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Farm Workers Rights

Southern Pacific Railroad Ad – Orientalism – They’re Coming to See California… Why Don’t You Come Too? – April 1904, Vol. XII

Sunset Magazine – April 1904, Vol. XII

Since the publication of Edward Said‘s Orientalism in 1978, much academic discourse has begun to use the term “Orientalism” to refer to a general patronizing Western attitude towards Middle Eastern, Asian and North African societies. In Said’s analysis, the West essentializes these societies as static and undeveloped—thereby fabricating a view of Oriental culture that can be studied, depicted, and reproduced. Implicit in this fabrication, writes Said, is the idea that Western society is developed, rational, flexible, and superior – Wikipedia

Sunset Magazine – April 1904, Vol. XII – CLICK FOR LARGER IMAGE

Yes, “they” are coming to California by rail, but not as tourists.

The first Chinese were hired in 1865 [sic] at approximately $28 per month to do the very dangerous work of blasting and laying ties over the treacherous terrain of the high Sierras. They lived in simply dwellings and cooked their own meals, often consisting of fish, dried oysters and fruit, mushrooms and seaweed. – Central Pacific Railroad Photographic History Museum

From Sunset Magazine article – California Netherlands – April 1904 CLICK FOR LARGER IMAGE

In the late 1800’s, thousands of Chinese and Japanese workers were brought to work in the fruit orchards and sugar beet fields. They were the first farmworkers, to form associations and strike for improved wages and conditions. But their victories were short-lived.

The growers were able to play them off against anglos and other immigrant workers, especially during the depression years of the 1870’s and early 1900’s – when Asian workers were blamed for taking away jobs from “Americans.” The result was racist laws excluding the Chinese (1882) and Japanese (1920) from the U.S. – Farmworkers’ Website – The Struggle in California

Eastern Farmworkers Association – National Labor Federation – Syracuse, NY

© Vincenzo Aiosa

The organization grew out of the Eastern Farm Workers Association in Suffolk County, New York, founded in 1972 by Gino Perente and others. Perente had worked at the New York office of the United Farm Workers Organizing Committee in 1971 or 1972 and, according to Dolores Huerta, “…created a lot of problems for the union, attacking us in the press. Then he went off and formed his own group….NATLFED operates about thirty offices, called entities around the US, with concentrations in California and the Northeast. The Eastern Farm Workers Association (now in Bellport, New York and Syracuse, New York) and California Homemakers Association (in Sacramento, California) were founded in the early seventies, and were followed by Eastern Service Workers Association, Western Service Workers Association, the Commemoration Committee for the Black Panther Party in Oakland, California, Western Massachusetts Labor Action in Pittsfield, Massachusetts, Western Farm Workers Association in Stockton, California, Yuba City, California, and Hillsboro, Oregon, Friends of Seasonal and Service Workers in Portland, Oregon and Northwest Seasonal Workers Association in Medford, Oregon.”Wikipedia

NYC Screening of Diego Luna’s ‘Chavez’ – March 17, 2014

Jump, Robert F. Kennedy, Jr & Vincenzo Aiosa © Frank H. Jump

© Frank H. Jump

Rosario Dawson @ CHAVEZ screening – plays farm worker activist Dolores Huerta © Frank H. Jump

UFW President Arturo Rodriguez & RFK, Jr. © Frank H. Jump

Isabel Celeste Dawson © Frank H. Jump

Gregory & Clay Dawson © Frank H. Jump

Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. © Frank H. Jump

UFW Pres. Arturo Rodriguez, Bronx Boro President Ruben Diaz, Jr, RFK, Jr, Rosario Dawson, ? , Paul F. Chavez- President Cesar Chavez Foundation © Frank H. Jump