Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

BLOOD, SWEAT & CHEERS

City Labor Day parade returns for first time since pandemic

- BY ZACK MILLER

Ralph Chaplin’s 1915 union anthem, “Solidarity Forever,” blared from a pair of loudspeake­rs riding in the back of a black pickup truck Saturday afternoon as the Chicago Labor Day parade returned to the Far South Side for the first time in two years.

“People think of this just as a holiday, but it’s built out of the blood, sweat and tears of workers in this city,” said Don Villar, secretaryt­reasurer of the Chicago Federation of Labor, which helped organize the parade. “Labor Day happens because of what happened just a couple miles from here.”

Villar was referring to the 1894 Pullman Strikes that led to the creation of the holiday,

as well as the Memorial Day Massacre — where 10 people were killed and more than a hundred injured by Chicago police officers at a steel worker strike in 1937.

Because of the city’s deep history of workers fighting for their rights and better pay, Villar said he considers Chicago the “hometown” of the American labor movement.

The spirit of the holiday was embodied Saturday by the parade’s leader, 104-year-old Bea Lumpkin, who was named this year’s grand marshal of the parade.

Lumpkin started organizing unions when she was a teenager in New York, but eventually moved to Chicago, became a Chicago Public Schools teacher and later a tenured professor at Malcolm X College.

Following the centenaria­n were laborers from a wide variety of fields — baristas, bricklayer­s, ironworker­s and carpenters all marched along the 1.3-mile route.

Emily Alaimo, a barista and member of Starbucks Workers United, said it was validating to be “with fellow workers” in the parade, adding that her job doesn’t fall under “traditiona­lly” unionized occupation­s.

The coffee chain’s Chicago stores have seen seven of 10 stores vote to unionize.

Other residents echoed her sentiment as they watched along the route.

“Any job is a job,” said Paulina Salazar, a lifelong resident of the East Side. “What you put into your community is really what matters. To be able to celebrate everyone, no matter where they work, is a beautiful thing to me.”

 ?? PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES ?? A child holds a sign in support of union workers on Saturday during the city’s Labor Day parade on the Far South Side.
PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES A child holds a sign in support of union workers on Saturday during the city’s Labor Day parade on the Far South Side.

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