Live boldly, KVIE. Channel 6. March 27, 9 PM, and other public television stations.,
by Duane Campbell
There is an important new film out – Dolores, the
story of former DSA Honorary Chair Dolores Huerta and her fight for justice.
(All DSA honorary chairs were eliminated by the 2017 DSA convention.) She is
the woman holding the Huelga sign on the DSA landing page. If
you want to be inspired by her struggle for social justice, go see the
film.
Although at times ignored by the Anglo media, and at other times
castigated as a red and an “outside agitator,” Huerta tirelessly led the fight
for racial and labor justice alongside Cesar Chavez, becoming one of the most
important feminists of the twentieth century. If you don’t know her story, you
should ask yourself why. She continues the fight on many fronts to this
day, at age 87. With unprecedented access to Dolores, the film reveals
important parts of the struggle for dignity and justice for farmworkers, as
well as the raw, personal stakes involved in committing one’s life to social
change.
Dolores, produced by PBS and Independent Lens, serves labor history well
by accurately describing the often overlooked role of Filipinos who initiated a
strike in Delano in 1965, which the nascent NFWA (National Farm Workers
Association) joined to create the great Grape Strike that changed labor history
in the Southwest.
Video clips in the documentary illustrate the hard work required
to build a union -- particularly a union of Mexican, Filipino, and other
migrant workers. Former DSA Honorary Chairs Eliseo Medina and
Gloria Steinem, along with activist Angela Davis, provide historical records,
commentary, insights, testimonies, and evaluations of Huerta’s important life
work.
After negotiating the first union contract in grapes, Huerta moved
to New York in 1968 to build the Grape Boycott, developing great union
support for the effort to build a union for farmworkers. There she encountered
Gloria Steinem and the New York feminist movement of that era. Over the
years, Dolores became a well-known Latina/Chicana feminist as well as a union
leader. Her participation contributed to a broadening of the mostly white
feminist movement of that time to include the struggles of working-class women
of color.
The film shows Dolores being assaulted by police in San Francisco
during an anti-Bush demonstration in 1988, leaving her badly injured with two
cracked ribs and a ruptured spleen. She sued the SF police department for
violence and received a large settlement. The funds from the settlement
became the endowment to establish the Dolores Huerta Foundation, which continues
to this day to teach community organizing and women’s (particularly Latinas’)
empowerment.
Since founding the United Farm Workers (UFW) union, along with
Cesar Chavez and others, through her current work in supporting union
democracy, civic engagement and empowerment of women and youth in
disadvantaged communities, Huerta’s influence has been profound. The creation
of the UFW changed the nature of labor organizing in the
Southwest and contributed significantly to the growth of Latino politics
in the U.S. Union professionals had argued that farm workers could not be
organized into a union -- but they were.
As Michael Harrington once did, Huerta frequently speaks at
universities, union conventions, feminist organizations and forums on issues of
social justice and public policy, and she remains active in the current
immigrants’ rights struggle. I most recently saw her at a series of
demonstrations in Sacramento in the spring of 2017 for the California Sanctuary
Law SB 54, which passed the legislature after significant community
mobilizations. It will become law on Jan.1, 2018. Dolores now works to
develop a new generation of community leaders and advocating for the working
poor, immigrants, women and youth as president of the Dolores Huerta Foundation.
The film records her being recognized for this work, including her receiving
the Presidential Medal of Freedom from Barack Obama in 2012. ( BTW,
Dolores supported Hillary Clinton, not Barack Obama, for president in the 2008
Democratic Party primary).
Dolores Huerta has played a major role in the U.S. civil
rights movement as a labor organizer, community organizer and social activist
for over 50 years. A staunch advocate for women’s rights and reproductive
freedom, Dolores is a founding board member of the Feminist Majority Foundation
and serves on the board of Ms. Magazine. The video shows examples
of how, along with the union struggle, Huerta was famous for her assertive,
militant assaults on sexism within the union, in politics, and in the broader
society. She is a disciplined, effective advocate for change. Young feminists
and socialists have much to learn from this film.
Testimony and interviews in the film show her achieving overtime
pay for farmworkers, toilets in the fields, and worker protections from
pesticides among others. These conditions exist only in California due in
large part to the building of a farmworkers’ union. The video also
highlights Dolores Huerta’s eventual exit from the UFW leadership after the
death of Cesar Chavez.
That Huerta is not better known in the nation provides a
commentary on how little the mainstream media, and much of the Left, know about
the growth of Latino power in these movements.
History and social science textbooks in public schools in
California and most of the nation are racist, class-biased, and ignore LGBT
history. This condition will change in California in 2017 when new textbooks
are adopted.
Under a
unanimous decision by the California Board of Education made on
July 14, 2016 , California students will finally be encouraged to know the
history of Latino civil rights leaders like Cesar Chavez and Dolores Huerta and
Filipino labor leaders like Larry Itliong, as well as an accurate and inclusive
history of LGBT activists as a part of the history of California and the
nation. These topics are currently substantially absent from public school
textbooks.
In the film Curtis Acosta, known for his work to defend ethnic
studies in Tucson, Arizona, argues that an accurate and complete history of
Huerta’s life is a vital part of a complete education and serves to empower
young Chicanas/Latinas to organize and to continue the several struggles for
social justice. In the film, Huerta and others argue that developing a strong
Latina feminist leadership is important for young girls today in order to
continue the fight against misogyny and to develop local community organizers.
Huerta’s role in labor history and feminist history provides a bridge to continue
to teach new generations a more complete view, a more accurate view of our
society.
Both Texas and Arizona specifically ban textbooks that contain
references to Dolores Huerta because she is a member and (was then) an honorary
chair of DSA, thus a socialist. Through my own efforts and that of
several Latino allies we were able to mandate the inclusion of Dolores’
historical contributions, along with those of Cesar Chavez, Larry Itliong,
Philip Vera Cruz and others, in all California public school textbooksbeginning
in 2017.
Most unions in the U.S., have suffered declines in membership and
power in the last twenty years, including the UFW. Early in the film, Huerta
quotes Cesar Chavez as saying, “We will not have a national farmworker union in
our lifetime because of corporate power, grower political power and
racism.” This observation has proven to be accurate.
Currently, with a weakened farm union, migrant farm labor
remains an exploitable resource as a result of strategic racism. This system of
racial oppression is created and enforced because it benefits the over-class of
corporate agriculture and farm owners. It is a complex structure of
institutions and individuals, from police and sheriffs to immigration
authorities and anti-immigrant activists, white nationalist politicians and
elected officials and their support networks.
Do yourself a favor. Contribute to your own education.
Duane Campbell is a professor emeritus of bilingual multicultural
education at California State University Sacramento, a union activist, and past
chair of Sacramento DSA. He serves on the Immigrant Rights Committee of DSA’s
Anti Racism Working Group. The committee can be reached
Dsa.immigration@gmail.com
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