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1 | | HOUSE RESOLUTION
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2 | | WHEREAS, The members of the Illinois House of |
3 | | Representatives are pleased to honor the life and legacy of |
4 | | farm workers' leader Cesar Estrada Chavez; and
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5 | | WHEREAS, Cesar Estrada Chavez was born on March 31, 1927 |
6 | | on a farm near Yuma, Arizona that his grandfather homesteaded |
7 | | in the 1880s; after Cesar Chavez's father, Librado, was forced |
8 | | from his farm in 1937, the Chavez family became migrant |
9 | | workers in California, the beginning of Cesar's legendary |
10 | | destiny; he quit school after the 8th grade in 1942 in order to |
11 | | help support his family by working in the fields; and
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12 | | WHEREAS, In 1944, Cesar Chavez joined the United States |
13 | | Navy, where he was slated to serve in the western Pacific |
14 | | theatre during World War II; just before he was to be shipped |
15 | | to the Pacific, he was arrested in a segregated movie theater |
16 | | in Delano, California for sitting in the "whites only" |
17 | | section; and
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18 | | WHEREAS, In 1952, Cesar Chavez was recruited into the |
19 | | Community Service Organization (CSO) by community organizer |
20 | | Fred Ross, who discovered the young farm worker laboring in |
21 | | apricot orchards outside San Jose, California; together with |
22 | | Mr. Ross, he organized 22 CSO chapters across California |
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1 | | during the 1950s, leading to CSO becoming the most militant |
2 | | and effective Latino civil rights group of its day; and |
3 | | WHEREAS, On March 31, 1962, his 35th birthday, Cesar |
4 | | Chavez resigned from CSO, choosing instead to move his wife |
5 | | and eight small children to Delano, California and to dedicate |
6 | | himself fully to organizing farm workers; the first convention |
7 | | of Cesar's National Farm Workers Association (NFWA) convened |
8 | | in Fresno, California on September 30, 1962; and
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9 | | WHEREAS, The 1960s presented a prime opportunity for Cesar |
10 | | Chavez and his new organization to advocate for the rights of |
11 | | migrant workers; having worked on building the membership of |
12 | | his infant union during the early 1960s, the NFWA, with |
13 | | 1,200-member families, voted on September 16, 1965 to join an |
14 | | ongoing strike against Delano-area grape growers started by |
15 | | the mostly Filipino American members of the Agricultural |
16 | | Workers Organizing Committee, AFL-CIO (AWOC), beginning the |
17 | | famous five-year Delano Grape Strike; during March and April |
18 | | of 1966, he and a band of strikers embarked upon a 340-mile |
19 | | Peregrinacion (Pilgrimage) from Delano to the steps of the |
20 | | California state capitol in Sacramento to draw national |
21 | | attention to the suffering of farm workers; as a result of the |
22 | | march and a four-month boycott, Schenley Vineyards negotiated |
23 | | an agreement with NFWA, the first genuine union contract |
24 | | between a grower and farm workers' union in United States |
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1 | | history; and
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2 | | WHEREAS, Cesar Chavez's success with the NFWA continued |
3 | | throughout the late 1960s, with a successful boycott at the |
4 | | DiGiorgio Fruit Corporation and a strike at the Giumarra |
5 | | Vineyards Corporation; in 1966, the NFWA and the Filipino |
6 | | American AWOC merged to form the United Farm Workers, which |
7 | | affiliated with the AFL-CIO; in 1968, Cesar fasted for 25 days |
8 | | to rededicate his movement to nonviolence; United States |
9 | | Senator Robert F. Kennedy joined over 8,000 farm workers and |
10 | | supporters at a mass where Cesar broke his fast, calling the |
11 | | weakened farm labor leader "one of the heroic figures of our |
12 | | time"; and |
13 | | WHEREAS, Cesar Chavez's movement continued apace during |
14 | | the 1970s, with most California table grape growers signing |
15 | | UFW contracts by 1970; after Salinas Valley growers signed |
16 | | contracts with the Teamsters Union in the summer of 1970, he |
17 | | led a national boycott of lettuce, a decision that led to a |
18 | | jail sentence in Salinas, California from December 10 to 24 of |
19 | | 1970; still going strong, the UFW became chartered as an |
20 | | independent affiliate by the AFL-CIO in 1972, becoming the |
21 | | United Farm Workers of America, AFL-CIO (UFW); and
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22 | | WHEREAS, After a hard-fought battle with the California |
23 | | state government and various growers, Cesar Chavez and the UFW |
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1 | | managed to pass the landmark Agricultural Labor Relations Act |
2 | | in June of 1975, which guaranteed California farm workers the |
3 | | right to organize and bargain with their employers; under his |
4 | | leadership, the United Farm Workers of America won hundreds of |
5 | | labor elections across the nation during 1975 and 1976; and
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6 | | WHEREAS, The number of farm workers protected by UFW |
7 | | contracts grew to about 45,000 by the early 1980s; Republican |
8 | | George Deukmejian was elected California governor in 1982 with |
9 | | $1 million in grower campaign contributions; under Governor |
10 | | Deukmajian's leadership, the California Agricultural Labor |
11 | | Relations Board ceased enforcement of the Agricultural Labor |
12 | | Relations Act, forcing Cesar Chavez to declare a third grape |
13 | | boycott in 1984; and |
14 | | WHEREAS, In 1986, 61-year old Cesar Chavez kicked off the |
15 | | "Wrath of Grapes" campaign to draw public attention to the |
16 | | pesticide poisoning of grape workers and their children; the |
17 | | campaign included a 36 day public fast in Delano, California, |
18 | | his last and longest-running; and
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19 | | WHEREAS, In 1992, Cesar Chavez, working with UFW First |
20 | | Vice President Arturo Rodriguez, led vineyard walkouts in the |
21 | | Coachella and San Joaquin valleys, resulting in the first |
22 | | industry-wide pay hike in eight years for grape workers; this |
23 | | feat proved to be the last for this brave pioneer, who passed |
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1 | | away in his sleep on April 23, 1993 in the midst of defending |
2 | | the UFW against a multi-million dollar lawsuit brought against |
3 | | the union; and
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4 | | WHEREAS, On August 8, 1994, President Bill Clinton |
5 | | posthumously awarded the Medal of Freedom, America's highest |
6 | | civilian honor, to Cesar Chavez in honor of his everlasting |
7 | | contributions to society; and |
8 | | WHEREAS, Today, the UFW continues its vigilant protection |
9 | | of its many union members; the union remains strong, with |
10 | | undeniable strength in numerous states such as California, |
11 | | Florida, and Washington, a fact that would certainly make |
12 | | Cesar Chavez proud; therefore, be it
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13 | | RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE ONE |
14 | | HUNDRED THIRD GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that |
15 | | we honor the life and legacy of Cesar Chavez and his |
16 | | contributions to the downtrodden of our society; and be it |
17 | | further
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18 | | RESOLVED, That a suitable copy of this resolution be |
19 | | presented to the family of Cesar Chavez as a symbol of our |
20 | | great esteem and respect.
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