spoken Cesar Chavez It was another time, a different era that today's Mexican-
American youth DO NOT identify with.
That's awesome. Much better than a photo with a celebrity.
I thought it was Seinfeld in the picture !!
Dammed Tea-bagger from 10:58 yesterday doesn't know the difference between a Marxist and a Socialist. Pendejo!
I thought it was Seinfeld in the picture !!
Mejor mamasela, dude.
It clearly says it's Montoya , read much?
El movimiento is a shadow of itself these days. Cesar was the REAL DEAL!
While La UniĆ³n Del Pueblo Entero in San Juan puts Mr. Chavez's picture out front to draw attention, they falsely claim to have thousands of members and do all of this community work. Call them up and ask them to get you some farmerworkers wiling to work for ANY amount of money! LUPE has become whores to the Catholic Church, big foundation money and government funding when they can get it! They are only helping themselves!
Behind the curtain the puppeteers are spending the cash! Puro pedo, LUPE! Cesar is rolling over in his grave.
I remember mom and dad not buying grapes for a long time during the late sixties early seventies. As a little boy didnt understand why. Just loved grapes.
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