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Tuesday Afternoon

(56,912 posts)
Wed Jul 23, 2014, 12:07 PM Jul 2014

Emma Tenayuca = Mexican-American labor rights activist

Emma Tenayuca, Mexican-American labor rights activist, died today in 1999. Her first arrest came during a protest for fair wages in 1933 at the young age of 16. Tenayuca’s campaigns against cigar companies, the Texan pecan industry, and beatings of immigrants by U.S. Border Patrol agents earned her respect and recognition in the labor movement.

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Emma Tenayuca = Mexican-American labor rights activist (Original Post) Tuesday Afternoon Jul 2014 OP
Thanks for posting this ... redqueen Jul 2014 #1
Life Affirming Women. Strong. Take Charge. Tuesday Afternoon Jul 2014 #2
Thank you, Emma. theHandpuppet Jul 2014 #3
Incredible woman ismnotwasm Jul 2014 #4
yw, ism Tuesday Afternoon Jul 2014 #5
Good I love her ismnotwasm Jul 2014 #6
yeah me too. Brave, Brave Soldier. Tuesday Afternoon Jul 2014 #7

ismnotwasm

(41,916 posts)
4. Incredible woman
Wed Jul 23, 2014, 02:05 PM
Jul 2014

From wiki:

Emma Tenayuca (December 21, 1916 – July 23, 1999) was a Mexican American labor leader, union organizer and educator. She grew up in a family of eleven and began living with her grandparents at an early age in order to ease the burden on the rest of her family.Emma Tenayuca was born into a tejana/o family whose residence in South Texas predated both Mexican independence and the Mexico-U.S. War.[2]Emma and her family were hit hard by the Depression, and all around her Emma Tenayuca began opening her eyes to see the suffering of low class workers. She became interested in activism and was a labor activist even before graduating from Brackenridge High School in San Antonio. Tenayuca’s first arrest came at the age of 16, in 1933, when she joined a picket line of workers in strike against the Finck Cigar Company.

After high school, Tenayuca obtained a position as an elevator operator, but she made a career out of her passion for labor rights. She founded two international ladies' garment workers unions, and was highly involved in both the Worker’s Alliance of America and Woman’s League for Peace and Freedom. She organized a protest over the beating of Mexican migrants by United States Border Patrol agents. In her early adulthood she was arrested for a second and third time: once on a charge of “disturbing the peace” during a nonviolent protest, and again for her leadership role in a labor strike in 1938.

I was arrested a number of times.
I don't think that I felt exactly fearful.
I never thought in terms of fear.
I thought in terms of justice.

“”
Emma Tenayuca
Organizing large scale strikes against the injustices in the labor sphere was also one of Tenayuca’s vocations. Tenayuca was instrumental in one of the most famous conflicts of Texas labor history–the 1938 Pecan Shellers Strike at the Southern Pecan Shelling Company. During the strike, thousands of workers at over 130 plants protested a wage reduction of one cent per pound of shelled pecans. Mexicana and Chicana workers who picketed were gassed, arrested, and jailed. The strike ended after thirty-seven days when the city's pecan operators agreed to arbitration. In October that year, the National Labor Relations Act raised wages to twenty-five cents an hour.

http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emma_Tenayuca


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