The Mercury News Weekend

A civil rights icon

Labor leader worked tirelessly to ‘advance justice and equality for all’

- By Tatiana Sanchez tsanchez@bayareanew­sgroup.com

With the rise of hate crimes against minority groups nationwide, a polarizing White House administra­tion and a housing crisis that’s deepened the divide between rich and poor — Cesar Chavez Day, celebrated on Friday, resonates even more, activists say.

Many of these Chavez-era activists remain determined to carry on the labor leader’s mission by doing what they say he would’ve done to confront social injustice in these modern times: mobilize tirelessly and give a voice to

those marginaliz­ed.

“His humanity and his work to advance justice and equality for all would have required him to speak out,” said former Santa Clara County Supervisor Blanca Alvarado. “He’d be ready to organize throughout California and throughout the country.”

The civil rights icon would have turned 90 on Friday — his birthday is officially recognized nationwide on March 31.

Alvarado, now 85, organized alongside Chavez during the height of the farmworker movement, visiting local supermarke­ts during the infamous Delano grape strike to call on customers to boycott grapes.

“He would have called on labor unions (to organize), he would’ve called on the church community, he would’ve called on grassroots communitie­s. He would’ve counted on all of us,” she added.

The Rev. Jon Pedigo, director for projects for peace and justice for the Diocese of San Jose, said Chavez would have been troubled by the many issues affecting immigrant communitie­s, in particular, the separation of families as a result of deportatio­n.

“Without a doubt, Cesar would’ve addressed that issue,” he said. “He was a deeply spiritual man. But he wouldn’t see it as a separate issue from the at- tack against Muslims, the denigratio­n of LGBTQIA folks ... all these things go together.

“His reaction would be to mobilize people together, for unity,” Pedigo added.

Born in Yuma, Arizona, in 1927, Chavez spent his childhood as a migrant farmworker, traveling often with his family to pick a variety of crops throughout California.

Chavez spent the early years of his activism in San Jose, in a neighborho­od dubbed, “Sal Si Puedes” or “get out if you can.” A modest wooden meeting house on San Antonio Street — known today as McDonnell Hall — was where Chavez first learned to organize with members of the Latino civil rights group, Community Service Organizati­on in the 1950s and 1960s. Chavez became a prominent figure in San Jose’s Mexican-American community, ramping up voter registrati­on drives and fighting for economic and racial equality.

In January, the National Park Service named McDonnell Hall a federal landmark.

Chavez, hailed as a creative genius whose movement challenged the social and political structure of its time, went on to create the first farmworker labor union in the country, known today as the United Farm Workers. The man who famously coined the term, “Si Se Puede,” remains an important part of Latino-American history today, with many farmworker­s and immigratio­n activists rallying in his name, often using the same catch phrase. Miriam Pawel, author of the 2014 Chavez biography “The Crusades of Ce- sar Chavez” said there are many lessons to take away from his unique legacy.

“Fundamenta­lly, his greatest accomplish­ment was empowering people who thought they had no power,” she said. “To me, that’s very much his legacy, this idea that people can organize.”

Chavez’s activism also demonstrat­ed the importance of small victories, according to Pawel.

“I think you see that today whenever someone surrounds a car and stops ICE from taking someone away,” she said. “It’s basic, fundamenta­l organizing — people join together and organize for a common purpose that they can in fact change and control what happens.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Head of the United Farm Workers Union Cesar Chavez speaks in 1975 at the headquarte­rs for the state Agricultur­e Labor Relations Board to call for the resignatio­n ofWalter Kintz, legal counsel for the board, in Sacramento. Chavez was born near Yuma,...
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Head of the United Farm Workers Union Cesar Chavez speaks in 1975 at the headquarte­rs for the state Agricultur­e Labor Relations Board to call for the resignatio­n ofWalter Kintz, legal counsel for the board, in Sacramento. Chavez was born near Yuma,...
 ?? LIPO CHING/STAFF FILE ?? Former San Jose Vice Mayor and member of the Board of Supervisor­s Blanca Alvarado speaks at the “Breaking Walls and Building Bridges” rally in 2016 addressing the antiimmigr­ant rhetoric from the Trump campaign at Plaza de Cesar Chavez in San Jose.
LIPO CHING/STAFF FILE Former San Jose Vice Mayor and member of the Board of Supervisor­s Blanca Alvarado speaks at the “Breaking Walls and Building Bridges” rally in 2016 addressing the antiimmigr­ant rhetoric from the Trump campaign at Plaza de Cesar Chavez in San Jose.
 ?? MONTEREY COUNTY HERALD ?? UFWpreside­nt Cesar Chavez attends a rally for farmworker­s in the Salinas Valley.
MONTEREY COUNTY HERALD UFWpreside­nt Cesar Chavez attends a rally for farmworker­s in the Salinas Valley.

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