Civil rights activist Cesar Chavez is a major supporter of workers' rights in the history of Hispanics. Cesar was born in 1927 as a Mexican American in Yuma, Arizona. He grew up with many ranchers and grocery owners. His family lived in a small adobe house and was taken away during the Great Depression. In order to gain ownership of the house, his father had to clean 80 acres. Unfortunately, after the father cleared the land, the agreement was broken and the family could not buy the house.
Latin American civil rights activist Cesar Chavez (1927-1993) strongly insisted on nonviolent means and unionism to make the struggle of Mexican-American farm workers a national project. On November 9, 1984 Chavez, president of United Farm Workers Federation, made a speech to a non-profit, non-partisan educational institution in San Francisco, Federal Club of California. Please refer to this article and discuss Chavez's idea of social change in the classroom. Ask students that Chavez has led the social movements because of the rights of farmer workers and the broad impact that this movement has on our society. Please encourage your class to speak about the influential social movements that are happening today.
Cesar Chavez is definitely one of the most famous Latino civil rights activists in history. As a Mexican-American, Chavez is supported by American labor movement and works in a non-violent and unionized way, especially in California and Florida, to raise awareness of the fighting of Hispanic farm workers nationwide . . The oldest leader in our list is Spanish missionary Juniper Rosera. In the mid 18th century, Sera came to California as a monk of the Franciscan of Spain and opened 21 Spanish missionaries in San Diego and San Francisco. His contribution is multifaceted as his architectural structure continues to affect California's architecture today.