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At Nearly 80, Sí, Dolores Huerta Can
By Khalil Abdullah
Jul 04, 2009
Dolores Huerta will be
forever linked with Cesar Chavez and Philip Vera Cruz as a co-founder of
the United Farm Workers Union (UFW) in the 1960s. As director of a grape
workers strike and a national boycott against grape growers for the
meager wages afforded their workers, Huerta was instrumental in
orchestrating efforts that led to a major victory for the UFW and the
labor movement.
Huerta, who left the
union several years ago to found the Dolores Huerta Foundation in
Bakersfield, Calif., proudly announced at the AARP Diversity Conference
in Chicago, “Next year I will be 80.” She was honored at the conference
as one of the nation’s extraordinary older women.
The energetic Huerta
dedicated her foundation to supporting efforts in community organizing.
She told the 600 attendees that one former organizer – President Barack
Obama – told her, “I stole your slogan.” In English, Huerta’s phrase,
“Sí se puede!” which galvanized the farmworkers movement, translates as
“Yes, we can!”
In an interview, Huerta
noted, “I still work with farmers and we teach the importance of the
unions, but I wanted to include other activities as well.” She has
become a frank critic of America’s failure to value elders and calls for
new strategies to bind generations together.
“I think the elderly
have a lot to contribute to society, and the way to do it is to have
seniors incorporated into the community” rather than promoting programs
that “shut them off in a corner.” She encourages communities to devise
ways to tap the knowledge and wisdom older adults have to offer.
“Our whole society is
so youth focused,” Huerta contended, and “Anglo or U.S. culture demeans
elderly people.” Generally, she believes, “cultures of color have more
respect for elders.” Traditional views, though, are being challenged by
the rapid aging of the Hispanic population in the United States.
Expected to more than double in the next two decades, the Latino
population of those age 65 or older will yield increasing numbers of
older adult children caring for very elderly parents.
Although Huerta noted
that Latinos are deeply reluctant to place their elders in nursing
homes, sometimes those in their 50s or 60s face their own debilitating
medical conditions and may not have the strength to assist their aging
parents. Unable to lift their parents from a chair, bed or bathtub,
these aging boomers will increasingly confront their “pangs of guilt,”
she said, over finding a long-term-care placement for a frail parent.
Huerta acknowledged
that “the longevity facing baby boomers, especially women,” will only
intensify the stress on families trying to cope with aging relatives.
She conceded that government cannot do everything, but refused to accept
the conservative political position that the Social Security system
should be downsized. In order to provide an effective safety net for
families, she said, “More economic resources need to be appropriated.”
That’s a goal, she added, best accomplished through continued pressure
on politicians. “You do it the same way you organize communities,” she
stressed.
At the local level,
Huerta described her foundation’s organizing success in one California
county. Using techniques such as petitions, the foundation helped local
citizens gain infrastructure improvements from the building sidewalks to
the construction of a gymnasium where none had existed before.
Huerta said a county
supervisor told her that the newly organized citizens had become his
eyes and ears, resulting in a shift of the county’s budgetary priorities
to be more responsive to people’s real needs.
Although Huerta
advocates for a stronger government role, she also urges people to take
responsibility for personal behaviors that may negatively affect the
well being of families. “Diabetes is rampant among blacks, Latinos and
indigenous peoples,” she stated, citing but one of what she termed “the
terrible individual diseases” that are exacerbated by unhealthy diets
and poor nutrition. She emphasized, “Preventative health could save us a
lot of money in terms of health costs.”
Educating communities
about sound health practices requires effective communication, Huerta
said, and she’s concerned that the increasing failure of individuals to
communicate is an ominous sign of a fraying society: “We don’t know how
to talk to each other.”
While waiting in an
airport, she said, “I watched a family of four, a man, a wife, and two
kids. The parents were on their cell phones; the children were on their
Gameboys. No one was talking to each other.”
Even accomplished
adults may lose opportunities for vital personal connections. Huerta
recalled that while on the campaign trail in 2008, she sometimes
traveled with other well known personages. When their formal duties
ended, though, each retreated to his or her cell phone or text messages
– even though they were still seated within easy conversational range of
their companions,
The mother of eleven
children, Huerta said she, her children and grandchildren, make a
conscious family effort not to lose the art of conversation. Any family
will find strength in communication, she said, “and I just don’t mean
the nuclear family.” For Huerta, the term family extends to those who
define themselves as such, “including the LGBT family.”
Huerta attributes her
determination to pursue her beliefs to her mother and the influence of
other strong women and feminists she has encountered and befriended over
the years, especially “Ms. Magazine” founder Gloria Steinem and former
National Organization for Women President Eleanor Smeal.
One possibility she has
seen realized is the nomination of a Latina for the U.S. Supreme Court.
“I’m thrilled,” she said of President Obama’s selection of Judge Sonia
Sotomayor.
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