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March 30, 2005

“Once social change begins, it cannot be reversed.”

cesar_chavez.jpg

On March 31, Texas will celebrate the birth of cultural icon, labor, civil and human rights leader Cesar Estrada Chavez. To commemorate Chavez, I have borrowed some lines from the United Farm Workers’ biography of the late leader.

The story of Cesar Estrada Chavez begins near Yuma, Arizona. Cesar was born on March 31, 1927. He was named after his grandfather, Cesario. Regrettably, the story of Cesar Estrada Chavez also ends near Yuma, Arizona. He passed away on April 23, 1993, in San Luis, a small village near Yuma, Arizona.

He learned about justice or rather injustice early in his life. Cesar grew up in Arizona; the small adobe home, where Cesar was born was swindled from them by dishonest Anglos. Cesar's father agreed to clear eighty acres of land and in exchange he would receive the deed to forty acres of land that adjoined the home. The agreement was broken and the land sold to a man named Justus Jackson. Cesar's dad went to a lawyer who advised him to borrow money and buy the land. Later when Cesar's father could not pay the interest on the loan the lawyer bought back the land and sold it to the original owner. Cesar learned a lesson about injustice that he would never forget. Later, he would say, “The love for justice that is in us is not only the best part of our being but it is also the most true to our nature.”

In 1962 Cesar founded the National Farm Workers Association, later to become the United Farm Workers--the UFW. He was joined by Dolores Huerta and the union was born. By 1970 the UFW got grape growers to accept union contracts and had effectively organized most of that industry, at one point in time claiming 50,000 dues paying members. The reason was Cesar Chavez's tireless leadership and nonviolent tactics that included the Delano grape strike, his fasts that focused national attention on farm workers problems, and the 340-mile march from Delano to Sacramento in 1966. The marchers wanted the state government to pass laws which would permit farm workers to organize into a union and allow collective bargaining agreements. Cesar made people aware of the struggles of farm workers for better pay and safer working conditions. He succeeded through nonviolent tactics (boycotts, pickets, and strikes). Cesar Chavez and the union sought recognition of the importance and dignity of all farm workers.

Cesar was willing to sacrifice his own life so that the union would continue and that violence was not used. Cesar fasted many times. In 1968 Cesar went on a water only, 25 day fast. He repeated the fast in 1972 for 24 days, and again in 1988, this time for 36 days. What motivated him to do this? He said, Farm workers everywhere are angry and worried that we cannot win without violence. We have proved it before through persistence, hard work, faith and willingness to sacrifice. We can win and keep our own selfrespect and build a great union that will secure the spirit of all people if we do it through a rededication and recommitment to the struggle for justice through nonviolence.

Cesar Chavez completed his 36-day Fast for Life on August 21, 1988. The Reverend Jesse Jackson took up where Cesar left off, fasting on water for three days before passing on the fast to celebrities and leaders. The fast was passed to Martin Sheen, actor; the Reverend J. Lowery, President SCLC; Edward Olmos, actor; Emilio Estevez, actor; Kerry Kennedy, daughter of Robert Kennedy, Peter Chacon, legislator, Julie Carmen, actress; Danny Glover, actor; Carly Simon, singer; and Whoopi Goldberg, actress.

Cesar Estrada Chavez died peacefully in his sleep on April 23, 1993 near Yuma, Arizona, a short distance from the small family farm in the Gila River Valley where he was born more than 66 years before. The founder and president of the United Farm Workers of America, AFLCIO was in Yuma helping UFW attorneys defend the union against a lawsuit brought by Bruce Church Inc., a giant Salinas, Calif.based lettuce and vegetable producer. Church demanded that the farm workers pay millions of dollars in damages resulting from a UFW boycott of its lettuce during the 1980's. Rather than bring the legal action in a state where the boycott actually took place, such as California or New York, Church "shopped around" for a friendly court in conservative, agribusiness dominated Arizona where there had been no boycott activity.

On April 29, 1993, Cesar Estrada Chavez was honored in death by those he led in life. More than 50,000 mourners came to honor the charismatic labor leader at the site of his first public fast in 1968 and his last in 1988, the United Farm Workers Delano Field Office at "Forty Acres." It was the largest funeral of any labor leader in the history of the U.S. They came in caravans from Florida to California to pay respect to a man whose strength was in his simplicity.

Farm workers, family members, friends and union staff took turns standing vigil over the plain pine coffin which held the body of Cesar Chavez. Among the honor guard were many celebrities who had supported Chavez throughout his years of struggle to better the lot of farmworkers throughout America.

Many of the mourners had marched side by side with Chavez during his tumultuous years in the vineyards and farms of America. For the last time, they came to march by the side of the man who had taught them to stand up for their rights, through nonviolent protest and collective bargaining.

Cardinal Roger M. Mahoney, who celebrated the funeral mass, called Chavez "a special prophet for the worlds' farm workers." Pall bearers, including crews of these workers, Chavez children and grandchildren, then carried their fallen leader, resting at last, from the Memorial Park to Forty Acres.

The death of Chavez marked an era of dramatic changes in American agriculture. His contributions would be eroded, and others would have to shoulder the burden of his work. But, Cesar Chavez, who insisted that those who labor in the earth were entitled to share fairly in the rewards of their toil, would never be forgotten.

As Luis Valdez said, "Cesar, we have come to plant your heart like a seed . . . the farm workers shall harvest in the seed of your memory."

VIVA LA CAUSA!

VIVA LA UNION!

VIVA LA HUELGA!

y VIVA CESAR CHAVEZ!


Posted by Stace Medellin at March 30, 2005 12:01 AM | Permalink

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Comments

This is a lovely, informative piece about Cesar Chavez, Stace. We don't know enough about people like him who literally gave their lives for movements we claim to support. Thank you.

Posted by: Yellow Dawg at March 30, 2005 01:24 AM

Thank you Stace for this posting. It brought back memories for me of the Table Grape Boycott in California.

Posted by: Leif Hatlen at March 31, 2005 10:43 AM

Like Leif, I well recall the Table Grape Boycott. In fact it was the rallying call during the polling of the States at the 1972 Democratic Convention.


During the 70's and early 80's, I worked in Ohio for ABLE, Inc (Advocates for Basic Legal Equality) and accompanied the young attorneys out to the fields to give legal aid to the migrants who had come up to NW Ohio to work the fields that supplied Campbells, Heinz and Vlasic.


There were some horrific conditions and we helped get the migrants access to medical care, food stamps and just plain humane sanitary living conditions.


I'll never forget the time we got back to the office, after being run off one of the farms by a group of especially hostile farmers. As I walked around our van which was covered with all sorts of rallying messages in Spanish, I noticed that the law student who was driving had lost the gas cap and stuffed a rag in the opening. The rag was sticking out a good foot. Basically, one tossed match and we'd have exploded. The young law student is now 30 years older, hopefully a bit wiser and working at an Indian reservation in Arizona.


We worked a lot with FLOC (Farm Labor Organizing Committee) and it's leader Baldemar Valasquez. In fact, their office was across the street from ours. Now, thinking of Chavez and Baldy, I'm sitting here seeing all the faces of the other people from our FLOC office and trying to think of the names.

Posted by: Mary Porter at March 31, 2005 11:17 PM

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