Civil Rights Icon Dolores Huerta Inspires, Challenges SMU Students

dolores huerta headshotDolores Huerta, the 85-year-old civil rights icon, stood inside 海角直播鈥檚 (SMU) Bechtel Hall in Oakland on Thursday night and pumped her fist into the air as if she were leading a rally in 1965. (See the events photos .)

鈥淰iva Cesar Chavez!鈥

The crowd of 130 students and faculty shouted it back to Huerta.

鈥淰iva Martin Luther King!鈥

The audience responded.

鈥淰iva healthcare workers!鈥

The crowd roared again.

Huerta, who traveled from her home in Stockton to speak at SMU as part of the Hispanic Heritage Month celebration, dolores huerta in front of crowddelivered a fiery and inspired sermon that called on future healthcare providers to serve with compassion and help overhaul the inequalities created by the U.S. healthcare system.

鈥淲e鈥檝e got to get civically involved and engaged,鈥 Huerta said. 鈥淲e have to make politicians accountable, so they put the money where they need it. So please vote, and vote for the progressive candidates who will help make us a healthier society for all.鈥

Patricia Gomez, a Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN) student, told a visiting reporter from that she was inspired by Huerta鈥檚 dedication to the working poor, and would one day like to work in an underserved community.

鈥淗uerta is a role model for students of color like myself,鈥 Gomez said, 鈥渁nd for students who are seeking to continue empowering our underrepresented community.鈥

dolores huerta and smu president diazHuerta鈥檚 visit also coincided with the University鈥檚 second Community Reads Initiative, the year-long, campus-wide, shared reading of an important book that challenges all to consider the inequities in healthcare. This year, SMU is reading 鈥Fresh Fruit, Broken Bodies: Migrant Farmworkers in the United States,鈥 by Seth Holmes, an assistant professor of health and social behavior at UC Berkeley.

鈥淒olores Huerta鈥檚 courage as an activist and organizer serves as inspiration to our future healthcare professionals,鈥 said Shirley Strong, chief diversity officer at SMU. 鈥淎s healthcare providers we often talk about getting healthy by eating fruits and vegetables, but we do not want our health to come at the cost of exploiting others.鈥

Before addressing the crowd, Huerta met privately with two dozen Latino and Latina students and faculty for a more intimate round table discussion.

dolores huerta at podium鈥淪MU students asked me, 鈥榃hat can I do right away to make a positive change?鈥欌 Huerta said. 鈥淚 told them you can always work on legislation and sign people up to vote.鈥

Huerta shared memories from her time as the cofounder of the National Farm Workers Association with Cesar Chavez, which aimed to bring basic labor rights to field workers and raise the profile of the injustices against the workers.

Huerta helped establish three critical pieces of California state legislation that improved healthcare for farmworkers: disability insurance, worker鈥檚 compensation, and unemployment payments.

In 49 other states, farmworkers are not entitled to those basic labor services, Huerta said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 because the farmworkers in the 49 other states aren鈥檛 organized,鈥 she added. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 why it鈥檚 important to organize, gain strength in numbers, and change the laws to improve lives.鈥

Huerta told her audience it was critical to serve migrant farmworkers, who often go without proper health assistance and work in deadly heat and breathe in toxic pesticides.

鈥淲e know that undocumented people in our society are taken advantage of,鈥 Huerta said. 鈥淲e know our society takes advantage of those who can鈥檛 protect themselves. That鈥檚 why I call on yodolores huerta and smu students u to help them.鈥

Huerta also pointed to mental health issues among farmworkers that have gone overlooked and unaddressed since the closure of federal facilities in the 1980s that specialized in treating such patients. Huerta, whose eldest son is a medical doctor, said socialist countries delivered better and less expensive healthcare to their citizens 鈥 something she鈥檇 like to see in the U.S.

鈥淲e need to look and see what they are doing right and what we are doing wrong,鈥 Huerta said.  鈥淲e can鈥檛 think some miracle is going to make all these bad things go away. We have to take responsibility and make sure they get changed. We don鈥檛 have to feel helpless; we鈥檙e the ones who have the power.鈥

For more photos from the event, visit our .

 

 

 

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