The Mercury News Weekend

Bust of César Chávez thrills great-niece

Garcia, who lives in uncle’s former home in San Jose, says, ‘It kind of gives you hope’

- Ay Aldo Toledo Atoledo@bAyAreAnew­sgroup.com

SAN JOSE >> As President Joe Biden settled into the Oval Office on Wednesday, Rachel Garcia was happy to see a bust of civil rights leader and farm workers’ union organizer César Chávez in a prominent spot right behind the Resolute Desk.

For many, Chávez represents the struggles of farm workers across California and the country who organized for unions and better working conditions at a time when they faced racial prejudice and systematic silencing.

But for Garcia, who is Chávez’s great-niece, he is just “tío.”

Standing in the courtyard of her childhood home — the same house on the East Side of San Jose that the Chicano leader lived in from 1951 to 1953 while he labored at nearby apricot orchards — Garcia said she was honored to see that Biden chose her great-uncle to honor in the Oval.

“It kind of gives you hope,” she said, flanked by an apricot tree to her left. “It makes me think that he’ll help the people. That’s what my tio was about. If that’s who he looks up to then I feel very honored and hopeful.”

Chávez is among several American leaders Biden has chosen to display in the Oval Office, including a bust of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., a massive portrait of Franklin Roosevelt, a painting of Benjamin Franklin and others. The bust of Chávez is surrounded by photos of the president’s fam

ily.

Garcia said she’d like to meet the president and ask him why he chose to honor Chávez. Though she didn’t get a chance to know him very well, as she was only a child at the time her greatuncle was making history. She said she remembers his positive energy and noted that the legacy he left with his family has left a lasting imprint in her life.

She said she has focused on living the life of nonviolenc­e that Chávez advocated for. In his struggle to unionize Mexican immigrants working in the fertile valleys of California, Chávez — like other civil rights leaders of the time — advocated for peaceful demonstrat­ions and holding power to account via nonbellige­rent means.

“It wasn’t just the nonviolenc­e thing,” Garcia said. “He was brave enough to be a voice to the voiceless.”

On his first day in office, Biden took several far-reaching steps to undo his predecesso­r’s landmark executive orders restrictin­g immigratio­n to the U.S. The president signed executive orders halting constructi­on of the border wall with Mexico, lifted a travel ban on people from several Muslim-majority countries and reversed plans to exclude people here illegally from the 2020 census.

Biden also has promised to work to preserve the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals act, a program started in 2012 shielding hundreds of thousands of people who came to the United States as kids from being deported.

Garcia said she hopes that by keeping Chávez at the top of his mind, in the same way he keeps Chávez’s bust in his office, Biden will continue to advocate for immigrants and farm workers.

Recalling the grueling conditions farm workers had to endure in California last year — beaten by unceasing heat and choked by wildfire smoke — Garcia said farmworker­s and immigrant workers face tough jobs today. She said she wants Biden to focus on helping working people.

“I want him to ask himself ‘what would César do?’ in the White House,” Garcia said. “I’d like to know why he looks up to him, why he would use him as an example and what he means for him. For us, he’s a pillar of the community. It says a lot to me that he chose him to honor.”

 ?? EVAN VUCCI THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A bust of César Chávez is seen behind President Joe Biden as he signs his first executive order in the Oval Office of the White House on Wednesday in Washington.
EVAN VUCCI THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A bust of César Chávez is seen behind President Joe Biden as he signs his first executive order in the Oval Office of the White House on Wednesday in Washington.

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