How Did Cesar Chavez Change the Labor Movement? - podcast episode cover

How Did Cesar Chavez Change the Labor Movement?

Jun 14, 20249 min
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Welcome to Brainstuff, a production of iHeartRadio, Hey brain Stuff, Louren Bogelbaum. Here, the fight for human rights is never done alone. It's borne by a multitude of visionary leaders, carried on by armies of believers in a better future, and waged in a variety of ways. One such leader was Caesar Estrata Chavez, whose humility and resolute certaintude in La Casa made him a hero to millions. For the article this episode is based on How Stuff Work. Spoke

with Mark Grossman. Chavez is speechwriter and a spokeperson for the Caesar Chavez Foundation. He said, why were they drawn to him? Because he had great faith in them. He had faith they could do great things. Chavez is known as an American union builder and a relentless advocate for the rights of abused farm workers during the furious nineteen sixties.

He was also a devout Catholic who believed in the goodness of his fellow humans and the power of nonviolent resistance, and to this day, Caesar Chaves remains a darling of America's counterculture, a soft spoken, sly smiling, immovable object standing in the path of the country's rich and powerful the child of Mexican American parents, Chavez was born in nineteen twenty seven in Yuma, Arizona, into a migrant farm family

in the southwestern United States. He and many others commonly worked ten to twelve hour days, often bent over a short handled hoe, for wages that would barely keep them alive. He estimated that he attended sixty five different schools as a kid. He never got past the eighth grade. Chavez enlisted in the US Navy shortly before the end of World War Two, but soon returned to California, where he started a family of his own with his high school

sweetheart Helen. By the early nineteen fifties, he was introduced to organizers in the Community Services Organization, a Mexican American civil rights organization. By the early nineteen fifties, he was introduced to organizers in the Community Services Organisms, which dealt with Mexican American civil rights, and by the late fifties

he had become its national president. By the early sixties, Chavas was already in full dispute with the moneyed farm owners, who saw him and his swelling group of followers as a threat to their financial well being. He traveled the fields of California, signing up workers to join his fledgling National farm Workers Association, later to become the United farm Workers. Though Chavez lacked a full formal education, he was a voracious reader. He followed Mahama Gandhi and Martin Uther King

Junior and took from them lessons of non violence. He also read the works of union organizers like Eugene V. Debs. His belief in the workers and their worth pushed him, and their belief in him sustained his work. A grossman, said, many people, for one hundred years before Caesar Chavas tried and failed to organize farm workers, people who had a lot more resources and money and had much better education, tried and failed, and he succeeded. I think because he

was one of them. It was not an academic pursuit for him. Chavez endured government investigations and death threats from the rich and powerful. He often traveled with two fierce looking German shepherds named Boycott and Weelga meaning Strike, who were both friends to Javas and deterrence to those who might wish him harm. He also credited those dogs with his decision to become vegetarian, and he became an animal

rights activist later in his life. As he had done in the fields as a young man, Chavez put in long, hard hours organizing workers, traveling from town to town, pushing for better wages, improved working conditions, and access to insurance. He employed boycotts and strikes to try to better the lives of those he represented. In nineteen sixty five, Chavez and the National farm Workers Association joined forces of the group of Filipino grape workers in the Delano, California grape strike.

It lasted five years and included a boycott of table grapes that spread throughout the nation. A Chavas insisted, with an acute awareness of the violence that royaled the country that decade with other protests and civil rights movements, that the protest remained nonviolent, but as it wore on, many workers grew impatient. To focus strikers on staying strong without using violence, and to show those throughout the country their resolve,

the Javas went on a twenty five day fast. Thousands streamed into the tiny windowless room near Delano to see him. During his fast, he lost thirty five pounds that's about fifteen kilos during those twenty five days. In a statement, Javes said, to be a man is to suffer for others. God help us to be men. It took more time, but in nineteen seventy grape growers signed their first union contracts with the farm owners, providing workers better pay and benefits.

The Delano Fast was not the only one that Javes would undertake over his long career. He went for thirty six days out food in nineteen eighty eight to protest the threat that pesticides post of farm workers and their children. He continued to work and organize for the United farm Workers throughout his life. He was in Arizona in nineteen ninety three helping to defend a union in a lawsuit. When he died peacefully at the home of a longtime friend, and he was sixty six years old, Some forty five

thousand people attended his funeral in Deleno, California. He's now buried in Keene, California, where he lived and labored for the last quarter century of his life, and where the Caesar E. Chavas National Monument is now located. Throughout his life, Chaves fought for farm workers, but he stepped outside union activism too. He came out strongly against the Vietnam War in the nineteen sixties, and in the seventies was active

in the struggle for gay rights. In nineteen eighty four, in a carefully crafted speech in front of the Commonwealth Club in San Francisco, his first time speaking from a script, Java's laid out his vision. That's an excerpt. Once social change begins, it cannot be reversed. You cannot uneducate the person who has learned to read. You cannot humiliate the person who feels pride. You cannot oppress the people who are not afraid anymore. Our opponents must understand that it's

not just a union. We have built unions like other institutions can come and go, but we are more than an institution. For nearly twenty years, our union has been on the cutting edge of a people's cause, and you cannot do away with an entire people. You cannot stamp out a people's cause. Regardless of what the future holds for farm workers, our accomplishments cannot be undone a la cassa.

Our cause doesn't have to be experienced twice Today, the University of California, Berkeley has a student center named after Chavez. High schools, elementary schools, streets and parks bear his name, so does a Navy ship. In two thousand and three, the US Postal Service issued a stamp with his likeness. In twenty twelve, President Barack Obama christian the National Monument where Chavez is now buried even more in his honor. The people he inspired continued to carry on his work.

A Grossman cited a couple of examples off the top of his head. A young teachers ad in California who's now a school district superintendent. A young paralegal who's now a superior court judge in the state. A Grossman said, he saw the greater good of helping people fulfill their dreams, and some of them were dreams that many of them didn't even know they had. He really instilled hope and

confidence in people who never had them before. In August of nineteen ninety four, a little more than a year after his death, Chavez was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by President Bill Clinton in a ceremony at the White House. Helen, an activist herself, received it in his place.

Clinton said during the ceremony, the farm workers who labored in the fields and yearned for respect and self sufficiency pinned their hopes on this remarkable man, who, with faith and discipline, with soft spoken humility and amazing inner strength, led a very courageous life, and in so doing brought dignity to the lives of so many others, and provided us for inspiration for the rest of our nation's history.

Today's episode is based on the article how Caesar Chavez united thousands of farm workers and became a civil rights icon on how stuffworks dot Com, written by John Donovan. Brain Stuff is production of by Heart Radio in partnership with how Stuffworks dot Com and is produced by Tyler Klang. Four more podcasts my heart Radio, visit the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.

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