The danger of revering heroes
Jessica
Corbett for Common Dreams
“Our collective power is what defines us and is our
movement, and one person cannot tear our movement down,” Alianza Nacional De
Campesinas
said in the wake of The
New York Times reporting Wednesday on multiple sexual abuse
allegations against late Mexican-American labor leader César Chávez.
“As a farmworker women’s organization, many of us have
experienced or witnessed the sexual abuse and silence women endure in many
aspects of our lives,” the group continued, adding that “we are deeply troubled
and devastated” to learn about the reporting, and “we stand with Dolores
Huerta, Ana Murguía, and Debra Rojas, who have bravely shared their painful
stories.”
Huerta, cofounded with Chávez a group that went on to become
the labor union United Farm Workers (UFW). In her
comments to the Times and a separate statement, the 95-year-old described two separate
encounters with Chávez that led to pregnancies: “The first time I was
manipulated and pressured into having sex with him... The second time I was
forced, against my will, and in an environment where I felt trapped.”
Murguía told the Times that Chávez molested her for four
years, beginning when she was 13. Rojas said she was 12 when Chávez first
groped her breasts in the same office where abused Murguía. When Rojas was 15,
the newspaper reported, “he arranged to have her stay at a motel during a
weekslong march through California, she said, and had sexual intercourse with
her—rape, under state law, because she was not old enough to consent.”
The reporting has sparked a wave of responses from labor
groups, elected officials, and others who have expressed support for survivors
and stressed, as Guardian US columnist Moira Donegan wrote Friday, that “the rightness of the movement for
the dignity of workers, for the rights and respect of Latinos, and for a future
in which there is more freedom and possibility for poor people... cannot be
tarnished by Chávez’s behavior.”
UFW Foundation said this week that “as a women-led organization that
exists to empower communities, the allegations about abusive behavior by César
Chávez go against everything that we stand for.”
Describing the alleged abuse as “shocking, indefensible and
something we are taking seriously,” the UFW Foundation also announced that it
“has cancelled all César Chávez Day activities this month.”
EDITOR'S NOTE: I spent a day with Cesar Chavez when he visited Providence in May 1972. I was a young organizer of 23 and was picked to be part of a contingent who essentially served as human shields. Cesar had gotten many death threats. I was mostly within an arm's length of him and liked and admired him at the time, but much less so now. - Will Collette