DOLORES (2017)
Directed by Peter
Bratt
PBS Distribution, 95
minutes, Not-rated
★★★★
Remember Bill O'Reilly, the sexual predator from Fox? We briefly
see his bile-spewing mug in the documentary Dolores,
a look at the life and selfless career of Dolores Huerta (b. 1930). O'Reilly
was among the smug Fox commentators aroused to righteous fury during a 2010
Arizona debate over adding ethnic studies to the state's school curriculum. One
wonders why this is even a question in a state whose population is nearly one-third
Hispanic, but Huerta was there to fight for it because she knew that Arizona
was controlled by the GOP. When she sought to fire up local activists, she told
them, "Look, the Republicans hate Latinos." That drove O'Reilly mad
and he took to the Fox News airways: "Who is she? I've never even heard of
this woman." Way to display your ignorance Billy. Arizona defeated the
ethnic studies proposal and just look at how much Latinos love the GOP now.
My tone is sarcastic, something Huerta almost never is. In
one way, though, O'Reilly was correct. If you had to pick the figure from the
20th century with the most awards, humanitarian achievements, and
influence that is so little known, Dolores Huerta would be a contender. (For
the record, any student who ever took a course from me would have heard her
name, even if they can't recall why.) This raises a question. Why do so many
recognize bloviators like O'Reilly, but so few know about Dolores Huerta? How
about Carlos Santana? Bet you've heard of him. Santana thought it a sin that
"Sister Dolores" (his term) is a relative unknown, so he put up some
of his own dough to produce Peter Bratt's documentary about a remarkable woman
who, at age 87, is still on the frontlines for social justice.
Call Huerta the Latina Mother Jones, except her résumé is
even broader. Consider this abbreviated
bullet point summary of Ms. Huerta's accomplishments:
·
Working for social justice since 1955
·
1962: Co-founder of the United Farm Workers of
America (UFWA)
·
1955: Took command of the Delano strike and
grape boycott, which
·
1966: Negotiated a settlement with Schenely Wine
Company that was the first time an agricultural producer signed a union
contract
·
1968: Worked with Robert Kennedy's presidential
campaign
·
1970: Negotiate contracts when California
growers capitulated to the grape boycott
·
1975: A leader in the campaign that culminated
in the California Agricultural
Labor Relations Act*
·
1987: Cited by Ms Magazine as one of its women of the year
·
1980s/90s: Spearheaded campaigns against
pesticide poisoning
·
1993: Inducted into National Women's Hall of
Fame
·
1997: Cited as one of the 100 most important
women of the 20th century
·
1998: Won the Eleanor Roosevelt Award for Human Rights
·
2002: Established Dolores Huerta Foundation to train human rights
activists
·
2012: Awarded Presidential Medal of Freedom by
Barack Obama
·
2017: Co-chaired the Women's March on Washington
to protest inauguration of Donald Trump
·
Huerta coined the rallying cry Sí, su pudre whose English translation
is "Yes, we can!" and was used by Barack Obama.
Dolores dares ask
us: Why isn't Dolores Huerta a household name? Part of the answer is obvious:
she's a brown-skinned Latina in a society dominated by white, male, Anglos. But
that's not the whole story. Franklin Roosevelt once implored, "I ask you
to judge me by the enemies I have made." This takes us back to O'Reilly.
Huerta has spent her life speaking truth to power. Let's add some Frederick
Douglass to FDR: "Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did
and it never will." Huerta has tackled powers such as racism, sexism,
ethnocentrism, and economic privilege; that is, elites neither concerned with social
or economic justice, nor inclined to shed tears for those living on life's
margins. They are, however, inclined to moralizing.
The documentary takes as honest look at Huerta. She is
saintly, but unlikely ever to be saint. She has been married and divorced
twice, and has born eleven children to three different fathers—the last of whom
was Richard Chavez, Cesar Chavez's brother. The documentary is unsparing
regarding the cost of her activism. She was born in New Mexico, attended
Stockton College, indulged her love of jazz and dance, and was on the path to a
middle-class life until she chucked it all in 1955, when she joined the
Community Service Organization, a Latino civil rights group. Huerta never
looked back, though it meant voluntary poverty and absentee motherhood. Her
children speak candidly of her absence, their hurt, and (often) their anger;
Huerta views this as akin to collateral damage in a time of war. Her personal
life, however, made her easy prey for moralists wishing to divert attention
from their own activities.
The film is also unsparing in looking at organized labor's
internal struggles, union sexism, and the lengths to which organized power
would go to try to thwart Huerta and the UFWA. Testimonials appear throughout;
among them those of Angela Davis, Hillary Clinton, and Gloria Steinem. Steinem
utters the movie's most poignant line when discussing Huerta's work with Bobby
Kennedy and his assassination: "I had seen the past die, but never before
had I witnessed the death of the future." Yowser! Imagine: If RFK had
lived, no Nixon, no Ford, no Carter, and probably no Reagan or Bush. Not coincidentally,
Huerta was singled out for an unprovoked near-fatal beating while protesting
against G. H. W. Bush in 1988. Imagine also a different post-1993 future. Cesar
Chavez got most of the UFWA glory, but Huerta was (at least) his equal. When
Chavez died, most farmworkers assumed Huerta would assume the union presidency;
it went to a man (and the UFWA has never been the same). For Huerta, it
awakened a dormant feminist consciousness and made her revaluate her life. Draw
a straight line from 1993 to the Huerta Foundation.
Another amazing aspect of the film is Huerta's
demeanor—measured, calm, and pacific no matter what she faced. Nor does she
ever apologize for the path she followed. Dolores Huerta is the very embodiment
of a person all in for her causes. Numerous interviewers have played the role
of Satan in the Wilderness and have tempted Huerta with questions of what she
would do if she were given a large sum of money to spend on herself. The answer
is always the same: give it to the cause. Thus the moralists rant and pretend
they don't know her, or rail that she's a poor role model who abandoned her
children. Problem: Every one of her now-adult children deeply loves and admires
Dolores. Most of them now work with her foundation. If you don't know about
this remarkable woman, be sure to see this documentary. After all, who wants to
be as big an ignoramus as Bill O'Reilly?
Rob Weir
* Contrary to popular belief, many workers were excluded
from the 1935 Labor Relations Act and agricultural workers were specifically
excluded from it. To date, California remains the only state to extend labor
protection to agricultural workers.
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