Title: The Bracero Program
1The Bracero Program
2What was the Bracero Program?
- Foreign contract labor program initiated in 1942
during WWII - Also known as the Migrant Labor Agreement between
U.S. Mexican governments - 4.6 million workers between 1942 1964
- WHY THEN?
- Parallels with other societal changes?
- Why did it begin?
- Why did it end?
3What is a bracero?
- Bracero
- Migrant worker. Mexican laborer who sells the
work of his arms (BRAZOS) in the fields of the
United States. Similar to farmHAND or HANDyman -
-
4What is a bracero?
- Generally speaking, the Latin American migratory
worker going into west Texas is regarded as a
necessary evil, nothing more nor less than an
unavoidable adjunct to the harvest season.
Judging by the treatment that has been accorded
him in that section of the state, one might
assume that he is not a human being at all, but a
species of farm implement that comes mysteriously
and spontaneously into being coincident with the
maturing of the cotton, that requires no upkeep
or special consideration during the period of its
usefulness, needs no protection from the
elements, and when the crop has been harvested,
vanishes into the limbo of forgotten things
-until the next harvest season rolls around. - He has no past, no future, only a brief and
anonymous present.From Latin Americans in
Texas, by Pauline R. Kibbe, The University of New
Mexico Press, Albuquerque, 1948
5Sign outside Texas tavern, 1940s
6BACKGROUND
- In the US
- Large Mexican agricultural labor force from
1880s, especially in CA, TX, and southwest - Transformation of agriculture in 1920s-1930s to
larger bank-owned enterprises (beginning of the
end for family farms) instead of year-round
farmhands, labor became migrant - Growers did not want to pay fair wages to
citizens preferred low-wage undocumented
workers - Border Patrol established in 1924, and many
Mexican workers deported during the Depression,
creating shortages of agricultural workers
providing leverage to legal workers STRIKES!
7BACKGROUND
- In Mexico
- Many people fled northward from 1910 revolution
- 1930s agricultural crisis harvests were
insufficient to support many farming communities - Imagined possibility of earning relative riches
in the US (even though wages were often lower in
Texas than in Mexico)
8WWII and the Bracero Treaty
- 1941-1942 growers claimed labor shortage
refused to raise wages and demanded importation
of labor instead of organized citizen labor - Contract labor had been outlawed since 1885 -- a
little too much like slavery - BUT
9The Bracero Program is established
- On September 27, 1942, the first braceros were
admitted in time for the sugar-beet harvest. - Reasons The increasingly difficult
circumstances of the Mexican working class in the
cities and rural communities in regards to the
scarcity of nourishment increasing price rates
and other economic overturnings and Mexican
workers' hope of earning better wages in the
United States than in Mexico..." - HUNGER IN ONE PLACE DRIVES FOOD PRODUCTION IN
ANOTHER
10Workers in Mexico City hoping to be contracted to
work in the US, 1942
11RECRUITMENT CENTERS
12RECRUITMENT CENTERS
Notice anything about gender?
13RECRUITMENT CENTERS
14RECRUITMENT CENTERS
DDT not just used on crops
15- Braceros received an Alien Laborer's Permit and
signed a contract, usually for 9-12 months, at
the end of which they had to turn in their
permits and return to Mexico.
16Bracero Program Documentation
- Although the bracero treaty called for contracts
to be written in Spanish, often they were in
English, and the braceros did not understand what
they were agreeing to.
17Upon arrival
- Ranchers would pick up the braceros at the
borders and transport them to the camps.
18Bracero Program Contracts
- Braceros were contracted to one employer only.
Regardless of labor conditions, if they were
caught outside the farms specified in their
documents, they were subject to deportation.
19Living Conditions
- Conditions were often very poor, with workers
sleeping in crowded barracks.
20Employers
- Underpayment was the most common complaintoften
employers made braceros sign blank receipts and
paid them far less than the agreed-upon wage.
21- But what were the conditions like for the workers?
22Idaho potato picker, 1950s
23California, 1947
24New Mexico chile harvest, 1950s
25Was it all bad? 2 Testimonials
261954 OPERATION WETBACK
- According to INS Commissioner Swing, the
alarming, ever-increasing, flood tide of
undocumented migrants from Mexico constituted an
actual invasion of the United States. Operation
Wetback commenced in June 1954 with a direct
attackupon the hordes of aliens facing us across
the borderPlanes were used to locate wetbacks
and to direct ground teams working in jeepsto
discourage re-entry, many of those apprehended
were moved far into the interior of Mexico by
train and ship. - Mae Ngai, Impossible Subjects (2004)155-156
271964 THE END
- Union leaders and others led outcry against
abusive conditions (and undercutting of union
wages) - Increased mechanization of agriculture decreased
demand for labor - More liberal rights-focused politics in
Washington (connections with other movements?)