Cesar Chavez Foundation
  • About Cesar
  • Licensing
  • Chavez100
  • Store
  • About Cesar
  • Licensing
  • Store
  • Who We Are
    • History
    • Executive Staff
    • Board of Directors
  • What We Do
    • National Chavez Center
    • Housing & Economic Development Fund
    • Education Fund
      • Summer Curricula and Services
      • After-School Curricula and Services
      • Cesar Chavez Migrant Education Program
      • School-Year Curricula and Training
      • Innovation
      • Contact Us
    • Chavez Media
  • News
  • Events
    • Staff Convocations
    • Legacy Awards
  • Contact Us
    • Careers
    • Request A Speaker

Author: CCF

This is our archive page
  • Cesar Chavez Foundation > Articles by: CCF
post-thumb

Cesar Chavez began his activism 72 years ago by mobilizing Latino voters. Let’s do it again!

August 22, 2024, by CCF

The Legacy of Cesar Chavez in Activism

Before he organized farm workers, Cesar Chavez’s activism began by registering and turning out poor Latinos to vote. He also fought Republican voter suppression tactics as early as 1952 in the impoverished Eastside San Jose barrio called Sal Si Puedes(Get Out If You Can).

Think about it. Why did President Biden have Cesar Chavez’s bronze bust placed in the Oval Office on the first day he entered it as president—27 years after Cesar’s passing? Why did 17 million Americans support his boycott of California table grapes in 1975? Was it partly because the genesis of Cesar’s activism was community organizing and voter engagement? He was a civil rights leader before becoming a farm labor leader.

Cesar Chavez’s organizing career started at age 25, when he met Fred Ross Sr., one of America’s greatest community organizers.

Cesar Chavez and Fred Ross Sr.
(Bob Fitch)

“The first time I met Fred Ross, he was about the last person I wanted to see,” Cesar recalled when eulogizing his mentor and teacher in 1992. Ross arrived in the rough East San Jose barrio in the spring of 1952, organizing a local chapter of the Community Service Organization after forming the original chapter in East Los Angeles. Cesar had recently left field work. He initially believed Ross was one of the college professors who came down from Berkeley or Stanford while studying Mexicans and asking them rude questions. Once Ross started talking, he quickly realized that wasn’t the case. He spoke about empowerment through the ballot box—and Cesar’s life was forever changed. Ross wrote that night in his diary, “I think I’ve found the guy I’m looking for.”

Over more than a month of frantic days and nights, Cesar helped CSO register 4,000 new voters. When Election Day arrived, the local Republican Party dispatched “challengers” to threaten Latinos voting for the first time. It was reminiscent of voter suppression still taking place in too many places when people of color cast ballots. The tactic failed. One Latino voter exclaimed, “At first, I got really mad, but then thought if they go to all that trouble to keep us from voting, it means they are paying attention to us.”

The Impact and Importance of Mobilizing Latino Voters

So many Latinos turned out to vote that county authorities got packinghouses to stop dumping waste into barrio creeks. And they fixed cesspools that had been producing amoebic dysentery.

After that successful drive, Ross saw to it that Cesar was put on as a full-time CSO organizer. Together, the two men established 22 CSO chapters across California and in Arizona. More than 500,000 voters were registered.

Cesar Chavez mobilized the Latino vote while working with CSO in Oxnard in the fall of 1958.

Some 50,000 residents become U.S. citizens. This organizing produced indigenous leaders such as Edward Roybal, Herman Gallegos, and Cruz Reynoso, among many others. CSO attracted broad support by addressing the concerns expressed by the people who were being organized. It confronted voter suppression, battled police brutality, and opposed employment discrimination and school segregation. The diverse coalition it assembled included Latinos, African Americans, Jews, Catholics, Japanese Americans, and union leaders.

CSO registered 160,000 Latino voters and turned them out to the polls for John F. Kennedy’s 1960 race for president. Cesar won praise from Robert F. Kennedy, who met with him and would later play a key role in the farm worker movement.

Mobilizing for Today and Tomorrow

“You can’t do anything by talking,” Cesar explained. “You can’t do anything if you haven’t got the power…And the only way you can generate power is by doing a lot of work.”

This year, let’s do a lot more work by making sure everyone is registered to vote—and votes. How better to honor Cesar Chavez than by doing what he did? As he once said, “We don’t need perfect political systems; we need perfect participation.”

Let your voice be heard! Visit vote.org now to find your polling center and get all the info you need for your state’s election. Together, we can create a powerful impact on the future of our nation.

post-thumb

Groundbreaking Celebration for Esteban E. Torres Village in Baldwin Park, CA

July 24, 2024, by CCF

The Cesar Chavez Foundation held a groundbreaking ceremony for the Esteban E. Torres Village, a new affordable housing project in Baldwin Park. This project aims to provide not just homes but hope and opportunity to the community. The village is named in honor of the late Congressman Esteban E. Torres, a dedicated advocate for Latino civil rights and empowerment. It is designed to offer safe, affordable housing for low-income families with 51 units dedicated to serving these vulnerable populations, the project is a testament to the power of collaboration and a shared vision of social justice and community support.

Features and Amenities

The Esteban E. Torres Village will encompass a total of 6,362 square feet of space dedicated to residential services, including:

  • Recreational and Meeting Spaces: Two courtyards, two central laundry facilities, property management offices, meeting rooms, and spaces for social services.
  • Educational and Social Services: The village will offer vital social services, including programming lounges, an educational space, a community garden, and warming kitchens for cooking demonstrations. It will also provide mental health care referrals, education, employment training, and more.
  • Outdoor Spaces: With over 5,693 square feet of passive open space, residents will enjoy beautifully landscaped courtyards, an occupiable roof deck, indoor recreational rooms, BBQ grills, and a community garden for outdoor activities and relaxation.

Watch Highlights of the Esteban E. Torres Village Groundbreaking

 

post-thumb

Cesar Chavez Foundation Celebrates the Grand Opening of Plaza Ortiz II in El Monte, CA

June 5, 2024, by CCF

The Cesar Chavez Foundation (CCF), the City of El Monte, and stakeholders including Boston Financial, JP Morgan Chase, and the California Department of Housing and Community Development, celebrated the grand opening of Plaza Ysabel “Mac” Ortiz II, a new affordable housing community for low-income families in El Monte, California.

Plaza Ysabel “Mac” Ortiz II is CCF’s second project in the City of El Monte and honors a 19-year-old native of El Monte killed during the Korean War. It is the second property commemorating the young soldier, whose remains were returned nearly 70 years after being reported missing in action.

In attendance, El Monte Mayor Jessica Ancona remarked, “One of the things that warms my heart is the addition to the beautiful housing is a Si Se Puede Learning Center. The commitment to families and children is one of the missions of the Cesar Chavez Foundation and one the council values here in the City of El Monte—providing a brighter future for children and families. Families don’t have to go elsewhere for their children to receive additional support by having those opportunities within this development.”

Plaza Ysabel “Mac” Ortiz II provides 53 units of 100% affordable housing and community services, including a Si Se Puede Learning Center, Chavez Foundation’s flagship afterschool program for K-5 students, spaces for residential services, a recreational meeting space, conference and meeting rooms. The property also features a new mural by artist John Park, “Celebración,” paying homage to the city’s farm worker history and Latino culture.

Marlee Martinez, who currently resides in Plaza Ortiz II and was raised in El Monte, has recently moved back from the high desert. She commented, “That’s the whole point of affordable housing…it allows people to thrive in the communities they grew up in and continue to do so. It has been very helpful for my family, as we are finally close together.”

Plaza Ysabel “Mac” Ortiz II is CCF’s second project in the Main Street Specific Plan corridor in the City of El Monte. CCF’s first project, Plaza Ysabel “Mac” Oritz, is located east of the new development at 10950 Railroad Street and provides 53 units of affordable housing for veterans and families.

post-thumb

Larry Itliong Unity Park Honors Epic Multi-Racial U.S. Civil and Labor Rights Struggle

May 8, 2024, by CCF

Mexican-Filipino-American labor activist Lorraine Agtang reflects on the significance of Larry Itliong Unity Park.

I am one of the last surviving Filipino grape strikers who walked out of Delano, Calif. vineyards on Sept. 8, 1965, when Larry Itliong helped lead those historic walkouts. My six siblings and I lived with our parents for years in the same farm labor camp where most of us were born outside Delano. I was 13 when the strike started.

Thus began an epic American civil and labor rights struggle, and Larry Itliong is increasingly celebrated as a landmark figure and as a tough and relentless Filipino American labor organizer and community leader. His Oct. 25 birthday is marked as a special day under state law in California. He is acclaimed in books, films, schools, and now a musical. Larry is finally being honored with the grand opening on May 11 of a park named for him in Delano, where he and the Filipino grape strikers started the five-year-long grape strike and boycott.

The park, Larry Itliong Unity Park, is aptly named. It signifies the solidarity between the races he and the other Filipino grape strikers belonging to the Agricultural Workers Organizing Committee initiated by turning to the largely Latino National Farm Workers Association led by Cesar Chavez, and asking them to join their picket lines. Growers historically used the races to break each other’s strikes. So that racial unity was key to the walkouts’ success and the emergence of America’s first enduring farm worker union, the United Farm Workers, the result of a merger of the Filipino and Latino unions in 1966.

Larry’s lifetime of activism predated Delano in 1965. After immigrating from the Philippines at age 15 in 1929, he migrated up and down the West Coast toiling in fields and canaries. His storied organizing career spanned from the 1930s through the 1960s.

Most Filipino members of the Agricultural Workers Organizing Committee could not marry because of California’s racist anti-miscegenation law. My family was an exception. My father, Platon Agtang, married my mother, Lorenza Agtang, a Mexican. Larry and my father were called “Manongs”—older, respected ones who helped build the union movement in the fields.

My father was a loyal union member who never broke the strike during its five years. With seven kids to feed, he returned to migrant farm work, laboring as far north as Stockton.

By the time the strike and boycott convinced table grape growers to sign their first UFW contracts in 1970, most Filipino grape strikers were too old for field labor. Without families, they had no decent places to live.

So inspired by Larry and Filipino UFW leaders, the farm worker movement used volunteer labor—including college students—to build the Paulo Agbayani Retirement Village on the movement’s “Forty Acres” complex in Delano. It is still owned and managed by the National Chavez Center, an arm of the Cesar Chavez Foundation.

A beautiful adobe-brick Mission-style affordable housing community, Agbayani Village was for the Delano Manongs and other retired or displaced Filipino farm workers. I was the first manager. We went as far as Salinas and Stockton to recruit the initial residents. There, elderly Filipino brothers lived the rest of their years in dignity and security. They had a community kitchen with a Filipino menu, a recreation room, garden, and access to the adjacent medical clinic and social services.

When California’s farm labor law passed in 1975, I was a UFW organizer, practicing lessons about racial solidarity learned from Cesar, Larry and the other Manongs. I organized farm workers at Delano grape ranches who were Filipinos, Arabs, Puerto Ricans, and Mexicans.

Larry Itliong, Cesar Chavez, and the other Filipino and Latino leaders of the UFW brought together the two races and cultures. I was a mestiza, of mixed race, Filipino and Mexican. Because Filipinos and Latinos united in one union, for the first time in my life I felt whole as a person grounded in both communities. That’s partly why the UFW succeeded while other unions failed for 80 years to organize farm workers.

We can never forget Larry Itliong, Platon Agtang, and the Filipino workers who started the grape strike. They helped found an extraordinary movement and union that continues fighting for farm workers seven decades later.

On Oct. 19, around Larry’s birthday, we will commemorate the 50th anniversary of the Agbayani Village. The Filipino Community of Delano is also staging its Filipino Weekend celebration then at the Forty Acres. Please join us in marking these historic events.

About Lorraine Agtang

Lorraine Agtang, a participant in the 1965 Delano Grape Strike at just 13, later became the first Paulo Agbayani Retirement Village manager and has been a lifelong activist in the farm worker movement. She played a crucial role in organizing diverse farm workers for union elections in 1975, continuously honoring the legacy of the Manongs.

Image Credit: Calendow

post-thumb

2024 Cesar Chavez Legacy Awards

April 30, 2024, by CCF

The annual Cesar Chavez Legacy Awards ceremony was held on April 4, 2024, at the beautiful Vibiana in downtown Los Angeles. The event brought together leaders from various sectors, including business, government, labor, and education, to commemorate the life and work of Cesar Chavez. In addition to honoring Cesar’s life and legacy, the Legacy Awards celebrate those who exemplify excellence and commitment to advocacy and community.

The inaugural Taste of Avenida Cesar Chavez made its debut at this year’s Legacy Awards. Inspired by a movement and legacy that endure well beyond the fields and into America’s largest cities, this unique culinary experience pays homage to the people and businesses along the street that bears the name—Avenida Cesar Chavez.

2024 HONOREES

Cástulo de la Rocha, President and CEO of AltaMed Health Services, was recognized for his unwavering commitment to expanding access to healthcare in underserved communities. His passion for social justice has driven his professional and personal pursuits, significantly impacting health service accessibility.

Jane Fonda, a stellar actress and fervent activist, was among the distinguished honorees. With a legacy of advocacy that spans decades, Fonda’s work ranges from supporting Indigenous peoples’ rights and economic justice to LGBTQ rights, gender equality, and, more recently, leading efforts against climate change through Fire Drill Fridays and the Jane Fonda Climate PAC.

Robert Rivas, Speaker of the California State Assembly, was honored for his dedication to serving the most vulnerable. Inspired by his grandfather, a labor activist, Rivas’s journey from teacher and firefighter to a historic Assembly Speaker is a testament to his commitment to public service.

The legacy awards included Julián Castro, the former United States Secretary of Housing and Urban Development and the new CEO of the Latino Community Foundation, who delivered the keynote address, and Cristela Alonzo, an acclaimed actor, and comedian known for her unique blend of humor and insight, hosted the ceremony. Her role as the evening’s host added a special touch to the celebration, highlighting the achievements of the honorees and the legacy of Cesar Chavez.

Check out our video highlighting the night’s events!

 

 

Posts pagination

Previous page 1 … 5 6 7 … 20 Next page
Press Inquiries:

Suzy Silvestre

Director of Strategic Communications

ssilvestre@chavezfoundation.org

 

Marc Grossman

Spokesperson

mgrossman@chavezfoundation.org

Recent Posts
  • We Are Winning: A Revolution of Mind + Heart
  • Free Sample Lessons for K-8 Curriculum
  • Carrying the Legacy Forward: A New Generation of Radio Campesina 
  • Rising Together to Empower Migrant Students
  • Sí Se Puede: Where Communities Thrive and Future Leaders Rise
Cesar Chavez Foundation
.

Important Links

  • What We Do
  • Who We Are
  • News
  • Contact

Contact Us

P.O. Box 310
29700 Woodford-Tehachapi Rd.
Keene, CA 93531

contact us

Newsletter Subscription

    © Copyright Cesar Chavez Foundation 2024. All Rights Reserved.

    site design and site maintenance by Dream Warrior Group