...Cesar Chavez Essay Contest 2011 Cesar Chávez, a great Mexican-American labor leader, who fought without violence for the rights of the farm laborers. He was one of the heroic figures of our time. Chavez changed the perspective of the legislators in improving the life of farm laborers. His core values made a big difference today in our society. Without his perseverance to make a better society, it could have been in a big calamity. One of his core values was the acceptance of all people. To have a success in social change, people should have an essential ingredient in organizing a diverse force and actualizing the democracy. Since my really caring, hilarious, and friendly counselor always trigger his students’ ability to earn As and Bs, join clubs, play sports, and volunteer. I came to a conclusion to follow all this norms and it’s worth the time. I have been an active member of variety of clubs at school and big organizations in my community. Volunteering 3 days a week, trying to help my peers with their concerns is a good feeling. Crawford High School is so diverse that it has over 40 languages spoken and most students that immigrated are from Somalia, Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam, and countries around the world. They were refugees who had no choice but to leave the country they loved and begin a new life in a strange new country. In addition, students need to feel welcomed and loved. I help my peers through asking them to go to this one organization I volunteer at, San Diego...
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...Introduction: The United States today has a large population of Mexicans, and has had a significantly large population of Mexicans since they became U.S citizens after the Treaty of Hidalgo was signed in 1848. The treaty was an agreement between the U.S, and Mexico, transferring land to the U.S, but not only did they get land; Mexicans who resided in those states also stayed, and most became U.S citizens. Since then, Mexicans, and their U.S born children have faced many problems such as, discrimination, inequality, and segregation. For many years Mexicans, and Mexican-Americans dealt with the inequality, until the 1960’s when they decided that there had to be an end to all the discrimination that Mexicans faced, and started what is now known as the Chicano Movement. The Chicano Movement had a huge impact on not only Chicanos, but also on the nation. A) During the 60’s there were several civil rights movements that took place, and according to Rodolfo F. Acuna “the bases of social movements were inequality, and a moral outrage at the lack of fairness in the system” (Acuna 287), and this is what the Chicano Movement was. In order to understand the Chicano Movement, it must be defined; in short, the Chicano Movement was part of the Civil Rights movement during the 60’s whose goal was to get better education, voting rights, equal wages, and restoration of land grants; as it had originally been agreed to in the Treaty of Hidalgo. The word “Chicano” used to be considered...
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...Social Movements and Trends His/145 May 29 2012 In the rare occasions when the U.S looks at unions, the media tends to view social movements as the creation of strong leaders. The view of Cesar Chavez and the United Farm Workers is one of the most evident events of all. Cesar Chavez the famous activist would have been 85 years old today. After his death in 1993 an abundance of coverage assumed that the Unite Farm Workers would not survive the tragedy. The Chicano movement began during the Civil Rights era with three main goals which included the restoration of land, rights for farm workers and developments in education. Prior to the 1960’s Latinos had no influence when it came to the national political arena. There was a complete turnaround in the 1960’s when the Mexican American Political Association worked to elect President John F. Kennedy, creating Latinos as a significant voting alliance. After Kennedy won the election he showed his appreciation towards the Latino community by assigning Hispanics to posts in his administration and he also took in consideration the concerns of the Hispanic community. Latinos, mainly Mexican Americans began demanding and were very persisting towards the reforms made in labor and education to meet their needs. Under the leadership of Cesar Chavez, the Chicano movement in the 1960's used economic pressure rather than violence to pursue civil rights for Mexican-Americans. The fight during the 1960’s to secure unionization for farm workers...
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...The Farm Labor Movement was when Cesar Chavez and Dolores Huerta worked together to form the United Farm Workers Union. This union was formed to ensure that farm workers got paid for the right amount of time they worked for. Many farmers were getting low wages and Cesar Chavez thought that was unfair. Cesar Chavez was a farmer ever since he graduated eight grade. His father was in an accident and he didn't want his mother to work so much. When he was 17 he went to the Navy for two years. He started the United Farm Workers Union in 1962. Cesar didn't have many members in it until 1970, when he urged grape workers to join the union. This caused the Delano grape strike, a march from Sacramento to Delano. This was a three hundred and forty mile trip to Delano. The marchers wanted state government to pass laws, which would permit farm workers to organize into a union and allow collective bargaining agreements. He tried to make people aware of the struggles of farm workers for better pay and treatment. He did this through boycotts, pickets, and strikes. Cesar did not believe in acts of violence. The picketing, boycotts, and strikes worked against the grape growers and this led to the grape growers sign contracts with the union. The result of the Farm Labor Movement gave farmers the money and dignity that everyone should receive and ensured that the farmers of America will always be treated fairly. Work Cited ----------...
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...This man fought for the rights of migrant workers everywhere, he gave all he could to better other people’s lives, his name was Cesar Chavez. Cesar was a very influential activist for farm workers and Mexican immigrants in the 1960’s and 70’s. He spent his early life as a farm worker and experienced firsthand, all the problems that the workers had to endure. He dedicated his life to helping others and improving wages for migrant workers all over California. Cesar spent the early years of his life in the United States as a farm worker with the rest of his family. When he turned 17, he joined the U.S. Navy. After leaving the navy, he referred to his time in service as the worst two years of his life. He returned to California to marry his high school sweetheart and moved to San Jose. He continued to work in the fields until 1952. In 1952 Cesar moved on to working for the Community Service Organization, which was an activist group for Latin Americans. He worked with the group for six years, and was made the national director in 1958. Cesar worked as the director for four more years before leaving the group to co-find the United Farm Workers. The United Farm Workers brought migrant workers together, in order to get more reasonable wages, and to keep the legal immigrants from losing their jobs to illegal immigrants. In 1965 Chavez joined the Delano Grape Strike. His work helping the strike win caused three other groups in different areas to strike for fair wages and working conditions...
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...Cesar Chavez's Was Cesar Chavez's an effective leader? Cesar Chavez's was born March 31, 1927, Yuma, AZ Cesar Chavez was given Awards Presidential Medal of Freedom, Pacem in Terris Award, Jefferson Awards for Public Service was a Civil rights activist goal was to build their own union called (UFW = united farm workers) dropped out of school to help his family was poor moved to california started to pick Cesar passed away in his sleep on April 23, 1993, in San Luis, Arizona, only miles from his birthplace 66 years earlier.Cesar Chavez was an effective leader because he did everything non-violence,had clear goal and had a positive attitude and was willing to sacrifice. First Cesar Chavez s strategy that was most effective was nonviolence....
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...Dolores Clara Fernandez Huerta born April 10, 1930 in Dawson, New Mexico is an American labor leader and civil rights activist who was co-founder of the National Farm Workers Association, and later the United Farm workers. Huerta has received many award and accolades and has remained a role model and voice to many in the Latino community. Huerta was born to Juan Fernandez and Alicia Chavez, they divorced when Huerta was just three years old. Both Huerta’s parents were active in the rights of people and the community itself. Huerta’s father was a field worker, miner, as well as a union activist. Huerta’s mother was a business woman who owned a restaurant and a 70-room hotel where she helped low wage workers. A lot of Huerta’s humanitarianism...
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...Christine Munroe Sociology November 26, 2015 Topic # 1 One of the most significant contributions to the growth of the agricultural economy was the creation of the Bracero Program in which more than 4 million Mexican farm laborers came to work the fields of this nation. The braceros converted the agricultural fields of America into the most productive in the planet. The Bracero Program was a corporative international program through which the United States imported large number of Mexicans workers (mostly farmworkers). This program came about because of farm labor shortages caused by American entry into World War 11. The men were recruited to work primarily in agriculture, although during World War II braceros also supplied railroad labor. The majority of the braceros were experienced farm labors from important agricultural regions of Mexico. Huge numbers of bracero candidates arrived by train to the northern border. Their arrival altered the social environment and economy of many border towns. The program brought Mexican workers to replace American workers dislocated by the war. The program was intended to be temporary, but because of dependence of American farms on Mexican labor it kept going for nearly two decades after the war. The braceros contracts were controlled by independent associations and the Farm Bureau. The contracts were in English and the braceros would sign them without understanding theor full rights and the conditions of employment. When the contracts...
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...the poorest of poor and the weakest of weak are pitted against the strongest of strong.” While reading this particular document about Cesar Chavez and his actions regarding Mexican American Civil Rights I was surprised to see how much of a role he played. Chavez was a Mexican American farm worker and his role was key in the organization of the unions fighting for the rights of farm workers in California-Mexico area. After I read this document my eyes were opened to how immigrants were treated when it came to their jobs as labor workers. I think that the information that Chavez presented in this document was very informative and given at a very accurate point of view. Through this document you can learn that immigrants were very poorly treated. This document also shows that there are many ways we have advanced as a country and society, where there are also ways that we have not. Just like now, the U.S. contracted out work to different countries. First it was the Philippines in the early twenties and then on to the Japanese when they moved to the U.S. and then when the population of Mexicans began to rise, the U.S. used them and allowed them temporary access to the United States. Some of the main cultural and social changes I noticed from this document were that there were tons of issues within the labor workers. Cesar Chavez witnessed all of this first hand, and this account gives the reader a look into what went on, on a more personal level. Rather than just...
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...Analysis Paper: Cesar Chavez is a well known civil rights leader and labor union organizer. He publishes an article that emphasizes the importance of nonviolent resistance to absorb his readers to follow the non-violence method. In the article, Chavez uses many rhetorical strategies such as personification, repetition, and alliteration to get his argument about non violence across. He uses personification in the sentence, “In this sense, time is our ally.” He gives time a human characteristic and by doing so, he is basically saying that is doesn't matter how long we wait to receive victory. Time is on our side, the wait will be worth it in the end. Chavez uses personification frequently in the article. “This observance of Dr.King’s...
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...Cesar Estrada Chavez was a first generation American who was born on March 31, 1927 (CESAR CHAVEZ). Chavez grew up in a small home in Arizona. At an early age, the Chavez family lost their farm during the Great Depression due to a broken deal that was made with Chavez’s father. They were unable to pay for the land and the Chavez family, along with about 300,000 families traveled to California. Chavez experienced harsh conditions and the injustice that many migrant workers face(“Life Behind”). Although Chavez never finished school after eighth he felt that education was important and he even stated, “The end of all education should surely be service to others”(UFW). After his father was involved in an accident, Chavez worked as a migrant to...
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...Cesar Chavez was a small Mexican catholic man; one of americas most influential civil rights activists. He believed in the ways of Martin Luther king and Ghandi such as non violence, “Violence can only hurt us and our cause (Cesar Chavez). Cesar Chavez became one of americas most successful Mexican-American leaders, fighting for union rights, using non violence and being a labor leader. Cesar Chavez was named after his grandfather from his dads side. His grandfather Cesar migrated to Arizona from Mexico during the Mexican Revolution and settled in 160 acres of Land twenty miles away from Yuma. Cesar Chavez was born December 31, 1927 in Yulma, Arizona. Cesar is the second out of five children but the oldest boy his father Librado and mother Juana Chavez had together. Cesar and his siblings were all raised in a big loving family despite the fact they were not wealthy at all they had enough to live happy and at ease. They had a family farm in which they grew grapes, lettuce, watermelons, had crops of cotton, planted carrots and they even had chickens. Librado began to teach Cesar and his brother Richard how to take care...
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...Before the coming of the man Cesar Chavez, workers on the California farms had been exploited for decades. Facing horrible working conditions and terrible pay, many attempts had been made to organize a union and push for better more rights and more reasonable statures for the farmers, but it had met with no success. So, what set apart Cesar Chavez from the rest? What made him able to succeed where all others had failed? To unite a group whose disunity seemed almost inherent from the numerous failures to unionize?In order to begin, one must begin talking about the man Cesar Chavez and his own thought processes behind his machinations. He had moved from Arizona with his family as a boy and had attended over 30 different schools before finally dropping out at the end of eighth grade, living only intents of shacks. It was then after a small time in the navy and ten years doing community service work did he...
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...n 1962, Cesar Chavez left CSO (Community Service Organization) and co-founded the National Farm Association (NFWA) His initial impact was by helping Filipino American farm workers initiate the Delano grape strike on September 8, 1965. He then decided to protest for similar reasons. In 1962, Cesar Chavez founded the National Farm Workers Association later to become the United Farm Workers (UFA). He was joined by Dolores Huerta a labor leader who has started the CSO and helped agricultural workers. The problem started early on with labor workers upset with the low wages, long hours and low resources. In 1965 the union finally exploded.the agricultural Workers Organizing Committee, a mostly Filipino union struck when the Delano grape growers cut the pay rates during the harvest of that year. Cesar Chavez asked his organization to join him during the strike and quickly became its leader. Cesar Chavez and his organization wanted more pay, less work and other benefits. This social movement was important because labor workers were not being treated right. They were neglected and seen as slaves and not given proper benefits. Cesar Chavez wanted to help agricultural workers across the entire nation and make their lives a little more easier and to be treated equally. Cesar Chavez and his union became nationally known when Chavez’s drawings on the imagery of the civil rights movement, his insistence on non violence, his reliance on volunteers from the universities and religious...
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...in their food. This speech became known as “The Grapes of Wrath”. In the speech the Grapes of Wrath a man named Cesar Chavez spoke about the pesticides that are being used in growing grapes, were harmful to anyone in contact with the grapes. Cesar Chavez gave the speech of “The Grapes of Wrath” in 1965-1973. He dedicated his life in making a difference for immigrants working conditions. Chavez witnessed Immigrants dying every day because of the harmful pesticides used in agriculture. He organized a union called UFW (United Farm Workers of America) (Monte 10). This was the first effective farm workers’ union in America. Chavez knew that he had to find a way to stop the use of the poisonous pesticides, so he gave his speech for the consumers of the grapes. Consumers did not care what was happening to the immigrants, but they do care about what happens to them. Chavez told consumers they were eating poison and they started to listen. Chavez wanted the consumer to see and feel the dangers through his speech and facts he spoke about. He knew once they heard how the poison pesticides affect everyone, the farmers would finally stop using that poison because consumers would not buy a poisonous grape. Chavez used logos to strengthen his speech to the consumers. Logos is known as logical evidence, facts used to prove what is said. For example, Chavez talks about the five insecticides used on the grapes to keep...
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