Sunday, September 03, 2006

Cesar Chavez, an American Hero


Chávez was trained and taught by Fred Ross, and started working as an organizer in 1952 for the Community Services Organization (CSO), a Latino civil rights group. Chávez urged Mexican-American to register and vote, and he traveled throughout California and made speeches in support of worker's rights. He became CSO's national director in the late 1950's.
Four years later, however, Chávez left the CSO. He co-founded the National Farm Workers Association (NFWA) with Dolores Huerta. In 1965, the Filipino workers, under their organization the Agricultural Workers Organizing Committee (AWOC), initiated the Delano grape strike on September 8 to protest in favor of higher wages.

Saturday, August 19, 2006

Democracy Starts Here

Thursday, August 17, 2006

Carlos Bulosan, America in the Heart 1943

"America is also the nameless foreigner, the homeless refugee, the hungry boy begging for a job and the black body dangling on a tree. America is the illiterate immigrant who is ashamed that the world of books and intellectual opportunities closed to him. We are all that nameless foreigner, that homeless refugee, that hungry boy, that illiterate immigrant and that lynched black body. All of us, from the first Adams to the last Filipino, native born or alien, educated or illiterate &endash; We are America!"
- Carlos Bulosan, America is in the Heart 1943.
Visit this site to know him more :
http://www.bulosan.org/html/bulosan_biography.html


Carlos Bulosan (1913 - 1956)
The first Filipino writer to bring Filipino concerns to national attention, Carlos Bulosan came to Seattle in 1930, steerage class, inculcated with the ideals of brotherhood and equality he had learned in American schools in the Philippines. Arriving at the start of the Great Depression, he quickly learned the bitter truth that when jobs are scarce, minorities and immigrants become scapegoats, and the egalitarian rhetoric was far from reality for such as he. From the 1870s, the Chinese had been targets of such racial hatred; in the 1930s, the Filipinos were perceived as the latest influx of the “yellow horde” who worked for little pay, taking jobs away from whites. In his brief experience as a migrant laborer, Bulosan endured living conditions worse than those he had left behind. Bulosan found “that in many ways it was a crime to be a Filipino in California. I came to know that the public streets were not free to my people: we were stopped each time these vigilant patrolmen saw us driving a car. We were suspect each time we were seen with a white woman.”In Los Angeles, Bulosan met labor organizer Chris Mensalves. Together they organized a union of fish cannery workers, and Bulosan, working as a dishwasher, wrote for the union paper. Writing became a means of defining his life, and his concern for just treatment for Filipino workers became one of his major themes. In 1936 the effects of poverty and constant moving led to tuberculosis. Bulosan entered the hospital, and in 1938 he was discharged, after three operations for lung lesions and an extended convalescence. His enforced confinement became his education. Bulosan read at least a book a day, from Whitman and Poe through Hemingway, Dreiser, and Steinbeck.With some of the most important Pacific action of World War II occurring in the Philippine Islands, names such as Bataan and Corregidor became household words, and the climate was right for Bulosan to rise to national prominence. The Saturday Evening Post paid nearly a thousand dollars for Bulosan’s essay “Freedom from Want” (an essay which was illustrated by Norman Rockwell and displayed in the Federal Building in San Francisco); his work appeared in The New Yorker, Harper’s Bazaar, Town and Country, Poetry and other prestigious magazines, and he was featured on the cover of news magazines. His book of reminiscences, Laughter of My Father, was broadcast to American soldiers around the world, and Look declared his autobiographic novel, America Is in the Heart, one of the fifty most important American books ever published.However, Bulosan died in 1956, in poverty and obscurity. The political climate had changed, and narratives of the underdog, the remorselessly common person, were no longer appealing. In Asian American literature, though, Carlos Bulosan’s impassioned work has an enduring place.The selections in the book from chapters 13 and 14 of America Is in the Heart describe Carlos’s arrival in the United States at age seventeen, penniless, idealistic, and naive. Thrust into a violent, dog-eat-dog world, Carlos struggles to maintain his belief in himself and the faith in the American ideals of democracy and justice that he had been taught in the Philippines. America Is in the Heart is a reminder to Americans to live up to the ideals set forth by the founders and a searing record of the painful experience of Filipino immigrants in the United States in the 1930s.
Amy Linglate of University of Wisconsin at MadisonKing-Kok CheungUniversity of California, Los Angeles.

The Asian Division of the Library of Congress held a daylong symposium on author Carlos Bulosan, titled "America Is in the Heart for the 21st Century."

Part 1 (Webcast Library of Congress)
http://www.loc.gov/today/cyberlc/feature_wdesc.php?rec=3908

Part 2 (Webcast Library of Congress)
http://www.loc.gov/today/cyberlc/feature_wdesc.php?rec=3906

The Word - The Colbert Report's


Stop Bush’s NLRB from Taking Away Your Freedom to Form a Union

Sunday, August 13, 2006

Election of Representatives


The Making Of A Union In The Workplace! Here we've elected our union representatives...so give them our support...If we don't stand for something we fall for anything!!!

the C.H.A.R.M Squad (Chemical Hazard Against Risky Management)


Victory get together (6.12.2005) UT Employee,Packaging Department

Get Up Stand Up for Your Rights!


Here is a tribute to all my brothers in the union IBT-GCIU Local 432M...United We Bargain, Divided We Fall. God Bless The Union People, America Needs 'Em....Power in the Union, Solidarity There Is Power....