San Francisco Chronicle

Cesar Chavez gets Navy funeral honors

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KEENE, Kern County — Hundreds gathered Thursday to see military honors rendered belatedly for Cesar Chavez, the legendary rights and labor leader but also a Navy veteran.

On the 22nd anniversar­y of his death, Chavez was receiving full graveside honors from the U. S. Navy at his memorial in California.

The idea for the ceremony came from a current sailor who learned Chavez didn’t receive the honors at the time of his death, according to the Cesar Chavez Foundation.

Paul Chavez, son of the civil rights leader, said Chavez’s sudden death from natural causes in 1993, at age 66, had surprised his family. He and his siblings didn’t ask at the time for military recognitio­n for their father, who served in the western Pacific during a 1946- 48 stint in the Navy, according to the foundation’s website.

“We just didn’t do it,” Paul Chavez said near his father’s memorial site, as crowds gathered in the foothills of the San Joaquin Valley for the service. “We were busy trying to comfort people and bury him with dignity. We had always focused on his work with farmworker­s” rather than his military service.

It was Navy Petty Officer 2nd Class Marco Valdovinos who contacted the family with the idea of arranging the military honors after watching a documentar­y on Chavez.

Chavez’s foundation is hosting the ceremony, along with the National Park Service, which operates Chavez’s memorial.

Born near Yuma, Ariz., Chavez used marches, boycotts and hunger strikes to bring attention to the plight of the country’s farmworker­s. He formed the National Farm Workers Associatio­n, which later became United Farm Workers.

The slogan he popularize­d for farmworker­s, “Si, se puede,” or “Yes, we can,” evolved to also become the presidenti­al campaign slogan of Barack Obama.

Current sailors, veterans and Chavez relatives turned out for the formal ceremony. Organizers arranged a Navy bugler playing taps, a rifle salute and the folding of a U. S. flag for Chavez’s widow, Helen.

The ceremony won’t be the only time the Navy has honored Chavez. In 2012 it launched a cargo ship it named the USNS Cesar Chavez.

Organizers say Thursday’s honors are an opportunit­y to show the public that Chavez’s time in the military helped him become a renowned fighter and organizer.

 ?? Richard Drew / Associated Press 1989 ?? Cesar Chavez, civil rights advocate and United Farm Workers founder, served a stint in the U. S. Navy in the western Pacific from 1946 to 1948.
Richard Drew / Associated Press 1989 Cesar Chavez, civil rights advocate and United Farm Workers founder, served a stint in the U. S. Navy in the western Pacific from 1946 to 1948.
 ?? Gosia Wozniacka / Associated Press 2012 ?? The grave site where the Chicano farmworker leader Cesar Chavez is buried in Keene.
Gosia Wozniacka / Associated Press 2012 The grave site where the Chicano farmworker leader Cesar Chavez is buried in Keene.

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