
Latino Americans
Episode 5: Prejudice and Pride
Episode 5 | 55m 16sVideo has Closed Captions
Details the creation of the proud “Chicano” identity
Details the creation of the proud “Chicano” identity, as labor leaders organize farm workers in California, and as activists push for better education opportunities for Latinos, the inclusion of Latino studies, and empowerment in the political process.
Funding for LATINO AMERICANS is provided by CPB, PBS, Ford Foundation, National Endowment for the Humanities, The Rockefeller Foundation, The Arthur Vining Davis Foundations and The Summerlee Foundation
Latino Americans
Episode 5: Prejudice and Pride
Episode 5 | 55m 16sVideo has Closed Captions
Details the creation of the proud “Chicano” identity, as labor leaders organize farm workers in California, and as activists push for better education opportunities for Latinos, the inclusion of Latino studies, and empowerment in the political process.
How to Watch Latino Americans
Latino Americans is available to stream on pbs.org and the free PBS App, available on iPhone, Apple TV, Android TV, Android smartphones, Amazon Fire TV, Amazon Fire Tablet, Roku, Samsung Smart TV, and Vizio.
Buy Now
Man: WHAT IS OUR HISTORY?
WHAT IS OUR PAST?
WHAT IS THE CLAIM THAT WE HAVE TO BE MEMBERS OF THIS SOCIETY?
Man: WE ARE NOT HERE TO THREATEN OR TO BEG.
WE ARE HERE TO PARTICIPATE.
Woman: YOU CANNOT CLOSE YOUR EYES AND YOUR EARS TO US ANY LONGER BECAUSE WE ARE HERE.
Man: MOST PEOPLE ARE SAYING, SPANISH, THE MEXICANS, INDIGENOUS PEOPLES DO NOT HAVE THE SPECIAL INHERITANCE OF LIBERTY THAT WE HAVE.
Man: MY FATHER THOUGHT THAT THE UNITED STATES WOULD BE LIKE PARADISE.
THERE WAS JOBS FOR EVERYONE.
THERE WERE THOUSANDS OF PEOPLE TRYING TO GET ACROSS.
Man: THE TOUGHEST PART WAS WHEN I LEFT MY MOM NOT KNOWING IF I'M GONNA SEE HER AGAIN.
Woman: HERE'S A MAN WHO'S SHED HIS BLOOD, AND YET HE CAN'T GET SOMETHING TO EAT.
Man: RECKLESS?
YES.
DANGEROUS?
EXTREMELY.
DID IT PAY OFF?
DAMN RIGHT.
Woman: THE FIRST EUROPEAN LANGUAGE SPOKEN IN WHAT WOULD BECOME THE UNITED STATES IS SPANISH.
Rita Moren: IMMIGRATION MEANS IT ALL GETS TO BE PART OF YOUR IDENTITY.
I CAN'T BELIEVE IT.
Gloria Estefan: IT'S CRUCIAL THAT WE KNOW WHO WE ARE, WHERE WE COME FROM, AND WHAT IT'S BEEN LIKE.
I AM SO PROUD TO BE YOUR MAYOR.
I, SONIA SOTOMAYOR... Man: THERE'S SO MUCH AT STAKE FOR ALL AMERICANS IN HOW LATINOS IN THE UNITED STATES DO.
Announcer: FUNDING FOR Narrator: IN THE 1940s, IN DELANO, CALIFORNIA, AS IN MOST AMERICAN TOWNS, PEOPLE LIVED SEGREGATED LIVES...
EVEN AT THE LOCAL MOVIE HOUSE WHERE WHITES SAT IN THE MIDDLE AND EVERYONE ELSE SAT ON THE SIDES.
THEN, ONE DAY, THINGS CHANGED.
Man: IN 1946 THERE WAS A YOUNG GUY BY THE NAME OF CC.
HE WAS A PACHUCO.
HE WAS A ZOOT SUITER WHO WENT OFF TO THE NAVY, CAME BACK, PUT ON HIS CIVVIES AND WENT TO THE MOVIES, AND SINCE HE WAS SERVING HIS COUNTRY HE FELT THAT HE HAD A RIGHT TO SIT WHEREVER HE WANTED, SO HE CAME AND SAT IN THE MIDDLE.
HE WOULDN'T MOVE, SO THE POLICE ARRESTED HIM.
[SIREN] THERE WAS NO LAW THAT SAID YOU COULDN'T SIT IN THE MIDDLE, SO THEY COULDN'T CHARGE HIM WITH ANYTHING, NOT EVEN DISTURBING THE PEACE.
HE WAS PRETTY PEACEFUL.
SO THEY GRILLED HIM FOR A COUPLE OF HOURS AND THEN RELEASED HIM, AND EVERYBODY NOTICED.
THEY SAID, "HEY, CC GOT AWAY WITH IT.
HE SAT IN THE MIDDLE."
SO THE FOLLOWING WEEK, EVERYBODY SAT IN THE MIDDLE SECTION, AND THE TOWN MOVIE HOUSE WAS DESEGREGATED.
AND THAT HAPPENED ACROSS THE ENTIRE VALLEY.
SOME 20 YEARS LATER WHEN I TOLD MY MOM I WAS GOING BACK TO DELANO TO WORK WITH THE UNION, SHE SAYS, "OH, YOU'RE GOING TO WORK WITH CC."
AND I SAID "CC?
IS THAT VATO STILL AROUND?"
AND SHE SAID, "M'IJO, DON'T YOU KNOW WHO CC IS?
HE'S CESAR CHAVEZ."
Narrator: IN THE 1960s, CESAR CHAVEZ WOULD BECOME THE MOST SIGNIFICANT MEXICAN-AMERICAN LEADER OF HIS GENERATION.
HE WOULD JOIN FORCES WITH DOLORES HUERTA TO CHAMPION THE HUMAN RIGHTS OF SOME OF AMERICA'S POOREST WORKERS.
Huerta: THE WORKERS WERE LITERALLY LIKE SLAVES.
THE LIVING CONDITIONS WERE HORRENDOUS, AND THE CHILDREN WERE BAREFOOT.
AND I THOUGHT, "WELL THIS IS SO WRONG."
Narrator: THEIR SUCCESS WOULD IGNITE A MOVEMENT CHALLENGING A LONG HISTORY OF PREJUDICE AND INJUSTICE.
IN EAST LOS ANGELES, A HIGH SCHOOL TEACHER LED THE LARGEST STUDENT WALKOUT IN HISTORY, RISKING HIS OWN FREEDOM TO GIVE MEXICAN-AMERICAN STUDENTS A CHANCE AT A QUALITY EDUCATION.
Man: IT WAS A RISK, IT WAS A GAMBLE, BUT THE GAMBLE THAT HAD TO BE TAKEN.
WE'RE TRYING TO MAKE THE SCHOOLS BETTER, TRYING TO MAKE THE COUNTRY BETTER.
Narrator: IN CRYSTAL CITY, TEXAS, A GRADUATE STUDENT FOUNDED A POLITICAL PARTY, TRANSFORMING CENTURIES OF OPPRESSION INTO ETHNIC POWER.
Man: RECKLESS?
YES.
DANGEROUS?
EXTREMELY.
DID IT PAY OFF?
DAMN RIGHT.
Narrator: AND IN SAN ANTONIO, A YOUNG ACTIVIST BROUGHT MILLIONS OF MEXICAN AMERICANS WHO HAD NEVER VOTED TO THE POLLS, EVENTUALLY DOUBLING THE NUMBER OF LATINOS ELECTED TO POLITICAL OFFICE.
Man: BECAUSE OF HIS WILL, HIS SHEER WILL, WE BECAME A PART OF THE AMERICAN SYSTEM.
Narrator: DURING THE 1960s AND '70s, A WHOLE GENERATION OF MEXICAN AMERICANS DISCOVERED A NEW SENSE OF PRIDE AS THEY FOUGHT FOR EQUALITY... AND CHALLENGED AMERICA TO ACCEPT THEM ON THEIR OWN TERMS.
[HELICOPTER] Narrator: CALIFORNIA'S CENTRAL VALLEY: 23,000 ACRES OF SOME OF THE MOST PRODUCTIVE FARMLAND ON THE PLANET.
IN THE 1960s, WHILE THE AGRICULTURAL COMPANIES THAT OWNED THE LAND BECAME WEALTHY, TENS OF THOUSANDS OF FARM LABORERS WHO WORKED THE LAND REMAINED DESPERATELY POOR.
Man: THESE WERE INHUMANE CONDITIONS.
THEY WERE UN-AMERICAN CONDITIONS.
THEY WERE CONDITIONS THAT RELEGATED THESE FARM WORKERS TO THE LOWEST WORKERS IN THE WHOLE COUNTRY.
Narrator: MOST WERE MEXICAN AMERICANS WHO COULD NEITHER READ NOR WRITE...
MOST WOULD DIE BY THE AGE OF 49... AND TO MOST OF THE COUNTRY, THEY WERE INVISIBLE.
EVERY TIME YOU SIT AT THE TABLE TO HAVE SOMETHING TO EAT, THE FRUIT AND THE VEGETABLES GOT THERE BECAUSE SOMEONE WAS EXPLOITED.
THEY'RE SUBJECTED TO THE SUN AND TO THE HEAT AND TO THE COLD AND TO PESTICIDE POISONING, THEY'RE TREATED LIKE ANIMALS, AND THEY ENDURE ALL THE SACRIFICES AND ALL THE SUFFERING SO YOU CAN EAT AND I CAN EAT.
THESE MEN AND WOMEN AND CHILDREN FEED ALL OF US, AND THEY DON'T HAVE ANY FOOD FOR THEMSELVES.
AND WE'RE GOING TO CHANGE IT.
IT'S GOING TO BE CHANGED.
Narrator: CESAR CHAVEZ WAS THE SECOND OF SIX CHILDREN, BORN INTO A DEVOUT CATHOLIC FAMILY ON A MODEST RANCH IN YUMA, ARIZONA.
THEY LOST THE RANCH DURING THE GREAT DEPRESSION AND WERE SOON FORCED TO ENTER THE BACKBREAKING WORLD OF MIGRANT LABOR.
TRAVELING ACROSS CALIFORNIA, TAKING WHATEVER WORK THEY COULD FIND, THE CHAVEZ CHILDREN PASSED THROUGH 37 SCHOOLS IN THREE YEARS.
CESAR DROPPED OUT AT THE AGE OF 14 TO WORK FULL-TIME IN THE FIELDS.
Man: WHAT WAS AMAZING ABOUT CESAR WAS THAT HE WAS ALMOST ENTIRELY AND COMPLETELY SELF-POSSESSED.
HE NEVER GOT PAST THE 8th GRADE, AND YET HE WAS BRILLIANT.
Narrator: AFTER A STINT IN THE NAVY, CHAVEZ WORKED FOR THE CSO--THE COMMUNITY SERVICE ORGANIZATION--A GROUP DEDICATED TO IMPROVING THE LIVES OF MEXICAN AMERICANS.
THERE HE MET SOMEONE WHO SHARED HIS PASSION FOR JUSTICE: A 28-YEAR-OLD FORMER SCHOOLTEACHER FROM STOCKTON, CALIFORNIA: DOLORES HUERTA.
Huerta: IN THE SCHOOL WHERE I WAS TEACHING, THERE WERE A LOT OF MALNUTRITIONED CHILDREN.
SO I WENT TO MY PRINCIPAL AND I SAID, "YOU KNOW, THESE KIDS ARE OBVIOUSLY VERY HUNGRY."
YOU KNOW, "CAN I GET A VOUCHER FOR SHOES?
FREE LUNCH FOR THESE KIDS?"
AND HIS RESPONSE WAS, "THEIR PARENTS--ALL THEY DO IS DRINK UP ALL THEIR MONEY."
I KNEW HE WAS WRONG.
Narrator: A FRUSTRATED HUERTA HAD QUIT HER TEACHING JOB TO JOIN THE CSO.
AT A MEETING IN SAN FRANCISCO IN 1962, CESAR CHAVEZ APPROACHED HER WITH AN IDEA THAT WOULD ALTER THE COURSE OF THEIR LIVES.
Huerta: HE SAID, "YOU AND I HAVE TO ORGANIZE A UNION."
AND THEN HE SAID, "BUT WE WILL NOT SEE AN ACTUAL UNION IN OUR LIFETIME."
AND I SAID, "WHY?"
AND HE SAID, "BECAUSE THE GROWERS ARE TOO RICH, THEY'RE TOO POWERFUL, AND THEY'RE TOO RACIST."
Narrator: FOR HUERTA, A DIVORCED MOTHER WITH SEVEN CHILDREN, COMMITTING HERSELF TO THE FARM WORKER CAUSE WAS AN AGONIZING DECISION.
Huerta: AND THAT WAS A BIG STEP FOR ME BECAUSE I HAD A FAMILY THAT I HAD TO SUPPORT.
AND I REMEMBER JUST THINKING ABOUT THIS, "THIS IS SUCH A FOOLISH THING TO DO."
BUT I JUST REMEMBER, "I'VE GOT TO DO THIS," AND I DID IT.
Narrator: BUT A SERIOUS OBSTACLE STOOD IN THE WAY OF CREATING A FARM WORKERS UNION: THE BRACERO PROGRAM, A GOVERNMENT INITIATIVE LEFT OVER FROM WORLD WAR II THAT BROUGHT IN MEXICAN LABORERS TO REPLACE AMERICANS WHO WERE FIGHTING OVERSEAS.
[MILITARY MARCH PLAYING] Newsreel announcer: THIS IS THE VANGUARD OF 1,500 MEXICANS BROUGHT TO THE STATES BY THE FARM SECURITY ADMINISTRATION.
MOST ARE LABORERS.
ALL OF THEM ARE BACHELORS.
Narrator: WHEN THE WAR ENDED, THE PROGRAM CONTINUED TO BRING IN A NEARLY UNLIMITED SUPPLY OF CHEAP LABORERS FROM MEXICO, DESPERATE FOR WORK.
BUT ONCE IN THE U.S., THEIR EMPLOYERS COULD USE THEM AS STRIKEBREAKERS AND HAVE THEM DEPORTED IF THEY COMPLAINED.
Huerta: THEY WEREN'T ALLOWED TO ORGANIZE INTO UNIONS.
THE WORKERS WERE LITERALLY LIKE SLAVES.
Narrator: THE BRACERO PROGRAM WAS FINALLY ENDED IN 1964, AFTER 20 YEARS OF OPPOSITION BY MEXICAN-AMERICAN LEADERS.
Huerta: I WAS ABLE TO GO TO WASHINGTON, D.C., AND CESAR AND I WORKED TOGETHER, WORKING WITH THE SECRETARY OF LABOR, AND WE WERE ABLE TO END THAT PROGRAM.
Narrator: NOW A VIABLE UNION SEEMED POSSIBLE.
[SHOUTING AND GUNSHOTS] BUT THE HISTORY OF UNIONISM IN THE UNITED STATES WAS SCARRED BY VIOLENCE.
SINCE THE 1930s, DOZENS OF STRIKES HAD BLOODIED THE STREETS AND FIELDS OF CALIFORNIA.
ATTACKS AND RETALIATION OFTEN TRIGGERED CYCLES OF VIOLENCE THAT ROBBED WORKERS OF PUBLIC SUPPORT AND DOOMED THE STRIKES TO FAILURE.
Huerta: WE KNEW THAT IN THE PAST HISTORY OF ORGANIZING FARM WORKERS THAT THERE HAD BEEN A LOT OF VIOLENCE.
WE KNEW FARM WORKERS HAD BEEN KILLED.
Narrator: CHAVEZ AND HUERTA ADMIRED MAHATMA GANDHI, WHO HAD GAINED INDIA'S INDEPENDENCE FROM ENGLAND THROUGH A NONVIOLENT CAMPAIGN.
Garcia: FOR BOTH OF THEM, NONVIOLENCE WAS NOT JUST A STRATEGY, IT WAS A PRINCIPLE OF HOW TO LIVE YOUR LIFE THAT, IF YOU BELIEVED IN THE PRINCIPLE OF HUMAN DIGNITY, YOU DIDN'T HARM ANOTHER HUMAN BEING.
Narrator: FOR THREE YEARS, CHAVEZ AND HUERTA SIGNED UP FARM WORKERS, GRADUALLY BUILDING THEIR UNION.
BUT IN SEPTEMBER 1965, THEY WERE CAUGHT OFF GUARD.
[MAN SHOUTING] FILIPINO GRAPE WORKERS NEAR DELANO, CALIFORNIA, WENT ON STRIKE, DEMANDING HIGHER WAGES.
COME INTO THE FOLD OF UNIONISM AND HELP [INDISTINCT] WORKER INTO THE FOLD OF UNIONISM.
Huerta: WE VOTED TO SUPPORT THE FILIPINO WORKERS, BUT WE WERE VERY NAIVE.
WE MADE THESE BIG OLD SIGNS THAT SAID "HUELGA," WHICH MEANS STRIKE IN SPANISH.
THE FIRST DAY WE HAD A COUPLE OF STRIKERS THAT WERE BEATEN UP, AND IT WAS NOT A GOOD EXPERIENCE.
Huerta: [INDISTINCT] SISTER OR BROTHER!
Man: HERE'S THIS YOUNG WOMAN, NOT THAT BIG, LEADING A STRUGGLE, AND SHE WAS CHALLENGING THE ROLE OF WOMEN AMONG FARM WORKERS.
THEY HAD NEVER SEEN AN AGGRESSIVE, INDEPENDENT WOMAN LIKE DOLORES.
COME ALONG, BROTHERS!
WE ARE WAITING FOR YOU!
YOU ARE EARNING MORE MONEY TODAY BECAUSE THE WORKERS WENT OUT ON STRIKE ON SEPTEMBER THE 9th... Valdez: AND I FOUND MYSELF IN A POSITION WHERE I WAS WILLING TO BE A LIEUTENANT, TO BE A FOLLOWER.
[INDISTINCT] Narrator: THE STRIKE UNFOLDING IN THE SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY RESONATED WITH VALDEZ, AN ASPIRING YOUNG PLAYWRIGHT WHO'D GROWN UP IN DELANO.
Valdez: WE WERE MIGRANT FARM WORKERS.
AND SO I WAS IN THE FIELDS BEFORE I COULD WALK.
I WAS IN MY MOTHER'S ARMS.
AND LIKE A LOT OF MIGRANT KIDS, I USED TO SLEEP IN A FRUIT BOX WHILE SHE WORKED, AND EVENTUALLY WHEN I WAS OLD ENOUGH TO WALK, I BEGAN TO WORK.
[INDISTINCT] ...ENGAGED IN THE CONVERSATION.
Narrator: VALDEZ SOON BECAME PART OF CESAR CHAVEZ'S INNER CIRCLE.
[SPEAKS SPANISH] Valdez: CESAR WAS RELATIVELY YOUNG, BUT HE WAS MESMERIZING.
I MEAN HIS PRESENCE, AND I'M NOT TALKING ABOUT SOMETHING FLASHY.
I'M TALKING ABOUT SOMETHING VERY BASIC, VERY HUMBLE.
Crowd: HUELGA!
HUELGA!
Valdez: BUT HIS SENSE OF PLACE AND TIME, OF WHAT TO DO UNDER THE GIVEN CIRCUMSTANCES CAME FROM A CONFIDENCE THAT HE HAD WITHIN HIM.
THAT CONFIDENCE INSPIRED ALL OF US.
[CROWD SHOUTING] Narrator: AFTER 4 MONTHS, THE STRIKE WAS GOING NOWHERE.
GROWERS BUSSED IN NON-UNION WORKERS TO PICK THE GRAPES AND BREAK THE STRIKE.
[BUS HORN HONKS] AS THE HARVEST WOUND DOWN, THE UNION WAS ALMOST BROKE, AND CHAVEZ WAS LOSING HOPE.
Valdez: IN THE CROP SEASON, THERE IS A PERIOD WHERE EVERYTHING IS GERMINATING.
THE VINES HAVE BEEN PRUNED, YOU KNOW, THEY'VE BEEN DE-LEAFED.
IT'S BEEN IRRIGATED, AND NOW YOU GOT TO WAIT FOR THE NEW CROP TO KICK IN.
AND SO THERE IS A DEAD SEASON.
WHAT THE FARM WORKERS CALL EL INVIERNO CHIQUITO--THE LITTLE WINTER.
THAT WAS A DANGEROUS TIME FOR THE UNION BECAUSE THERE WERE NO WORKERS IN THE FIELD.
Narrator: CHAVEZ WAS BEGINNING TO BELIEVE THE STRIKE COULD NEVER BE WON IN THE FIELDS.
HE DESPERATELY WANTED TO BRING THE MOVEMENT INTO THE NATIONAL SPOTLIGHT.
Valdez: CESAR CAME UP WITH THIS BRILLIANT IDEA OF MARCHING TO SACRAMENTO.
Narrator: IN THE MANNER OF MARTIN LUTHER KING, WHO GARNERED MEDIA ATTENTION LEADING A MARCH THROUGH ALABAMA IN 1965, CHAVEZ WOULD LEAD A 300-MILE PILGRIMAGE FROM DELANO TO THE STATE CAPITAL, PASSING THROUGH FARM WORKERS' TOWNS ALONG THE WAY.
Huerta: CESAR SAID IT'S GOING TO BE A MARCH OF PENITENCE, AND THE WORKERS SAID, "WELL, WE DON'T HAVE ANYTHING TO BE "PENITENT ABOUT.
THE GROWERS ARE THE ONES THAT ARE DOING EVERYTHING WRONG."
HE SAID, "NO, NO.
I WANT EVERYBODY TO THINK "OF SOMETHING THAT YOU'VE DONE--SOME GOSSIP MAYBE, SOME "FIGHT THAT YOU HAD.
THINK OF YOUR OWN THINGS IN YOUR OWN LIFE."
Garcia: IT WAS A PILGRIMAGE.
THIS WAS A SPIRITUAL PILGRIMAGE.
IT WAS AN ATTEMPT TO SUGGEST, TO THE WORKERS AND OTHERS, THIS WAS GOING TO BE A LONG STRUGGLE.
[PEOPLE SHOUTING] Narrator: AS HE PLANNED FOR THE MARCH, CHAVEZ'S FAITH WAS BEING TESTED.
STRIKING WORKERS WERE SUBJECTED TO PHYSICAL AND VERBAL ATTACKS FROM GROWERS WHO SEEMED TO HAVE LAW ENFORCEMENT IN THEIR POCKET.
[PEOPLE SHOUTING IN SPANISH] Narrator: ON MARCH 16, 1966, WITH THE SITUATION THREATENING TO EXPLODE, THE SENATE SUB-COMMITTEE ON MIGRATORY LABOR HELD HEARINGS IN DELANO.
Robert Kennedy: THE FACT THAT SOMEBODY MAKES A REPORT ABOUT SOMEBODY'S GOING TO... Narrator: AS NEWS CAMERAS ROLLED, SENATOR ROBERT KENNEDY GRILLED THE LOCAL SHERIFF ON HIS PRACTICE OF ARRESTING PEACEFUL DEMONSTRATORS.
Kennedy: WHO TOLD YOU THAT THEY'RE GOING TO RIOT?
Sheriff: THE MEN RIGHT OUT IN THE FIELD THAT THEY WERE TALKING TO SAID, "IF YOU DON'T GET 'EM OUT OF HERE, WE'RE GONNA CUT THEIR HEARTS OUT."
SO RATHER THAN LET 'EM GET CUT, YOU REMOVE THE CAUSE.
[CROWD LAUGHS] Kennedy: THIS IS A MOST INTERESTING CONCEPT, I THINK.
HOW CAN YOU GO ARREST SOMEBODY IF THEY HAVEN'T VIOLATED THE LAW?
Sheriff: THEY'RE READY TO VIOLATE THE LAW, IN OTHER WORDS...
Crowd: OH!
Kennedy: COULD I SUGGEST IN THE LUNCHEON PERIOD OF TIME THAT THE SHERIFF AND THE DISTRICT ATTORNEY READ THE CONSTITUTION OF THE UNITED STATES?
Robert Kennedy: THE FARM WORKERS HAVE SUFFERED IN OUR SOCIETY OVER THE PERIOD OF THE LAST THIRTY YEARS, AND THAT SITUATION HAS TO BE CHANGED.
[CROWD CHEERING] Narrator: CHAVEZ SET OUT THE VERY NEXT MORNING, ALONG WITH 100 FARM WORKERS, TO BEGIN HIS PILGRIMAGE THROUGH CALIFORNIA'S SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY.
Valdez: CESAR EITHER BY DESIGN OR BY ACCIDENT ENDED UP BECOMING SYMBOLIC OF THE PENANCE PART BECAUSE HE HAD SOME BOOTS THAT INJURED HIS FEET.
TURNED OUT TO BE THE WORST IDEA FOR THE MARCH.
HE WAS VISIBLY IN ANGUISH, WHICH MADE FOR GREAT PICTURES-- YOU KNOW, A LIVING CESAR SUFFERING ON THE ROAD.
Narrator: AS THEY TRAVELED NORTH, PASSING THROUGH TOWN AFTER TOWN, THEIR NUMBERS GREW.
[MEN SINGING IN SPANISH] ♫THE PICKET SIGN, THE PICKET SIGN♫ [SINGING IN SPANISH] ♫THE PICKET SIGN, THE PICKET SIGN♫ [SINGING IN SPANISH] Narrator: AS A CATHOLIC, CHAVEZ UNDERSTOOD THE POWER OF SYMBOLS TO INSTILL A DEEP PERSONAL COMMITMENT TO THE MOVEMENT--AND ATTRACT PUBLIC ATTENTION.
[MEN SINGING IN SPANISH] Narrator: THEY FLEW THE UNION EAGLE, A SYMBOL OF MEXICAN PRIDE... AND THE VIRGIN OF GUADALUPE-- THE VIRGIN MARY AS A BROWN-SKINNED, MEXICAN INDIAN--SIGNIFIED, FOR MANY, THE RIGHTEOUSNESS OF WHAT WAS NOW BEING CALLED LA CAUSA: THE CAUSE.
Crowd: HUELGA!
HUELGA!
HUELGA!
HUELGA!
Narrator: AFTER 25 DAYS, THEIR NUMBERS HAD SWELLED FROM A FEW DOZEN TO AN ARMY OF THOUSANDS.
ON EASTER SUNDAY, 1966, THE STATE CAPITAL WAS FINALLY IN SIGHT.
Valdez: WHEN WE GOT TO SACRAMENTO, THERE WERE 10,000 PEOPLE MARCHING ACROSS THE SACRAMENTO RIVER WITH US OVER THE BRIDGE, AND IT WAS PEOPLE POWER.
THIS WAS A DEMONSTRATION OF DEMOCRACY.
Crowd: HUELGA!
HUELGA!
HUELGA!
HUELGA!
Huerta: TO THE GOVERNOR AND THE LEGISLATURE OF CALIFORNIA, WE SAY YOU CANNOT CLOSE YOUR EYES AND YOUR EARS TO US ANY LONGER.
YOU CANNOT PRETEND THAT WE DO NOT EXIST.
YOU CANNOT PLEAD IGNORANCE TO OUR PROBLEMS, BECAUSE WE ARE HERE AND WE ARE NOT ALONE... [CROWD CHEERING] Narrator: WITH PUBLIC SYMPATHY MOUNTING, AND THE SPRING GROWING SEASON UPON THEM, GROWERS FINALLY AGREED TO MEET WITH UNION REPRESENTATIVES.
Huerta: ...FARM WORKERS OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA.
[CROWD CHEERS] Garcia: DOLORES HUERTA BECAME THE LEAD NEGOTIATOR, AND IT WAS UNPRECEDENTED BECAUSE HERE WAS A MEXICAN-AMERICAN WOMAN NEGOTIATING WITH THE GROWERS AND TAKING THEM ON.
Valdez: SHE IS AN EXCELLENT NEGOTIATOR.
SHE CAN BREAK THINGS DOWN AND CAN ALSO STAND HER GROUND AT AN INTELLECTUAL LEVEL AND ARGUE POINTS, YOU KNOW, WITH LAWYERS.
Garcia: THEY HATED HER.
THEY CALLED HER THE "DRAGON LADY."
THEY WISHED THEY WERE NEGOTIATING MORE WITH CESAR THAN WITH DOLORES.
Narrator: IT WOULD TAKE YEARS OF NEGOTIATIONS AND A NATIONAL BOYCOTT FOR HUERTA AND CHAVEZ TO SECURE HIGHER WAGES, SAFER WORKING CONDITIONS, AND AN END TO CHILD LABOR.
BUT THE MARCH TO SACRAMENTO WAS A TURNING POINT.
IT LED TO THE FIRST FARM WORKER CONTRACTS IN AMERICAN HISTORY, AND FOR MEXICAN AMERICANS, IT WAS ONLY THE BEGINNING.
Man: VIVA LA HUELGA.
[CHEERING AND APPLAUSE] Narrator: THE RISE OF CESAR CHAVEZ AS A NATIONAL FIGURE BEGAN A FUNDAMENTAL SHIFT IN MEXICAN-AMERICAN IDENTITY.
BEFORE CHAVEZ, MOST MEXICAN- AMERICAN LEADERS CAME FROM UPPER-CLASS FAMILIES AND TENDED TO BE LIGHT-SKINNED, EUROPEAN-LOOKING--TRAITS THAT WERE PRIZED BY MANY IN THE LATINO COMMUNITY.
OUR ELDERS, YOU KNOW, WHEN THERE WAS A NEW BABY AND THEY'D SAY [SPEAKS SPANISH] AND THEN WE'D HEAR [SPEAKS SPANISH].
SO, THEY'D SAY, "LOOK AT THAT PRETTY BABY.
"IT'S GOT BLUE EYES.
IT'S SO WHITE.
IT'S SO PRETTY," AND THEN THE OTHER BABY, ANOTHER COUSIN IN THE FAMILY, "OH, TOO BAD, MAN.
HE CAME OUT DARK.
HE LOOKS LIKE AN INDIAN."
THERE WAS A SELF-HATE THAT WAS EMBEDDED IN THAT.
Narrator: BUT AFTER CESAR CHAVEZ, SOME OF THOSE PREJUDICES BEGAN TO ERODE.
Man: HE HAD BECOME PRETTY MUCH A NATIONAL ICON.
AND WE LOVED HIM BECAUSE HE DRESSED THE PART LIKE WE DID.
NO SUIT AND TIE, NO BRYLCREEM, NO AFTERSHAVE, PURO INDIO.
SOFT SPOKEN, KHAKI PANTS AND A FLANNEL SHIRT, MIXED-BLOOD.
THIS IS WHO WE ARE.
WE ARE AMERICA.
Narrator: BUT IN MID-1960s LOS ANGELES, THE LARGEST LATINO COMMUNITY IN THE UNITED STATES SEEMED DESTINED TO REMAIN IN SOCIETY'S UNDERCLASS.
130,000 MEXICAN AMERICANS WERE ATTENDING L.A. PUBLIC SCHOOLS, BUT THEIR GRADUATION RATE WAS ONE OF THE LOWEST IN THE COUNTRY.
IT HAD BEEN THAT WAY FOR GENERATIONS.
AT BELMONT HIGH, SAL CASTRO-- AN EAST L.A.
NATIVE--HAD LANDED A JOB TEACHING SOCIAL STUDIES.
AFTER ONLY A FEW WEEKS, HE NOTICED SOMETHING ABOUT THE STUDENT BODY THAT CONCERNED HIM AND APPROACHED THE PRINCIPAL.
I SAID, "MRS. LORD"--I STILL REMEMBER HER NAME--I SAID, "MRS. LORD, YOU KNOW, THERE'S A LOT OF MEXICAN KIDS HERE.
"THEY'RE NOT IN STUDENT COUNCIL.
"THEY'RE NOT PARTICIPATING IN SOME OF THE ACADEMIC PROGRAMS.
WHAT'S GOING ON HERE?"
SHE SAYS, "YOU KNOW WHAT?
YOU KNOW, THE KIDS ARE PARTICIPATING."
I SAID, "NO, MA'AM, THAT'S NOT TRUE.
I'M CONCERNED ABOUT THIS."
"MR. CASTRO," SHE SAYS, "LET ME CHECK."
SO THEN, SHE CALLS ME BACK AND SHE SAYS, "MR. CASTRO, LOOK.
"MEXICANS HAVE A VERY CHARMING PASSIVITY.
YOU WOULDN'T WANT TO TAKE THAT AWAY FROM THEM, DO YOU?"
Narrator: CASTRO WAS DISHEARTENED BUT HARDLY SURPRISED.
THE SITUATION IN THE SCHOOL SEEMED ALL TOO FAMILIAR.
WHEN SAL WAS ONLY TWO, IN 1935, HIS FATHER HAD BEEN FORCED TO LEAVE L.A. AND RETURN TO MEXICO--ONE OF ABOUT HALF A MILLION MEXICANS AND THEIR U.S.-BORN CHILDREN DEPORTED DURING THE GREAT DEPRESSION.
Castro: THE IDEA WAS THAT MEXICANS WERE CAUSING THE DEPRESSION.
PEOPLE WERE OUT OF WORK BECAUSE OF THESE GODDAMN MEXICANS, SO THEY STARTED ROUNDING MEXICANS UP.
Narrator: WITH HIS FAMILY DIVIDED, CASTRO SPENT HIS CHILDHOOD GOING BACK AND FORTH BETWEEN MEXICO AND THE U.S. BEFORE ATTENDING SCHOOL IN EAST LOS ANGELES.
Castro: AS I CAME BACK UP TO THE UNITED STATES AND STARTED SCHOOL HERE, I SPOKE MOSTLY SPANISH, AND THE TEACHER COULD NOT UNDERSTAND ME, SO I SAT IN THE CORNER.
THEY WERE EVEN SWATTING KIDS FOR SPEAKING SPANISH.
AND WORST OF ALL, YOUR PARENTS SPOKE SPANISH.
MAYBE THERE IS SOMETHING WRONG WITH YOUR PARENTS.
THAT'S REALLY A PSYCHOLOGICAL WHIPPING THAT THESE FOLKS DID NOT UNDERSTAND, OR IF THEY UNDERSTOOD IT, THEY DIDN'T GIVE A DAMN.
Narrator: NOW AS A TEACHER, CASTRO COULD SEE THAT LITTLE HAD CHANGED--MOST MEXICAN- AMERICAN STUDENTS WERE DIRECTED AWAY FROM ACADEMIC CLASSES AND INTO VOCATIONAL TRAINING.
Man: WHEN I WAS IN HIGH SCHOOL, I WAS ASKED, "WHAT DOES YOUR FATHER DO FOR A LIVING?"
AND I SAID, "WELL, HE WORKS WITH HIS HANDS--CONSTRUCTION, CHEAP LABOR, PICK AND SHOVEL KIND OF JOB," AND SHE TOLD ME-- SHE WAS A WHITE WOMAN--SHE TOLD ME, "OH, THAT IS A VERY "HONORABLE PROFESSION.
YOU SHOULD FOLLOW IN YOUR FATHER'S FOOTSTEPS."
I WAS TOLD SPECIFICALLY IN A GEOMETRY CLASS, WHEN I GOT UP TO ASK A QUESTION, "OH, PAULA, WHY ARE YOU EVEN BOTHERING?
"WE ALL KNOW YOU'RE NOT GOING TO GO TO COLLEGE.
"YOU'RE GOING TO BE PREGNANT BY THE END OF SUMMER LIKE THE REST OF YOUR GIRLFRIENDS."
Narrator: EVERY YEAR, ABOUT HALF OF ALL MEXICAN-AMERICAN STUDENTS IN LOS ANGELES SCHOOLS DROPPED OUT.
BARELY ONE IN A THOUSAND ATTAINED A COLLEGE DEGREE.
CASTRO SET OUT TO TRANSFORM THESE DIRE STATISTICS BY INSTILLING IN HIS STUDENTS A SENSE OF PRIDE.
HE MADE ME FEEL LIKE LOVING MEXICAN CULTURE AND OUR OWN HERITAGE WAS ACTUALLY COOL, AND THAT WAS BOTH UNSETTLING AND REVOLUTIONARY AND EXCITING.
Narrator: AS STUDENTS LEARNED ABOUT MEXICAN-AMERICAN HISTORY AND THE INDIGENOUS ROOTS OF THEIR CULTURE, MANY BEGAN ADOPTING A NEW NAME FOR THEMSELVES: CHICANO.
Esparza: WHEN WE IDENTIFIED WITH THE WORD "CHICANO," OUR UNDERSTANDING OF THE WORD WAS THAT IT WAS THE SAME WORD THAT IS THE ROOT WORD FOR MEXICO, WHICH WAS THE NAME OF THE AZTEC INDIANS, AND THEIR NAME WAS MEXICA, NOT AZTEC.
THAT'S WHAT THE SPANIARDS CALLED THEM.
MEXICA, AND YOU DROP OFF THAT WEAK FIRST SYLLABLE, "ME," AND YOU GET "'XICA" AND THAT BECOMES CHICANO, MEXICANO, AND THAT'S WHO WE WERE.
Narrator: WITH THIS NEW AWARENESS OF IDENTITY CAME A HEIGHTENED SENSE OF SELF-WORTH, WHICH SAL CASTRO REINFORCED.
Garcia: WHAT HE WAS ABLE TO DO WITH HIS STUDENTS WAS TO GIVE THEM A SENSE THAT THEY WEREN'T THE PROBLEM.
IT WAS THE SCHOOLS THAT WERE THE PROBLEM.
AND WHEN THEY BEGAN TO UNDERSTAND THAT IN THE DIALOGUE THAT THEY WOULD HAVE WITH SAL, BOTH IN AND OUT OF THE CLASSROOMS, THAT EMPOWERED THEM.
SO WE STARTED TO GET THAT THERE WAS SOMETHING WRONG, AND WE WERE LOOKING AT THE AFRICAN-AMERICAN CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT, AND WE UNDERSTOOD THAT IT WASN'T THEIR CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT, IT WAS A CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT.
IT INCLUDED EVERYBODY.
Narrator: BY 1967, WITH MARTIN LUTHER KING ORGANIZING IN THE SOUTH AND CESAR CHAVEZ ORGANIZING IN CALIFORNIA, SAL CASTRO BEGAN LOOKING FOR WAYS TO ORGANIZE STUDENTS IN EAST L.A. Castro: I WENT TO SEE MY FATHER, AND I SAID, "WHAT DO "YOU THINK, DAD?
WHAT DO YOU THINK I SHOULD DO?"
HE SAID, "HUELGA, M'IJO.
HUELGA."
THAT'S ALL HE SAID.
Narrator: CASTRO DETERMINED TO ORGANIZE A HUELGA, A STUDENT STRIKE OF AS MANY SCHOOLS AS POSSIBLE.
STUDENTS DREW UP A LIST OF DEMANDS THAT INCLUDED HAVING CLASSES IN MEXICAN-AMERICAN HISTORY AND HIRING MORE LATINO TEACHERS.
CASTRO ENLISTED RECENT GRADUATES TO HELP.
Muñoz: HE SAID, "THERE'S KIDS TODAY IN THE SCHOOLS THAT I'M TEACHING THAT ARE GOING THROUGH THE SAME EXPERIENCE THAT YOU GUYS DID, THAT I DID," HE SAID, "AND I WANT YOUR HELP TO BRING IT TO A STOP."
Esparza: THE WORD STARTED TO CIRCULATE, "WALKOUT, WALKOUT.
LET'S BOYCOTT SCHOOL."
AND WE SLOWLY PLANNED THIS OUT CAMPUS BY CAMPUS OVER A SIX-MONTH PERIOD, AND WE SET A DATE.
MARCH THE 6th, 1968.
Woman: I WAS SCARED, EXCITED, NERVOUS.
MY MOTHER TOLD ME "I'LL MEET YOU IN FRONT OF SCHOOL.
LOOK FOR ME."
SO THAT REALLY EMPOWERED ME.
Esparza: I GOT TO LINCOLN HIGH SCHOOL, AND I KNEW THAT OTHERS WERE AT ROOSEVELT.
WE HAD ALL COORDINATED, AND OTHERS WERE AT GARFIELD, AND SOME WERE AT WILSON.
BELMONT WAS READY AS WELL.
Crisostomo: I REMEMBER BEING REALLY NERVOUS AND NOT KNOWING, "CAN I DO THIS?
"WHAT IF I'M THE ONLY ONE WHO GETS UP TO DO THIS?
CAN I REALLY DO THIS?"
AND YOU KNOW, THE TIME CAME--10:00.
AND I RUSHED ONTO CAMPUS, AND NOBODY WAS WALKING OUT.
AND I STARTED YELLING UP AND DOWN THE HALLWAYS, "WALKOUT!
WALKOUT!
WALKOUT!"
I STOOD UP AND WALKED OUT OF THE CLASSROOM.
I WAS AFRAID TO LOOK BEHIND ME TO SEE IF ANYONE ELSE WAS COMING.
AND THEN THE DOORS STARTED TO FLING OPEN.
AND THE STUDENTS JUST RUSHED OUT.
Crisostomo: THE ROAR OF THEIR FOOTSTEPS ALL COMING DOWN THE STAIRWELL WHERE I WAS... THAT WAS EXCITING.
[CROWD SHOUTING] Crisostomo: ALL I REMEMBER WAS, "OK, I GOTTA GO TO THE FRONT GATE 'CAUSE THAT'S WHERE MOM IS."
AND THERE SHE WAS.
AS ALL OF THE STUDENTS CAME OUT, I PICKETED LINCOLN HIGH SCHOOL WITH MY MOTHER.
Muñoz: OVER A THOUSAND KIDS, YOU KNOW, WERE--WERE OUT THERE, AND THE MORE WE MARCHED, AND THOSE OF US IN THE FRONT, WE LOOKED BACKED AND WOW.
"LOOK AT ALL--LOOK AT ALL THESE KIDS" AND PARENTS COMING OUT AND JOINING THEM.
Castro: IT WAS A VERY EMOTIONAL TIME FOR ME.
DAMN, IT WAS BEAUTIFUL.
Narrator: BY THE END OF THE DAY, MARCH 6th, 1968, SOME 10,000 STUDENTS HAD PEACEFULLY WALKED OUT OF FOUR EAST LOS ANGELES HIGH SCHOOLS.
BUT TENSIONS WERE HIGH IN THE CITY.
RACE RIOTS HAD ERUPTED ALL ACROSS AMERICA THE YEAR BEFORE, AND WHEN STUDENTS AT ROOSEVELT HIGH SCHOOL WALKED OUT, POLICE OFFICERS WERE SENT TO MAINTAIN ORDER.
THINGS SOON GOT OUT OF HAND.
Man on megaphone: DISPERSE IMMEDIATELY.
Esparza: THE NEXT THING WE KNEW, THE POLICE STARTED RUSHING US.
AND THEY WERE WAVING THEIR BILLY CLUBS.
AND IT WAS AS UGLY A THING AS I REMEMBER IN MY LIFE--PEOPLE BEING CLUBBED DOWN TO THE FLOOR BECAUSE THEY WANTED AN EDUCATION.
[CROWD SHOUTING] THE NEXT DAY, WE WALKED OUT AGAIN, AND WE WALKED OUT AGAIN THE NEXT DAY AFTER THAT, AND WE DIDN'T STOP FOR TWO WEEKS.
Man: WE ARE NOT GOING TO... Narrator: THE WALKOUTS EVENTUALLY LED TO MEETINGS WITH PARENTS AND ADMINISTRATORS, AND MANY OF THE STUDENTS' DEMANDS WERE MET.
Castro: YOU STARTED HAVING BROWN FACES, YOU STARTED HAVING MORE MEXICAN ADMINISTRATORS, MORE BILINGUAL ADMINISTRATORS, AND SURE ENOUGH, WE EVENTUALLY STARTED HAVING SUPERINTENDENTS.
Narrator: THE DECADE OF THE 1970s WOULD SEE MORE LATINOS ATTENDING COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES ACROSS THE COUNTRY THAN EVER BEFORE... AND THEY WOULD EVENTUALLY ESTABLISH CHICANO AND LATINO STUDIES DEPARTMENTS AT OVER 160 UNIVERSITIES.
BUT PERHAPS THE GREATEST TRANSFORMATION TOOK PLACE WITHIN THE STUDENTS THEMSELVES.
Esparza: BEFORE THE WALKOUTS, THE WORD CHICANO DIDN'T HAVE THE CHARGE OF CLAIMING OUR IDENTITY IN THE COUNTRY AND SAYING, "YEAH, I'M AN AMERICAN, AND THAT MEANS BEING A CHICANO."
AFTER THE WALKOUTS, BEING CHICANO MEANT THAT YOU WERE GOING TO STAND UP FOR WHO YOU WERE AND OWN IT.
Narrator: ALL ACROSS THE COUNTRY, CHICANOS WERE TAKING OWNERSHIP OF THEIR FUTURE.
WE CAME HERE TO BUILD THE NEW CHICANO MOVEMENT.
THAT'S WHAT WE CAME HERE FOR.
Narrator: IN COLORADO, RODOLFO "CORKY" GONZALES ORGANIZED THE FIRST-EVER CHICANO YOUTH CONFERENCE.
1,500 YOUNG PEOPLE RALLIED TO SUPPORT CHICANOS RUNNING FOR OFFICE, TO DEMAND EQUAL RIGHTS FOR WOMEN, AND TO PRESS FOR MORE COMMUNITY INVOLVEMENT IN PUBLIC SCHOOLS.
IN WASHINGTON D.C., THE NATIONAL COUNCIL OF LA RAZA BECAME THE LARGEST LATINO ORGANIZATION IN THE COUNTRY FIGHTING FOR CIVIL RIGHTS.
ALTHOUGH WE ARE FIGHTING FOR LAND, WE ARE FIGHTING THE SURVIVAL AND PROTECTION OF OUR CULTURE.
Narrator: IN NEW MEXICO, REIES LOPEZ TIJERINA LED A MOVEMENT DEMANDING JUSTICE FOR THE DESCENDENTS OF MEXICAN AMERICANS WHOSE LANDS HAD BEEN TAKEN FOLLOWING THE U.S.-MEXICO WAR OF 1848.
[CROWD CHANTING] Narrator: IN CALIFORNIA, THE FARM WORKERS UNION WOULD GROW TO OVER 70,000 MEMBERS, AND THEIR GAINS IN WAGES AND WORKING CONDITIONS HAD ENABLED MANY TO LEAVE THE MIGRANT TRAIL.
AND IN SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS, YOUNG CHICANOS, FRUSTRATED WITH THE SLOW PACE OF SOCIAL CHANGE, WERE CHALLENGING THE POLITICAL STATUS QUO, AS REPRESENTED BY CONGRESSMAN HENRY BARBOSA GONZALEZ.
Gutiérrez: HE WAS THE FIRST MEMBER OF CONGRESS FROM TEXAS WHO WAS MEXICAN AMERICAN.
WE ALL LOOKED UP TO HIM, AND HE WAS FINE AT THE BEGINNING.
Narrator: BACK IN 1956, GONZALEZ--KNOWN TO ALL AS HENRY B.--HAD BECOME A BEACON OF HOPE AND CHANGE FOR MEXICAN AMERICANS WITH HIS ELECTION TO THE ALL-ANGLO TEXAS STATE SENATE.
HE SOON TOOK ON THE TEXAS ESTABLISHMENT IN A CRUCIAL BATTLE OVER SCHOOL INTEGRATION.
Man: IN 1954, THE SUPREME COURT PASSES THE BROWN VS. BOARD DECISION, DECLARING THAT SCHOOL SEGREGATION IS UNCONSTITUTIONAL.
WELL, THERE WAS A SERIOUS BACKLASH FROM SOUTHERNERS, TEXAS INCLUDED.
THE STATE WAS IN FLAMES ABOUT INTEGRATING SCHOOLS.
Narrator: TEXAS' GOVERNOR PRICE DANIEL INTRODUCED NEARLY A DOZEN BILLS INTENDED TO PRESERVE SEGREGATION.
HENRY B. GONZALEZ DETERMINED TO STOP THEM BY STAGING A FILIBUSTER IN THE SENATE.
Man: WELL HE JUST TALKED ALL NIGHT, AND WITH NOBODY ELSE THERE TO HEAR IT, HE WAS SAYING, "WHO SPEAKS "FOR THE BLACK MAN?
"WHO SPEAKS FOR THE MEXICAN AMERICAN?
"FOR WHOM DOES THE BELL TOLL?
IT TOLLS FOR THEE."
Narrator: GONZALEZ SPOKE FOR A RECORD-BREAKING 22 STRAIGHT HOURS.
Montejano: HENRY B.
EFFECTIVELY DERAILED MOST OF THE BILLS, AND HE BECAME IMMEDIATELY A HERO TO THE AFRICAN-AMERICAN AND MEXICAN- AMERICAN POPULATION OF TEXAS.
Narrator: GONZALEZ GREW UP MIDDLE CLASS, IN A MIXED RACE NEIGHBORHOOD NEAR SAN ANTONIO'S DOWNTOWN.
HIS PARENTS FLED MEXICO FOR TEXAS DURING THE REVOLUTION OF 1911.
THEY CAME WELL-EDUCATED, WITH MORE SCHOOLING THAN MOST AMERICANS.
Man: MY GRANDFATHER LEONIDES GONZALEZ WAS ACTUALLY THE MAYOR OF A SMALL CITY.
HIS BROTHER WAS A DOCTOR.
YOU COULD SAY THEY WERE REPRESENTATIVE OF A CERTAIN SEGMENT OF SOCIETY THAT TRULY WERE VERY ACCOMPLISHED AND IN MANY WAYS PRIVILEGED.
DAD WAS BROUGHT UP WITH THE ARTS AND LITERATURE AND MUSIC.
[MUSIC PLAYING] Narrator: IN 1961, GONZALEZ BROKE ANOTHER BARRIER, BECOMING THE FIRST MEXICAN AMERICAN FROM TEXAS TO WIN A SEAT IN THE U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES.
ALMOST IMMEDIATELY HE BEGAN PROMOTING A WORLD'S FAIR TO CELEBRATE THE 250th BIRTHDAY OF SAN ANTONIO AND BRING NEW JOBS AND TOURISM TO HIS CITY.
THIS IS A TRIBUTE TO THE PEOPLE OF SAN ANTONIO.
OUR HOPES, OUR ASPIRATIONS ARE WRAPPED UP IN THE SUCCESSFUL HEMISFAIR OF 1968.
Announcer: DON'T MISS THE TRAVEL HIGHLIGHT OF THE YEAR.
COME JOIN THE FUN AT THE SAN ANTONIO WORLD'S FAIR, NOW IN AMERICA'S "FIESTA CITY."
Narrator: BUT JUST A FEW MILES AWAY, SAN ANTONIO'S WEST SIDE WAS NO "FIESTA CITY."
HENRY B. GONZALEZ'S EFFORTS TO BOOST THE LOCAL ECONOMY WERE NOT TRICKLING DOWN TO THE BARRIO WHERE MANY OF SAN ANTONIO'S 350,000 MEXICAN AMERICANS LIVED IN SOME OF THE WORST SLUMS IN THE NATION.
Montejano: THE LIVING CONDITIONS FOR MEXICAN AMERICANS IN SAN ANTONIO WERE DIRE.
THE HOMES WERE PIECED TOGETHER WITH SCRAPS OF METAL, WOOD.
IN SOME PLACES YOU HAD SHOTGUN HOUSES ARRANGED AROUND A LITTLE COURTYARD WITH ONE FAUCET, ONE OUTDOOR PRIVY.
THOSE WERE THE CONDITIONS IN SAN ANTONIO.
Narrator: BY 1968, MANY CHICANOS SAW HENRY B.
AS OUT OF TOUCH, MORE CONNECTED TO WASHINGTON POWER BROKERS THAN TO SAN ANTONIO'S POOR.
Montejano: HENRY B. GONZALES BY THIS TIME WAS SEEN BY MANY TO HAVE COMPROMISED HIS EARLIER IDEALS.
MANY CHICANOS WERE POINTING OUT THE GLARING INEQUITIES IN THE CITY, AND THE CRY FROM THE CHICANO COMMUNITY OR THE ACTIVIST COMMUNITY IS, "WHERE IS HENRY B. GONZALEZ?
WHERE IS HENRY B.
GONZALEZ?"
[CROWD SHOUTING] Narrator: JUST DAYS AFTER THE GRAND OPENING OF HEMISFAIR, CHICANO HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS-- LIKE THEIR LOS ANGELES COUNTERPARTS--STAGED WALKOUTS, FIRST IN SAN ANTONIO, THEN IN THIRTY-NINE TOWNS ACROSS TEXAS.
EVENTUALLY THEY SPREAD TO NEARLY 100 HIGH SCHOOLS IN TEN STATES.
THE MASTERMIND BEHIND MUCH OF THIS ACTIVISM WAS JOSE ANGEL GUTIERREZ, SON OF A LOCAL DOCTOR AND A GRADUATE STUDENT IN POLITICAL SCIENCE FROM A SMALL TOWN SOUTHWEST OF SAN ANTONIO CALLED CRYSTAL CITY.
Gutiérrez: CRYSTAL CITY, WHERE I GREW UP, WAS SIMPLY LIKE AN OLD COLONIAL PLANTATION.
IT WAS A SEGREGATED TOWN.
ANGLOS HAD PAVED STREETS, SIDEWALKS, LIGHTS.
WE HAD NONE OF THAT.
POLIO WAS RAMPANT.
TUBERCULOSIS WAS RAMPANT.
EVERYTHING AROUND YOU WAS JUST SIMPLY DISHEARTENING.
Narrator: LIKE MANY SOUTH TEXAS TOWNS, CRYSTAL CITY HAD BEEN SHAPED BY RACIAL VIOLENCE, MUCH OF IT PERPETRATED BY THE TEXAS RANGERS, A 150-YEAR-OLD AUTONOMOUS POLICE FORCE WITH A HISTORY OF INTIMIDATING, EVEN KILLING MEXICANS.
AS A YOUNG BOY, GUTIERREZ OFTEN WITNESSED THE AFTERMATH OF THIS BRUTALITY.
Gutiérrez: MY FATHER'S MEDICAL PRACTICE WAS IN OUR HOME, AND IT WOULD NOT BE UNUSUAL FOR US AT NIGHT, THE MIDDLE OF THE NIGHT, TO HEAR A THUMP, YOU KNOW, ON THE DOOR, AND THERE'S A BODY.
THEY HAD BEEN PISTOL-WHIPPED OR THEY HAD BEEN BEATEN BY THE POLICE.
Man: THE POLICE DEPARTMENT AT THE TIME WAS JUST ABOUT A HUNDRED PERCENT ANGLO, AND THEY PRETTY MUCH ENFORCED WHATEVER THE RULING CLASS NEEDED TO HAVE ENFORCED.
Narrator: GUTIERREZ BLAMED "GRINGOS"--THE ANGLO AUTHORITIES IN SOUTH TEXAS-- FOR KEEPING MEXICAN AMERICANS DOWN.
HE WAS DETERMINED TO HELP CHICANOS GAIN POLITICAL POWER.
Gutiérrez: WE RECOGNIZE THAT THE BARRIERS TO OUR INTEGRATING INTO THIS SOCIETY AND TO UPLIFTING OURSELVES IS THE GRINGO, THE GRINGO WHO'S PUT THE BARRIERS WHO MAKES US DROP OUT OF SCHOOL, WHO KEEPS US IN BAD HEALTH, WHO DOESN'T PAY US GOOD WAGES, WHO PROHIBITS OUR UNIONS, AND SO ON AND SO ON AND SO ON.
SO UNTIL WE GET RID OF THOSE ELEMENTS, WE'RE NOT GOING TO PROGRESS, WE'RE NOT GOING TO BE FREE.
SO, YES, THE GRINGO MUST GO.
Montejano: THIS PRESS CONFERENCE BECAME KNOWN AS THE "KILL THE GRINGO" PRESS CONFERENCE BECAUSE THAT'S THE WAY THE NEWSPAPERS PORTRAYED IT.
BUT WHAT JOSE ANGEL GUTIERREZ MEANT WAS KILL THE GRINGO SUPREMACY--YOU KNOW, NOT THE INDIVIDUAL BUT THE SYSTEM.
Narrator: IN A TELEVISION INTERVIEW, HENRY B. GONZALEZ DENOUNCED CHICANO ACTIVISTS LIKE GUTIERREZ AND WHAT HE CALLED THEIR "CAMPAIGN OF HATE."
I PICTURE MY OWN ROLE AS HAVING A RESPONSIBILITY TO SMOKE OUT AND TO EXPOSE THESE FALSE AND MISTAKEN VOICES OF HATRED.
I FEEL THAT I FOUGHT AGAINST THOSE IN THE MAJORITY WHO WERE PREACHING THE SAME HATRED 12 YEARS AGO IN A DIFFERENT CONTEXT AND THAT I HAVE THE SAME RESPONSIBILITY TO EXPOSE IT AMONG THE MINORITY EVEN IF IT IS A MINORITY FROM WHICH I EMERGE.
Man: HENRY B. GONZALEZ, IN MY ESTIMATION, HAD A VIEW OF AMERICA THAT BOUGHT INTO THE MELTING POT SCENARIO, AND OUR MOVEMENT SAID NO, WE REJECT THAT.
WE DON'T HAVE TO GIVE UP OUR LANGUAGE, WE DON'T HAVE TO GIVE UP OUR CULTURE, THE EXTENDED FAMILY... ALL THOSE THINGS THAT MAKE US WHO WE ARE.
WE'RE NOT GOING TO ERASE THOSE JUST TO BUY INTO THIS, TO YOUR NOTION OF WHAT IT IS TO BE AN AMERICAN.
Narrator: BACK IN HIS HOMETOWN OF CRYSTAL CITY, GUTIERREZ ORGANIZED YET ANOTHER HIGH SCHOOL WALKOUT.
AFTER 8 LONG WEEKS, THE STUDENTS WON THEIR DEMANDS, BUT THAT WAS NOT ENOUGH FOR GUTIERREZ.
Gutiérrez: IN A SCHOOL WALKOUT, YOU HAVE TO GO BACK THE NEXT DAY ONCE YOU SETTLE TO THE SAME TEACHER, THE SAME PRINCIPAL, THE SAME SUPERINTENDENT, THE SAME SCHOOL BOARD.
WELL, THE ONLY WAY TO CHANGE THAT IS TO HAVE A POLITICAL REVOLUTION ELECTORALLY.
VOTE THEM OUT OF OFFICE SO THAT THEN YOU CAN HIRE THE CORRECT PRINCIPAL AND SUPERINTENDENT AND SO ON.
IF WE CAN TAKE OVER A SCHOOL AND BE SUCCESSFUL AND GET WHAT THE STUDENTS AND THEIR PARENTS WANT, WHY CAN'T WE JUST BECOME A COUNTY COMMISSIONER?
WHY CAN'T WE BECOME A SHERIFF?
WHY DON'T WE BECOME THE COUNTY JUDGE?
SO WE FORMED A POLITICAL PARTY.
Narrator: THEY CALLED THEIR NEW PARTY LA RAZA UNIDA...
THE UNITED PEOPLE.
GUTIERREZ SPENT WEEKS GOING DOOR TO DOOR, ENCOURAGING MEXICAN AMERICANS--WHO MADE UP 80% OF THE POPULATION--TO RUN CANDIDATES IN THE UPCOMING ELECTIONS.
[SPEAKING SPANISH] Man: WHEN YOU SAW JOSE ANGEL GUTIERREZ WALK INTO A CRYSTAL CITY BARRIO, HE KNEW HOW TO TALK TO PEOPLE.
HE COULD SPEAK TO OUR GRANDMOTHERS.
HE COULD SPEAK TO OUR MOTHER, TO OUR UNCLE, TO OUR FATHER, AND HE COULD ARTICULATE THEIR CONCERNS.
HE WAS VERY COMMITTED TO THE POOR, TO THE WORKING CLASS.
HE UNDERSTOOD THEIR NEEDS.
HE KNEW HOW TO ORGANIZE PEOPLE.
Montejano: NOW WE WERE GOING BEYOND HIGH SCHOOL WALKOUTS.
NOW WE'RE REALLY GONNA TAKE ON THE SYSTEM HERE.
WE FIELDED SIXTEEN CANDIDATES IN THREE COUNTIES AND WON FIFTEEN: SCHOOL BOARDS AND CITY COUNCILS.
Narrator: THE ELECTIONS IN APRIL OF 1970 SAW AN UNPRECEDENTED VICTORY FOR CHICANOS.
GUTIERREZ WAS ELECTED COUNTY JUDGE, AND LA RAZA UNIDA NOW CONTROLLED NOT ONLY THE SCHOOL BOARD, BUT CITY AND COUNTY GOVERNMENT AS WELL.
Gutiérrez: BEFORE YOU KNEW IT, WE HAD CHICANO TEACHERS AND PRINCIPALS AND SUPERINTENDENT.
I MEAN THIS WAS JUST INCREDIBLE!
YOU KNOW, YOU WALKED INTO THE COUNTRY COURTHOUSE, AND YOU WOULD SMELL CHORIZO, AND WE WOULD BE SPEAKING IN SPANISH IN THE COURTROOM AND, YOU KNOW, AND TELL THE ANGLO LAWYER, "YOU NEED AN INTERPRETER."
Montejano: AND OF COURSE THE ANGLO TEXANS ARE BESIDE THEMSELVES.
THEY'RE THINKING THAT THIS IS A REAL REVOLUTION.
EXCEPT THAT ALL THAT'S HAPPENING IS THAT MEXICAN AMERICANS ARE EXERCISING THEIR POLITICAL WILL.
[APPLAUSE] Narrator: LA RAZA UNIDA WOULD GROW INTO A NATIONAL PARTY, RUNNING CANDIDATES FROM CALIFORNIA TO MICHIGAN AS CHICANOS BEGAN FLEXING THEIR POLITICAL MUSCLE.
AND IN THE LARGEST DEMONSTRATION OF CHICANO SOLIDARITY EVER SEEN IN THE U.S., ON THE MORNING OF AUGUST 29, 1970, OVER 30,000 TOOK TO THE STREETS OF EAST LOS ANGELES, DEMANDING AN END TO THE WAR IN VIETNAM.
Valdez: THE WAR WAS REALLY BECOMING SUCH A HEAVY PRESENCE IN OUR LIVES, AND NO ONE COULD IGNORE IT.
AT THAT TIME, WE WERE ABOUT 6% OF THE POPULATION IN THE COUNTRY AND 20% OF CASUALTIES IN VIETNAM.
Crowd: WE WON'T GO!
HELL, NO, WE WON'T GO!
HELL, NO, WE WON'T GO!
Esparza: AS I RECALL, THERE WERE MILES OF PEOPLE MARCHING DOWN WHITTIER BOULEVARD, AND WE HAD THIS GREAT CELEBRATION.
Narrator: MARCHERS, INCLUDING THEIR FAMILIES, GATHERED TO ENJOY SPEECHES, DANCING, AND MUSIC.
BUT AUTHORITIES WERE ON EDGE.
ANTI-WAR DEMONSTRATIONS ACROSS THE COUNTRY HAD OFTEN TURNED VIOLENT.
AND WHEN POLICE WERE SUMMONED TO A LOCAL LIQUOR STORE AFTER THE ALLEGED THEFT OF A SIX-PACK, THE NEARLY ALL-ANGLO SHERIFF'S DEPARTMENT ARRIVED IN RIOT GEAR, PREPARED TO BREAK UP THE DEMONSTRATION.
Esparza: AND THEN TEAR GAS WAS BEING THROWN AT US, AND THE PEOPLE STARTED RUNNING IN ALL DIRECTIONS, AND THEN I SAW THE POLICE RUSHING US, KNOCKING PEOPLE DOWN, AND THEN PEOPLE WERE PICKING UP THE TEAR GAS AND THROWING IT BACK AT THEM, AND WE DIDN'T KNOW WHAT WAS GOING ON AND WHY IT HAPPENED.
[CROWD SHOUTING] I SAW A POLICEMAN COMING UP BEHIND A YOUNG WOMAN AND, WITH A BATON, HITTING HER IN THE BACK OF THE NECK AND WATCHING HER DROP LIKE A RAG DOLL.
NO ONE WAS EVER HELD ACCOUNTABLE FOR THAT.
Narrator: THREE PEOPLE WERE KILLED THAT AFTERNOON, INCLUDING RUBEN SALAZAR, A REPORTER FOR THE "LOS ANGELES TIMES" WHO HAD OFTEN BEEN CRITICAL OF LAW ENFORCEMENT IN THE MEXICAN COMMUNITY.
SALAZAR WAS ONE OF THE FEW LATINOS IN THE COUNTRY WHO WORKED IN THE MAINSTREAM PRESS.
Esparza: WE LOST SOME OF OUR HEART.
WE COULDN'T UNDERSTAND... WHY PEOPLE HAD TO DIE SO THAT WE COULD BE AMERICANS.
Narrator: THE UGLY END TO THE DEMONSTRATION SEEMED TO KNOCK THE WIND OUT OF THE CHICANO POLITICAL MOVEMENTS OF THE LATE 1960s AND EARLY '70s.
LA RAZA UNIDA HAD FEW SUCCESSES OUTSIDE OF SOUTH TEXAS.
TORN BY INFIGHTING AND UNDER PRESSURE FROM THE POLITICAL ESTABLISHMENT, THE PARTY EVENTUALLY DISBANDED.
REIES LOPEZ TIJERINA'S FIGHT TO RECLAIM LAND FOR MEXICAN AMERICANS GOT HIM TWO YEARS IN FEDERAL PRISON.
HE AND TWENTY ARMED FOLLOWERS HAD ATTEMPTED TO STAGE A "CITIZENS ARREST" OF THE DISTRICT ATTORNEY AND FREE EIGHT OF TIJERINA'S MEN FROM THE COUNTY COURTHOUSE WHO THEY BELIEVED HAD WRONGLY BEEN JAILED.
[GUNSHOTS] TWO OFFICERS WERE SHOT.
TIJERINA TRIGGERED THE LARGEST MANHUNT IN THE HISTORY OF NEW MEXICO WHEN HE FLED INTO THE MOUNTAINS.
AFTER A WEEK HE SURRENDERED IN ALBUQUERQUE.
AND SAL CASTRO--THE HERO OF THE L.A. WALKOUTS--WAS ARRESTED ALONG WITH 12 OTHERS.
THE AUTHORITIES HAD PUSHED BACK HARD, CHARGING THE SO-CALLED L.A. THIRTEEN WITH MULTIPLE COUNTS OF CONSPIRACY.
IT TOOK TWO YEARS OF COMMUNITY PROTEST AND LEGAL WRANGLING FOR THE CHARGES TO BE DISMISSED.
BUT AFTER THOSE TURBULENT YEARS, THE CHICANO MOVEMENT WOULD TAKE ON A DIFFERENT TONE.
IN TEXAS, CHICANO ACTIVIST WILLIE VELASQUEZ, FRUSTRATED WITH BOTH HENRY GONZALEZ'S POLITICS OF GRADUALISM AND THE MILITANCY OF JOSE ANGEL GUTIERREZ, SOUGHT ANOTHER WAY FOR LATINOS TO ENTER THE POLITICAL MAINSTREAM.
Montejano: EVERYBODY WAS LOOKING FOR A THIRD WAY HERE, OR AN ALTERNATIVE WAY, AND I THINK WILLIE FOUND ONE.
ON THE FACE OF IT, IT'S VERY SIMPLE.
YOU JUST ORGANIZE AND REGISTER VOTERS, RIGHT?
THAT'S IT.
YOU KNOW, HOW CAN YOU BUILD POLITICAL POWER LIKE THAT?
WELL, HE WAS DOING THAT IN EVERY TOWN.
I REMEMBER HEARING HIM GIVE SPEECHES ON VOTER REGISTRATION, AND THE PEOPLE WOULD JUMP UP AND START APPLAUDING AND SCREAMING BECAUSE HE GOT PEOPLE EXCITED ABOUT GETTING REGISTERED TO VOTE.
I'VE NEVER SEEN ANYTHING LIKE IT.
Narrator: WILLIE VELASQUEZ GREW UP ON SAN ANTONIO'S WEST SIDE, IN THE HEART OF THE BARRIO.
THERE WERE NO SIDEWALKS, NO DRAINAGE FOR THE WINTER DOWNPOURS THAT REGULARLY FLOODED THE MEXICAN PART OF TOWN, INCLUDING THE VELASQUEZ HOME.
IN 1966, VELASQUEZ BECAME THE FIRST IN HIS FAMILY TO GRADUATE FROM COLLEGE.
WHILE VOLUNTEERING WITH THE FARM WORKERS THAT SUMMER, HE REALIZED NOTHING WOULD CHANGE IN THE BARRIO UNTIL CHICANOS HARNESSED THE POWER OF THEIR NUMBERS.
BY 1974, VELASQUEZ HAD FOUND HIS CALLING, ORGANIZING THOUSANDS OF VOTER REGISTRATION DRIVES ACROSS THE SOUTHWEST.
Yzaguirre: HE WAS ENORMOUSLY SUCCESSFUL.
NOBODY HAD MARSHALED THE RESOURCES, THE EXPERTISE, THE TECHNOLOGY OF VOTER REGISTRATION LIKE WILLIE VELASQUEZ DID.
Leal: AND THERE ARE SOME ELECTIONS, AND YOU KNOW, SOME OF THE PEOPLE HE REGISTERS TO VOTE ASK HIM, "WILLIE, WHY "DIDN'T WE WIN?
WE'RE ALL REGISTERED."
OK?
SO, THEN, YOU KNOW, IT BECAME VERY PAINFULLY CLEAR TO WILLIE THAT IT WAS THE SYSTEM, IT WAS THE ELECTORAL POLITICAL SYSTEM OF THE STATE OF TEXAS THAT WAS TOTALLY AGAINST THEM EVER WINNING.
THE SYSTEM IS STACKED AGAINST US WITH GERRYMANDERING.
THE WAY THEY HAVE DISTRICTS CUT UP IS THAT THEY DIVIDE A NEIGHBORHOOD WHERE IT'S A CONCENTRATION OF CHICANOS INTO LITTLE PIECES, AND WE'RE NEVER GOING TO BE ABLE TO WIN THAT WAY.
SO ONE OF THE THINGS THAT WE'RE GOING TO HAVE TO DO IS WE'RE GOING TO HAVE TO TAKE PEOPLE TO COURT.
Narrator: IN TOWN AFTER TOWN, VELASQUEZ DOCUMENTED ABUSES AND BEGAN FILING VOTING RIGHTS LAWSUITS.
Leal: THEY NEVER LOST A CASE.
85 VOTING RIGHTS CASES, THEY NEVER LOST A CASE.
Rios: IT WASN'T THAT WE WERE GREAT LAWYERS.
IT'S JUST THAT THE LAW WAS SO OBVIOUS AND THE VIOLATIONS WERE SO CLEAR AND THE RESULTS WERE SO DIRECTLY CONNECTED TO CHANGING THE ELECTION SYSTEM, CHANGING THE WAY THE GAME WAS PLAYED.
ONCE YOU CHANGED IT AND PEOPLE PARTICIPATED, PEOPLE STARTED GETTING ELECTED.
Narrator: VELASQUEZ WAS CONSUMED WITH COURT CASES AND REGISTRATION DRIVES, PUSHING HIMSELF TO THE POINT OF EXHAUSTION, EVEN THOUGH HE WAS OFTEN ILL.
HE NEVER WENT TO THE DOCTOR TO HAVE HIMSELF CHECKED OUT.
AND INSTEAD HE JUST KEPT TAKING PEPTO-BISMOL TO GET THROUGH WHATEVER PAIN HE WAS GOING THROUGH.
AND FINALLY HE COULDN'T TAKE IT ANYMORE.
Narrator: VELASQUEZ WAS DIAGNOSED WITH KIDNEY CANCER IN MAY OF 1988.
IN SIX WEEKS HE WAS DEAD.
Montejano: HE DIED AT 44.
44.
WE LOST SOMEBODY THAT WAS BASICALLY A GENIUS ORGANIZER.
THAT'S THE WAY I WOULD PUT IT.
Narrator: WILLIE VELASQUEZ WAS POSTHUMOUSLY HONORED WITH THE PRESIDENTIAL MEDAL OF FREEDOM, THE HIGHEST CIVILIAN PEACETIME AWARD A U.S. PRESIDENT CAN BESTOW.
President Clinton: NO PERSON IN MODERN AMERICA WHO HAS RUN FOR PUBLIC OFFICE, WHEREVER HISPANIC AMERICANS LIVE, HAS FAILED TO FEEL THE HAND OF WILLIE VELASQUEZ.
HE MADE THIS A GREATER COUNTRY.
THE WORLD CHANGED FOR US IN A WAY THAT NOW, YOU CAN SEE IT.
THERE ARE UNITED STATES SENATORS THAT ARE LATINO.
YOU CAN SEE THAT THERE ARE GOVERNORS.
YOU CAN SEE MAYORS.
YOU CAN SEE FIGURES THAT ARE NOW LEADING MANY INSTITUTIONS.
THIS IS A BEAUTIFUL FLOWERING THAT CAME OUT OF THE CHICANO MOVEMENT... AND WHAT THAT SAID WAS WE WERE NOT FOREIGNERS.
THIS IS OUR HOMELAND, WHICH WE UNDERSTOOD WAS THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, WHERE WE ALL BELONGED.
Announcer: STILL TO COME ON "LATINO AMERICANS Announcer: CREATE A VIDEO TO SHARE YOUR STORY ONLINE.
EXPLORE LATINO CULTURE AND LEARN ABOUT LATINO HISTORY AT PBS.ORG/LATINOAMERICANS AND JOIN THE CONVERSATION ON TWITTER USING #LATINOSPBS.
"LATINO AMERICANS" IS AVAILABLE ON DVD.
THE COMPANION BOOK IS ALSO AVAILABLE.
TO ORDER, VISIT SHOPPBS.ORG OR CALL US AT 1-800-PLAY-PBS.
THIS SERIES IS ALSO AVAILABLE FOR DOWNLOAD ON iTUNES.
Episode 5: Prejudice and Pride Trailer
In the 1960s and 1970s a generation of Mexican Americans build a new "Chicano" identity (3m 23s)
Providing Support for PBS.org
Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorshipFunding for LATINO AMERICANS is provided by CPB, PBS, Ford Foundation, National Endowment for the Humanities, The Rockefeller Foundation, The Arthur Vining Davis Foundations and The Summerlee Foundation