|
If a person were to write about a man like Cesar Chavez,
whose tireless efforts led to his successful establishment
of a union for farm workers in the early 1960s, a huge book
would be required to do justice to the man and to all he accomplished
in his life.
But no comprehensive book could be written Chavez's life
without careful and complete attention to his spirituality.
Most people who knew Chavez only through newspapers and radio
and TV broadcasts would have little awareness of how deeply
spiritual he was. It was a facet of his life that was never
publicized much or talked about, certainly not by Cesar himself.
Others who knew him well, however, would have been familiar
with how religious, how deeply spiritual he was.
I was one of those who were aware of his profound spirituality,
as a priest and as a member of National Farm Worker Ministry.
I lived and worked for the United Farm Workers for 12 years
(1977-89) at the UFW's La Paz headquarters at Keene, California,
near Tehachapi, and I was fortunate enough to come to know
Chavez well.
He simply
never missed
Mass -- no matter where he was the night or day before.
He learned the value of regular attendance at Mass ---
with no excuses for missing --- at home, and he never
betrayed what he learned from his faithful parents.
|
He was deeply spiritual for a very good reason. He grew
up in a home in Yuma, Arizona, that was totally immersed in
the Catholic faith. Chavez learned how to pray in the earliest
moments of his life from his father and mother, Librado and
Juana. As dedicated Catholics, they prayed regularly in devotions
at home and at Mass in church every Sunday and holy day. In
all the years that I knew Chavez at La Paz, I never knew him
to deliberately miss Mass.
On one occasion after I first arrived in La Paz, Cesar was
in Detroit on a Saturday night speaking engagement. By the
time he got back to Los Angeles International Airport it was
around 4 a.m. Sunday, and around 6 or 6:30 before he arrived
home. And there he was, a couple hours later, in his customary
front row seat, ready for Mass.
It was only later that I realized I should not have been
surprised. He simply never missed Mass -- no matter where
he was the night or day before. He learned the value of regular
attendance at Mass --- with no excuses for missing --- at
home, and he never betrayed what he learned from his faithful
parents.
When his father was swindled out of his little ranch near
Yuma and was forced to take his family to California and become
migrant workers, Chavez learned firsthand from watching his
defeated and humiliated father that even the cruelest mistreatment
at the hands of evil people never justified revenge. Never.
And Chavez' later utter rejection of revenge and violence
was further reinforced at home by his mother. Juana would
not, under any circumstances, condone fighting by her son
for any reason at all, but especially as a means of getting
back at someone.
Whenever Cesar came home disheveled and bruised after a
fight, no matter how much he tried to justify the fight to
his mother --- pleading, for example, that he didn't start
it --- she would simply say, "It takes two to fight." In other
words, no excuse would do. Not wanting to be known as a coward
was not an acceptable excuse, either. She would tell him,
"It is better to say that he ran from here than to say he
died here."
Is it any wonder, then, that Chavez later embraced Jesus'
message of nonviolence enfleshed in St. Francis, Gandhi and
the Rev. Martin Luther King, and put the doctrine of nonviolence
into practice in his own life and the life of the union?
In 1968, when many striking farm workers were beginning
to respond with violent behavior to the mistreatment they
were suffering at the hands of growers, Chavez embarked upon
a painful 25-day fast to make farm workers understand once
and for all that revenge and violence would never be a part
of the farm worker movement if they wanted him to be their
leader.
Chavez knew how important it would be to make the deepest
spiritual values the bedrock of the farm worker union. While
I was working in the UFW at La Paz, I can't remember a time
when every small or big community meeting, every minor or
major march, and every convention didn't begin with either
a prayer or a Mass.
And, of course, always prominent on those occasions was
the banner of Our Lady of Guadalupe. Chavez loved Our Lady
of Guadalupe and was never ashamed to show it.
One of the most familiar sites on the La Paz compound was
the Guadalupe Room, which we reserved for some of our most
cherished celebrations. For example, after observing the days
of Las Posadas in different homes before Christmas, on Christmas
Eve the people would process a long distance down to the Guadalupe
Room to celebrate the birth of Jesus.
And on Holy Thursday night after Mass, the Guadalwpe Room
is where we held our vigil, watching and waiting with Jesus
during the night before he was to be arrested and led away
to be crucified. Our Lady of Guadalupe was significant for
all of us at La Paz, and Cesar's devotion was a big reason
for that.
Finally, a word about private meditation, a practice Chavez
was profoundly committed to as part of his spiritual life.
He knew --- and it is something good for all of us to learn
--- that it is one thing to go to Mass regularly and to participate
in certain religious devotions, but these must be accompanied
by pondering their value, by meditating on their meaning,
and reflecting upon how they affect the way we live.
Chavez
was very private about when and where he went to meditate.
Some of us were aware, however, that he would go off to certain
hideaways in La Paz, often but not always, early in the morning
to meditate. Had not meditation been an important part of
his life, how could he possibly ever have decided to suffer
through not one, not two, but three excruciatingly long fasts?
You simply don't do things like that without reflecting deeply
upon them beforehand.
Again this year, we celebrate Chavez's birthday on March
31. He would be 77 this year. And again we celebrate his birthday
during Lent, this year during the fifth week of Lent, when
the passion and death of Jesus are drawing rear. Just as Jesus
often used to hide from his disciples and go off somewhere
to pray and meditate, so did Chavez.
It might be a good idea during this time for us also to
find a hideaway where we can not only pray, but also where
we can reflect upon two deeply spiritual men we love and admire
--- Jesus first, of course, and Cesar Chavez.
We could learn a lot from both of them --- in solitude.
Father Ken Irrgang finished a 12-year period with the
United Farm Workers in 1989. A priest of the Diocese of New
Ulm, Minnesota, he is now retired and living in St. Cloud,
Minnesota.
|