Authors:
Historic Era:
Historic Theme:
Subject:
October 2022 | Volume 67, Issue 5
Authors:
Historic Era:
Historic Theme:
Subject:
October 2022 | Volume 67, Issue 5
DELANO, CALIFORNIA — 1965 — Singing, marching, and chanting “Viva La Huelga!,” two thousand farm workers picket the grape fields of California's Central Valley. Some have worked those fields for decades. Others are children earning 80 cents an hour. Will someone take up their cause?
Journalists focus on a single strike leader — Cesar Chavez. But right up front, speaking through a bullhorn, is his alter ego. Where he appears calm and Christlike, she seems lit by fire. When he ponders, she acts. Her “Yes, we can’’ often clashes with his “not yet.” But those who know Dolores Huerta know she is second to no one in the United Farm Workers.
Fate and marriage gave her the surname that means, in Spanish, “orchard.” Yet Dolores Clara Fernandez Huerta never picked fruit. Instead, she took up la causa in the name of children.
“A lot of the children were the children of farmworkers,” she recalled of teaching in California’s Central Valley. “And they would come to school with their raggedy shoes and their little bones sticking out of their T-shirts. And I thought that was so wrong. I thought I could do more by organizing farm workers than by trying to teach their hungry children."
The mid-1950s was the peak of the labor movement, massive unions — United Auto Workers, United Steelworkers— earning laborers the respect and wages that create a solid middle class. But the million who picked fruit remained as Woody Guthrie had found them.
In 1955, though she was a single mother with seven children, Dolores Huerta left the classroom and went into the fields near Stockton, California. She met farm workers in their shacks, and later went to Sacramento to lobby for a $1.25 wage. In 1959, she met a kindred spirit. Chavez had heard of Huerta.
“She’s a real firebrand,” one organizer told him, “She’s smart, articulate, self-starting.” Soon, Chavez and Huerta were working together. And fighting