Cesar Chávez: Simple Man, People’s HeroBy Jessica Nevarez, Laura Jasso, Tania Ugarte and Oscar Estrada
He had attended 30 schools by the time he was 15, dropping out to help support his family. Self-educated, he read the Bible and Mahatma Gandhi's biography. He led thousands of workers to fight non-violently against injustice in America's fields. He met presidents and the pope in his blue jeans. A quiet, unassuming, almost shy man,
Cesar Chávez has become known as the people's hero, a man
who fought for the rights of the migrant farm worker all his
life, who gave dignity and respect to workers and jobs that
produce the bountiful fruits and vegetables that supply American
tables.
Chávez was named for his grandfather, Cesario, known
affectionately as "Papa Chayo," who crossed the Mexican border
into the U.S. in the 1880s to escape virtual slavery by Mexican
ranchers. In El Paso, the elder Chávez found work on the
railroad and in the fields but settled his family further west
in Yuma, Arizona. His son Librado worked on the family farm with
the rest of the family until he married Juana Estrada in 1924
when he was 38.
Cesario Estrada Chávez, the couple's first son and second of
six children, was born Easter Sunday, March 31, 1927, shortly
before the onset of one of the hardest times for most Americans
--
the Great Depression. Unable to pay taxes on his farm,
Librado Chávez lost it and moved his family back to his father's
farm. After this farm, too, was lost, the Chávezes became part
of hundreds of thousands of other Americans who had lost their
land to the Depression and drought and were condemned to the
life of the migrant worker. The Chávezes, also like many
families, traveled to California where they heard work was
available.
John Gregory Dunne's
book on Cesar Chávez recalls the young boy's memories of
his childhood and youth. Cesar walked barefoot to school in the
mud, picked wild mustard greens in the canals to ward off
starvation, collected tinfoil from cigarette packages to sell to
a junk dealer for money toward a pair of shoes or a shirt. His
parents rose before dawn during the Depression to pick peas all
day in the fields and then did not earn the 70 cents their
transportation had cost. The family often had to live in grim
labor camps with one rest room for the entire camp and no water,
plumbing or electricity.
The Chávez family sometimes lived under bridges which
sheltered them from cold and rain and picked wine grapes seven
days a week only to have contractors disappear with their pay.
As hard as life was, Chávez's mother taught her family a strong
religious faith and guided them with two principles: the duty to
help the poor and to turn the other cheek when attacked.
By 1939, a union began organizing workers in the dried fruit
industry, and Cesar Chávez's father and uncle became members,
but the union died after its first strike failed. His life as a
migrant worker and these early union activities were to motivate
the young Cesar Chávez to become an active union leader and
represent other field workers. After serving in the navy during
World War II, Chávez returned to migrant farm work, where he met
his future wife, Helena Fabela.
By the early 1950s, Cesar Chávez had been hired by the
Community Service Organization (CSO), headed by Fred Ross, which
helped the poor by educating them to solve their own social and
economic problems. The CSO helped register migrants to vote and
held meetings to motivate farm workers to learn English. He
encouraged these workers to vote in order to influence politics.
Chávez worked for eight years with the CSO and served as
director but resigned to focus on the problems of farm workers,
whose life had not improved.
In 1962, Chávez, his brother Richard and their cousin Manuel
Chávez, along with CSO workers
Dolores Huerta, Gil Padilla and Fred Ross, Cesar's adviser
and friend, organized a convention of farm workers and
supporters in Fresno, California, forming a new union. the
National Farm Workers Association (NFWA). The union unveiled its
red, black and white flag featuring the eagle as a sign of unity
between Mexico and the U.S. The leaders were committed to
building a union that could take away the absolute power from
the growers.
By 1964, the union had 1,000 members. It began its first
strike against California's grape growers in 1965, a strike that
would last five years and begin a national boycott of table
grapes. On Easter Sunday in 1966, Chávez led a 250-mile march
from Delano to Sacramento, greeting 10,000 supporters along the
way. Although final settlement with grape growers would not come
for several years, the union had settled with Schenley
Industries, providing the first contract for farm workers in
American history. "Viva La Causa!" Chávez cried in celebration.
"Long Live the Cause! " This short but effective phrase would
come to symbolize the efforts of the farm workers union.
The NFWA merged with the Agricultural Workers Organizing
Committee and became the United Farm Workers Organizing
Committee. In 1968, Chávez began his first fast to emphasize
non- violence in the continuing strike against grape growers not
only for fair wages but also because of the effect pesticides
were having on the workers exposed to them. Skin cancer, birth
defects, sterilization, hormonal changes and neurological damage
had been traced to these substances.
Chávez ended his 25-day fast at a Catholic mass amid 4,000
people who had gathered at his side, including Robert F. Kennedy
who gave him a piece of bread; he had lost 40 pounds during this
time. On July 29, 1970, the strike officially ended, and almost
every grower in the Coachella Valley signed a contract within
the next three months.
In 1972, the union received its permanent charter from the
AFL-CIO, dropping "Organizing Committee" from its name to become
the
United Farm Workers of America
(UFW). Chávez continued to fight through the 1970s and 1980s
for the rights of farm workers. There were more strikes, more
marches, more fasts. In 1970, Chávez went to jail for refusing
to call off a lettuce boycott when 10,000 workers staged the
biggest strike by farm workers in history. Chávez was quoted as
saying, "My spirit was never in jail. They can jail us, but they
can never jail la causa."
Chávez and his union won major victories for farm workers,
including establishing schools in migrant camps. He wanted every
child to get an education because he knew this was the key for
people to overcome life's obstacles. But Chávez realized that
injustices would always exist for migrant workers. In 1991, he
discovered workers in citrus groves being paid $2.50 per hour,
sleeping under trees and paying $20 per month for the privilege,
drinking impure water and bathing in ditch water.
Living a simple life, Chávez never stopped supporting the
workers from whom he descended. He died in his sleep on April
23, 1993, having recently ended a seven-day fast at the home of
a union supporter.
Two years later, the great Lettuce War between his union and
Ted Taylor, president of Bruce Church Inc., a major lettuce
producer, finally
came to an end. The 17-year conflict involved numerous
boycotts and lawsuits and gained a living wage for workers, who
should average $7.23 an hour by the year 2000, and provided
medical benefits and a pension plan for long-time workers.
Membership in the UFW increased from 20,000 to 30,000 members
because of the agreement. Much of the credit for the settlement
of this conflict goes to Chávez's son-in-law,
Arturo Rodriguez, and Steve Taylor, Ted Taylor's son who
continued negotiations after their elders died. The end of this
bitter dispute is a fitting memorial to Chávez.
Chávez has influenced many in El Paso, especially Carlos
Marentes, whose work helped established the first permanent
shelter for migrant farm workers (See
related story).
Reflecting Chávez's concern for education, the Ysleta
Independent School District named their alternative school for
him. The
Cesar Chávez
Academy
was designed to give students expelled from traditional schools
in the district a second chance at completing their education. A
month before his death, Cesar Chávez addressed students of the
Y.I.S.D., who greeted him with enthusiasm and affection. Darleen
Diaz, a counselor at the Academy, says, "He was an inspiration,
and after his death, the students petitioned [the district] to
name the school after him. Although Chávez never got to visit
the school named after him, several relatives, including one
son, have.
The academy was named after Chávez on April 5, 1994, having
been founded under adverse conditions including strong
objections from various factions of the community, according to
Li1ia B. Limon, principal. Diaz says, "It serves as the last
hope for students who have faced severe problems in school, and,
like the life of Chávez, plants its seeds today with faith that
they will bring rich harvest in the future.
For many Americans, Cesar Chávez's life and work brought hope
that all people could share in America's dream of freedom,
choice and prosperity. He championed the underdog, preaching
hope, education and hard work. He never gave up. In her book
Hispanics of Achievement, Consuelo Rodriguez quotes Chávez's
son Fernando as saying, "My father chose to live a life of
voluntary poverty, and yet I believe his legacy will be rich, a
legacy of non violence, a legacy in the spirit of
Gandhi,
Martin Luther King, and
Bobby Kennedy." Few who know about Cesar Chávez would
disagree.
Cesar Chávez has become known as the people's hero, a man
who fought for the rights of the migrant farm worker all his
life, who gave dignity and respect to workers and jobs that
produce the bountiful fruits and vegetables that supply American
tables.
|













![[Photo of Carlos Marentes shaking hands with Cesar Chávez]](15_chavez.jpg)