FILM IN HINDE, UNIVERSITY UNION 3 PM
KEYNOTE SPEAKER AT GUY WEST PLAZA David Bacon, Free. 5:30 PM
as a part of the Farm to Fork celebration. Sept 13.
"When Mexico sends its people, they're not sending their best. . . They're sending people that have lots of problems, and they're bringing those problems with us. They're bringing drugs. They're bringing crime. They're rapists. And some, I assume, are good people."
-Donald Trump, June 16, 2015
In the Fields of the
North/ En Los Campos del Norte by David Bacon
Univerity
of California Press, 2017
Reviewed
by Duane Campbell
“We are not animals. We are human beings.”
In
an impressive and important new book, David
Bacon effectively counters the racism and xenophobia advanced by our current
president and promoted in right-wing media by providing hundreds of photos and
clear descriptions of the real life and work of the immigrants harvesting the
food we eat.
Bacon
does so by interviewing farmworkers and photographing farmworkers in their
“housing” and in their work. He reports and records the humanity of the
thousands of people who come north to harvest our crops and to feed their
families as best they can.
Photojournalist
David Bacon has a long history of documenting the lives of immigrant people,
including the important books:, Illegal People: How Globalization creates
migration and criminalizes immigrants. (2008) and The Right to Stay Home: How US Policy Drives Mexican Migration
(Beacon Press, 2013), as well as a long list of journal
articles.
In
The Fields of the North, Bacon uses
his extensive and award-winning photography to tell more of the story. This is
not just a book with some photos, but
rather a series of extended photo essays (with over 300 photos) showing that images and words have a combined
power far beyond either words or images by themselves. Bacon tells the story of
cycles of exploitation and poverty suffered by tens of thousands moving from
season to season, working in the fields to harvest our food for subminimum
wages, and facing the racism and political power of growers and their labor
contractors.
In
general, Bacon argues, farm laborers are paid more poorly today than were
workers in the 60’s when the United Farm Workers union was organized and
conducted its first strikes in the valleys of California.
Today many growers are "paying an illegal [subminimum]
wage to tens of thousands of farm workers," Bacon says. Workers get about
$1.50 for picking a flat of strawberries. "Each flat contains about eight
plastic clamshell boxes, so a worker is paid about 20 cents to fill each one.
That same box sells in a supermarket for three dollars...If the price of a
clamshell box increased by five cents the wages of workers would increase by 25
percent."
While
the United Farmworkers Union made an impressive gain in achieving unemployment
benefits for farmworkers in the 1980’s in California, undocumented farmworkers cannot collect
unemployment for the long periods when there are no crops to harvest.
Recent
legislation increases the California minimum wage to $10.50 per hour in 2017, on the way to $15
per hour for all workers including farmworkers in 2023; that is, if it can be
enforced where workers are often paid by piece work such as in the berries.
While legislative gains promise improvements for some California farmworkers,
farm labor in most other states is not covered by minimum wage laws.[1]
Where Does Your Food Come From ?
Bacon’s
informative personal interviews and accounts reveal what today’s life is like
for a wide variety of migrant workers in grapes, berries, lettuce and a variety
of crops we serve on our tables; from living in caves, without housing, in
river beds, and in cardboard shacks, to
living in the back seats of cars.[2] The photographs speak volumes.
The
photo essays make the difference in understanding the lives of farm workers and
their families. They harvest our crops and they feed us. The work force is
significantly female. Many suffer sexual assaults and exploitation,
which they too often endure in order to keep their jobs and feed their
children. These are excerpts from the personal tale told by Lucrecia Camacho:
“I
began working when I was nine years old. In Culiacán I picked cotton. I would get three pesos per day…From that
time on, I have spent my entire life working. . .
When
I was 13 my mother sold me to a young man and I was with him for eight months,
I was soon pregnant. After I started
having children, they were always with me. . .
After I came to the U.S., I did
the same thing. I took them to the
fields with me and built them a little shaded tent on the side of the field… I
began working here in the fields of Oxnard when I first arrived in 1985, and I
did it until last year. I already had 7 seven children
by the time I got here.”
The
author records the significant shift in farm labor that accelerated in the 80’s
toward Mexican indigenous people, speakers of Mixtec, Triqui, and various other
languages, who were pushed out of their homes in the south of Mexico and moved
into the U.S. migrant stream largely in response to NAFTA.
The
photo essays provide important contributions to our understanding of the major
restructuring of the global economy we are experiencing. This economic
restructuring (commonly known as neoliberalism) is directed by transnational
corporations to produce profits for their owners. The impoverishment of the
vast majority of people in pursuit of profits for a small minority has pushed
millions to migrate from Africa, Asia and Latin America in search of food,
jobs, and security. Global capitalism produces global migration.
A
result is a situation in which workers on both sides of this border and around
the world have been disempowered and impoverished. Workers everywhere are
forced to accept ever- worsening
wages and working conditions.
The
problem in our economy is not immigration as Trump claims; the problem is our
broken immigration laws that allow business to exploit workers who lack legal
status, driving down wages for all workers. If every immigrant were allowed to
get into our system of labor law, pay their dues, and work legally, we could
block the corporations’ exploitation and eliminate much of the oppression in
farm labor. But that will not happen until poor people have political power.
As Bacon argues, the work of the UFW and of smaller
independent unions is vital. At the same
time, H2A workers (guest workers) are increasingly used to break efforts to
form a union. The H2A program was established in 1986 to allow U.S.
agricultural employers to hire workers in other countries and bring them to the
U.S. in response to an alleged labor shortage.
This alleged labor shortage is in fact created by the
restrictions of our broken immigration system and the current enhanced
enforcement of ICE. Use of H2A, or guest
workers, rather than legal immigrants is the preferred form of immigration
“reform” advanced by growers and the Republican party.
In both photos and essays Bacon describes the battle for
unionization at Sakuma Farms in Washington that well illustrates one of the
problems of H2A programs. Today Sakuma Farms is one of the largest berry
growers in Washington.
In prior years, Sakuma Farms relied on local workers and
migrants from California (mostly indigenous Mixtec and Triqui) to fill its
7-800 picking jobs at the peak of the harvest.
In 2013 and 2014, the
company applied to bring in H2A Workers. This year, another Washington berry
grower, Sarbanand Farms, brought in over 500 H2-A workers, and working
conditions were so bad that one worker died and 70 others went on strike.
Sakuma workers went on strike twice during the last year,
seeking better wages and safe living conditions. Finally, the workers ratified
a first contract this summer. If history follows the pattern of other
farmworker contracts, the corporation will use the first opportunity it finds
to break the contract (actually, it already has), while other growers like
Sarbanand Farms bring in ever-larger numbers of H2A workers to prevent
unionization.
“We can’t leave things like
this. There is too much abuse. We are
making them right and making ourselves poor.
It is not fair.” Rosario
Ventura, a Sakuma Farms striker
The
persistent poverty in the fields and the use of migrant labor as an exploitable
resource is a result of strategic racism, a system of racial oppression created
and enforced because it benefits the over- class
of corporate agriculture and farm owners. It is a complex structure of
institutions and individuals from police and sheriffs, to immigration
authorities and anti-immigrant activists, politicians and elected officials and
their support networks. These groups foster and promote inter-racial conflict,
job competition, and anti-union organizing, as strategies to keep wages and
benefits low and to promote their continuing hold on power and wealth.
Currently
most farm labor workers lacks
legal protections and basic labor protections, while
they live under the constant threat of deportation.
Bacon helps us to see the exploitation and to hear the stories of the
oppressed in this current wave of migration. This labor force is all around us,
but it is largely invisible. The Fields
of the North makes them visible.[3] [4] [5] [6]
Duane Campbell is a professor emeritus of bilingual
multicultural education at California State University Sacramento, a union
activist, and past chair of Sacramento DSA.
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