SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) 鈥 California Gov. Gavin 草莓传媒om said he supports a proposal to rename C茅sar Chavez Day as following stunning against the revered labor leader.
Political leaders in states and cities are after the allegations became public, accusing Chavez of sexually abusing girls and the co-founder of the United Farm Workers of America union, , decades ago.
There also have been calls to alter who in the 1960s helped secure better wages and working conditions for farmworkers and had been .
Washington Gov. Bob Ferguson’s office said Thursday that he won鈥檛 issue a proclamation honoring C茅sar Chavez Day this year while Denver officials plan to rename their annual celebration. Events in Texas and in his home state of Arizona have been canceled at the request of the C茅sar Chavez Foundation.
In 2000, California became the first state to designate Chavez鈥檚 birthday as a holiday. Schools were required to teach students about his involvement in the labor movement in California. Chavez died in California in 1993 at age 66.
Assembly Speaker Robert Rivas and Senate President pro Tempore Monique Lim贸n, the leaders of the California Legislature, said Thursday they would pass a bill renaming the holiday before the end of the month. The legislation would need 草莓传媒om’s approval.
Advocates grapple with Chavez’s legacy
Latino leaders and community groups quickly condemned the alleged abuse by Chavez but emphasized that the farmworker movement was never about one person.
Mary Rose Wilcox and her husband marched alongside Chavez, helped him open a radio station in Phoenix and plastered their Mexican restaurant with his photos and a mural.
By Wednesday morning, they had taken down Chavez’s photos and were making plans to cover the mural.
鈥淲e love C茅sar Chavez. But we cannot honor him and we cannot even love him anymore,鈥 said the former Phoenix City Council member.
Visitors to the Chavez National Monument in central California, where the labor leader is buried, were also contemplating how he should be remembered.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 think you want to erase everything he did,” Nell O鈥橫alley, from Corvallis, Oregon, said Thursday. “But I don鈥檛 think you want to honor him the same way knowing what we know now.鈥
Dolores Huerta stamped her own legacy on the fight for justice
Huerta, who is a labor rights legend in her own right, said in a statement Wednesday that she stayed silent for 60 years for fear her words could hurt the farmworker movement. She said she did not know Chavez had hurt other women.
Huerta described two sexual encounters with Chavez; one in which she was 鈥渕anipulated and pressured鈥 and another when she was 鈥渇orced against my will.鈥 She said both led to pregnancies, which she kept secret, and that she arranged for the children to be raised by other families.
The New York Times first reported Wednesday that it found Chavez groomed and sexually abused young girls working in the movement. Huerta, too, revealed to the newspaper that she was a victim of abuse in her 30s.
She joined Chavez in 1962 to co-found the National Farm Workers Association, which became the United Farm Workers of America.
Huerta’s resolve and dedication to women’s rights and social justice won wide admiration. Some, including a group of Democrats in Texas, are calling for Huerta鈥檚 name to replace Chavez鈥檚 on places that bear his name.
Some knew about Chavez’s abusive behavior, biographer says
Chavez is known nationally for his early a hunger strike, a grape boycott and eventual victory in getting growers to negotiate with farmworkers for better wages and working conditions.
His place in history grew after his death. Schools, streets and parks pay tribute to him not only in the Southwest and California but also in places far away where he remained an inspiration.
In Milwaukee, there鈥檚 a statue of Chavez near a street bearing his name while a colorful mural of his likeness adorns a building in a Toledo, Ohio.
In 2014, President Barack Obama proclaimed March 31 C茅sar Chavez Day. President Joe Biden had a installed in the Oval Office when he moved into the White House.
But Chavez was full of contradictions even as a union leader, said Miriam Pawel, a California journalist who wrote a biography of him. There was abusive behaviors within the union, but people didn鈥檛 speak out because they believed the union was the best way to protect farmworkers, she said.
鈥淔or many, many years, for most of those people, even when they saw things that they found disturbing, they did not wanna talk about it,鈥 Pawel said.
Chavez’s family and foundation voice support for the victims
Born in Yuma, Arizona, Chavez grew up in a Mexican American family that traveled around California picking produce.
His family said in a statement that they are devastated by the allegations.
鈥淲e wish peace and healing to the survivors and commend their courage to come forward. As a family steeped in the values of equity and justice, we honor the voices of those who feel unheard and who report sexual abuse,鈥 the family said.
The C茅sar Chavez Foundation pledged support for the labor leader鈥檚 victims, saying 鈥 with the Chavez family鈥檚 support 鈥 the organization will figure out its identity going forward.
The United Farm Workers union quickly distanced itself from annual celebrations of its .
Its president, Teresa Romero, said Thursday that the many people who have dedicated years to fighting for workers鈥 rights should know their work is recognized.
鈥淲e have in one hand C茅sar Chavez, the man who committed horrible acts that we鈥檙e not going to justify, that we don鈥檛 condone,鈥 she told The Associated Press. 鈥淥n the other hand, we have C茅sar Chavez, the organizer who brought thousands and thousands of people together to be able to work for farm workers, and improve their lives and working conditions.鈥
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This story has been corrected to show Wilcox and her husband did not participate in a hunger strike with Chavez but did march with him.
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Daley reported from Keene, California, and Seewer from Toledo, Ohio. Associated Press writers Susan Montoya Bryan in Albuquerque, New Mexico; Dorany Pineda in Los Angeles; Jacques Billeaud in Phoenix; Fernanda Figueroa in Austin, Texas; Hallie Golden in Seattle; Rebecca Boone in Boise, Idaho; and Colleen Slevin in Denver contributed.
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