Dark History - 105: Cesar Chavez, Dolores Huerta & The Struggle Of America's Farm Workers: The Dark History of the Chicano Movement
Episode Date: September 27, 2023Welcome to the Dark History podcast. Today we’re talking about the Chicano Movement. Before this movement, just saying the word “boycott” could get you SIX MONTHS in prison. And many Americans w...eren’t even allowed to take a break, drink water, or even use the bathroom. So yeah, this movement was pretty necessary. And it lead to one of the greatest fights for civil rights in US history. Episode Advertisers Include: Apostrophe, Hello Fresh, Ouai, & ShipStation. Learn more during the podcast about special offers!
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In the 70s, just saying the word boycott could land you in prison for 6 months.
Yes, no lie.
For decades, the workers who picked the produce Americans lived on didn't have basic human
rights.
I'm talking about the right to take, I don't know, a break, maybe to have some water,
or even use the freaking bathroom, huh?
Anytime these workers spoke up and maybe just demanded some rights, they would be punished
or replaced.
It wasn't until two great civil rights leaders
unified the workers that they realized
just how much power they had.
This led to one of the greatest fights
for civil rights in US history.
Today, we are talking about the Chicano movement. Hi friends, I hope you're having a wonderful day today.
My name is Bailey Sarian and I'd like to welcome you to my podcast, Dark History!
Here you know, we believe that like history doesn't have to be boring.
I mean yes, it might be tragic, usually it is.
I mean, sometimes it's even happy.
But either way, it's our dark history, baby.
So look, all you have to do, sit back, relax,
and let me tell you some hot juicy history, Gus, okay?
You know what I mean?
You're on driving, right?
You know, when you start saying like all these streets
that are named after tons of different people, there's one like Martin Luther King, JFK, Lincoln,
there's a million Washington things because everyone loves that guy, right? So many Washingtons.
For me growing up in Southern California, I would see like this name over and over and over again.
And I never really knew who it was because I didn't learn about it.
And that name was Caesar Chavez.
Now, although other names I had recognized, right?
But not so much this one growing up.
So I was like, let's get into it, right?
So Caesar was a Mexican-American,
labor and civil rights activist,
and he helped build like one of the greatest
political movements the United States has ever seen in all life. It's something called the Chicano
movement and working right next to him was another icon in American history.
Her name is Dolores Werta and Dolores and Caesar consider American heroes as
they should be. Oh my god. And honestly I don't remember being taught really any
Mexican-American history for that matter. It just feels like a huge blind heroes as they should be. Oh my God. And honestly, I don't remember being taught really any Mexican
American history for that matter.
It just feels like a huge blind spot because so much
happened during this time.
This movement across this past was so many dark moments
in American history, talking about the Great Depression,
World War II, the Zoot Suit riots, and the Vietnam War.
It went through, it went through it all.
So, in order to understand the Chicano movement,
we need to understand what the term Chicano means
because it has so many different meanings.
It's got a pretty complicated history,
but essentially the term comes from Mexico,
specifically the indigenous cultures from countries
like Costa Rica, Guatemala,
Belize, El Salvador, as well as some other countries.
So Chicano is a term used to refer to people with indigenous roots,
and the term was actually slang and even insults.
Mm-hmm.
Even though native cultures were here in America first,
they were seen as less American in the 20th century,
around the 1920s and the 30s.
Chicanos, they started to take the term back
and make it like a symbol of pride.
But once the Great Depression hit in California
in like early 1930s, things were about to get
just real bad for them.
This is because the United States ordered the deportation of 2 million people of Mexican descent.
They claimed the country couldn't take the economic demand during the depression.
In other words, they wanted the limited resources they had like food, water, and farm jobs to go to
the white Americans.
Here's the even more insane part.
Through over 1.2 million people
who were deported back to Mexico,
we're US citizens.
Yeah, we're making make sense, right?
So imagine you're just walking around
like mining your own business,
then somebody frickin' snatches you up
and deports you to a country that you've never even lived in.
Boo!
Deporting US citizens was illegal, but to the local governments and
officials in charge, you know how it goes.
They don't give a shit, it didn't matter.
They were like, no one's gonna call us on this.
They knew they were in charge.
Keep in mind, during this time, America was experiencing a huge boom in immigration from Europe.
And most of those immigrants were able to stay in the United States during the Depression.
But if you existed in lower income communities of color,
it doesn't matter where you were born.
If you were in the wrong place during this time,
your ass is grass man.
So the government deported 2 million Mexicans in America.
And it wasn't until after the Great Depression that people of Mexican descent were allowed to come back into America to work.
Yeah, talk about a toxic relationship.
You have to leave.
But when I want you or need you, you have to come back. Okay,
but then you're going to leave again, because I don't want you here. Don't leave your toothbrush,
but I'm going to need you to come back. Okay. That's pretty much that relationship. But when
I did get here, it was like the job options for them were slim to not pretty much the only
jobs they could get were doing manual labor. And they would be working on farms,
looking after cattle, working in mines,
or even chopping down trees.
These jobs left many of them living way below
the national poverty level.
And like so many people began to equate being poor,
with being Chicano.
And then all the stereotypes that came along with that.
And at that time, I mean, it just felt hopeless.
Like, there was no way they could get ahead of life.
It wasn't until one man decided to use his voice
or the voiceless, that some real change
started to happen for the community.
This is when we meet Caesar Chavez.
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dark history. I would suggest you check it out if you really want to. It's great! As many
of us are birthed, it usually starts with our parents. So we're going to start with Caesar
Stam. Weird way to get there Bailey, but I got there.
His name was Librato Chavez,
and he was the son of Mexican immigrants.
He and his wife, Wana, settled in Yuma, Arizona
in the early 1900s with their six kids.
Librato is known as a really hardworking
and successful person.
He ran a general store.
He cared for his family's farm in Yuma
and he was even a postmaster.
I know, damn daddy, he was doing a lot.
Most people only had just one of these like three jobs he had.
So you could say, Liberado was doing well for himself.
Everything he did was for the sake of his family
and he wanted to change their future.
Because his family, like so many other immigrant families
in the area, they had lived in poverty
and didn't want that for his own children.
Since the Chavez family had roots in Mexico,
they were known as Chicanos, which meant right from the start
they were treated a little differently, differently,
in society.
I mean, in America, at this time,
if you didn't fit into that mold of a European
Christian American, then you were treated. Not so great. People are just rude.
Rude little assholes. Very un-Christian-like is what I would say, but what do I know?
So one day, L'Bratto struck up a deal with his white, neighbor. So, Flabrado and his family cleared 80 acres
of the farmland that they have lived on.
The neighbor would sign over a big part of his land
to the Chavez family, which is like a great deal, right?
You're like, oh my God, fuck yeah, I'm it.
I mean, on top of that, he was even gonna throw in
like that the home that was built on the land.
He was like, yeah, and you can keep the home too.
Whoa, the crown goes wild.
He was like, okay, great.
So the Chavez family hustled.
And they got the 80 acres of land on his property
looking gorgeous, nice, cleaned up, all done, right?
But after they did all the work, the neighbor,
you think he followed through?
I doubt it.
Of course he did, right?
He screwed them over.
The owner, he sold the land
that he was gonna give to the family.
He sold it to someone else
and got the land cleaned up for free.
Oh, what a dick, right?
Cheese, the leaves.
So the Chavez family had done like all that hard work
for somebody else's game.
Nothing for them.
What a dick move.
So the Chavez family reached out to a lawyer
and they were asking for advice like,
you know, what can we do?
Can we do anything?
And the lawyer tells them to like,
take out a loan so they'd be able to buy the land back.
So they decided to take into advice.
So they got a loan, they ended up buying the land
and they were living there and everything was great.
But the problem was the family wasn't able
to pay the high interest on the loan.
And I get, you know, the lawyer knew that.
As soon as the family was behind on their bills,
the lawyer came in and took everything the Chavez family had, everything. They're home,
they're money, they're land, it was all taken. It's like, damn, give me a break, right? The Chavez
family had to move in with LeBratos' mother and just start over.
And obviously, this really affected the whole family, especially LeBratos' oldest son,
Caesar, right? Caesar was just like a child when all this was happening, but the injustice he
and his family were experiencing is something he could never forget. Despite how little they had,
the Chavez family always had the mindset of helping
others, which is like so kind because it got screwed over so hard and you know most
best would just turn to awful witches and they did that. No matter who you were, you knew you could
get a meal at the Chavez households. Their doors were open. His mother and grandmother taught him that
there was nothing more important than helping others
And his family never turned anyone away
Something else that shaved young Caesar's life was the way he was treated at school
I mean he has very first day. It's very far save school
He's only like 70 years old and the other kids they would bully him because he had an accent
They also called him what they called other Tricanos in school, which was like, dirty Mexican. And you'd think like the teachers might
jump in and tell the kids the stop of they never did. They would actually like egg them on.
Yeah, and at the time, teachers were totally allowed to physically punish students.
Caesar would say, quote, when we spoke Spanish, the teacher swooped down on us.
I remember the ruler whistling through the air as its edge came down sharply across my knuckles.
And oh, I mean sometimes the teacher would even like do this in front of other kids.
So you know, the other kids are like, well, she's doing it. I'm gonna do it.
This is why I won't have kids because they're pieces of shit.
I'm sorry, I said it.
Someone had to say it.
Your kid is probably a piece of shit.
Sorry about that.
Anyways, but this is in the 30s.
So maybe they're not anymore.
Children have brown, sorry.
Or we can't see them.
So this was in 1930s and at the time like many of the schools
they were still segregated.
But the ones that weren't segregated,
honestly, they weren't any better for the kids at all. You know, it's on like a safe space.
I mean, even in integrated schools, kids weren't allowed to speak Spanish,
and those who did would end up being hit before us to run labs around the school or have to write,
I will not speak Spanish. I'm like the board. Yeah, they have to do that hundreds of times.
For what?
I don't know.
God bless America.
Right?
One time a teacher caught Caesar speaking Spanish
once again in class.
And they forced him to wear a sign at school all day.
That said, I am a clown, I speak Spanish.
So dumb, I hate this planet.
So not only were the kids, you know,
tree and like garbage, right?
Being asked for us to him
because he's wearing a sign.
But the teachers were making it a point to humiliate him, right?
One of the reasons the schools just truly did not give a shit about these
kids is because they knew that they'd most likely be gone in a matter of weeks.
This is because their parents were migrant farm workers who were constantly
moving to different towns, you know, for work opportunity. Wherever the work was,
that's where people were going. A migrant worker is a person who lives
replaced, replaced, looking for work, typically
farm work. So because of that, children of migrant workers were always changing schools. And
unfortunately the teachers they knew this. So they just, they didn't like try and bother actually
trying to teach the kids or help them out. Because in their mind, with what was the point,
they were just going to leave by, you know? So for migrant workers, like Caesar's parents,
it was a struggle to earn the bare minimum to live.
I mean, anytime a job popped up nearby,
the Chavez family, they had to move.
Workers would follow something called the Harvest Trail.
It's a trail along a stretch of farmland in California
that hired migrant workers to come in and they also gave them housing
This is so they'd be able to work longer hours and like go to bed and then you know wake back up and look you're right at work
Wow, oh my god and the housing they had it wasn't like some nice
It wasn't cute. Okay. It wasn't something you're imagining. That's cute and cozy like wow carpet
No, the conditions were awful. Okay, the families't something you're imagining. That's cute and cozy. Like, wow, carpet.
No, the conditions were awful.
Okay, the families would stay in bare cabin
sneer the farmland and not like a cute bear.
Wow.
Bear meaning empty.
There was nothing to do, nothing to look at.
Just empty.
Thanks.
Cool.
These places didn't have indoor plumbing or electricity, but there was a roof,
right? So roof over their head. Woo! Most migrant families would be placed in tents that would be
damp and cold from, you know, the outdoor elements, and the shitty housing that there was
wasn't even free. The labor contractors who hired the workers would charge rent for these tents and cabbots and
It'd be taken directly from their pay so it's like they could just jack up the prices of rent if they wanted to and
They couldn't say anything so lame. You really felt like you just couldn't win and on top of that
The tools the workers would need for these labor jobs. They weren't even supplied to them.
Workers, they would have to go out, use their paycheck again
to purchase all of the tools they would need.
From the same people who are paying them.
So it's just a circle, Jerk, yeah.
So in conclusion, they would go home with barely anything, barely
screened by, but it felt like everyone was desperate for work at this time, so
it was like no choice but to take these shit jobs. There are no other places that
would hire migrant workers. Society, sadly few them as poor, dirty labor workers, not like just a normal fucking person, like everyone else.
So this was a life the Chavez family lived in over the course of a decade,
Caesar transferred schools 37 times.
Damn, I know, that's a lot.
Paul, that's a lot. Oh my god, he looks so scary Paul, he's a lot. Paul, that's a lot.
Oh my god, he looks so scary Paul.
He's black guys.
I'm even possessed by a demon.
I forgot about you guys.
You guys been so quiet.
Anyways, I don't know.
Every school he attended, he was punished
for speaking Spanish and honestly, just being different.
In 1942, after Caesar graduated the eighth grade,
he ended up dropping out. So that means he went to 37 different schools before eighth grade.
Can you imagine being the new kid 37 times? Being the new kid is awful. Poor guy. Oh my god. So he
drops out at the eighth grade. And this is because his father actually got seriously injured in a car accident.
So Caesar knew if he didn't step up to help the family then his mother would have to go out and work.
Like in the fields and do all that. So Caesar took over his dad's shifts in the fields when he was just 14 years old.
And he became like the man of the household.
Well just because he left school didn't mean that he left all that bullying behind, right?
When Caesar was a teenager he walked into a diner and tried to order a hamburger.
And the waitress, I guess she laughed at him and told him like, oh we don't sell them exicans.
No hamburger being. And it was like, oh, we don't sell them exicans. No hamburger being.
And it was like, bro, really?
We're adults.
Does anyone ever grow up?
Oh, no.
All right.
Well, fuck me then.
Anyways, there was another time he was arrested
for sitting in the White's only part of a movie theater.
Not even though he bought a ticket,
just like everyone else in there,
he's still gotten trouble. So else in there, he's still got in trouble.
So, I mean, think about it.
When society rejects everything about you, you...
Right? You're never doing anything right? It's like, fuck society.
Fuck the mainstream. Fuck everything.
And for Jocanos and other communities of color, I mean, this is exactly where their head was at.
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And now let's get back to the story.
All of this rejection and straight up racism
just led to a big counterculture movement,
a movement which essentially celebrated people
taking pride and being different, okay?
Black, Filipino, and Mexican-American teenagers
revolved against mainstream fashion trends
by wearing something called,
zootsuits.
We did an episode on zoootzoot riots in season one
and it's kind of like the ghost episode.
It disappeared, but you can still listen to it
on the audio side if you want.
But if you don't know, I'll give you a little recap.
Zootzootz, they were like the super stylish
and like oversized suits.
And they became super popular in Harlem Dance halls
because I guess they were easy to move in,
but also you just looked fucking sick, okay?
They were worn mostly by men,
but some women, they were own in that shit too.
And they looked, like yes bitch, work.
Okay, the suit had like these, it was high waisted,
wide leg trouser, right? And on top was this
big long coat with like big lapels. Everything was like oversized, but strong, padded shoulders.
It's a look. So the issue was that these zoos-oops, they required like a lot of material to make them. And during World War II, fabric was being rationed.
Okay, they needed them to make war stuff.
Great.
So being seen wearing a zoo suit at the time was like,
oh my God, so anti-American, how dare you?
How dare you?
So rumors about zooshooters, especially the Chicanos
who wore them started to spread.
I mean, people had a negative opinion about them,
but the zoosuits were finally like an excuse
to let loose and just punish the Chicano community, really.
Disgave them a reason.
On June 3rd, 1943,
hundreds of police officers and soldiers beat the shit
out of anyone who was wearing a zoo suit.
And it got so bad that they even started beating up
anyone who looked like a person of color or looked Chicano.
I mean, whether they were in a zoo suit or not,
Caesar was one of these suitors.
His family had moved to Los Angeles and settled in a neighborhood known as a Barrio.
A Barrio is a Spanish-speaking part of town, and many people who lived in these areas struggled with poverty.
People in Caesar's Barrio used to say,
Salicy Puites, which means, get out if you can.
Between having to work in the field to support his family and getting beat up in the streets,
Caesar was just ready to get the hell out, right?
So he ends up joining the Navy when he was 17.
He was one of over half a million Latinos who served in World War II.
And actually their numbers are probably way higher than that.
That's because if you were any type of Latin descent and you enrolled in
the army, chances are your race was marked as white on your official enrollment papers.
So when he returned home after serving for two years, it's not like he got some kind of woo!
Like heroes welcome, you know, like welcome home, you're amazing. I mean while he was gone,
the relationship between Chican's law enforcement and honestly,
like society in general seemed to have gotten way worse.
Because so many American men were shipped off to the war, there weren't enough people
around to do jobs that required like hard labor.
So the US turned to Mexico asking for their help.
So yeah, of course they're asking for Mexico's help.
They come crying back.
My bail is jail. So then the government creates the Bracero program.
Bracero translates to strong armed ones. And for many Mexicans, this was seen as a good
opportunity to make money in America. We knew even if it was only for a short amount of time.
But on the other hand, you know, these people were forced to work.
Once again, grueling hours live in horrible conditions
and be treated horribly and just general.
Very similar to the migrant workers we talked about earlier.
So what people from the Bersero program
entered California, people in society just start to panic,
the locals, the whites.
We're like, oh my god, these guys are gonna take our jobs.
And honestly, they had never seen that many Mexicans before, so...
You know, the whites get spooked easily.
Two, and there were all these signs posted all over restaurants that read,
like, we serve whites only, no Spanish or Mexicans.
They ran articles in the newspaper
about how Mexican-Americans weren't loyal to the country.
What the hell, right?
Like what is, everyone's deal.
Caesar went back to work in the fields
as soon as he got home from the war
and he wants to describe just how difficult
and back-breaking it was to work in the fields all day.
So Caesar thought back to his upbringing with his mother and grandmother, and they like never turned
anyone away who needed help, right? So he looked around him in the fields at thousands of
migrant workers who had been treated as less than human for a little too long. He decided, you know
what, it was time to take a stand.
Caesar knew that writing letters and complaining, eh, I'd only do so much.
The way to get real change in the country was to vote.
So Caesar got involved with something called the Community Service Organization, and he
made it his mission to get as many laborers registered to vote as possible.
I guess he was so good at this
that he even ran the organization for a couple of years.
It was clear that Caesar was a natural born leader.
I mean, he was said to treat people with empathy
and he spent his whole life up until that point
working in the fields alongside the people
he was fighting for.
So it was like, you know, people trusted him.
Caesar ended up launching his own newspaper
for the farm workers called El Mocriano,
which translates to, quote, badly behaved.
I think it's like a pretty badass name, yeah?
Yeah.
So he really started to make a public name for himself in 1965
when he organized farm workers to peacefully strike
and respond to their cruel treatment, which is pretty bad
ass, right? One of the most famous strikes he helped organize was called the Delano
Great Strike. Now, the strike was started by the Filipino American farming community,
and Caesar had his union actually joined forces with them. I mean, power numbers, right? And the strike centered around the
shockingly low wages and high physical expectations of great pickers in America.
So the strike like really encouraged everyday people to, you know, immediately
stop buying and eating grapes. They figured if they did this, it would hit the farm owners where it hurt in their balls.
And in their pocket.
Yeah.
And then maybe, you know, they'd start paying attention
to the workers and look, they were soon right.
As soon as profits were affected,
oh, oh, these people are panicking,
what are we gonna do?
Get all of a sudden, hmm.
So people started paying attention to Caesar and his unions.
He started getting calls from other organizations
asking like, hey, can you come here
and like working in magic over here?
And I mean, great.
It was in a bunch of different cities.
And this is like when Caesar teamed up with someone
who would take the Chicago movement
to the next freaking level.
Dolores Clawra Fernandez, or as she's known today, Dolores Werdah.
I quote, listen, she Dolores is the ship.
Okay, so she's born on April 10, 1930, and like a little mining town of Dawson, New Mexico.
And her dad, as it was Juan Fernandez, was a farm worker by day and a union activist
by night.
So he fought for fair wages and better working conditions and won, like he even ran for
political office in 1938 and became representative for new Mexico.
Go off, go all the way off.
So from my young gauge, their family was politically involved. And Delorean
said, quote, I remember when I was eight years old, I put a bumper sticker on a car for Franklin,
Delano, Roosevelt. I don't know where I got those stickers or whose car I put it on. In my family,
the idea of being informed about what was happening in the world was just part of growing up.
And it worked. So just like Caesar, Delores experienced insane prejudice
as a child because of her indigenous roots and one of her teachers even accused her of cheating
in school because her papers were a little too well-written. Okay, the teacher probably couldn't read,
you know, but really you just couldn't win, you couldn't win, but Del. But really, you just couldn't win. You can win. But the
Lord's always had that like hustle mindset. And it's probably because she grew up
in the Great Depression and both of her parents were just houselers, right? They
needed to get by named Foudaway. During the summer between school years, she
would often work in the field as a great picker. And for picking a full bucket of grapes,
she would get two bits.
In other words, a quarter.
A quarter for a full bucket of grapes.
That's a lot, right?
Not the quarter, the grapes.
I mean, it wasn't much, but it showed to her
at a young gauge like she was smart, she was
savvy, and she could be self-sufficient.
But most importantly, she learned from her parents how to organize a movement.
And Dolores' dad, Juan, was one of the founders of an early union for farm workers.
He volunteered with the mine workers union too since their family lived in the mining
town. And whoever won went for work, if the town didn't have a union, he would organize one.
So all of this is naturally having an impact on little Dolores growing up, you know.
And not only was Dolores' dad a union activist, but her mom, Alicia Chapas, owned a hotel
where she would rent rooms out to labor workers for
low prices. Alicia was also an activist and was always supporting the workers.
Dolores remembers that her mom said quote, if you see someone that's in need then you have an
obligation to help them." After graduating in high school in 1947, Dolores went to college and she got a degree in education.
And between becoming like a mother and getting a divorce, just like figuring out how to be a single mom of two,
she began working as a teacher. No Dolores would say that she liked being a teacher,
but she couldn't help noticing how many of her kids would be coming to class, coming to school in general,
just hungry. Dolores naturally
understood what was going on since both of her parents, you know, started as farmers. So she decided,
you know, there was probably, there's more she could be doing to help. So she decided she wanted to
move beyond the classroom. So this is when she moved to Stockton, which is a city in Northern California, and there was a huge Chicano population in Stockton, and this is where Dolores once again seized
firsthand just how horrible the working conditions were for Latino and Filipino farm workers.
So this inspired her to like take a stand, but there was no union.
The closest thing was Latino civil Rights Group in Los Angeles.
So, she started going to the meetings in LA.
And Dolores was inspired by the things that they were able to accomplish that she actually started her own chapter of the organization back in Stockton.
So Dolores, she rallied the community around her, and within just a few years they started getting lost past.
I mean for example, driver's license tests and voting ballots became available in Spanish. Hello,
major. Huge. Before Dolores's time, it wasn't possible to get public assistance like employment
or food stamps if you had a green card. But with the support of her community,
she changed that.
She changed not too.
So by the 70s, as long as you were a legal resident
and had a green card, you could access the same things
as your wife neighbors.
Basically, with enough people saying the same thing,
the lawyers realized that she could actually make politicians
and the people in power listen to her or then really the group
You just had to like make enough noise
Something I love about this is that Delores was only five feet tall
Love that but she was a freaking powerhouse when it came to getting people to pay attention to her
She claimed her space, okay, but if the entire community of workers decided to just stop working and like go on strike,
it would put pressure on the entire supply chain.
So like suddenly, their bosses were forced to listen to the workers' demands.
They're like, we call the shots bitches.
And if they didn't, the produce would not get harvested.
Okay, they couldn't deliver to their suppliers and no money would be made.
Boom, which, let's be real,
that's the only part they cared about was the money.
So, yeah.
You guys know the phrase or heard the phrase,
Cesar Puede?
It means yes, we can.
And no, it wasn't Dora who thought of it.
It was Delores.
I know, I didn't know this.
I don't know, I'm not gonna ask, sorry, but no longer.
Because Delores actually took this quote
and made it part of her whole thing.
And maybe that's where Dora got it.
Dora Delores, come on.
Okay, here's a story about Cease of White Hat.
I guess she was picketing in Arizona.
And because of state, they had like passed a law
that said, if you say the word boycott,
which is essentially a strike word, right?
You would say it.
You could end up going to prison for six months.
So Arizona was like, don't even say the word,
or straight to jail.
I mean, that's how powerful Dolores movement was, just the word considering a jail.
So Dolores had gone to Arizona and was rallying the farm workers to join her in protesting
that law.
And apparently she went to speak to a group of professionals in the farm industry to
see if they would support her.
Maybe you know, walk around, wave sign,
maybe middle finger, depending on who you are.
But these businessmen essentially told her
to stand down.
They were like, oh no, no, no,
we don't do that here in Arizona.
No sip, wedded, meaning no you can't.
But to the law, it wasn't gonna take no for an answer.
And she told him back
like no in Arizona, see Sepwayda. Boom, everything just lit off fire. I don't know
no one was gonna silence her. She's gonna turn it flip it back on you. Boom, bye,
so she went back to her union meeting that she hosted every single night and she told them what happened
She's like this guy. He said like no set play that whatever
But I said see said by that and everyone's like, ah
Just losing her shit. Yeah, but everyone started shouting see said play that see said play that
Booth it became the slogan for the whole Chicano movement
I love this story.
It's a cool story.
Fucking love Dolores.
Basically, you did not want to fuck with Dolores, okay?
But that didn't mean people were going
to just leave the farm workers alone.
Where, you know, people in charge hated
seeing farm workers protest out in the open.
They're like, ew, gross.
Well, the lawyers was like out on the picket line
alongside these workers.
She saw all kinds of violence.
The growers, quote unquote, growers.
These are the people who own the farms.
They would try to run down picketing workers
in their cars, nasty ass.
Like, nothing could keep jurors away
from that goddamn picket line.
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Glores' reputation left an impression on Caesar.
And in 1955, he met Delora,
set a fundraising dinner up in Oakland,
and they had been making waves
and getting the attention of the media
with their own individual movements.
So it was like about time they meet.
Then in 1962, they decided to team up
to create the USW,
and stands for United Farm Workers Union.
And together, Caesar and Delora secured the first legal work contracts for these laborers.
I know, I know. These contracts would guarantee seemingly basic things like drinking water,
breaks, time to use the bathroom. This is the basics. I mean they didn't have any of these basic things before the contracts,
which is wild, right? Because you would help, they would be given.
Anyway, so someone had to fight tooth and nail just for them to get some water.
Dolores and Caesar also got the farm workers a union, which then is job security, and also real contracts.
The UW became a huge force in the California grape strike that Cesar helped lead, and that
grape strike lasted for like five years, and it only ended in 1970 when the growers finally
signed union contracts. Now this meant that they had to play by the rules
and actually give their workers all of those basic rights.
Oh, woohoo for them, woohoo.
And now, thanks to leaders like Delores and Caesar,
workers and unions were legally allowed
to strike against their employers.
Before they had no protections,
they were like,
good luck bud, you're getting fired by a lunch.
And now the state had to support your picket line.
This became called the California Agriculture
Lager Relations Act.
Super easy, just close right off the tongue.
And the movement had come a pretty long way
from not being allowed to say the word boycott. This act also established a board whose job it was
to make sure unions had organized leaders and representatives, which essentially meant that
they were making sure unions had all the tools and leaders they needed to strike when they needed to. There were still more problems to tackle, like pesticides.
Yeah, random, but real.
Because if you listen to our mom's santo episode,
you'll know that pesticides are chemicals that are sprayed around crops to get rid of bugs
or weeds that might kill the crops, right?
So there are hundreds, hundreds of studies
that showed these pesticides are toxic to human health, right?
Can we agree?
We agree.
And on top of that, until the 1970s,
growers were allowed to spray pesticides
into their fields while the workers were working.
Yeah, they thought that showering workers with
like these toxic pesticides was the right thing to do. That is, until the USW stepped in.
So according to Dolores, these pesticides were causing severe damage to the health of the workers.
And Dolores even said, quote, pesticides in the fields really affect women
even more than they do men.
But we have had so many women that have cancer.
So many children have been born with deformities.
And men have also died because they were spraying pesticides
in the field and they died of lung cancer.
End quote.
So you think this would be enough
to get the farm's degree to stop spraying,
but it was an uphill battle, and the UFW today is actually still fighting it. They didn't stop
spraying those chemicals. No, they did a not-ni-ni, which is not only rude, you guys, but like
they're kill-a-be-ball. Instead, they gave workers protective gear, quote, quote, protective gear, who really knows.
And you know, to help them guard themselves from the toxic chemical exposure that they're in all day
and still touch in regardless, like, probably like a pair of goggles.
This is what I'm imagining.
So like, this should help.
To this day, this is still a critical issue for those farm workers.
According to Delores, quote, even though we were able to get many of the pesticides banned,
they keep inventing new ones.
And quote, we're looking at you, Monsanto, or I should say Bayer.
Yeah, talking to you.
We're watching you.
I'm getting murdered.
I can't wait. I can't wait.
I can't wait to get blackmailed.
Around the same time as this pesticide controversy,
the Chicano movement came to an end.
By 1970, every organization you can think of,
I'm talking from the police department to the FBI.
They were monitoring everything that Chicano movement was doing.
On August 29th 1970 in Los
Angeles, a peaceful protest led by the Chicano movement went south. We all
remember what happened in Zootzu riots, right? I hope so. We didn't talk about it that
long ago. It was like that, but it was more than the LAPD reportedly opened fire
on the protest,
and as a result, they killed several innocent people.
And then on top of that,
the authorities had been infiltrating
the Chicano lupins for years.
So the organization was kind of crumbling from within.
Between that and the murders at the peaceful protest,
it was a devastating sign that the Chicano movement had come to an end.
And sadly, many of the most pressing issues facing migrant workers back over like seven
years are still a problem today.
Caesar died on April 23rd, 1993, at the age of 66.
And for much of his life, he was known as just a farm worker and union leader
who liked to stir up trouble.
But today, he's known as one of the great American civil rights leaders of our time.
The union he helped create, the National Farm Workers Association, still exists to this
day.
Something that really stood out to me when I was learning about all this is that for a
while.
To Laura's, they didn't want to take credit for the work that she was doing.
She didn't even want to be like vice president of the National Farm Workers Association.
Up until Caesar told her it would be crazy not to.
She said afterwards, if Caesar hadn't told me to, I wouldn't have thought about it.
And I think that's a problem with us women.
We don't think we need to be in the
power structure. Sometimes we think, well, I'm not really prepared to take about position or
that role. But I say to women out there, just do it like the guys do it. Pretend that you know
and then you learn on the job. End quote. I mean, hell yeah. I think if there's anyone we should be listening to about taking charge at work
It's the worst. Hello
Delores is still alive today and still fighting and fucking kickin ass
She's in her 90s and she is thriving. Okay. She's still inspiring
Generations of activists to stand up for underrepresented workers through her work with the Delores
Werthell Foundation. I'm going to link down in the description below where you can learn more
about like the work Delores' foundation is doing. Make sure you check it out and look,
if there's anything that Delores and Caesar taught us, it's to stand up for yourself,
never apologize for who you are and even if something seems impossible,
your voice, our voice has power, and they matter.
Pfft!
Thank you, thank you, hope for me,
2020 for whatever fun.
Anyways, thank you guys so much for listening.
I hope you learned something new.
Next week we'll be talking about one of my
favorite things on the planet. Something that every single one of us has in common. It's something
that, ooh, it has such a weird past that you're going to be just as shocked as I was. It was a
substance that used to be used as medicine. And it's single-handedly enslaved millions of people around the world.
Can you guess? No. Well, it causes many diseases today and the government has been trying to step in
and bam it. Next week, we'll be talking about the dark history of sugar! Yeah, sugar. Ah, it's very
humbling.
Remember, don't be afraid to ask questions to get the whole story because you deserve
that.
You can join me over on my YouTube where you can watch these episodes on Thursday after
the podcast airs.
And while you're there, you can also catch my murder mystery and makeup.
Now, I'd love to hear your guys' reactions to today's story. So make sure to use the hashtag
dark history over on social media so I can see what you're saying. And maybe you'll end up
in one of my videos. For example desert holly chattel tubeo because you commented on our
Tyson video from season three quote, I just hollered at my boyfriend from the bathroom
shower time that Tyson chicken helped make McDonald's make the chicken nugget.
And in the same breath said, there are thousands of girls all over the world right now telling
their boyfriend's random facts about Tyson chicken at this very moment.
He belly laughed and phoned.
Honestly, I love fun facts don't you?
Tyson chicken, full of them. I love shouting fun facts at a boyfriend. I wish I had a boyfriend.
So lonely. Teresa Longo, 70 68 says, quote, great episode, as always,
Bailey. So I noticed you were not moving your right arm. You okay? You
guessed you're a lot. I do two on my top. So just hoping you are well.
You guessed you're a lot. I do two on my talk. So just hoping you are well. Huts the truth is
Sometimes I like to touch myself what I'm filming. It just makes it a better experience
You're welcome. Nathasia Verne
Stanabe one JC
Said quote day one of me asking Bailey to do a dark history of money. P.S. I'm a broke AF student and both.
Girl is very vague. I want to need some specifics. Okay, listen, are we, are you
mean like wire certain precedents on money? Why is money green? What's up with that
triangle in the eye? Why do we have money? When did we decide paper money is good, you know?
I mean, these are really good questions,
and honestly, I'm intrigued,
but there's so many directions we could go.
Anyways, don't forget to leave a comment
because maybe I'll read it and say something funny back
because I'm hilarious.
Thank you.
Dark History is an audio boom original.
This podcast is executive produced by Bailey Sarian High,
Junia McNuley from Three Arts, Kevin Grush,
and Matt Enlowe from Maiden Network.
A big thank you to our writers, Joie Scavuzo,
Katy Burris, Alison Floboz, and me, Bailey Sarian.
Production lead, Brian Jackers.
Research provided by Zander Elmore and the dark history researcher team
special thank you to our expert
joctur and Wardo Pagan and I'm your host
Bailey Zarian I hope we have a great day
make a choices and I'll be talking to you next week
goodbye Week! Goodbye!