In Honor Of International May Day...
I’m not very different from anyone else who has ever
tried to accomplish something with his life. My motivation
comes from my personal life—from watching what my mother
and father went through when I was growing up; from what we
experienced as migrant farm workers in California. That dream,
that vision, grew from my own experience with racism, with
hope, with the desire to be treated fairly and to see my people
treated as human beings and not as chattel. It grew from anger
and rage—emotions I felt 40 years ago when people of
my color were denied the right to see a movie or eat at a
restuarant in many parts of California. It grew from the frustration
and humiliation I felt as a boy who couldn’t understand
how the growers could abuse and exploit farm workers when
there were so many of us and so few of them. Later, in the
’50s, I experienced a different kind of exploitation.
In San Jose, in Los Angeles and in other urban communities,
we—the Mexican American people—were dominated
by a majority that was Anglo. I began to realize what other
minority people had discovered: That the only answer—the
only hope—was in organizing. More of us had to become
citizens. We had to register to vote. And people like me had
to develop the skills it would take to organize, to educate,
to help empower the Chicano people. I spent many years—before
we founded the union—learning how to work with people.
We experienced some successes in voter registration, in politics,
in battling racial discrimination—successes in an era
when Black Americans were just beginning to assert their civil
rights and when political awareness among Hispanics was almost
non-existent. But deep in my heart, I knew I could never be
happy unless I tried organizing the farm workers. I didn’t
know if I would succeed. But I had to try. All Hispanics—urban
and rural, young and old—are connected to the farm workers’
experience. We had all lived through the fields—or our
parents had. We shared that common humiliation. How could
we progress as a people, even if we lived in the cities, while
the farm workers—men and women of our color—were
condemned to a life without pride? How could we progress as
a people while the farm workers—who symbolized our history
in this land—were denied self-respect? How could our
people believe that their children could become lawyers and
doctors and judges and business people while this shame, this
injustice was permitted to continue? Those who attack our
union often say, ‘It’s not really a union. It’s
something else: A social movement. A civil rights movement.
It’s something dangerous.’ They’re half
right. The United Farm Workers is first and foremost a union.
A union like any other. A union that either produces for its
members on the bread and butter issues or doesn’t survive.
But the UFW has always been something more than a union —although
it’s never been dangerous if you believe in the Bill
of Rights. The UFW was the beginning! We attacked that historical
source of shame and infamy that our people in this country
lived with. We attacked that injustice, not by complaining;
not by seeking hand-outs; not by becoming soldiers in the
War on Poverty. We organized! Farm workers acknowledged we
had allowed ourselves to become victims in a democratic society—a
society where majority rule and collective bargaining are
supposed to be more than academic theories or political rhetoric.
And by addressing this historical problem, we created confidence
and pride and hope in an entire people’s ability to
create the future. The UFW’s survival—its existence-was
not in doubt in my mind when the time began to come—after
the union became visible—when Chicanos started entering
college in greater numbers, when Hispanics began running for
public office in greater numbers—when our people started
asserting their rights on a broad range of issues and in many
communities across the country. The union’s survival—its
very existence—sent out a signal to all Hispanics that
we were fighting for our dignity, that we were challenging
and overcoming injustice, that we were empowering the least
educated among us—the poorest among us. The message
was clear: If it could happen in the fields, it could happen
anywhere— in the cities, in the courts, in the city
councils, in the state legislatures. I didn’t really
appreciate it at the time, but the coming of our union signaled
the start of great changes among Hispanics that are only now
beginning to be seen.
Address by Cesar Chavez, President
United Farm Workers of America, Part of the AFL-CIO
at The Commonwealth Club
of California, San Francisco
November 9, 1984