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Latino Equality

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Latino Equality Just as we have looked at the African-American and Native American fight for equality so to did the Latino population in the US – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Latino Equality


1
Latino Equality
  • Just as we have looked at the African-American
    and Native American fight for equality so to did
    the Latino population in the US
  • They were fighting for greater representation in
    government better treatment and a respect for
    their culture and heritage.
  • Many Latinos upon moving into the US worked on
    fruit and vegetable farms doing backbreaking work.

2
OFWOC
  • Two individuals stepped forward to fight for
    rights for these workers César Chávez and
    Dolores Huerta.
  • Together they established the National Farm
    Workers Association
  • Four years later the NFWA merged with a Filipino
    group and were renamed the United Farm Workers
    Organizing Committee (UFWOC)

3
UFWOC
  • Chávez and others insisted that the farms accept
    the union as the bargaining agent for the farm
    workers.
  • Upon the refusal to accept the union (1965),
    Chávez led the people in a boycott the grapes
    grown at the farms.
  • There were many supermarkets and shoppers who
    heeded the boycott. (Mrs. Craig-Salmon remembers
    the boycott.)

4
UFWOC
  • Chávez Believed in Dr. Kings nonviolence
    concept.
  • During the boycott, Chávez also went on a hunger
    strike for 3 weeks where he lost 35 pounds.
  • In 1970, Huerta negotiated a contract between the
    grape growers and the UFWOC
  • Union workers gained higher wages and other
    benefits long denied them

5
UFWOC
  • The UFWOC victory inspired others to get involved
    around the country
  • Puerto Ricans in New York demanded that schools
    offer Spanish speaking children classes taught in
    Spanish and that the curriculum should include
    culture
  • 1968 Bilingual Education Act provided funds for
    schools to offer bilingual and cultural heritage
    programs for non-English speakers

6
Chicano and Brown Power
  • Chicanos (Mexicanos) is a term to describe
    Mexican-Americans which expressed pride in their
    ethnic heritage
  • 1968 David Sanchez forms a group called the
    Brown Berets, a community action group
  • The Brown Berets organized walkouts at East LA
    high schools demanding smaller class sizes more
    Chicano teachers and administrators and programs
    designed to reduce the Latino dropout rate
  • At colleges and universities more militant
    Mexican-American students won the establishment
    of Chicano studies programs

7
political power
  • Many Latinos also organized politically by
    forming some groups to work in the two party
    system
  • Mexican American Political Association (MAPA)
  • Helped LA politician Edward Roybel to the House
  • In the 1960s 8 Hispanic Americans served in the
    House, and one served in the Senate (Joseph
    Montoya of New Mexico)

8
political power
  • The League of United Latin American Citizens
    (LULAC)
  • Formed in 1929 to fight segregation and
    discrimination
  • In the 1940s and 50s fought to desegregate
    schools in the southwest
  • 1954 helped Mexican-Americans gain right to
    serve on juries
  • 1960s some LULAC programs were funded under
    LBJs Great Society

9
political power
  • La Raza Unida (Mexican-Americans United)
  • 1970 created to make an independent Latino
    political movement
  • Some groups became more militant
  • 1963 Alianza Federal de Mercedes (Federal
    Alliance of Land Grants) was formed to help
    reclaim US land taken from Mexican landholders in
    the 19th century
  • Formed by one-time evangelical preacher Reies
    Tijerina

10
Chicano! PBS Documentary
  • The Struggle in the Fields
  • Take notes on the social, economic, and political
    hardships experienced by Latinos.
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