Helen Fabela Chávez

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Helen Fabela Chávez
Born Helen Fabela
(1928-01-21)January 21, 1928
Brawley, California
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Bakersfield, California
Nationality American
Occupation UFW administrator
Known for Contributions to the labor activist movement of the United Farm Workers
Spouse(s) César Chávez (1948–93, his death)
Children 8

Helen Fabela Chávez (January 21, 1928 – June 6, 2016) was an American labor activist for the United Farm Workers of America (UFWA). Aside from her affiliation with the UFW, she was a Chicana with a traditional upbringing and limited education. She was also the wife of César Chávez.

Early life

Helen Fabela was born on January 21, 1928, in Brawley, California. She was a first generation Mexican-American. Her mother Eloisa Rodriguez was from Sombrerete, Mexico, and her father Vidal Fabela was from San Jacinto, Durango, Mexico. Both her parents immigrated to the USA separately after the Mexican Revolution, and eventually married in Los Angeles, California, in 1923.[1] Both worked as migrant laborers, first in the Imperial Valley and later in the San Joaquín Valley and thus exposed her to the hardships of labor at an early age. She began working in the fields herself at age seven. After her father's death, when Helen was fifteen, she left high school to support her family which consisted of her mother, two sisters, and four brothers of whom she was the eldest.[citation needed] Helen worked in a grocery store and eventually made her way to working in the fields and vineyards full-time.[1]

Married life

Fabela met César Chávez in 1942 while she was still a student at Delano High School in California.[citation needed] Soon after his World War II service in the United States Navy ended, in 1945, he began spending more time with her.[2] They dated "inexpensively — a walk in the moonlight or perhaps a movie."[3] The couple was married in a civil ceremony on October 22, 1948, in Reno, Nevada. At the time, she was 20 years old.[citation needed] Then the two returned to San Jose, California for a church wedding.[3] They departed for a two-week honeymoon before settling into their new lives together. Although she was trying to start her own family, she remained the main source of income for her siblings and parents. The newlyweds settled permanently in Delano, California. Over the next decade, the two grew to a family of ten with the total addition of eight children (Fernando, Sylvia, Linda, Eloise, Liz, Paul, Anna, and Anthony) and a later total of 31 grandchildren.

Union organizing

Due to her father's involvement in the Mexican Revolution, Helen Chávez was influenced from a young age to be involved in political activism.[citation needed] She held the more 'traditional' role usually reserved for women. The traditional model for union organizing for women included the ability to "juggle the competing demands of family life, sexual division of labor, and protest in a unique blend of union activism."[1] Helen and César soon became involved in labor organizing. By networking with their local Catholic priest, his name was passed to Fred Ross, an organizer of the Community Service Organization (CSO). César initially refused to work with Ross due to his Anglo background, but Helen persuaded him to eventually become a full-time CSO organizer. He became the National Director of the CSO in 1958.

Dual commitments

Due to Helen Chávez's emphasis on home life as both a mother and a wife, the majority of credit for the labor movement went to her husband. Unlike female labor activists of the time, such as Dolores Huerta, her activities were considered "essentially auxiliary; she helped in the office, mimeographing fliers or sorting the mail, but usually worked at home after her domestic chores were done and the children were asleep".[1] Her involvement in CSO activities is often overshadowed by her husband's political involvement, although, "the voluntarism of Helen Chávez and other women behind the scenes made the CSO one of the most successful associations for Mexican Americans in California during that time".[1] Not only caring for and raising her eight children, she also worked tirelessly ten hours a day supporting her family. Between family and work, she dedicated all of her spare time to assisting with CSO business. She also taught literacy classes for migrant workers during voting drives and later assisted them in gaining US citizenship. She was also in charge of handwriting the CSO daily reports that her husband dictated (CSO).

Later involvements

César Chávez resigned from the CSO in 1962 to start the Farm Workers Association, later known as the National Farm Workers Association, thus moving the family back to Delano. While he was building the new union, Helen Chávez picked up a job working in a field picking grapes for less than $2.00 per day. The NFWA soon voted her to a full-time position as an administrator of the credit union, a position she was not keen to take due her lack of skills. She quickly learned book keeping and remained a financial record keeper for the association for more than 20 years.[1]

In 1965, the NFWA merged with the Agricultural Workers Organizing Committee (AWOC) to become the United Farm Workers Organization Committee (UFWOC). César and Helen Chávez's efforts became known as La Causa (the Cause). Using nonviolent alternatives for change such as protests, strikes, boycotts, pickets, fasts and marches, the UFWOC fought for fair labor practices. She was involved in the demand for union recognition during all demonstrations and was arrested in 1966 for shouting Huelga! ("Strike!") at the W. B. Camp ranch.

Accomplishments

Chávez mostly maintained the traditional role of a woman involved in such movements by assisting in the administrative parts of the process and by staying out of the public eye. Her most public moments were her "four arrests, two of which were widely reported" and although her "acts of civil disobedience have been few, her example has encouraged other Mexicanas and Chicanas to undergo arrest" for the sake of the greater good.[1] Chávez challenged the role of women in the activist movement and provided a template for other Hispanic women who may eventually join the union efforts.

Chávez's personal experience of the hardships of working the fields made her an invaluable part of the spirit of the movement. Her involvement and passion for the cause became a huge motivator for other Latinos to join the union efforts. In 1974, news of her efforts spread as far as Europe. It was in 1994, a year after her husband's death, that she accepted the US Presidential Medal of Freedom in her husband's honor. Due to the existing sexual division of labor in the union and systemic sexism in society, few women have been recognized for their contributions to labor movements. She still remained invisible — unrecognized and unappreciated by union members and supporters.

In 2008 Helen Chávez received the Latina of the Year award from the Los Angeles Chapter of the National Latino Peace Officers Association.[4]

Helen Chávez was played by America Ferrera in Diego Luna's Cesar Chavez.

Death

On June 6, 2016, Chávez died at a Bakersfield hospital at the age of 88.[5] She had earlier been fighting an unspecified infection. Chávez is buried in Keene, California alongside her husband.[6][7]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 Traditional and Nontraditional Patterns of Female Activism in the United Farm Workers of America, 1962 to 1980 by Margaret Rose
  2. Helen Fabela Chavez, Farm Activist’s Widow and Union Partner, Dies at the age of 88 The New York Times, June 12, 2016
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External links