#dolores huerta
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Note
OK, I'll bite - what's the deal with the United Farm Workers? What were their strengths and weaknesses compared to other labor unions?
It is not an easy thing to talk about the UFW, in part because it wasn't just a union. At the height of its influence in the 1960s and 1970s, it was also a civil rights movement that was directly inspired by the SCLC campaigns of Martin Luther King and owed its success as much to mass marches, hunger strikes, media attention, and the mass mobilization of the public in support of boycotts that stretched across the United States and as far as Europe as it did to traditional strikes and picket lines.
It was also a social movement that blended powerful strains of Catholic faith traditions with Chicano/Latino nationalism inspired by the black power movement, that reshaped the identity of millions away from asimilation into white society and towards a fierce identification with indigeneity, and challenged the racist social hierarchy of rural California.
It was also a political movement that transformed Latino voting behavior, established political coalitions with the Kennedys, Jerry Brown, and the state legislature, that pushed through legislation and ran statewide initiative campaigns, and that would eventually launch the careers of generations of Latino politicians who would rise to the very top of California politics.
However, it was also a movement that ultimately failed in its mission to remake the brutal lives of California farmworkers, which currently has only 7,000 members when it once had more than 80,000, and which today often merely trades on the memory of its celebrated founders Dolores Huerta and Cesar Chavez rather than doing any organizing work.
To explain the strengths and weaknesses of the UFW, we have to start with some organizational history, because the UFW was the result of the merger of several organizations each with their own strengths and weaknesses.
The Origins of the UFW:
To explain the strengths and weaknesses of the UFW, we have to start with some organizational history, because the UFW was the result of the merger of several organizations each with their own strengths and weaknesses.
In the 1950s, both Dolores Huerta and Cesar Chavez were community organizers working for a group called the Community Service Organization (an affiliate of Saul Alinsky's Industrial Areas Foundation) that sought to aid farmworkers living in poverty. Huerta and Chavez were trained in a novel strategy of grassroots, door-to-door organizing aimed not at getting workers to sign union cards, but to agree to host a house meeting where co-workers could gather privately to discuss their problems at work free from the surveillance of their bosses. This would prove to be very useful in organizing the fields, because unlike the traditional union model where organizers relied on the NRLB's rulings to directly access the factory floors, Central California farms were remote places where white farm owners and their white overseers would fire shotguns at brown "trespassers" (union-friendly workers, organizers, picketers).
In 1962, Chavez and Huerta quit CSO to found the National Farm Workers Association, which was really more of a worker center offering support services (chiefly, health care) to independent groups of largely Mexican farmworkers. In 1965, they received a request to provide support to workers dealing with a strike against grape growers in Delano, California.
In Delano, Chavez and Huerta met Larry Itliong of the Agricultural Workers Organizing Committee (AWOC), which was a more traditional labor union of migrant Filipino farmworkers who had begun the strike over sub-minimum wages. Itliong wanted Chavez and Huerta to organize Mexican farmworkers who had been brought in as potential strikebreakers and get them to honor the picket line.
The result of their collaboration was the formation of the United Farm Workers as a union of the AFL-CIO. The UFW would very much be marked by a combination of (and sometimes conflict between) AWOC's traditional union tactics - strikes, pickets, card drives, employer-based campaigns, and collective bargaining for union contracts - and NFWA's social movement strategy of marches, boycotts, hunger strikes, media campaigns, mobilization of liberal politicians, and legislative campaigns.
1965 to 1970: the Rise of the UFW:
While the strike starts with 2,000 Filipino workers and 1,200 Mexican families targeting Delano area growers, it quickly expanded to target more growers and bring more workers to the picket lines, eventually culminating in 10,000 workers striking against the whole of the table grape growers of California across the length and breadth of California.
Throughout 1966, the UFW faced extensive violence from the growers, from shotguns used as "warning shots" to hand-to-hand violence, to driving cars into pickets, to turning pesticide-spraying machines onto picketers. Local police responded to the violence by effectively siding with the growers, and would arrest UFW picketers for the crime of calling the police.
Chavez strongly emphasized a non-violent response to the growers' tactics - to the point of engaging in a Gandhian hunger strike against his own strikers in 1968 to quell discussions about retaliatory violence - but also began to employ a series of civil rights tactics that sought to break what had effectively become a stalemate on the picket line by side-stepping the picket lines altogether and attacking the growers on new fronts.
First, he sought the assistance of outside groups and individuals who would be sympathetic to the plight of the farmworker and could help bring media attention to the strike - UAW President Walter Reuther and Senator Robert Kennedy both visited Delano to express their solidarity, with Kennedy in particular holding hearings that shined a light on the issue of violence and police violations of the civil rights of UFW picketers.
Second, Chavez hit on the tactic of using boycotts as a way of exerting economic pressure on particular growers and leveraging the solidarity of other unions and consumers - the boycotts began when Chavez enlisted Dolores Huerta to follow a shipment of grapes from Schenley Industries (the first grower to be boycotted) to the Port of Oakland. There, Huerta reached out to the International Longshoremen's and Warehousemen's Union and persuaded them to honor the boycott and refuse to handle non-union grapes. Schenley's grapes started to rot on the docks, cutting them off from the market, and between the effects of union solidarity and growing consumer participation in the UFW's boycotts, the growers started to come under real economic pressure as their revenue dropped despite a record harvest.
Throughout the rest of the Delano grape strike, Dolores Huerta would be the main organizer of the national and internal boycotts, travelling across the country (and eventually all the way to the UK) to mobilize unions and faith groups to form boycott committees and boycott houses in major cities that in turn could educate and mobilize ordinary consumers through a campaign of leafleting and picketing at grocery stores.
Third, the UFW organized the first of its marches, a 300-mile trek from Delano to the state capital of Sacramento aimed at drawing national attention to the grape strike and attempting to enlist the state government to pass labor legislation that would give farmworkers the right to organize. Carefully organized by Cesar Chavez to draw on Mexican faith traditions, the march would be labelled a "pilgrimage," and would be timed to begin during Lent and culminate during Easter. In addition to American flags and the UFW banner, the march would be led by "pilgrims" carrying a banner of Our Lady of Guadelupe.
While this strategy was ultimately effective in its goal of influencing the broader Latino community in California to see the UFW as not just a union but a vehicle for the broader aspirations of the whole Latino community for equality and social justice, what became known in Chicano circles as La Causa, the emphasis on Mexican symbolism and Chicano identity contributed to a growing tension with the Filipino half of the UFW, who felt that they were being sidelined in a strike they had started.
Nevertheless, by the time that the UFW's pilgrimage arrived at Sacramento, news broke that they had won their first breakthrough in the strike as Schenley Industries (which had been suffering through a four-month national boycott of its products) agreed to sign the first UFW union contract, delivering a much-needed victory.
As the strike dragged on, growers were not passively standing by - in addition to doubling down on the violence by hiring strikebreakers to assault pro-UFW farmworkers, growers turned to the Teamsters Union as a way of pre-empting the UFW, either by pre-emptively signing contracts with the Teamsters or effectively backing the Teamsters in union elections.
Part of the darker legacy of the Teamsters is that, going all the back to the 1930s, they have a nasty habit of raiding other unions, and especially during their mobbed-up days would work with the bosses to sign sweetheart deals that allowed the Teamsters to siphon dues money from workers (who had not consented to be represented by the Teamsters, remember) while providing nothing in the way of wage increases or improved working conditions, usually in exchange for bribes and/or protection money from the employers. Moreover, the Teamsters had no compunction about using violence to intimidate rank-and-file workers and rival unions in order to defend their "paper locals" or win a union election. This would become even more of an issue later on, but it started up as early as 1966.
Moreover, the growers attempted to adapt to the UFW's boycott tactics by sharing labels, such that a boycotted company would sell their products under the guise of being from a different, non-boycotted company. This forced the UFW to change its boycott tactics in turn, so that instead of targeting individual growers for boycott, they now asked unions and consumers alike to boycott all table grapes from the state of California.
By 1970, however, the growing strength of the national grape boycott forced no fewer than 26 Delano grape growers to the bargaining table to sign the UFW's contracts. Practically overnight, the UFW grew from a membership of 10,000 strikers (none of whom had contracts, remember) to nearly 70,000 union members covered by collective bargaining agreements.
1970 to 1978: The UFW Confronts Internal and External Crises
Up until now, I've been telling the kind of simple narrative of gradual but inevitable social progress that U.S history textbooks like, the Hollywood story of an oppressed minority that wins a David and Goliath struggle against a violent, racist oligarchy through the kind of non-violent methods that make white allies feel comfortable and uplifted. (It's not an accident that the bulk of the 2014 film Cesar Chavez starring Michael Peña covers the Delano Grape Strike.)
It's also the period in which the UFW's strengths as an organization that came out of the community organizing/civil rights movement were most on display. In the eight years that followed, however, the union would start to experience a series of crises that would demonstrate some of the weaknesses of that same institutional legacy. As Matt Garcia describes in From the Jaws of Victory, in the wake of his historic victory in 1970, Cesar Chavez began to inflict a series of self-inflicted injuries on the UFW that crippled the functioning of the union, divided leadership and rank-and-file alike, and ultimately distracted from the union's external crises at a time when the UFW could not afford to be distracted.
That's not to say that this period was one of unbroken decline - as we'll discuss, the UFW would win many victories in this period - but the union's forward momentum was halted and it would spend much of the 1970s trying to get back to where it was at the very start of the decade.
To begin with, we should discuss the internal contradictions of the UFW: one of the major features of the UFW's new contracts was that they replaced the shape-up with the hiring hall. This gave the union an enormous amount of power in terms of hiring, firing and management of employees, but the quid-pro-quo of this system is that it puts a significant administrative burden on the union. Not only do you have to have to set up policies that fairly decide who gets work and when, but you then have to even-handedly enforce those policies on a day-to-day basis in often fraught circumstances - and all of this is skilled white-collar labor.
This ran into a major bone of contention within the movement. When the locus of the grape strike had shifted from the fields to the urban boycotts, this had made a new constituency within the union - white college-educated hippies who could do statistical research, operate boycott houses, and handle media campaigns. These hippies had done yeoman's work for the union and wanted to keep on doing that work, but they also needed to earn enough money to pay the rent and look after their growing families, and in general shift from being temporary volunteers to being professional union staffers.
This ran head-long into a buzzsaw of racial and cultural tension. Similar to the conflicts over the role of white volunteers in CORE/SNCC during the Civil Rights Movement, there were a lot of UFW leaders and members who had come out of the grassroots efforts in the field who felt that the white college kids were making a play for control over the UFW. This was especially driven by Cesar Chavez' religiously-inflected ideas of Catholic sacrifice and self-denial, embodied politically as the idea that a salary of $5 a week (roughly $30 a week in today's money) was a sign of the purity of one's "missionary work." This worked itself out in a series of internicene purges whereby vital college-educated staff were fired for various crimes of ideological disunity.
This all would have been survivable if Chavez had shown any interest in actually making the union and its hiring halls work. However, almost from the moment of victory in 1970, Chavez showed almost no interest in running the union as a union - instead, he thought that the most important thing was relocating the UFW's headquarters to a commune in La Paz, or creating the Poor People's Union as a way to organize poor whites in the San Joaquin Valley, or leaving the union altogether to become a Catholic priest, or joining up with the Synanon cult to run criticism sessions in La Paz. In the mean-time, a lot of the UFW's victories were withering on the vine as workers in the fields got fed up with hiring halls that couldn't do their basic job of making sure they got sufficient work at the right wages.
Externally, all of this was happening during the second major round of labor conflicts out in the fields. As before, the UFW faced serious conflicts with the Teamsters, first in the so-called "Salad Bowl Strike" that lasted from 1970-1971 and was at the time the largest and most violent agricultural strike in U.S history - only then to be eclipsed in 1973 with the second grape strike. Just as with the Salinas strike, the grape growers in 1973 shifted to a strategy of signing sweetheart deals with the Teamsters - and using Teamster muscle to fight off the UFW's new grape strike and boycott. UFW pickets were shot at and killed in drive-byes by Teamster trucks, who then escalated into firebombing pickets and UFW buildings alike.
After a year of violence, reduced support from the rank-and-file, and declining resources, Chavez and the UFW felt that their backs were up against a wall - and had to adjust their tactics accordingly. With the election of Jerry Brown as governor in 1974, the UFW pivoted to a strategy of pressuring the state government to enact a California Agricultural Labor Relations Act that would give agricultural workers the right to organize, and with that all the labor protections normally enjoyed by industrial workers under the Federal National Labor Relations Act - at the cost of giving up the freedom to boycott and conduct secondary strikes which they had had as outsiders to the system.
This led to the semi-miraculous Modesto March, itself a repeat of the Delano-to-Sacramento march from the 1960s. Starting as just a couple hundred marchers in San Francisco, the March swelled to as many as 15,000-strong by the time that it reached its objective at Modesto. This caused a sudden sea-change in the grape strike, bringing the growers and the Teamsters back to the table, and getting Jerry Brown and the state legislature to back passage of California Agricultural Labor Relations Act.
This proved to be the high-water mark for the UFW, which swelled to a peak of 80,000 members. The problem was that the old problems within the UFW did not go away - victory in 1975 didn't stop Chavez and his Chicano constituency feuding with more distinctively Mexican groups within the movement over undocumented immigration, nor feuding with Filipino constituencies over a meeting with Ferdinand Marcos, and nor escalating these internal conflicts into a series of leadership purges.
Conclusion: Decline and Fall
At the same time, the new alliance with the Agricultural Labor Relations Board proved to be a difficult one for the UFW. While establishment of the agency proved to be a major boon for the UFW, which won most of the free elections under CALRA (all the while continuing to neglect the critical hiring hall issue), the state legislature badly underfunded ALRB, forcing the agency to temporarily shut down. The UFW responded by sponsoring Prop 14 in the 1976 elections to try to empower ALRB, and then got very badly beaten in that election cycle - and then, when Republican George Deukmejian was elected in 1983, the ALRB was largely defunded and unable to achieve its original elective goals.
In the wake of Deukmejian, the UFW went into terminal decline. Most of its best organizers had left or been purged in internal struggles, their contracts failed to succeed over the long run due to the hiring hall problem, and the union basically stopped organizing new members after 1986.
#history#u.s history#labor history#ufw#united farm workers#cesar chavez#dolores huerta#trade unions#social history#social movements#unions
68 notes
·
View notes
Text
When you become an activist, you make history
November 25, 2024
I was listening to KPFA radio on the drive home from work in Stockton this evening and heard Delores Huerta talking on a show called Flash Points. Huerta was a co-founder of the United Farm workers along with Ceasar Chavez.
When asked what her message was to young people in these troubled times about how to get involved, she said the following “When Ceasar Chavez talked with students, he wad say that in school, you talk about history, you read about history and you write about history. But, when you become an activist, you make history. The times we are living in now are history making moments. She talked about forming human chains around immigrants so that they cannot be forcibly put in camps to be deported after Trump is sworn in as a possible example of activism that may be required in the coming days.
To hear the entire interview with Delores Huerta, go to the KPFA web site. Then go to archives. Type in Flash Points in the search bar, and then November in the month search bar that comes up for the November 25, 2024 show.
#Dolores Huerta#co founder of the United Farm Workers with Ceasar Chavez#when you become an activist#you make history#11/25/2024#mass deportation in 2025#Trump and Project 25
16 notes
·
View notes
Photo
Happy 94th birthday to civil rights activist Dolores Huerta!
Dolores has spent her life fighting for women, workers, immigrant, and Latino communities. She is a fierce advocate, dedicated mentor, and inspiring leader who has changed history.
Join us in celebrating her today! 💐
#dolores huerta#birthday#women's rights#workers rights#immigrant rights#latino communities#civil rights#activist
53 notes
·
View notes
Text
¡Viva La Huelga! ¡Viva Los Campesinos!
Celebrating the life and work of Cesar Chavez, 2024.
#art#artists on tumblr#digital art#vintage#expiremental#design#ufw#cesar chavez#viva la huelga#viva los campesinos#popart#pop art#graphic design#expiremental music#poster art#poster design#vintage posters#united farm workers#si se puede#dolores huerta#philip vera cruz#united farm workers union#cesar chavez day#civil rights#us politics#politics#socialism#communism#leftism#late stage capitalism
7 notes
·
View notes
Text
“…Is it so much to ask that the poorest people of the land have a measure of justice?” - #CesarChavez
"… ¿Es mucho pedir que las personas más pobres de la tierra tengan un poco de justicia?" - CésarChavez
Image description: A Latine mestizo man with brown skin and short black hair graying at his forehead looks out to the image's left with glasses in hand, speaking into a microphone. There is a hill or field behind him and wooden beams framing the photo.
— United Farm Workers (@UFWupdates) March 30, 2024
7 notes
·
View notes
Text
Mike’s instagram
6 notes
·
View notes
Text
3 notes
·
View notes
Text
The Humans Who Feed Us
youtube
by Helena Donato-Sapp
Youth scholar, activist, poet, and speaker Helena Donato-Sapp supports the #humanswhofeedus project by Justice for Migrant Women www.justice4women.org. Watch this profile of activist Monica Ramirez with a special shout-out to GLI!
#feminism#migrant workers#young feminists#youth activism#dolores huerta#migrant women#migrant rights#intersectional feminism#Youtube
3 notes
·
View notes
Text
Dolores Huerta by Allison Adams
"We must use our lives to make the world a better place to live, not just to acquire things. That is what we are put on the earth for."
Dolores Clara Fernández Huerta (born April 10, 1930) is an American labor leader and civil rights activist who, with Cesar Chavez, is a co-founder of the United Farmworkers Association, which later merged with the Agricultural Workers Organizing Committee to become the United Farm Workers (UFW). Huerta helped organize the Delano grape strike in 1965 in California and was the lead negotiator in the workers' contract that was created after the strike.
#dolores huerta#allison adams#civil rights#activism#activists#ufw#workers rights#female portrait#herstory#women in history#irl women/girls
1 note
·
View note
Text
When we think about the most precious things we have—number one, it's our bodies, number two, it's our time.
- Dolores Huerta
0 notes
Link
#dolores huerta#guadalajara#guadalajara film festival#gregory nava#krystall poppin#ximena urrutia#arturosampson#eugenio caballero#raiza licea#ruben navarro#jesus more#eugenio stiller
0 notes
Text
Dolores Huerta. Sí, se puede
https://www.unadonnalgiorno.it/dolores-huerta/
Dolores Huerta è tra le più importanti attiviste e sindacaliste di tutti i tempi.
Una vita spesa per i diritti civili, la difesa dei diritti delle donne, delle persone immigrate e dei lavoratori.
È stata arrestata ventidue volte per aver partecipato ad azioni di disobbedienza civile non violenta e scioperi.
Nel 1997 Ms, la più importante rivista femminista statunitense l’ha nominata tra le tre donne più importanti dell’anno. L’anno successivo Bill Clinton le ha consegnato il premio Eleanor Roosevelt per i diritti umani e il Ladies Home Journal l’ha elencata nelle Cento donne più importanti del Ventesimo secolo.
È stata nei consigli di amministrazione di Equality California, People for the American Way,Consumer Federation of California e Feminist Majority Foundation.
Prima donna latina inserita nella National Women’s Hall of Fame, ha ricevuto ben quindici lauree ad honorem da tutte le più prestigiose università statunitensi e premi importanti come la Medaglia presidenziale per la libertà conferitale da Barack Obama nel 2012.
È talmente celebrata che in California il 10 aprile è il Dolores Huerta Day.
Nata col nome di Dolores Fernández il 10 aprile 1930 a Dawson, nel New Mexico, aveva tre anni quando i genitori si sono separati e, insieme ai fratelli, ha seguito la madre a Stockton, una comunità agricola nella valle di San Joaquin in California.
Nonostante fosse una brava studentessa, suonasse vari strumenti e fosse una premiata come girl scout, il razzismo e il disprezzo per la sua condizione di immigrata non le sono stati risparmiati.
La sua più grande ispirazione è stata sua madre, Alicia Chávez che, dopo tanti sacrifici e doppi lavori per mantenere i figli e fornire loro istruzione e educazione, è arrivata a possedere un ristorante e un hotel dove accoglieva lavoratori a basso salario e famiglie di contadini a prezzi accessibili, talvolta anche gratuitamente.
Dopo essersi laureata allo Stockton College, per un breve periodo ha insegnato in una scuola elementare, ma si è dimessa perché in disaccordo col trattamento riservato agli studenti figli di contadini.
Nel 1955 si è impegnata nella Community Services Organization, associazione che lavorava per porre fine a segregazione, discriminazione e alla brutalità della polizia e per migliorare le condizioni sociali ed economiche dei lavoratori agricoli.
Questi venivano pagati poco o niente, non godevano di alcun diritto, dormivano sul pavimento, avevano scatole di legno come mobili e acqua sporca, non avevano accesso ai bagni e lavoravano dall’alba al tramonto senza interruzioni. Sovente emigravano per seguire la stagionalità dei raccolti, questo comportava che i loro figli non ricevevano un’istruzione adeguata e spesso lavoravano nei campi insieme ai genitori. Molte donne venivano aggredite sessualmente dai proprietari terrieri e costrette a tacere perché le loro famiglie avevano bisogno di lavorare.
Nel 1960, ha fondato la Agricultural Workers Association con cui ha esercito pressioni sui politici del tempo per garantire istruzione e accesso al voto, all’assistenza pubblica e alla pensione alle comunità immigrate.
Insieme a Cesar Chavez ha fondato la National Farm Workers Association (NFWA) che, nel 1965, si è unita all’AWA per formare il Sindacato dei lavoratori agricoli che ha organizzato un importante sciopero dei viticoltori che ha portato a importanti negoziazioni che hanno migliorato le condizioni di lavoro, tra cui la riduzione dell’uso di pesticidi dannosi, l’avvio della disoccupazione e garantito le prestazioni sanitarie. In questo periodo, le è stato attribuito il merito di aver coniato la frase “sí se puede” per spronare nella lotta senza mollare.
Negli anni ’70, ha coordinato un boicottaggio nazionale della lattuga e contribuito a creare il clima politico per l’approvazione dell’Atto per le relazioni sul lavoro agricolo del 1975, la prima legge a riconoscere i diritti dei lavoratori agricoli di contrattare collettivamente.
Durante gli anni ’80 è stata vicepresidente del Sindacato Nazionale, unica donna a sedere nel consiglio d’amministrazione.
Sempre in prima linea per sostenere le sue battaglie, nel 1988, è stata brutalmente picchiata dalla polizia di San Francisco in una manifestazione di protesta contro le politiche dell’allora candidato alla presidenza George H. W. Bush. Le hanno rotto sei costole e dovuto asportare la milza.
Il pestaggio, registrato e trasmesso nei notiziari televisivi le ha consentito di vincere la causa contro la polizia e ha utilizzato i proventi a beneficio dei lavoratori agricoli.
La risonanza mediatica ha costretto il dipartimento a cambiare le sue politiche di controllo della folla e il suo processo di disciplina degli ufficiali.
Dopo una lunga guarigione, Dolores Huerta ha lasciato il sindacato per concentrarsi sui diritti delle donne. Coinvolta per due anni, in giro per il paese, in una campagna di sensibilizzazione rivolta alla candidature delle donne latine che ha portato a un aumento significativo del numero di rappresentanti elette.
Coi soldi del Premio Puffin/Nation for Creative Citizenship nel 2002 ha creato la Fondazione che porta il suo nome per incoraggiare la formazione e le capacità organizzative nelle comunità a basso reddito che intreccia i movimenti dei diritti delle donne, quelli LGBTQ, delle persone immigrate, di lavoro e diritti civili in un unico filo.
A lei sono intitolate scuole, strade e perfino un asteroide. Protagonista di un documentario sulla sua vita, è stata omaggiata in vari film e opere teatrali.
È stata co-presidente onoraria della marcia delle donne su Washington il 21 gennaio 2017, contro l’insediamento di Donald Trump come presidente.
Femminista ecologista intersezionale, si è battuta per tutta la vita per portare le donne nelle lotte per il diritto al lavoro e a eque retribuzioni. Ancora oggi è in giro per portare la voce e le istanze di chi è ancora ai margini della politica e della società.
1 note
·
View note
Text
"We're in the fight for our lives right now" - GLAAD President & CEO Sarah Kate Ellis talks LGBTQ+ rights at TIME100 Summit
The 2023 TIME100 Summit, featuring TIME CO2, was held by Time magazine in New York City on Tuesday, April 25th, convening leaders from past and present TIME100 lists across a diverse range of sectors including government, business, entertainment, health and science for topical discussions anchored to the broad themes of leadership, impact and innovation with an increased focus on…
View On WordPress
#2023 time100#dolores huerta#dolores huerta the queer review#gay#James Kleinmann#lgbt#lgbtq#LGBTQ rights#LGBTQIA#queer#The Queer Review#the queer review time100#time100#time100 2023#time100 summit#time100 the queer review#trans#trans right#transgender
1 note
·
View note
Text
Tenoch Huerta with Manuel García-Rulfo, Ilse Salas, Rodrigo Prieto, and Dolores Heredia in LA Times Studio at TIFF photographed by Jason Armond
#pedro páramo premiere#2024 toronto international film festival#2024 tiff#tenoch huerta#josé tenoch huerta mejía#tenoch huerta mejía#manuel garcía-rulfo#ilse salas#rodrigo prieto#dolores heredia#tenochhuertaedit#photo#hqs
52 notes
·
View notes
Text
“Pedro Páramo” llegó al Festival Internacional de Cine de Morelia
El debut directorial de Rodrigo Prieto y adaptación de la obra cumbre de Juan Rulfo, provocó que murmullos del pasado inundaran las calles morelianas, tras su estreno en el Festival Internacional de Cine de Morelia.
#Pedro Páramo#Manuel García Rulfo#Tenoch Huerta#Dolores Heredia#Ilse Salas#Héctor Kotsifakis#Mayra Batalla#Roberto Sosa#Giovanna Zacarías#Noé Hernández#Yoshira Escárrega#Eventos
27 notes
·
View notes
Text
Watching
PEDRO PÁRAMO Rodrigo Prieto Mexico, 2024
#watching#Rodrigo Prieto#Manuel Garcia-Rulfo#Tenoch Huerta#Dolores Heredia#Ilse Salas#Mexican films#Spanish language#2024#Juan Rulfo
8 notes
·
View notes