HomeNewsLocalMorning Cesar Chavez Day Rally Set for Westlake District

Morning Cesar Chavez Day Rally Set for Westlake District

LOS ANGELES (CNS) – Hundreds of workers will rally in the Westlake district Monday morning before boarding buses bound for Delano for the “Con Estas Manos/With These Hands” César Chávez Day march.

Workers from hospitals, foster care, mental health, courts, law enforcement, libraries, street services, sanitation, water treatment, parks services, janitors, child care providers, health care and home care workers and gig workers will gather outside the headquarters of Service Employees International Union Local 721 for the rally, organizers said.

The theme of the march “honors not only the labor of workers who use their hands to feed us, to care for our children, the old, and the sick, and to build our shelter. It also recognizes how much we all share in common with families seeking safety in our state and parents willing to endure deep sacrifice to ensure their children don’t grow up with fear or hunger,” organizers said.

Organizers have likened Monday’s march to the 340-mile, 25-day march Chavez led from Delano, about 30 miles north of Bakersfield, to Sacramento in 1966 that is widely credited with awakening the conscience of America about the farmworkers’ struggle for rights and creating momentum for the farmworkers’ fight to form their union.

UCLA will mark César Chávez Day with the opening of the Latinx Success Center which the university bills as “a campus hub focused on improving student achievement, academic outcomes and overall college experiences, with academic and advising services as well as leadership and mentorship programs among its many offerings.”

The 4 to 6 p.m. ribbon-cutting ceremony and outdoor opening celebration is titled, “Floreciendo en Comunidad,” Spanish for “Flourishing in Community.” It will include remarks by Chancellor Julio Frenk and performances from Las Cafeteras, Mariachi de Uclatlán and Danza Azteca Tonatiuh.

The center is part of UCLA’s efforts to reach benchmarks to become a Hispanic-Serving Institution and is part of a commitment “to ensure that all Bruins — including Latino, first-generation and low-income students — can reach their highest potential,” according to the university.

“It is critical that UCLA be a place of belonging — a place where everyone is valued, and everyone adds value,” Frenk said in a statement. “The opening of this center is part of our commitment to fostering an inclusive and supportive environment where all students can thrive.”

On Sunday, a crowd estimated by organizers at between 2,500 and 3,000 participated in the annual César Chávez March for Justice in Pacoima.

The 2-mile march began on Van Nuys Boulevard near Pacoima Charter Elementary School and ended at Ritchie Valens Park. A cultural arts festival was at the park from noon to 3:30 p.m. with musical presentations by school groups and professional musicians.

The march was preceded by a rally highlighting the “invaluable contributions of immigrants” at Pacoima Charter Elementary School, organizers said.

Speakers included Los Angeles County Supervisor Lindsey Horvath, Rep. Luz Rivas, D-North Hollywood, Sen. Caroline Menjivar, D-Panorama City, Assemblywoman Celeste Rodriguez, D-San Fernando, Los Angeles City Council members Imelda Padilla and Monica Rodriguez and Los Angeles Unified School District Board of Education member Kelly Gonez.

“What really stood out is we had a lot of youth that’s becoming aware of the social injustice in our communities,” Ruben Rodriguez, the director of Pueblo y Salud, an organizer of the march and rally, told City News Service.

The annual Mass honoring Chávez’s memory and legacy was celebrated in Spanish by Archbishop José H. Gomez Sunday at the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels.

Farmworkers, including members of the United Farm Workers union that Chávez co-founded in 1962, participated in the procession down the cathedral’s center aisle before the Mass. Manuel Bernal, president and CEO of the César Chávez Foundation, spoke after communion.

The foundation describes its mission as carrying on Chávez’s “life’s work of uplifting the lives of Latinos and working families by inspiring and transforming communities through social enterprises that address essential human, cultural and community needs.”

The Mass also reflected on the 60th anniversary of the Delano Grape Strike.

A strike by the Agricultural Workers Organizing Committee, a predominantly Filipino and AFL-CIO-backed labor organization, against table grape growers began on Sept. 8, 1965.

The National Farmworkers Association, the predominately Mexican labor group Chávez founded alongside Dolores Huerta, joined the strike eight days later. The two groups merged in August 1966 to create the United Farm Workers.

The strike and boycott ended in 1970 after 26 table grape growers signed contracts with the UFW.

Then-Gov. Gray Davis signed legislation in 2000 making the March 31 anniversary of Chávez’s birth in 1927 a state holiday.

Eyekon Radio
Eyekon Radiohttp://eyekonradio.com
Southern California's hit radio from the streets. Playing local and mainstream music from yesterday, today, and tomorrow. We also have the best local talk radio and podcast shows!

Most Popular

Recent Comments