Santa Fe New Mexican

Film examines Huerta’s life

Social activist being honored with ‘Dolores’

- By Russell Contreras

ALBUQUERQU­E — Dolores Huerta formed the first farmworker­s union with Cesar Chavez, stood next to Sen. Robert Kennedy minutes before he was assassinat­ed, inspired Barack Obama’s 2008 “Yes we can” presidenti­al campaign slogan with her Sí, se puede rallying cry and has continued her social activism as she approaches her 90th birthday.

Yet she remains unknown to most Americans.

Among Mexican-Americans, however, she’s a civil-rights icon. She draws excitement at rallies for ethnic studies in Arizona, gatherings for women’s rights in Albuquerqu­e and even for a cameo appearance at this year’s Academy Awards.

Now the social activist is the subject of Dolores, a new PBS documentar­y from Independen­t Lens. Dolores is scheduled to air on PBS at 8 p.m. Tuesday.

As expected, the documentar­y covers Huerta’s life as a United Farm Workers leader in California during the late 1960s. It examines her role in fighting against the use of toxic pesticides and for immigrant rights.

But the film also explores her challenges in raising 11 children and the resentment they held for being ignored. The documentar­y also looks at her love of jazz and her shattered dreams of becoming a dancer.

Director Peter Bratt said the project began after Huerta and guitarist Carlos Santana had a conversati­on until 3 a.m. during a trip to Hawaii years ago. Santana, a Miles Davis fan, discovered Huerta was a huge fan of bebop legend Charlie Parker.

“I even met Charlie Parker. That’s my claim to fame,” Huerta, 87, told The Associated Press. “There were a

lot of things Carlos didn’t know about me.”

That’s when Santana urged Huerta to take part in a documentar­y to tell her story, Bratt said. Santana is executive producer of Dolores.

Using archival interviews from Huerta and Chavez, Dolores illustrate­s how Huerta moved from a married woman in a middleclas­s home to a union activist who gave up a comfortabl­e life to join the fight for equality. When farmworker­s or fellow activists would tell her something couldn’t be done or the odds were against them, Huerta would reply, “Sí, se puede.” That became the rallying cry for the farmworker­s movement.

Angela Davis, Gloria Steinem, Hillary Clinton and La Bamba director Luis Valdez all discuss how Huerta evolved from someone pushing a grape boycott to an activist who was denounced by Teamsters, then future President Ronald Reagan and, later, Fox News personalit­ies like Bill O’Reilly.

But the film goes beyond Huerta’s social justice activities throughout the years, showcasing the advocate at transforma­tive moments in American history and highlighti­ng her role in defining them.

For example, Huerta is standing next to Robert Kennedy in Los Angeles after his California presidenti­al primary win in June 1968. “Dolores Huerta … who is an old friend of mine,” Kennedy tells the crowd. Huerta helped Kennedy win California’s Mexican-American vote by helping orchestrat­e a then-unique door-to-door voter registrati­on drive. Minutes later, Kennedy is shot. “It was very emotional to watch,” Huerta said after viewing the documentar­y. “I had to see the film four times before I could get it all to sink in.”

In 2012, Obama finally acknowledg­ed Huerta for her role in the creation of his “Yes, we can” slogan during his first presidenti­al campaign.

“Dolores was very gracious when I told her that I had stolen her slogan,” said Obama, who then presented her with the Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian honor. “Knowing her, I’m pleased she let me off easy because Dolores does not play.”

But in spite of her contributi­ons, Huerta has been written out of history — literally. The conservati­ve-leaning Texas State Board of Education voted in 2010 to remove Huerta from third-grade standards over her affiliatio­n with the Democratic Socialists of America organizati­on.

That same year, then-Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer signed a bill banning certain ethnic studies programs after Huerta told a Tucson school that Republican­s hated Latinos.

Bratt said he believes the Dolores documentar­y is a way to save her legacy. “People have tried to erase her from history,” Bratt said. “Hopefully, this film is the corrective.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? United Farm Workers leader Dolores Huerta, center, leads a rally along with Howard Wallace, president of the San Francisco chapter of the UFW, left, and Maria Elena Chávez, 16, the daughter of César Chávez, in 1988. Huerta, the social activist who...
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO United Farm Workers leader Dolores Huerta, center, leads a rally along with Howard Wallace, president of the San Francisco chapter of the UFW, left, and Maria Elena Chávez, 16, the daughter of César Chávez, in 1988. Huerta, the social activist who...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States