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24

LIFE IN CHRIST—

PART TWO

THE PRINCIPLES OF THE CHRISTIAN MORAL LIFE

—CCC, NOS. 1691-2082

HE IS A GOD-FEARING,

CHRISTIAN GENTLEMAN

His Catholic faith led Cesar Chavez to improve the lives and livelihood of

America’s farm workers. Chavez was born on March 31, 1927. Raised in the

grinding poverty of the Great Depression, he was trained by his parents to

remember that there was always room for one more needy person at their

dinner table. He served in the Navy for two years during World War II.

After the war, Chavez met a priest who ministered to the Mexican

American migrant workers. The priest told Chavez about Catholic teach-

ings concerning the rights of workers. Chavez said, “I would do anything

to get Father to tell me more about labor history. I began going to the

bracero

(guest worker) camps with him to help with the Mass, to the city

jail to talk to the prisoners, anything to be with him.”

Chavez soon became active in drives for voter registration and in

countering abuses against Mexican immigrants and Mexican American

immigrants. During the 1960s, his organizing efforts gave birth to the United

Farm Workers. But federal laws exempted the agriculture industry from

the requirement of allowing free exercise of the right of farm workers to

organize a union. Chavez had to find a unique way to get the growers to

recognize his union. He resorted to the strategy of consumer boycotts.

In 1968, he led the nation’s first grape boycott. At one point, 17 million

Americans honored the boycott. Chavez went further and asked the

American bishops to support the boycott. In response, they intervened to

mediate the conflict.