Cesar Chavez is the reason for my avatar. Look it up. :-)
http://www.inthesetimes.com/working/entry/5753/remembering_cesar_chavez/Monday March 29 9:00 am
“The truest act of courage...is to sacrifice ourselves for others in a totally nonviolent struggle for justice." —Cesar Chavez
By R.M. Arrieta
The day the body of Cesar Chavez, civil rights leader and founder of the United Farm Workers (UFW), was brought to Delano in California, I cut out of work with a co-worker and drove from San Francisco to his memorial. After driving through the winding dusty road leading to Chavez’ UFW field office at “Forty Acres,” we saw before us a vast wave of people flowing onto the grounds. It seemed that his death galvanized the movement. 50,000 mourners had made a pilgrimage to honor this man who lay in a simple pine box.
Chavez died April 23, 1993, at age 66. This Wednesday, March 31—Chavez's birthday—is the California state holiday honoring the labor leader. (There's an ongoing effort to make his birthday a national holiday.) Many commemorations and events are planned to mark the occasion, including the Cesar Chavez holiday breakfast in San Francisco (March 31) and a parade and festival (April 10).
Chavez's funeral was said to be the largest for any labor leader in U.S. history. Hundreds of murals and memorials have been built in his honor. Two years ago, renowned Los Angeles artist Judy Baca and SPARC’s Cesar Chavez Digital Lab unveiled the exquisite Cesar E. Chavez monument at San Jose State University.
The day Chavez died, work across the fields and rural areas of the nation came to a stop. Workers in urban areas in the factories and offices from around the nation took off to make the memorial, many driving days to get there. Students from all over came in droves. People came in caravans, buses, vans. Many had marched side-by-side with Chavez in the struggle for farm worker justice.
Thousands of eagle-emblazoned red and black farm worker flags and banners and placards “Viva la Causa,” (Long Live Our Cause) and “Huelga” (Strike) waved across the grounds. People sang “De Colores,” the song many affiliate with Chavez and “La Causa.” Explaining the eagle, Chavez had once said, "A symbol is an important thing. That is why we chose an Aztec eagle. It gives pride . . . When people see it they know it means dignity."
There was no grand call for people to come to his memorial in the middle of the San Joaquin Valley. Few flyers were passed out, and the Internet was barely part of life. Texting and twittering were not a part of the landscape then.
FULL story at link.