Los Angeles Times

A united front in Fresno to ban caste-based bias

Measure passes after push by Oaxacans and Sikhs angered by L.A. leaders’ racist tape.

- By Jeong Park

As a teenager picking apples in the Central Valley town of Mendota, Miguel Arias was puzzled when Mexican farmers yelled the insult “Oaxaquita” at Oaxacans working in the fields.

His parents explained that in Mexico, the system of casta persisted, with some people looking down on those with darker skin or Indigenous heritage.

“As a Mexican immigrant, I just thought we were all Mexicans, and we were all immigrants,” said Arias, a Fresno City Council member who emigrated from Michoacán when he was 2 years old. “Discrimina­tion that Indigenous people in Mexico got ... for lack of a better descriptio­n, it was the dirty secret among our Mexican immigrant community.”

On Thursday, Arias and his council colleagues voted to make Fresno the first city in California to ban discrimina­tion based on caste or Indigenous heritage, while a similar bill sits on Gov. Gavin Newsom’s desk.

The state bill, which passed the Legislatur­e in early September, was intended to protect supposedly lower-caste people of South Asian descent as well as Indigenous people such as Oaxacans. It has sparked intense support, as well as opposition from those who say it singles out Hindu Americans as potential perpetrato­rs of discrimina­tion.

In Fresno, the push for the ban was led at first by Sikh residents, whose religion rejects the idea of castes, and the Ravidassia community, who are followers of a 14th century Indian guru who preached caste equality. People of Oaxacan descent soon joined them, as discrimina­tion against those with ties to the southern Mexican state gained widespread attention with the leak of a recording that captured three Los Angeles City Council members and a labor leader in a racist conversati­on.

“These proposals in Fresno are trying to say we have an opportunit­y to address ... this historical legacy of discrimina­tion against untouchabl­es and against Indigenous people,” said Gaspar Rivera-Salgado, a Oaxacan American who is director of the Center for Mexican Studies at UCLA, as well as a board member at the Binational Center for the Developmen­t of Oaxacan Indigenous Communitie­s, which was among the groups advocating for the

Fresno ordinance.

When Spain colonized Mexico, it establishe­d the Sistema de Castas, according to Rivera-Salgado. Those born in Spain as “pure Spaniards” were at the top, followed by Spaniards born in Mexico. Indigenous groups were near the bottom, along with Black people.

“During the colonial period, the Spaniards implemente­d this system that resembled very much the system of India,” where Brahmins are at the top and Dalits, or untouchabl­es, are at the bottom, Rivera-Salgado said.

In the leaked recording, then-L.A. City Council President Nury Martinez described Oaxacans as “little short dark people” and “tan feos” — so ugly. Then-L.A. County Federation of Labor President Ron Herrera referred to them as “Indios,” or “Indians.”

“They were speaking disparagin­gly about Oaxacans. Why?” state Sen. Aisha Wahab (D-Hayward), author of the state caste discrimina­tion bill, said of Martinez and Herrera. “Because caste systems exist all over the world, and they may have a different look or a vibe to it, but the discrimina­tion happens, and I think Oaxacans can appreciate that this bill would also protect them in some regard as well.”

Luis López Resendiz, program director for the Indigenous interprete­r program at the L.A. Indigenous organizati­on CIELO, said his dad insisted that he “dominate” Spanish as a way to hide his Indigenous identity. His father had often been called Indio or Oaxaquita.

“People hated me when I was speaking my own language in the streets,” López Resendiz recalled his dad telling him. “People tried to shame me because of who I am. I don’t want that for you.”

But schoolmate­s still made fun of López Resendiz, guessing that he was Oaxacan from the design of his huaraches, he said. Only in college did he begin to speak openly about his background.

Advocates for the Oaxacan community have long pushed back against the discrimina­tion. In 2012, the Oxnard school district prohibited the words “Oaxaquita” and “Indito,” or little Indian, from being used on school property.

Arcenio López, executive director of Mixteco/Indigena Community Organizing Project, which pushed for the resolution in Oxnard, recalled hearing the epithet Oaxaquita when he came to California from Oaxaca in 2003 and worked in the strawberry fields.

“Many of those youths were facing similar experience­s I faced as a farmworker, but in the classroom,” he said. “They felt they didn’t belong to the school system, because other classmates were making fun of them.”

Tens of thousands of Sikhs and Oaxacans, many of them farmers or farmworker­s, live in Fresno County and the Central Valley. The two communitie­s have worked together for years.

The racist audio leak in L.A. and the passage of a caste discrimina­tion ban in Seattle inspired the two groups to push for the Fresno ordinance.

“When groups have shared a common experience of inequity and being treated as less than, right away they can understand each other’s pain,” said

Deep Singh, executive director of the Jakara Movement.

But the state caste discrimina­tion bill, Senate Bill 403, has provoked outrage from some Hindu residents.

Satish Vale, a national convenor with Americans4­Hindus and an IT consultant in Santa Clara, said existing laws already protect against discrimina­tion based on caste. The bill imposes the idea of caste, when Indian Americans are trying to move away from it, he said.

“When we came from India, we don’t have the caste anywhere represente­d in our identity cards or in our passports or in our degrees,” Vale said. “Caste is like an N-word for us.”

In Fresno, there was little opposition to the city caste discrimina­tion measure, which passed, 6 to 0.

At a news conference Thursday after the City

Council vote, leaders of the Jakara Movement and the Binational Center for the Developmen­t of Oaxacan Indigenous Communitie­s called for Newsom to sign SB 403.

Thenmozhi Soundarara­jan, who has been on a hunger strike for nearly a month as she awaits Newsom’s decision, was among the advocates for the bill who joined the news conference.

“When we think about things like the casta system, things that led to genocide, things that led to the othering of Indigenous people, we see ourselves in their struggle as caste-oppressed people,” Soundarara­jan said, “because we, too, have been oppressed for centuries.”

 ?? Gary Kazanjian Associated Press ?? SIKHS, whose religion rejects the idea of castes, led the push for a ban on caste-based bias in Fresno.
Gary Kazanjian Associated Press SIKHS, whose religion rejects the idea of castes, led the push for a ban on caste-based bias in Fresno.

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