During the 1960s in America, there were many strikes and marches for equal rights for Latino farm workers. Due to the strikes, Cesar Chavez along with Dolores Huerta founded the National Farm Workers Association to help the workers while also having a nonviolent approach to the situation. The Mexican-American and the Church by Cesar Chavez was given in March 1968. The speech, Prepared and presented by Chavez, was given during the Second Annual Mexican Conference in Sacramento California. As Cesar Chavez speaks to the conference members he displays a wide variety of rhetorical devices, to argue that the Catholic church must unify during this time of hardship for the Latino-American community. Throughout the first part of his speech Chavez is beginning to explore the situation that the Farm Workers Association, adding to his ethos. IIIIIIIII “The place to begin is with our own experience with the Church in the strike that has gone on for thirty-one months in Delano” (Chavez 1). Chavez is demonstrating to the people …show more content…
IIIIII “We would ask, why do the Protestants come out here and help the people, demand nothing, and give all their time to serving farm workers, while our own parish priests stay in their churches” (Chavez 5). Cesar is very clearly questioning the churches actions, or lack of, and in turn making the audience question the same thing. IIIIIIII “But they stuck it out, and they began to point the way to the rest of the Church. In fact, when 30 of the strikers were arrested for shouting Huelga, 11 ministers went to jail with them” (Chavez 6). Here Chavez is still appealing to logos, but he is alluding to the arrests made during the strikes. While appealing to logos Chavez alludes to a different situation to try and gain support from the catholic church in the same way that the Protestant church has given him and the strike