In 1962 the United Farm Workers Union (UFW) was created to secure worker rights for the underserved farmworker in California. Founded by Cesar Chavez and Dolores Huerta, their vision for the UFW was simple; to provide farmworkers and other working people with the inspiration and the necessary tools to succeed and secure equal worker rights in the hope to obtain their share in society’s bounty. The UFW’s belief in Integrity, Innovation, Empowerment, and Non-Violence, became the backbone for the Si Se Puede attitude. Si Se Puede represented the face and core values of the UFW and its farmworker movement. With many farmworkers being denied a fair working wage and a decent work environment, the UFW formed and initiated its farmworker movement by …show more content…
Through this union, Chavez fought to protect the Union and its vision most importantly its laborers. He sought to end the bracero program, which was deploring the face and dignity of the farm worker. In hopes of revitalizing the agricultural farmworker movement, Chavez called on another tough and invigorated farmworker advocate named Dolores Huerta. Dolores was tough as nails and to this day, still fights for farmworker, and civil rights. Dolores Huerta was born in 1930 in Dawson, New Mexico. Inspired by her father, a migrant laborer and coal minor, “his union activity helped inspire her own activist work with a Hispanic self-help association” (About Education, iseek.com, Dolores Huerta). She served a major role in the early years of the UFW Union. She worked as one of the principal masterminds of the UFW movement and was the coordinator for East Coast efforts in the Table Grape Boycott, which was a turning point in the fight for farmworker rights. Huerta was head of the farmworkers union’s political arm and her effect on legislative protections; the (ALRA) Association of Labor Relations Agencies, helped secure the eventual protections for farm workers. With a young Chicano in Chavez and a social activist in Huerta, the UFW was on a path to end injustice towards Hispanics and agricultural