Smithsonian Magazine

They helped launch Time’s Up

- by Héctor Tobar

ASA TEENAGER WORKING on the farms of California in the 1970s, Mily Treviño-Sauceda often felt alone and afraid. A boss fondled her; she was assaulted by a supervisor in a vineyard. When she confided in her father, she recalls, he seemed to blame her. After that, “I didn’t want to speak about it anymore,” Treviño-Sauceda says.

She later took a job at the United Farm Workers and then in a legal aid office, and she listened to women farmworker­s talk about getting sick from pesticides and being cheated by employers. Sometimes these women were battered and bruised—but they did not want to talk about the how and why of their injuries. “I lived like this all my life,” one woman told Treviño-Sauceda. “I’ve been hiding it.”

Two decades later and 2,000 miles away, in Fremont, Ohio, 14-year-old Mónica Ramírez, the daughter and granddaugh­ter of farmworker­s, noticed that two groups of people descended on the town every spring: migrant workers, who came to pick cucumbers, sugar beets and other crops, and recreation­al fishermen, who came for the walleye bass in the Sandusky River.

Every year the Fremont News-Messenger ran a “Welcome Back” story for the fishermen, but not for those working in the fields. Ramírez went to the newspaper’s office and complained. To her surprise, the editor asked her to write stories about the Latino community; she did, and the newspaper published them.

For both women, these teenage experience­s led to lifelong activism on behalf of farmworker­s. Treviño-Sauceda

Mily TreviñoSau­ceda (above left) and Mónica

Ramírez cofounded the first national organizati­on representi­ng the country’s 700,000 women

farmworker­s.

spent decades as an organizer, co-founding the Líderes Campesinas in the 1990s to give a voice to the women working in California’s fields. Ramírez earned her law degree and advocated for farmworker­s and other low-paid immigrant workers with civil rights and employment claims. As the farmworker women’s movement gained momentum, Treviño-Sauceda, who had become one of its most powerful voices, saw an opportunit­y to tie together the work that she, Ramírez and so many others were doing to bring more attention to the cause.

Treviño-Sauceda and Ramírez joined forces in 2012 as co-founders of the Alianza Nacional de Campesinas, known in English as the National Farm- workers Women’s Alliance. It was the first national organizati­on to represent the country’s 700,000 women farmworker­s, uniting one of the most vulnerable groups in the American workforce. The Alianza addresses numerous issues the farmworker­s face, from domestic violence to workplace environmen­tal concerns. A major focus has been exposing the rampant sexual harassment and exploitati­on on farms; in one study, about 80 percent of women said they had experience­d some form of sexual violence on the job.

So last year when they watched as one celebrity after another came forward on social media with tales of sexual abuse in the entertainm­ent industry following the accusation­s against the mogul Harvey Weinstein and others, the stories were all too familiar. A group of Hollywood women helped to organize a “Take Back the Workplace” march in Los Angeles for November 12, 2017, and Treviño-Sauceda planned to attend with a few dozen women from Líderes Campesinas. But they wanted to do something more. “Do you think if we write something, we could read it at the march?” Ramírez asked Treviño-Sauceda.

Ramírez began to draft a letter on behalf of the country’s women farmworker­s. One ally suggested that Ramírez should criticize the Hollywood women for having ignored the plight of farmworker­s, but Ramírez did not heed that advice. The organizati­on had spoken up for hotel workers, domestic workers and janitors. The stars of Hollywood “were women workers, too,” Ramírez says.

“Dear sisters,” the letter began. “Even though we work in very different environmen­ts, we share a common experience of being preyed upon by individual­s who have the power to hire, fire, blacklist and otherwise threaten our economic, physical and emotional security,” Ramírez wrote. “We understand the hurt, confusion, isolation and betrayal that you might feel.” The power of the letter was in its sincerity. The farmworker­s had been organizing against workplace harassment for decades, and they could offer solidarity across the economic and social divides. “Please know that you’re not alone. We believe and stand with you.”

“It was written with no expectatio­n of a response,” Ramírez says. “We just wanted them to know we had their backs.”

Time magazine, which had been preparing a story on the #MeToo movement, agreed to publish the

HOW THE LEADERS OF A FARMWORKER­S’ ALLIANCE REACHED ACROSS A CULTURAL DIVIDE TO SPARK THE NEW TIME’S UP INITIATIVE

letter. Two days before the November march, it was posted online. Soon after, Reese Witherspoo­n, one of the most influentia­l women in Hollywood, shared it with her nearly four million Facebook followers. “Thank you,” she wrote to the Alianza Nacional de Campesinas. The letter went viral just as the march was coming together, but its impact was bigger than a hashtag. Suddenly, the public face of #MeToo was not just Hollywood women, but all women.

“To receive a letter on behalf of 700,000 women working in the fields, women who put food in our supermarke­ts, on our tables, standing with us—it was such a moment of modeling what we need to be doing in our larger society,” the actress America Ferrera said on the “Today” show on January 4 as she sat alongside Ramírez. The unexpected support from the farmworker­s had galvanized women in Hollywood who understood that their celebrity could help spur change. “It was such a signal to us that we couldn’t do anything but respond,” Ferrera said. “And not just with words, but with real action.”

Ferrera and Ramírez were there to announce one of the most powerful women’s initiative­s in decades: Time’s Up, an organizati­on launched by some of the biggest names in entertainm­ent to support anyone in any profession who speaks up about sexual harassment in the workplace. The core of Time’s Up is a legal defense fund. In its first nine months, the initiative inspired by a simple 400-word letter has received requests for help from more than 3,500 women and men, two-thirds of whom work in low-wage industries. It has spent about $4 million on public education and legal actions backing alleged victims of sexual abuse, including a suit on behalf of McDonald’s workers. Time’s Up builds on “the work that organizers and activists have done over decades,” Ramírez said in an interview. They “laid the foundation for the moment we are living in.”

Alianza Nacional de Campesinas helped pave the way, but they are just getting started. Says Treviño-Sauceda: “There’s still a lot of work out there we need to do.”

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 ??  ?? SOCIALPROG­RESS Mily TreviñoSau­ceda & Mónica Ramírez Alianza Nacional de Campesinas
SOCIALPROG­RESS Mily TreviñoSau­ceda & Mónica Ramírez Alianza Nacional de Campesinas

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