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STATE HORNET (California State University)
March 26, 2008
Historic leader shows support for social justice
By: Todd Wilson
At the age of 77, labor leader and civil rights activist Dolores Huerta
continues to organize and reach out to people to fight for social
justice and become an active part of the political process.
As Huerta, who founded the United Farm Workers union with Cesar Chavez
in 1962, took the stage at Sacramento State Thursday evening, more than
1,500 audience members rose to give her a standing ovation.
"There are so many issues confronting us - it is hard to know where to
begin," Huerta said.
Huerta spoke for more than an hour and a half on a variety of issues
including education, women's rights, the labor movement, racism,
corporate greed, gay and lesbian rights, health care, the war in Iraq
and free trade. All of these topics were centered on the theme of social
justice.
"We have to make change in this country by getting involved in political
action and applying direct pressure on politicians," Huerta said.
In regards to the state of education in the United States, Huerta said
the national trend to reduce the amount of money for education is
dangerous.
"We cannot continue to be the leaders of the free world if our citizens
are not educated," she said. "If citizens are not educated, the greedy
and corrupt take control of the country. That is what we see happening
now."
While she said there is nothing wrong with creating and accumulating
wealth, it should be used to benefit everyone and there are more
important things people can do, Huerta said. Over the years, the United
Farm Workers union accumulated millions of dollars to forward the farm
workers' cause instead of making a few people rich, she said.
Huerta also uses much of her own earnings to support organizations she
works with. The money leaves little for her children when she dies, but
parents can give their children something more important than a monetary
inheritance, Huerta said.
"Leave your children a love of justice when you die," she said.
This message was what struck Cyndi Long, a social work graduate student,
the most about Huerta's lecture.
"That was an amazing way to bring home that theme of social justice,"
Long said. "I have never heard it put that way before."
Huerta also stressed that while there are many ethnicities and
nationalities in the world, there is only one race: the human race.
"If we don't come together, organize together and fight together, we
cannot win," she said.
Nine-year-old Jasmine Carter, who came to the lecture with her mother
Angela Carter, said this is what she learned most from listening to
Huerta.
"I learned that no matter what race we come from, we are all connected
no matter what your last name is," Jasmine said.
Everardo G. Rivera, Movimiento Estudiantil Chicano de Aztlan adviser and
EOPS counselor for Oxnard College in Ventura County, said it is
important that Huerta addresses issues of inclusiveness.
"The Latino community cannot segregate itself from the rest of society,"
Rivera said. "These are not racial issues, but humanitarian and class
issues."
Rivera sees Huerta as a great role model for students and young people.
"She does not just give speeches," Rivera said. "She goes up and down
the state and across the nation working to help people."
Huerta spends much of her time running the Dolores Huerta Foundation.
The foundation's main goal is the training and organizing of community
activists with an emphasis on women and youth.
In 1988, Huerta was beaten by the police officers while protesting in
San Francisco against pesticide use in the agricultural industry. Huerta
suffered broken ribs and lost her spleen as a result of the beating. She
successfully sued the San Francisco Police Department. Huerta uses the
$2,000 a month she receives from that lawsuit and the honorariums for
speaking at universities to fund her activities.
Young people should not be discouraged to organize and work for causes
they believe in because they do not have masses of people standing
behind them, Huerta said.
"It just takes a few committed people to get started," she said. "In
1966, 70 farmers left Delano. By the time they got to Sacramento, they
had more than 20,000 people behind them."
Huerta referred to the United Farm Workers march from Delano, Calif.,
which is just north of Bakersfield, to Sacramento as part of a farm
workers strike against grape growers. The march from Delano and protest
at the State Capitol in March 1966 brought national attention to the
plight of the farm workers.
Marcos Pacheco, senior government major, said he was inspired by Huerta
to make a difference.
"As students, we should be concerned with working for the greater good,"
Pacheco said. "We need to get out there and organize."
Sam Starks, president of the Sac State Alumni Association, brought his
7-year-old daughter to see Huerta speak. He said it is important that
young people understand that Huerta's words and actions are the
foundations for many of the freedoms we enjoy today.
"She has laid down the gauntlet for the younger generation," Starks
said. "It is our job as parents, teachers, and leaders to make sure this
generation picks up the gauntlet."
After becoming the first person in her family to graduate from college,
Huerta began teaching grammar school in Stockton, Calif., in the early
1950s. Huerta left teaching in 1955 to found and work for the Stockton
Chapter of the Community Service Organization.
"I couldn't stand seeing farm worker children come to class hungry and
in need of shoes. I thought I could do more by organizing their parents
than by trying to teach their hungry children," Huerta said.
Jason Catering, graduate student educational leadership and teacher at
Martin Luther King, Jr. Middle School, said Huerta inspires him as a
teacher.
"She is about doing what she talks about," Catering said. "She goes out
and makes a difference."
Catering said he tries to take the messages of people like Huerta to his
students. "I ask my students to speak their minds about injustices that
affect them, and encourage them to do something about it," he said.
In 1997, Huerta was named by Ladies Home Journal magazine one of the 100
most important women of the 20th century. Women's rights and political
participation are key issues for Huerta. Women make up more than 50
percent of the U.S. population, but only 17 percent of Congress is made
up of women, Huerta said. Men and women need to work together to get
more women into politics, she said.
"We need to see a gender balance in Congress," Huerta said. "I want
women to be there alongside men making the decisions."
Helibet Flores, senior psychology major, said Huerta has inspired her to
work for women's rights.
"She made me realize how much women can do to empower one another, and
the power women can have if we work together," Flores said.
Huerta asked the audience to get involved in the effort to establish a
national holiday in honor of Cesar Chavez by signing petitions and
writing letters to members of Congress. California honors Chavez with a
state holiday in March.
"We are working to get a national holiday honoring Cesar Chavez," Rivera
said. "When are we going to get a Dolores Huerta day?"
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