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- From: ww@nyxfer.UUCP
- Newsgroups: alt.activism
- Date: 01 Jan 93 14:18 PST
- Subject: "La Adelita" inspires drywall strik
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- Subject: "La Adelita" inspires drywall strikers
- From: nyxfer!ww (Workers World Service)
-
-
- Via The NY Transfer News Service * All the News that Doesn't Fit
-
-
- "La Adelita" inspires drywall strikers
-
- By Rosa Maria de la Torre and Veronica Golos
-
- The Mexican drywall workers' strike in Southern California, now
- six months old, has won significant victories. Fifty-one of the
- region's 90 contractors have signed agreements with the strikers.
-
- Only those in San Diego continue to hold out. Police repression
- there is the strongest, and resistance is reaching heroic
- proportions.
-
- The strikers are optimistic about the prospects for a settlement.
- Hugo Gutierrez, an Orange County striker, told Workers World,
- "Many of the developers `don't want any more trouble' and are
- themselves urging other companies to sign."
-
- Encarnacion Sandoval is the sole woman drywall striker in San
- Diego. She starts walking the picket line at 4 a.m. every day.
- She has faced violence, shootings and police beatings. She is the
- backbone of the San Diego strike.
-
- Fellow strikers say her strength and courage have earned her the
- name "La Adelita," after the legendary women of the 1910 Mexican
- Revolution.
-
- Sandoval, 34, was born in the state of Hidalgo, in Mexico. She
- and her family came to San Diego eight years ago. She has two
- sons, ages 15 and 17, in high school. Both are active in the
- community.
-
- "La Adelita" worked in agricultural fields, restaurants and
- sewing shops before becoming the first woman drywall worker in
- San Diego. Before the strike, Sandoval was active in Hermandad
- Mexicana Nacional, a mutual aid society common in Mexican
- communities. She served as president of this group, which serves
- 500 families in San Diego.
-
- "Fighting discrimination is the main force motivating me to work
- in the community," Sandoval told Workers World. "The resources
- are there, but they are not within the reach of the community.
- Therefore, Hermandad focuses on informing the community of their
- rights and making the resources more accessible to them.
-
- "Very often one person alone will not be listened to. But if you
- organize and struggle as a group, you can accomplish more."
-
- When the strike started, she says, she struggled to choose
- between continuing her community work or strike activism. "But I
- felt that the strike had to take precedence. For we want our work
- to be valued, like anyone else's work.
-
- "We don't come to take anyone else's jobs. But we are not
- accepting the low wages and we will ... not be used. That is why
- our strike helps the American workers too."
-
- `I AM A PART OF THE STRUGGLE'
-
- "La Adelita" does whatever is necessary--including getting
- arrested. "I always tell the men to stay strong," she says. "If
- we take one step back, the repression will be worse.
-
- "And police aggression has been strong. On Nov. 12, in Carmen del
- Mar where we were picketing, police attacked and arrested several
- of us. I was one of those arrested, and I was beaten.
-
- "The police took me into the police station and tied me up in a
- special chair they have. They handcuffed me with my hands behind
- my back, tied me on this chair with several straps across my
- body. I stayed this way for more than an hour.
-
- "Altogether there had been 100 picketers, 11 arrested and 15
- beaten. One of the men vomited blood and had to be taken to the
- hospital. I am still under daily therapy. The doctor tells me if
- in six months I am not better, I might have to have an operation
- on my back. I am in pain all the day, head, neck, and back.
-
- "After this incident, we decided to build a special room in our
- union hall as a shelter for battered women and children, victims
- of violence. We know what that is like. The Carpenters are
- providing volunteer work to construct this."
-
- Sandoval is conscious of the importance of her role as the only
- woman striker. She says: "Also, one of the reasons I went
- full-time for the strike was it was necessary for women to show
- support, to show that women could do whatever was necessary,
- struggle side by side with men. I admire [strike leader] Tony
- Hernandez; I felt we were of one idea, that we were seeking
- respect as workers.
-
- "In San Diego I am the only woman in the strike," says Sandoval.
- "The other women, mostly wives, show support morally, but do not
- participate on the picket. This is because families cannot risk
- both parents to be arrested at the same time, the repression
- being so brutal. It is a tactic we use to keep us strong.
-
- Sandoval says: "I am honored that my companeros [comrades] call
- me `La Adelita'. I see it as a form of recognition of my
- participation in the strike. It shows that they, the men, really
- do think that I am a part of the struggle. This is con mucho
- carino [with much love]."
-
- -30-
-
- (Copyright Workers World Service: Permission to reprint granted if
- source is cited. For more info contact Workers World, 46 W. 21
- St., New York, NY 10010; email: ww%nyxfer@igc.apc.org; "workers"
- on PeaceNet; on Internet: "workers@mcimail.com".)
-
-
- NY Transfer News Service * All the News that Doesn't Fit
- Modem: 718-448-2358 * Internet: nytransfer@igc.apc.org
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