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ASSOCIATED PRESS
Indigenous Central Americans increasingly fill ranks of farmworkers
By MANUEL VALDES
A new farmworker survey suggests that nearly a quarter of such laborers
in Western Washington are indigenous Mexicans or other Central
Americans.
With their distinct culture and history, the relatively new migration of
indigenous peoples from Latin America means cultural adjustments for
their host towns.
Indigenous peoples from Latin America are the direct descendants of the
inhabitants who lived in the region before colonial times.
The survey -- "A Sustainable Bounty: Investing in Our Agricultural
Future" -- was conducted by the Washington State Farmworker Housing
Trust and released Friday. More than 2,800 farmworkers in 14 Washington
counties were interviewed for the survey in 2006.
Nearly 23 percent of the farmworkers surveyed in Whatcom, Skagit,
Snohomish and Clark counties said they were indigenous from southern
Mexico -- most from the state of Oaxaca. Statewide, indigenous
farmworkers were 3 percent of those surveyed.
The number of indigenous workers "shows the dire economic situation for
indigenous people in Latin America," said Rosalinda Guillen, one of the
survey coordinators. "I think it shows how bad our trade agreements have
worked. Here we are at the northern border, and we have indigenous women
dressed in their traditional dresses."
She echoed an argument suggesting that an overflow of American goods --
specifically corn -- drove the indigenous from their lands after many
could not compete with cheap goods from the north. Many were
self-sustainable farmers, working small plots of land.
Guillen said the influx of Oaxacans and others to Whatcom and Skagit
counties has increased in the past 10 years.
But their presence in Skagit County's biggest cities -- Mount Vernon and
Burlington -- is well established now.
A Mount Vernon radio station run out of the local community college
broadcasts public service announcements in one of the native languages
-- Mixteco.
"We're involved with all the community and part of the community doesn't
speak Spanish," said Carlos Bejar, the Spanish programming director at
KSVR-FM/91.7.
According to Mexican government figures, one-third of Oaxacans speak
indigenous dialects, and 14 percent don't speak Spanish.
The survey found that around 18 percent of those who said Spanish was
not their first language reported that they could not read or write in
Spanish.
Bejar said there are plans to create a newscast that will have segments
in Mixteco.
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