283 27 48MB
English Pages [324] Year 2001
Miriam Ching Yoon Louie
SWEATSHOP
JW y*
Immigrant Women Workers Take On The Global Factory
J Advance praise for Sweatshop Warriors Miriam Ching Louie's Sweatshop Warriors introduces us
who
refuse to accept their assigned place at the
to
women
bottom of the sweat-
shop pyramid. The Chinese, Korean and Mexican immigrant women,
whose testimonies
are included in this work,
have courageously chal-
lenged restaurant owners, contractors, corporations, governments and
Here
transnational anti-labor treaties.
the labor
movement and
for
all
of us
is
inspiration
who
and leadership for
seek creative ways of mount-
ing resistance to global capitalism.
—Angela
Y. Davis, author of Women, Race and Class
All the good-hearted liberals
who
trodden sweatshop workers must read fully
women
demonstrates, immigrant
and fighting back on the front
making
political
see themselves as saviors of this
lines
connections that
are just starting to think about.
down-
book. As Miriam Louie power-
themselves have been organizing
of the
class
war
many of today's
We need
against global capital,
traveling demonstrators
women. This is new labor move-
to listen to these
such a beautiful, moving book; the guiding
light for the
ment.
—Robin D. G.
Kelley, author of
Yo'Mamas
Fighting the Culture
There's no one blueprint for organizing
garment industry, but table.
this
book
Wars
DisFunktionalf:
in
Urban America
women workers in today's
puts polyvocal voices and plans
on
the
Organizers and academics interested in the power of labor orga-
nizing across relations of race, class, nation, and generation will find inspiration
and keen
insights in this book.
connects the threads and weaves
—
Pierrette
brilliant
Miriam Ching pathways to
Yoon
Louie
social justice.
Hondagneu-Sotelo, author of Domestical
Immigrant Workers Cleaning And Caring In The Shadows
OfAffluence
According to sion, there
is
popular
a
political saying,
"wherever there
resistance." In today's corporate-driven global
is
oppres-
economy
where sweatshops have become the norm rather than the exception, is
easy to focus only
on
the oppression. Long-time activist Miriam
Ching Louie's important book of resistance
who
in the U.S.
are tenaciously
Through
—
and
the stories of the frontline warriors
women
sweatshop laborers
creatively battling for justice
Korean and Latina immigrants
the lynchpins of the corporate
of union organizing class
tells
the immigrant
and
dignity.
the organizing vehicles of community-based workers' centers,
these Chinese,
dynamics in
ing for
it
—
as well as
their ethnic
community
economy but
are challenging not only
also the traditional
gender relations in
communities. This book
organizers, for labor activists,
model
their families is
and
essential read-
and for others
in-
volved in grassroots campaigns taking on corporate globalization.
— Glenn Omatsu, Associate
Editor, Amerasia Journal
A key weapon of the oppressor is to control the message — cover up the abuses, Luckily
silence the sorrows
and struggles of the oppressed.
we have Miriam Ching Yoon Louie
credible stories of these sweatshop warriors
to listen
—
a
and share the
women'
s
in-
movement
the mainstream media has too long ignored. In the process, Miriam
magnifies the
women's voices and
tion they challenge
shines a bright light
and the lessons they have
—
on
to teach us
the exploitaall.
Ellen Bravo, Co-Director, 9to5,
National Association of Working
Women
Sweatshop Warriors Immigrant
Women Workers
Take On the Global Factory
Miriam Ching Yoon Louie
South End Press Cambridge, Massachusetts
Copyright
Any
© 2001
by Miriam Ching
Yoon
Louie.
may be number of words quoted does
properly footnoted quotation of up to 500 sequential words
used without permission,
as
long as the
total
not exceed 2,000. For longer quotations or for a greater number of total words, please write to South
Cover
art:
End
Press for permission.
"El Lugar de
solidaridad intemacional/A
la
Una
mujer:
Woman's
International Solidarity," detail of mural
United
Electrical,
guerrillera
A
Place:
en
la
lucha para
byjuana
Alicia.
©2000. Created
for
Radio and Machine Workers, Local 506, Erie, PA. Photo by
Ed Bernik. Cover design by Ellen Shapiro. Text design and production by the South
End
Press collective.
Printed in Canada.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Louie, Miriam Ching Yoon.
Sweatshop Warriors immigrant women workers take on the global :
factory / p.
by Miriam Ching Yoon Louie.
cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 0896086380
(pbk: alk. paper)
--
0896086399
Women alien labor—United States—Interviews. States.
Foreign trade and employment—United
(cloth: alk.
paper)
Sweatshops— United
States. International division
of labor. Globalization— Economic aspects.
HD6057.5.U5 L68 2001 331.4/086/24
—dc21
00-051577
South
End
la
Warrior in the Struggle for
Press, 7 Brookline Street, #1,
Cambridge,
www.southendpress.org 06 05 04 03 02
3 4 5 6
MA 02139-4146
Contents
Dedication
vi
Acknowledgments
vii
Introduction
Listening to the
Women
The Real Experts
1
Chapter 1
Up Half the Sky Chinese Immigrant Women Workers
Holding
19
Chapter 2 jLa Mujer Luchando, El Mundo Transformando! Mexican Immigrant Women Workers
63
Chapter 3
"Each Day
I
with A New Wound in My Heart" Women Workers 123
Go Home
Korean Immigrant Chapter 4
Extended Families
179
Chapter 5
Movement Roots
195
Chapter 6 "Just-in-Time" Guerrilla Warriors
215
Conclusion Returning to the Source
247
Bibliography
257
Index
295
About
the
Author
307
Dedication Fondly remembering
my immigrant grandmothers Ching Bok
See
and Agnes Oh Yoon
and mother Minnie "Min-Hee" Marguerite Yoon Ching
Cheers
to
my garment worker and organiser aunties Yang Ching and Virginia Ching Tong
Dedicated to feisty women worker warriors everywhere
Acknowledgments This book inspiration
is
from
community-sized
like a
several teams of sewers
quilt
—although
any errors and blemishes that appear in the
Thanks a
million! to the
who paused from
immigrant
whose designs drew
final
women
I
bear blame for
product.
worker organizers
work
to share kernels of their life experi-
ences: Elena Alvarez, Refugio
"Cuca" Arieta, Bo Yee, Viola Casares,
their
Chan Wai Fun, Jenny Chen, Rojana "Na" Cheunchujit, Choi Kee Young, Chu Mi Hee, Maria del Carmen Dominguez, Maria Antonia Flores, Remedios Garcia, Carmen Ibarra Lopez, Celeste Jimenez, Kim Chong Ok, Kim Seung Min, Oi Kwan "Annie" Lai, "Lisa," Lin Cai Fen, Lee Jung Hee, Lee Kyu Hee, Lee Yin Wah, Marta Martinez, Petra Mata, Ernestina V. Mendoza, Irma Montoya Barajas, Paek Young Hee, Kyung Park, Obdulia M. Segura, Lucrecia Tamayo, Helen Wong, Wu Wan Mei, Amy Xie, and Yu Sau Kwan. Special thanks also to "Smita" and "Renuka" from Workers Awazz, a domestic workers organization for South Asian immigrant
women
in
New York City, who also shared their stories, which need to be documented tural
in a future piece, as
Workers Union
does the work of the Border Agricul-
that organizes
farm workers in the
chili
You all are the salt of the earth and the spice of our lives. Please know that so many people hold you in the highest respect and
industry.
trust
your
intuition, analysis, faith, strength, labor,
and laughter
to
lead us forward.
Mil gracias! them, too.
to the
Many
views with the
women's co-organizers who
let
me
question
also did double duty as translators during inter-
women,
or housed and fed
vii
me when I was
far
from
Sweatshop Warriors
viii
home: Geri Almanza, Cindy Arnold, Chuan Chen, Vivian Chang, Pamela Chiang, Guillermo Domfnguez Glenn, Trinh Duong, Yrene Espinoza,
Ken Fong, Roy Hong, Kwong Hui, Helen Kim, Jennifer
Jihye Chun, Stacy Kono, Wing Lam, Paul Lee, JoAnn Lum, Chanchanit "Chancee" Martorell, Brenda Mata, Jungsuk Oh, Gin
Danny Park, K.S. Park, Suyapa Portillo, Cecilia Rodriguez, Suk Hee Ryu, Young Shin, Julia Song, Liz Sunwoo, Robert Thiem, Tommy Yee, and Young Im Yoo. Special thanks to Asian ImmiPang,
grant ting
Women Advocates
me
experience
down
the public.
I
of let-
privilege
workers organizing from the
inside,
moments before we put on our makeup,
including those intimate patted
and Fuerza Unida for the
women
our cowlicks, shed our slippers, and went out to face learned so
much from
all
of my
sisters
and brothers
in
the workers centers.
Doh jie!
to organizers
while hunkered
down
and
activist scholars that
movement
in other
Madeline Janis-Aparicio,
Aliani,
Nikki
shared views
trenches:
Fortunato
Shahbano
Edna
Bas,
Bonacich, Carol de Leon, John Delloro, Bea Tarn and Harvey
Dong, Bob
Fitch,
Lora Jo Foo,
Pam
Galpern, Peter
Kwong, Chavel
Lopez, Alicia and Carlos Marentes, Elizabeth "Betita" Martinez, Jay
Mendoza, Susan Mika, Marta Ojeda, Peter Olney, Edward Park, Maggie Poe, Ai-jen Poo, Cristina Riegos, Saskia Sassen, Ruben Sandra Spector, Cathi Tactaquin, Williams, and
Pam Tau
Bob Wing in the U.S. Thanks
transpacific sister
Lee,
also to the cross-border,
and brother organizers: Elizabeth "Bed" Robles
Ortega, Reyna Montero,
Carmen Valadez,
Beatriz Alfaro, Beatriz
Lujan Uranga, Mathilde Arteaga, Alberta "Bed" Caririo
Omar
Solis,
Mary Tong, Steve
Trujillo,
Esparza Zarate, Martin Barrios Hernandez, Conception
Hernandez Mendez, Father Anastacio "Tacho" Hidalgo Miramon, Jesus Granada, Hortensia Hernandez Mendoza, Artemio
Osuna
Myung Hee, Jin Yoon Hae Ryun, Cho Ailee, Masami Azu, May-an Misun Kim, Rex Varona, Apo Leong, Fely Villasin, and
Osuna, Lai Tong Chi, Linda To, Maria Rhee, Choi
Kyong
Park,
Villalba,
Cenen Bagon. Thanks for all your razor sharp insights and fantastic work. You do the global conspiracy of troublemakers proud. jKamsa hamnidal to the grrrlfriends
who
kept
me
going: to the
Acknowledgments
ix
of the Jamae Son I Sister Sound Korean women's drumming
cast
Chun, Sun —Ann Chun, Mimi Kim, Helen Kim, Lee, and Betty Song, Jung Hee Choi, Ju Hui Han, Hyung and kept beat jammin'. To Juana Hyun Lee—who crew
Jennifer Jihye
Sujin
Lee,
the
fed the spirit
Alicia, milago muralist
saucy strength.
and cover
To my
Linda Burnham of the
Women
Jenkins stationed Jo'Berg
down
your beautiful work and
artist for
World Women's
old Third
Alliance alums,
of Color Resource Center, Myesha
side,
and Letisha Wadsworth holding Brooklyn for your
child-care services in Bed-Stuy in
col-
ored-girls-go-international Triple-Jeopardy-eyed-view of race, class,
and gender and world
as
it
for
interviews with
making me laugh by loud
Thanks Ledsha,
turns.
New York
for housing
talking stuff about the
and feeding me during
Chinatown workers; Myesha, for
inter-
vening during moments of confusion; and especially Linda, for picking up
the slack and fighting those exhausting batdes so
all
take off
dme
I
could
to write.
Allpower! to
my editors, both in the formal and informal sectors jSalud! to the tag team at South End Press who
of the economy. patched
me
Lynn Lu
through:
for getdng the ball rolling, tails,
and
especially Loie
Jill
for your gentle support, Sonia
Shah
Petty for tracking those devilish de-
Hayes
for
jumping in and
skillfully steering
this
process through to completion. Ganbei/ Bottoms Up! to
mal
collective,
my infor-
my dear friends who multi-task as writers, editors, orand information junkies: Luz Guerra, Max
ganizers, translators,
Elbaum, Antonio Diaz, Arnoldo Garcia, Margo Okazawa-Rey, and
Glenn Omatsu, those
for your Buddha-like patience reading
bumpy lumpy
crystal clear
through
all
e-mailed manuscript drafts and returning with
comments on how
and strengthen
to better interpret
our movements. Finally, love you/ sarang hae/ ho sek neidei! to '
Book
Police,
AKA
hubby Lanyuen
Dinh, and son Lung San Louie,
my
family,
Belvin, daughter
as well as
my
sister
AKA
the
Nguyen Thi
Beth Ching and
her honey Antonio Diaz. Thanks for your unconditional love and faith that I
distracted
would get
this
book done
by other campaigns and
Nguyen, and Lung San
—
if I
would
just stop getting
projects. Big bear
hugs to Belvin,
for reading, edidng, giving honest liposuc-
Sweatshop Warriors
x
don
radical surgery feedback, or granting
permission to
chill
when
I
got too weary to proceed. For taking care of technical difficulties
and
logistical
nightmares. For reminding
—
basic beat, the kibon
make
it
tired to
the
women's
through the passing of our dear
walk picket
scans, fix graphics,
lines, fax blast
download web
me
stories.
to always return to the
For helping us Chings
mom. For
media
fact checks,
photo
video demos, brain-
storm and debrief actions, rant and rave about the the folks, and just take care of business.
never being too
releases, e-mail
rich,
hang with
Introduction
Listening to the
Women
The Real Experts Outtake #1: What 60 Minutes Cut In
December
1994, 12 Chinese seamstresses
sit
perched on the
edge of their seats in the workers' center that has become their sec-
ond home: Asian Immigrant Women Advocates'
in Oakland's Chi-
natown. Together with an estimated viewing audience of between 23 and 36 million people, these utes
women are about to watch a 60 Min-
segment on the garment industry's labor practices that
will in-
clude footage of correspondent Morley Safer interviewing them.
For over two
years, the
women have been fighting a bitter battle
with San Francisco garment manufacturer Jessica McClintock to
re-
When
60
coup unpaid wages and demand corporate
responsibility.
Minutes producers approached them for interviews, they had ago-
nized about whether to go on camera without the protection of
masks or blurred images. Being seen means running the and
ting fired
could
tell
their story
spoke directly to the American public. After
garment workers had
much
the camera
discussion, the
zooms in. They see them-
selves beginning to describe in their native tongues
how
shop boss threatened them and posted signs ordering,
the sweat-
"No
loud
"Do not go to the bathroom without permission." Of women understand what they are shown saying, but they
and
course the
of get-
finally agreed.
The seamstresses watch as
talking"
risk
The producers argued that the women most effectively if they showed their faces and
blacklisted.
Sweatshop Warriors
2
realize the
sounds mean nothing to millions of North American
words go untranslated
viewers. Their
drowns out the women's faces
declarations.
Morley
as
Safer's voice-over
60 Minutes has exposed
their
and silenced them.
The show
cuts to the white
charged for his subcontractor's
male sportswear manufacturer
failure to
pay back wages.
viewers that fashion designer Jessica McClintock
——
seamstresses' campaign for corporate responsibility
He
tells
focus of the "is a
hero to
1
The program's "objective reporting" diamong manufacturers, workers, and bargain
every small businessman." vides blame equally
shoppers.
After watching the program, the their sense
overcome
struggle to
of betrayal.
Outtake #2: Fighting
On July company
women
for a
Place at the Table
20, 1998, at corporate headquarters in
San Francisco,
executives from Levi Strauss and Co., comfortably attired
in casual wear,
sit
at a
corporate conference table across from repre-
of labor and human
sentatives
rights organizations.
The advocates
argue that Levi's should set a positive example by pledging to pay living
wages to the workers
who sew
its
products
at
home and on
their
a former Levi's seamstress enters the dialogue. Petra
Mata
abroad. Despite sharp differences, everyone appears to be best behavior.
Then
starts to explain
how
Levi's
employees are paid below
minimum
wage, showing copies of recent pay stubs to make her point.
company man
interrupts Mata, questioning the veracity of the check
stubs and dismissing her
agenda. His mocking sage that her English bly
know what
table, including
company,
she
is
comments
"They to
Casares
is
comments and body language convey the mesnot good enough and that she couldn't possitalking about.
None of the
other groups at the
those with histories of sharp disagreements with the
treat us like
do
as irrelevant to the meeting's
is
are subjected to such
enough
A white
is
to
shoddy treatment.
we're stupid,
sew
like the
-.
only thing we're good
for them," Viola Casares
later
1
declared.J
co-coordinator with Mata of Fuerza Unida, a fightback
Listening to the
Women
3
organization launched by laid-off Levi's workers in 1990
company Rica.
closed
down
its
when
the
San Antonio plant and moved to Costa
2
Path Breakers and Tree Shakers This book
dedicated to the immigrant
is
from board rooms where
are barred
up on cutting room
who
floors;
who
women
whose
deals get cut;
These
women
this nation's industries
work
stories
end
trail
blazers they
warriors have trekked across mountains,
and borders, cutting deep paths through the heart of
rivers, oceans,
ered
who
get punished for telling the truth;
are asked to speak only as victims, not as the
truly are.
workers
and inner
Tucked
cities.
inside their weath-
cooking
jeans, double-knit pants, cleaning uniforms,
aprons, and serving caps are continents and worlds of experience.
These
are the
women who sew
and clean up our messes. ties
our clothes; grow, cook, and serve
when we get sick; For those of us who come from communi-
our food; make our fancy
gadgets; care for us
little
of color and working-class
women with-
families, these are the
out whose labor, love, sweat, and tears
we would not even
exist
on
this planet.
Yet the powerful and the privileged often
these
stifle
women's
voices. Luckily for us, these workers are chiseling through thick
walls of censorship to
make themselves
heard.
themselves in workers' centers, creating their
They
are organizing
own groups when
the
community organizations that already exist fail to meet their needs. Contrary to conventional wisdom that leans heavily on white
labor or
and/or male academics, these
women
are the real experts about the
inner workings of the global eco nomy, labor markets grant communities
— speaking
shop indu^ tnTpyramid.
Th ey
to us
,
and immi-
from the bottom of the sweat-
stand steadfast as the
first line
of
whistle-blowers and flak-catchers against corporate greed, govern-
ment
negligence, and racial wrongs.
who knock down
— —
goodies rights
the
fruit,
They
serve as the tree shakers
the pinata busters
of economic democracy, gender
for
all
of
us.
They
who
break open the
justice,
are neither victims
and human
nor superwomen.
Sweatshop Warriors
4
These sweatshop warriors are simply everyday munities
who have much
Sweatshop Pyramid
to
women in
our com-
teach.
of Exploitation
The term "sweatshop" was revolution in
and
tell
initially
coined during the industrial
the 1880s and 1890s to describe the subcontracting
system of labor. The sweatshops that served larger companies were run by middlemen
who expanded
or contracted their labor forces
depending on the success or
failure
The middlemen's
tied to the
profits
were
"sweat" out of their workers
dren
—through low wages,
tions.
of different clothing fashions.
amount of labor they could
—most
women
often
and
chil-
excessive hours, and unsanitary condi-
This system led to such industrial accidents as the 1911
Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire that claimed the lives of nearly 150
young women. 3
The US Government Accounting
Office defines poor working
conditions as the hallmark of a sweatshop, specifically "an employer that violates
more than one
federal or state labor, industrial
home-
work, occupational safety and health, workers' compensation, or dustry registration law."
4
According to the
in-
US Department
of
Labor, more than half oi the estimated 22,000 garment shops in the
United States jobs
—
—where many immigrant women
first
US
bottom of a pyramid of labor
ex-
violate multiple wage, hour,
Sweatshop workers ploitation
the
toil at
find their
and safety laws.
5
and proflrgeneration. Workers' immediate bosses are
own
subcontractors, often
men
and
top of the pyramid over the subcontractors
who tors
retailers sit at the
act as buffers,
of
their
shock absorbers, and
compete with each other
are generally not paid until the
to
ethnicity.
shields.
Manufacturers
The subcontrac-
win bids from manufacturers and
work they have been contracted
for
is
completed and accepted. Like the 19th-century sweatshop middle-
men, many of today's subcontractors survive the competition by "sweating" their workers out of wage, hour, benefits, and safety rights. Sitting at the
top of the industry pyramid, large manufactur-
ing corporations design products and services, set find buyers
and
retailers to distribute their
retail prices,
products.
6
and
Retailers, like
Listening to the
Women
5
Wal-Mart, Federated Department Stores, Stores,
Inc.,
May Department
Dayton-Hudson, K-Mart, and Nordstrom buy goods from
manufacturers and other wholesalers and
double or more what they paid.
Many
them
sell
to
customers
have merged into
retailers
at gi-
ant conglomerates that increasingly participate in the industry both
and working
horizontally and vertically, thus determining wages
conditions of workers at the bottom of the pyramid.
The
7
subcontracting system allows manufacturers and retailers
to slash the cost of labor
not manufacturers, are tions in their shops
and
facilities,
and
—
since subcontractors,
legally responsible for
any labor law viola-
—
leave subcontractors with the
burden of en-
suring decent working conditions. Manufacturers and retailers reap
huge benefits from the sweatshop system. Garment workers
in Los]
Angeles, for example, each produce about $100,000 worth of goods\ a year, but are paid less than 2 percent of the total value.
For a dress
that retails for $100, $1.72 goes to the sewer, $15 to the contractorj
and $50 goes
to the manufacturer.
8
Subcontracting Becomes the Standard While
particularly glaring in the
garment industry, sweating
workers through subcontracting has emerged
as standard operating
procedure in industries across the board resulting in massive wage
and benefit cuts on one end and unparalleled accumulation of profits
at the other.
Employers
utilize
these
methods of control not only
in globalized indus tries , like garment, electronics, toy, shoe, plastics,
and auto lik e
parts,
but also in the non-globalized locally-based sectors
the hea]th carp, fond processing, restaurant, hotel, custodial,
construction, landscaping, information processing, clerical, cus-
tomer
service,
and other
merly employed their
many
industries.
own
9
For example,
universities for-
cooks, janitors, and gardeners.
schools subcontract these services.
The workers do
the
Now same
work, or more, but for lower pay and fewer benefits, while the university gets to redirect their spending, in salaries for chief administrators.
icy Studies try
and United
for a Fair
some
cases,
toward higher
According
to the Institute for Pol-
Economy,
CEO pay across indus-
and service sectors jumped 535 percent
in
the
1990s, far
Sweatshop Warriors
6
outstripping growth in the stock market (297 percent), and dwarfing the 32 percent
growth
tion (27.5 percent). In
in
worker pay, which barely outpaced
1960 CEOs made
infla-
41 times their average em-
ployee's wage; in 1990, 85 times; but in 1999, the gap skyrocketed to
475 times.
Not
10
surprisingly, the
exploitation that the tion
and
rise as a
turing of the
US
global
reemergence of the sweatshop pyramid of witnessed during
first
power
US economy
in
its
industrial revolu-
also coincides with a massive restruc-
its
domestic and overseas operations.
The sweatshop pyramid has been exported
internationally
bottom
suscitated domestically, globalizing the
and
re-
of workers,
strata
the buffer level of subcontractors, and the elite core of G-7-based
transnational corporations.
11
Globalization of sweatshop production I
a broader
program of global economic
this effort is to
is
but one aspect within
restructuring.
The
goal o
open new markets and whole new economies
I
to the
world market and corporate investors. This usually involves
IMF/World Bank mandates slashing wages, publicly
for cutting
government spending on
and nutrition programs; freezing and
health, housing, education,
and suppressing workers'
owned property and assets
rights to organize; selling
to private interests; giving tax in-
centives and other forms of government "welfare" to corporations
and the wealthy; removing government regulations and
on corporations; devaluing currency so less
and foreign
population and away from the
tration
become
would be
and promotion of neoconservative
that funnel anger at those in the
ization has
that local people could
interests with stronger currencies
tracted to invest more;
restrictions
most marginalized 12
elite.
The domestic
increasingly obvious since the
began by busting the
air traffic controllers
buy at-
politics
sectors of the face
of global-
Reagan adminis-
union, trashing the
poor, and once again making the United States safe for the Robber
Barons.
AwThe global sweatshop pyramid of exploitation comes clothed in the specific gender, race, class, and national garments of its workers,
subcontractors,
and
13
elite.
As
sociologist
Fernandez-Kelly has astutely observed:
Maria
Patricia
Listening to the
Capitalism benefits from the exceptional.
may be viewed
wage-earners
Women
7
As long
as
women's
as the exception rather
(even in situations where large numbers of women
of the home)
women will
continue to be
criminatory policies in wages.
The sweatshop system "different,"
—
all
dis-
certain
of the population into
strata
more
privileged buffer posi-
to the benefit of the super-privileged minority sitting at
the top of the
workers'
outside
and
[emphasis added]
super-exploited positions and others to tions
work
liable to sexist
takes advantage of the "exceptional," the
relegate
to
14
role as
than the rule
power pyramid. Asian and Latina immigrant women
map
stories
life
the exploitation of these differences within
the global sweatshop economy.
Methodology: Calling on Family and Community Networks This book shines a spotlight on grassroots immigrant women as agents of change, and argues that they are, indeed, the very heartbeat
of the labor and anti-sweatshop movements. By highlighting the experiences of
women on whose
been erected, these activists
on
stories
backs sweatshop industries have
can narrow the divide between grassroots
one hand and scholars on the
the
confront similar dilemmas in other
may
other. Readers
this slice
hope
that
this bit
of their
activist heritage
and use
and kindred movements.
The primary source nese, Korean,
I
of Asian and Latina/o movement history,
our young bloods can claim to advance these
who
and ethnic communities
find helpful problem-solving approaches. Finally,
by documenting
it
racial
material for this
book
is
interviews of Chi-
and Mexicana immigrant women leaders active
independent community-based workers' centers
—Chinese
in five
Staff
New York City; La Mujer Obrera in El Paso, Texas; Asian Immigrant Women Advocates in Oakland, Caliand Workers Association
fornia;
in
Fuerza Unida in San Antonio, Texas; and Korean Immigrant
Workers Advocates
Los Angeles,
in
California.
Chinese and Korean women because of my
which gives me in these
a bit
of
communities.
I
familiarity
I
chose to focus on
own ethnic background,
and connection with the
also included the stories
of Mexican
because they often constitute the majority of immigrant
women women women
Sweatshop Warriors
8
working
sweatshop industries
in
in California,
throughout the Southwest, and Mexican organizations to the Chinese and
ter
tions.
While
I
I live,
and sis-
Korean women's organiza-
only had the resources to focus on these three ethnic
groups in a few of a larger
where
women have launched
these
cities,
movement
many different ethnicities, and the world.
I
and
mediums
artists in all
women and
that includes
located in
their organizations are part
women
immigrant
workers of
many different parts of the US,
strongly urge organizers, writers, videographers,
women in
to take the time to encourage
worker and
many emerging communities to share and document their stories and movement histories, too. Over hearty helpings of home madt guisado [stew], green tacos,
grassroots
the
sopa de polio [chicken soup],
hamhung naengmyun [cold spicy noodles],
deep
fried flounders, chiles en mole [chilies in sauce],
fish,
kimchee
[hot
vegetable pickle],
greens], steaming bowls
[hollow-stemmed
choy
of rice and baskets of tortillas,
words of wonderful
the
tong
steamed salted
women whom
I
I
listened to
and many people
in this
world dearly love and admire. The interviews were principally conducted between 1997 and 2000, camped out
at
movement
offices,
sandwiched between pickets and workshops, while driving across the state to demonstrations, leafleting at factory gates, and fighting
with government
officials.
In addition to those
women who had immigrated as adults, I women who had immigrated as
spoke with Asian and Latina
also
children with their families (what the
Korean-American community
refers to as "1.5 generation" immigrants), with
who
US-born organizers
represented the "second" and "third" generations of immi-
members of similar Thai Community Development
grant families, as well as with
organizations in-
cluding
Center,
the
Pilipino
Workers Center, and the Domestic Workers Project of the Coalition for
Humane Immigrant
tino
Rights of Los Angeles, California; the La-
Workers Center and Workers Awaaz
Southwest Public Workers Union
in
Border Agricultural Workers Union referred
me
knew and
New
York
City; the
San Antonio, Texas; and the in El Paso, Texas. Organizers
movement activists, writers, and scholars they for more information. The material in this book
to other
respected
in
Listening to the
is
of the iceberg
just the tip
today could
fill
many
—
Women
9
the organizing in communities of color
bookshelves.
This book also draws on analyses of migrant and ers' centers in the
workers in
movements
this
women's home
countries.
women workwomen
Immigrant
country depend upon these cousin
for analyses of conditions
(if
not
sister)
on the ground back home.
I
met a number of these organizers at the 1995 United Nations 4th World Conference on Women held in Beijing, China; at a 1996 conference of migrant worker organizations held in Seoul, Korea; and at a 1998
work
meeting of workers' center
for
affiliates
Environmental and Economic Justice held in Tijuana,
Mexico. At these and other gatherings, the
of the Southwest Net-
Korean
Women
I
members of
interviewed
Workers Associations United
(Seoul, Korea),
Hong Kong Women Workers Association (Hong Kong), Asian Migrant Centre
(Hong Kong), Casa de
ico),
la
Mujer Factor
Paz/SEDEPAC
X
(Tijuana,
(Coahuila,
Mex-
Frente Autentico del Trabajo (Juarez and Mexico City,
Mex-
Mexico), Servicio, Desarrollo y
and Comision de
ico),
las
Mujeres of the Comite de
Apoyo
Fronterizo Obrero Regional (Maclovio Rojas, Mexico). I
got away with pestering
members of busy organizations this movement. For over three
cause
I
have also clocked time in
cades
I
worked
in various Asian
of color, and Third World stint at first
Asian Immigrant
community, student, labor,
solidarity organizations. I
de-
women
began a 12-year
Women Advocates when the organization
opened its doors on November
Latina/o and Asian
be-
1,
1983.
community activists
Along with many other
in the late 1990s, I joined in
supporting the San Antonio, Texas, fightback organization Fuerza
Unida in its campaign against year and a half assisting the
Like so activists,
many
Levi's
dumping of workers, spending a
women with
media work.
other Asian and Latina/o labor and
my vantage point stems
from the
fact that
community members of my
family earned their livings in garment, restaurant, agricultural, and
other low-wage jobs.
My
Chinese immigrant paternal
Ching Bok See peeled onions and shelled shrimp one of her daughters sewed square-dance
Grandma
for restaurants
and
up
her
outfits
until
mid-70s for a San Francisco South of Market company owned by a
10
Sweatshop Warriors
Lebanese immigrant
words
Spanish
jAndakr
—
family.
— such
and
me
Auntie King understands some order
since the majority of
sewed were Chinese and sister,
My the
as
speed
to
women
in the
Latinas. (She used to
petticoats with leftover lace
shop where she
from work.)
My Auntie
and
assistant to
male organizer for the International Ladies Garment
Workers Union and assistant.
Yoon
"jAndale!
make our cousins, my
Virginia did a stint as a Chinese language interpreter a Jewish
up,
My
raised
later as a bilingual
elementary school teacher's
Korean immigrant maternal grandmother Agnes
1 1
children and
Oh
worked alongside my grandfather who
served as a minister, farmer, and
member of the Korean
exile inde-
pendence movement against Japanese colonialism. Before getting married,
my
mother worked
at a variety
of
sales
jobs and as a coat-checker at Forbidden City, the Chinese-owned
nightclub in San Francisco.
marrying, (at
Mom raised us
Dad worked
five kids while
as a kitchen helper. After
Dad worked
a triple-shift
and
a naval shipyard, as a cashier at a Chinese liquor store,
attendant at a Chinese gas station) so jects.
Years
later,
my
we
could
as
move out of the
an
pro-
children's elementary school friends sported
the eclectic, bright patterned pants that their mothers and aunts
sewed for them with
fabrics left over
from
their jobs in the
garment
industry.
Book Organization
C hapter On e examines the experiences of Chinese immigrant women garment and restaurant workers in New York a nd Oakland, followed by in-depth testimony from leaders of the Garment
Workers Justice Campaign of Asian Immigrant and the "Ain't
I
A
Women Advocates
Woman?!" Campaign of Chinese
Staff and
Workers Association. Chajp_ter__Twa focuses on the stories of Mexicana immigrant seamstresses in El Paso, San Antonio, and Los Angeles.
It is
followed by testimony from leaders of La Mujer
Obrera's struggle against
NAFTA-induced
layoffs
and Fuerza
Unida's fight for corporate accountability from Levi's.
T hree
examines the experiences of Korean immigrant
Chap ter
women
res-
taurant workers in Los Angeles' Koreatown, followed by testimony
Listening to the
Women
11
from leaders of Korean Immigrant Workers Advocates' Workers Organizing Project for industry-wide change within the ethnic enclave.
Chapter Four describes the relationship between immigrant
women
workers and
their
third generation activists
"extended family" of
who
and the fusion process between these two different building the
movement.
second, and
1.5,
have been attracted to their struggles
It also
sets
of people in
introduces the five workers' centers
and some of their main accomplishments. Chapter Five focuses on the development of the
women's
organizations. It examines
how vi-
brant independent workers' centers and
movements emerged
sponse to the global sweatshop pyramid.
It profiles
in re-
several examples
of the innovative organizing methodologies and campaigns of the workers' centers.
Chapter Six analyzes the role of the women's organizations
as
innovators within the broader labor and anti-sweatshop move-
ments, followed by an interview with a leader of the joint Thai
munity Development Center, Asian
Pacific
Com-
American Legal Center,
and Korean Immigrant Workers Advocates campaign
in defense
of
incarcerated Thai garment workers in El Monte. Finally, a brief conclusion summarizes the lessons to be learned from these
women and
their organizing.
Connecting Threads Five main themes surfaced in the women's stories. First, the
women worked
in their
homelands, within economies that have
been increasingly integrated into the global sweatshop. As teenagers
many of the women
served as the Asian and Latin American coun-
of the 19th-century factory
terparts
girls
who spun
the industrial
revolutions inside the former colonial powers. Before them, their
mothers and grandmothers labored tive
American
women
as the counterparts
of the Na-
before they were brutally driven from their
lands and the enslaved African and indentured Latina and Asian im-
migrant
women workers on
workers.
plantations and farms, and as domestic
Though barred from
campesinas/os,
factory jobs, these slaves, coolies,
[farmworkers] and
braceros [laborers]
grew the cash
Sweatshop Warriors
12
crops and birthed generations of workers whose labors financed the industrial revolutions. tion,
and
in
odd
Working
in the global
sweatshop and planta-
economy, these golden skinned
jobs in the informal
how
daughters of former colonial subjects described
on
serve as the foot soldiers
opment,
industrialization,
disproportionately high
march
to national
and globalization. In the new era of glob-
World
Third
alization,
the
came to economic devel-
feminist
scholars
women
As
"We
the anti-racist immigrant rights
are here because
from regions
that
labor import, and
13
and to the US, the country whose
dominance has so deeply influenced the lands.
the
in the global
migrated to urban centers inside their rap-
idly industrializing countries,
it,
dubbed
numbers of women working
sweatshop since the 1960s, "feminization of labor." Second, the
they
you were
destinies
of
their
home-
movement in England puts 16 The women all came
there."
have long been the target of US
whose economies
are
capital export
more and more
ven together through global sweatshop production, and labor markets. While they face
and
racist
tightly
and
wo-
distribution,
nativist backlash as
new immigrants, the women often traced their roots back to family members who had migrated to the US during and before the great waves of immigration from Europe beckoned by post-Civil War industrialization and expansionism. The women talked about their decisions to migrate as part
of family
strategies to
improve economic
and educational options. In other cases the women reported coming without family approval, and in times of crisis, without connections
and
ties to
ease their journeys.
They
in turn
have become the nuclei
of new migration chains of workers. International feminist
have dubbed
this rise in
women's labor
South, "feminization of migration."
Third, the
activists
migration from the global
17
women worked in the sweatshop segments
of the
US
labor market. Entering and transforming the historically segregated
US
workforce, the
women
generated
new
capital for corporations,
developers, and ethnic entrepreneurs, revitalized inner city economies, and sustained immigrant communities during a period of eco-
nomic friends,
They and community
instability.
talked about
how
contacts helped
networks of family,
them
set foot
on now
Women
Listening to the
how
well-worn paths to sweatshop jobs,
and struggled
They
also
to adjust to their
noted
their co-workers.
orated over the
longer
fits,
new
lives
last
they "learned the ropes,"
and work environments.
and immigration patterns of
shifts in the origins
They
13
how working conditions had deteri-
detailed
decade, with falling wages, loss of health bene-
work weeks, speedups, and massive
layoffs.
Many
expressed great fear about the future fate of their families and communities given industry changes coupled with growing hostility, hatred,
and backlash against them
The women had in the
"back of the house,"
immigrants and people of color.
as
a lot to say about
what goes on "behind the
at the
label,"
bottom of the "high fashion,"
"high tech" economy. Labor, feminist, race, and immigration schol-
market within which the
ars call the stratified job
women work,
the
"segmented labor market." 18 Fourth, the
women
chronicled the painful yet liberating process
through which they changed from being sweatshop industry workers to sweatshop warriors.
They transformed from women
the subcontractors and
where they
fit
to
elites
women who
into the "big picture."
They
and
[women
selves, their co-workers,
picture as they began to
comadres
dream and
talk to
exploited by
clearly
understood
started painting
them-
friends] into that big
each other about the
way
that they themselves
wanted
and, yes, paid for
the sweat, blood, and tears they had shed while
squeezed their
all
to
be seen, heard, understood, respected,
down at the bottom of the pyramid. And in standing up for basic human rights, the women confronted entrenched re-
most
class,
gender, race, and national privilege not only within
their industries,
but also within their families and communities, in-
lations
of
cluding within what sociologists have called "ethnic enclaves."
By
the very act of speaking their minds, these
have challenged multiple
layers
from corporate boardrooms
women
of oppression stretching
to labor
union
halls,
all
19
workers the
media
way
outlets,
churches, community gatherings, and the cramped living spaces of their
homes
inside inner-city barrios
sample makers
who
figure out
of a garment, then teach these sweatshop
this
and ghettos. Like the
skilled
how to design, cut, and sew the pieces process to their fellow seamstresses,
warriors are helping their co-workers,
extended
Sweatshop Warriors
14
and communities see where
families, ture,
and
how they
they, too,
fit
into the big pic-
can work together to liberate themselves as well.
Feminist organizers in the South and in the South within the North call this
women's
community
to
"triple shift"
challenge
of labor in the workplace, family, and
"multiple
oppressions" and serve as
"bridge people" within and between grassroots
movements
for jus-
20 rice.
Fifth, the
them
to
both
new ways
helped build workers' centers that enabled
resist the
oppressions they face and begin to fashion
work,
to
tured in this
women
live, think,
and
create.
The workers'
centers fea-
book are independent groups where workers gather and
organize themselves to carry out their fights and meet their needs.
Continuous industry restructuring requires the workers movement to develop strategies, tactics, methodologies,
and organizational
forms appropriate to specific niches of workers in the new econ-
omy. The groups emerged because the existing labor movement was not addressing the needs of these workers. The workers' centers served as vehicles through which the rights
how
their bare
hands to
for justice. Particularly as
fortify
themselves in their
immigrant women, they talked
how useful these organizations were in helping them
what was being
women
they either went to existing workers' centers or
formed them with about
could fight for their
from the bottom of the sweatshop pyramid. The
talked about
fights
women
said to
them and what they wanted
primarily English-speaking,
US
institutional,
and
translate
to say within the cultural environ-
ment.
These women eventually went on
to serve as the leadership core
of industry-wide campaigns that reached out to their peers working in
other sweatshops. They spoke of the mutual relationship between
their
own individual risk-taking and the forward motion of organiza-
tions that
backed them. The organizations themselves were trans-
formed through the women's participation and
women other
also
spoke of
unmet needs
how
leadership.
the centers reached out to
in their lives
—
to learn English, to
Many
them to fill become en-
franchised citizens, to break their isolation, to get out from under the
thumb of domineering
partners, to give themselves space out-
Listening to the
side the
sweatshop grind, and to
themselves as
fuller
human
Fusion and Innovation
first
organizers
15
freedom of remaking
taste the
beings.
in
Workers' Centers
These workers' centers featured between
Women
in this
book represent
generation low- waged immigrant
a fusion
women workers and
who are often their children, grandchildren and extended The immigrants'
family members.
working and middle
class
co-organizers
came from both
backgrounds and joined the immigrant
workers in building movements that fought for the rights of those
on
the
bottom of overlapping pyramids of oppression.
The
older organizers were often radicalized during an earlier
stage of the global birth of the Asian
economic
restructuring,
and Latina/o
radical
which precipitated the
movements of the 1960s and
1970s, linked to and cross fertilized by the
civil rights,
Native American sovereignty, labor, women's,
Black power,
lesbian and gay,
and other movements of the period. The organizations
anti-war,
have been joined by new generations of labor and student
From
creative organizing ries
radicals.
the 1980s to the present the workers' centers have pioneered
campaigns and scored precedent setting victo-
The workers'
during a period of ferocious attack.
centers have
often played the role of small innovators within the broader labor
and anti-sweatshop movements.
As immigrant women workers on
the
bottom of the industry
pyramid have begun to organize themselves, and create
own
their
workers' centers, they have shaken up the whole structure above
them. The Chinese immigrant garment workers that appeared on 60 Minutes were shocked, then angered to find that the style of dress
would have
they each.
collectively
The Mexicana and Chicana workers
Levi's corporate headquarters laid
them
took
been paid $5 for
off,
then enraged
their jobs to
work what cilitated
by
had
when
first
retailed for
made
their
they found out that the
Costa Rica and paid workers there for a
a free trade initiative
women workers
$175
way
into
been devastated when Levi's
the San Antonio workers had
these immigrant
that
—
made
funded by
in half
US
company full
an hour
taxpayers.
day's
—
fa-
When
were confronted with the big
pic-
Sweatshop Warriors
16
ture
of sweatshop exploitation, to paraphrase labor agitator Mother
Jones, they didn't just get
mad
—
they got organized.
women's words, please remember that they are maddeningly modest about the myriad contributions and sacrifices they've made to build this movement. They are more willing to
As you
build
up
read these
their comadres
and organizations than claim bragging
rights
for themselves. They tend to focus on what they've gotten from the movement more than what they've given. And once again, they've
put themselves on the
Thus, in some cases
line, this
I
time by telling their stories in public.
have used pseudonyms and omitted certain
pieces of identifying personal information.
wonderful
women
for sharing their
While immigrant spired this book, in histories
fact, I
workers and
no way does
of the organizations
one colored In
women
girl's hit
it
it
deeply thank these
their organizations in-
represent the official positions or
book represents just sector of the movement.
chronicles. This
on happenings
find myself chuckling
I
wisdom.
in this
now in
anticipation of the criticisms
certain compasl tong %hir/ dongji'/homies are sure to '
was
said or not said in this book.
discussion and debate that
my daughter Nguyen
But
this is all part
make about what of the process of
comes with development and growth. As
says, "It's all
good."
Notes to Listening to the
1
60
2
Kever, 1990.
3
Sweatshop Watch,
4 5
US Government Accounting
Women
17
Minutes, 1994.
1
997; and
US Government Accounting Office,
1
988:1
1
Office, 1988:17.
Yeh and McMurry, 1996:1/Z5.
6
Chin,
7
See
1
989:A1 0; and Bonacich and Appelbaum, 2000.
and Appelbaum,
Bonacich
2000:80-103
for
an
analysis
of the
inflation.
"Stock
restructuring of the retail industry.
8
Wypijewski, 1994:471-472.
9
Landler,2001.
10
Anderson, et al., 2000:3-4. Figures are not adjusted for market" refers to Standard and Poor 500.
11
G-7 stands United
12
for
States,
Group of Seven
Germany, France,
Italy,
—
the United Kingdom, Canada, and Japan.
countries
Louie and Burnham, 2000:48; Martinez and Garcia, 1997:4; Sparr, 1994; Vickers, 1991; and Suarez Aguilar, 1996.
13
Back
in the late 1960s, the
internationalist
women
Third World
Women's
Alliance, a
of color organization, began to
US-based
describe
the
intersection of race, sex, and class, as "triple jeopardy" (Beal, 1970). Veteran
of the Combahee River Collective, a counterpart Black lesbian feminist group, and social welfare professor Margo Okazawa-Rey nation, class
—
—
calls
gender, race,
as well as sexuality, dis/ability, ethnicity, language, age, religion,
of oppression and resistance" (Combahee River Okazawa-Rey, August 2000). See forthcoming alternative report on the status of US women of color to the 2001 UN World Conference Against Racism edited by the Women of Color Resource Center. etc.
the
"matrix
Collective, 1983;
14 15
16
Fernandez-Kelly, 1983:90. for Asian Women, 1995a; Fernandez-Kelly, 1983; Vickers, 1991; Lourdes Arizipe, 1981:453-473; Lim, 1983:76-79; and Beneria, 1994:49-76. For more on women's labor in free trade zones and the global sweatshop industries, see Asia Monitor Resource Center, 1998; Fuentes and Ehrenreich, 1984; Southeast Asia Chronicle and Pacific Studies Center, 1978 and 1979); Nash and Fernandez-Kelly, 1983; Nash and Safa, 1985; Boserup, 1970; De la O and Gonzalez, 1994; Enloe, 1989:151-176; and Mitter, 1986.
Committee
This slogan appeared on
a picket sign at
an immigrant rights
rally
of South
Asian and Caribbean protesters during the 1980s.
17
See for example Villalba, 1996; Hondagneu-Sotelo, 1994; Kyeyoung Park, 1997;
Sharon M.
Lee,
1996:1-22;
Grace Chang, 2000:129; Conover,
1997:124-132; Stalker, 1994; Asian Migrant Centre, 1996b and 1998; Daniel Lee, 1991; Sturdevant and Stoltzfus, 1992; China Labour Education and
Information Centre, 1995; and Huang, 1997.
18
For more on the impact of gender and race on labor market segmentation, see Amott and Matthaei, 1996:317-354. Additionally, a significant portion of African-American, Chicana, Puerto Rican, and Native American women did
Sweatshop Warriors
18
move "up the ladder" into better jobs, but were instead squeezed out altogether by deindustrialization and cuts in social welfare programs. During the 1980s for the first time in US history, the labor force participation rates of African-American and white women began to merge. not make the
The
closing of the gap between Black and white
women's labor
growing sections of white means that Black working class
participation rates indicates not only that
force
women women
working outside the home; it also the cracks. See Burnham, 1989. The Clinton falling through administration's 1996 welfare "reform" legislation and other state programs are pushing African-American, Latina, Asian, and white women to take workfare jobs as non-unionized minimum and sub-minimum wage workers with little in the way of childcare, nutrition, housing, or health assistance to support this move. See Burnham and Gustafson, 2000. are
are
19 20
Light and Bonacich, 1988;
Kwong,
Peter, 1987
Latin American feminists discussed the
"triple
and 1997; Mar, 1991. Jornada," or triple shift, of
women's work during the 1980s when international financial institutions imposed structural adjustment programs on Third World nations besieged by rising debts to First World nations. The unpaid work of poor women increased as they were forced to shoulder the costs of cuts in wages and social subsidies.
Thanks
to
Luz Guerra
for bringing this term to
my
attention.
For
examples of organizing around issues of multiple oppression, see for
example Jeopardy.
issues
of the Third
\X orld
Women's
See also Moraga and Anzaldua, 1981.
Alliance newspaper, Triple
Chapter One
Holding Up Half the Sky Chinese Immigrant
Women Workers
Sandwiched between produce shops overflowing with honey and tong choy in
tangerines, fuzzy melons, string beans, ginger,
New York Staff and
papers,
Chinatown, a small grubby sign reads "Chinese
City's
Workers Association" (CSWA). Inside and
leaflets,
picket
signs;
are stacks
overflowing
file
of newscabinets;
ever-ringing telephones; the staccato of Cantonese conversation; the smell of take-out food; and constantly replenished cups of
steaming hong cha [red/black
tea].
This storefront could just as well
be in San Francisco, Penang, Singapore, Saigon, or anywhere that Chinese workers gather to
A woman
talk, eat,
and organize for
drops by to volunteer. She
one-name pseudonym, Cher or Madonna
their rights.
insists
"Lisa," laughing when teasingly
for her choice. She's taking
on using
a
compared
to
no chances
since she
and co-workers were blacklisted for demanding overtime pay and shorter hours. Although in 1995 the
Department of Labor penalized
Streetbeat Sportswear, a subcontractor for Sears, for
nonpayment of wages and
violations of
overtime laws, their workers continued to
hours a week, for
less
Roebuck and
Co.,
minimum wage and
toil for
over one hundred
than $2 an hour. Lisa and her co-workers suf-
fered various injuries and constant fatigue. "I got x-rays taken and
shows
that the [back]
bone
is
kind of bent. If I
19
sit
or
work too
it
long,
Sweatshop Warriors
20
my back just can't take it anymore. That's why I need to rest a little," Lisa explains, shifting in discomfort.
Lisa and her co-workers joined with
CSWA and the worker-stu-
dent-youth alliance National Mobilization Against Sweatshops
(NMASS)
in
August 1997
to kick off a
tures
and
May
1998, sweatshop owner Jian
retailers
campaign
to hold
such as Sears accountable for workers'
Wen
manufac-
injuries.
In
Liang and his foreman
stormed CSWA's office with thugs, threatening to kill organizers. The garment workers and their allies held their ground for another 14 months, and tors to
finally
forced Streetbeat Sportswear and
its
contrac-
pay almost $300,000 in overtime and damages owed.
1
Chinese women's labor has been pivotal in the rebirth of garment, restaurant, and other low-wage industries in the United States' inner
cities.
Their work has also been
of southern China, to
omy, and
to the
critical to
the industrialization
Hong Kong's integration into the global econ-
development of
economic zones along
special
2
China's coast catering to multinational corporations. While Chinese
men
in the railroad, laundry,
fishing,
and restaurant industries
trail-blazed the
Chinese labor movement in
1970s Chinese
women
this country, since the
have increasingly taken the
lead.
3
Women
have transformed Chinatowns in the United States from bachelor sojourner societies into diverse, vibrant family-oriented
communi-
ties.
In
this chapter,
immigrant
windows and blocked
exits to
women leaders
what they
call
take us behind gated
the "back of the house"
of the garment and service industries. They compare their prior work in China and Hong Kong to their experiences in sweatshops "made in the USA." While ethnic Chinese factory owners sweat
women
their
workers
at the
bottom of the industry pyramid,
mous-name white-owned companies perched
at the
shots in this racialized and gendered hierarchy.
Women
terly
about
levels
conditions have declined to
1
call
the
speak
bit-
9th-century
because of corporate greed, globalization, and industrial
structuring, tion.
how working
top
They
and talk
fa-
re-
how immigrant bashing has hidden their exploitahow dominant ideologies in China and the
about
—and
United States collude with employer threats and union apathy
21
Holding Up Half the Sky
a
pool of hungry workers ready to slave
women.
lence
Finally, they reflect
to the breaking point
and on
movements of Chinese
on
at
even lower wages
the injustices that
their experiences
rebel
—
to
si-
drove them
of joining and leading
women.
— they love boys and hate girls" Retired garment worker and activist Wu Wan Mei serves as the
"You know how China
of ceremonies
spirited mistress
celebration.
At
was a
CSWA's
—which she
is.
Guangdong,
hair
Wu
annual Lunar
New Year
drumbeat of dragon dancers
from workers'
permed
salt-and-pepper
grandma
at
the event, the frenetic
incited peals of laughter
in Toisan,
is
She was born
With her short
children.
of a
lively
in pre-Revolutionary
China
Her
father
has
the
look
a dajie [big sister] to six siblings.
"very, very, very small businessman,"
who
sold cha siu [barbe-
cue pork] while her mother took care of the children. I
went to school in China
that time the
for eleven years to
government mandated
teachers were badly needed. tion in 1949
I
had
just
I
is
—
to
go to school
started teaching in
let
me
1
953.
so because
At Libera-
old. It
was very
difficult for
You know how China My dad was very traditional. He
at that time.
they love boys and hate
would not
become a teacher. At
we had to do
graduated from junior high school and was
about thirteen or fourteen years
women
that
girls!
go to school [with the boys].
4
The 1949 Chinese Revolution marked a sea change in the lives like Wu. Before then, Confucian ideology dictated women's subordination first to their fathers, then husbands, and finally sons. As in other socialist countries, women were seen as a vital resource for economic development. The Communist Party promoted women's integration into the paid labor force, instituting of
women
daycare and sewing centers to
facilitate
women's
participation. In
opposition to women's Confucian-mandated subservience to ther,
husband, and son, the party resurrected the proverb that
"women
hold up half the sky." Marriage laws enacted in 1950 and
1980 guaranteed women's mates
fa-
freely.
Sexist
rights to divorce
feudalistic
bride-prices, arranged marriages,
practices
and
to
such
as
choose
their
concubines,
and the purchase of child brides
Sweatshop Warriors
22
were outlawed, while widows'
were guaranteed.
to property Still,
remarry and women's rights
rights to
5
the "love for boys" and "hate for girls" that
By
lingers in China.
30 percent
less
the late 1980s,
than
men
for the
women
Wu describes
continued to earn about
same work. 6 Seventy percent of all 7
workers dismissed from their jobs are women. By the only about 45 percent of
were enrolled
all girls
late
1980s,
8
Under
in school.
China's "one family, one child" population control policy, bies are disproportionately
abandoned.
girl
ba-
9
Second Stage Labor Migration Most of China's women migrants the country's southeastern region,
to the
United States
which has
historically
hail
from
had higher
of global trade, commerce, industrialization, female labor force
rates
participation,
and emigration of
Guangdong and
workers.
its
10
In particular, the
Fujian provinces in southeastern China, located
near large navigable rivers and seaports and sharing a history of early
western colonization, have been ization process.
tween
Guangdong province
—
Hong Kong
—and
West
at the forefront
of China's global-
serves as a thoroughfare be-
the port of entry connecting China with the
the rest of China.
Hong Kong was one of the that sprang
first sites
up during the 1960s,
as
of the global assembly line
transnational corporations
sought low-waged, non-unionized, largely female workers to manufacture garments, electronics, toys, pletely
dependent on the
capitalist
and
plastics.
Hong Kong is com-
world market, with a stunning 90
percent of its manufactured goods exported overseas. In the 1960s
and 1970s, workforce. Since as China's
women
constituted 70 percent of
Hong Kong's
factor}-
11
its
annexation by the British in 1842,
Hong Kong
served
permeable membrane for the flow of capital, goods, and
people. Before normalization of the West's relations with China in
Hong Kong in 1997, Chinese immigrants had to pass through Hong Kong to process their applications for immigration. For many women and their families, migration to Hong Kong was the first step in a multi-stage migration the 1970s and the decolonization of
Holding Up Half the Sky
23
on
to inner-city jobs in the
process, from rural to urban areas, then
United
States.
Wu worked as a teacher in mainland China before immigrating and jobs
to the United States
in
New York's
Chinatown garment
shops. She says,
My mother-
and father-in-law were very young when they immi-
grated to the US. first
to
I
since
remember
exactly
when
they came, but
Hong Kong. ... My mother-in-law sponsored us Hong
they were in
come
don't
my father-in-law had already passed away.
.
.
.
Kong was part of the passage to America; you had to go there first to get a visa. We lived in Hong Kong for about half a year in a place we rented temporarily. If you got someone to sponsor you to immigrate to the US and you were just going to Hong Kong to get your visa signed and processed, they there
was no American consulate.
Helen
Wong was
moved
ents later
to
Kong, she worked
home
workers
you do
it.
In China
Guangdong province. Her parHong Kong to make a better living. In Hong born
also
in
garment industry
in the
to care for her children. Similar to
women
let
12
who
networks,
Wong had
mittently
on both
until she
had
to stay
many Mexican immigrant
belong to extended family chain migration family
sides
members who worked and lived
of the border between China and
inter-
Hong
Kong. Extended family members on both
sides
and juggled childcare arrangements. In 1988,
Wong immigrated to
Oakland with her family through her
My parents were born in
pooled income
father-in law's sponsorship.
Guangdong.
I
have two older brothers
One older brother is in mainland China and the others are in Hong Kong. My brother was born [on the main-
and
a
younger one.
my parents were so poor they had to leave their kids behind when they went to Hong Kong to try to make some money. They left the kids with my grandmother on my mother's side. After 1950 it got really crazy in China. My brother stopped writing land] but
and we couldn'^ send money or years
we
letters
back to him. For several
lost touch. But whenever they could get letters through,
my
parents sent
and
necessities. He's a farmer. After
money
to help
him
survive, for food, clothing,
he got older,
we
back when he got married, had children, and so on.
sent
money
Sweatshop Warriors
24
Kwan "Annie" Lai, a garment worker in New York, is an energetic woman with thick jet black hair. Her parents are from Guangdong province and moved to Hong Kong before she was Oi
Her
born.
a factory
father
worked
as a chauffeur while her
making packaging
tears as she
mother worked
for radio batteries. Lai's eyes
remembers the poverty she grew up
in.
Like
fill
in
with
many girls
across Asia, she quit school and started working in a toy factory at the age of twelve because her parents could not afford her pub-
She was one of the young women who helped create
lic-school fees.
Hong Kong's economic miracle,
eventually sewing garments for ex-
some two decades
port to Western countries for
in
Hong Kong fac-
tories.
born
Lisa,
Toisan in Guangdong province on the Chinese
in
mainland in 1957,
a first-generation
is
immigrant to the United
but a second-generation garment worker. Both she and her
States,
mother worked
My
garment shops
dad worked
mom
went
to
worker. Just father's
worked
.
Hong Kong
my mom
to take care
went
oldest. I
in yi chang [a
sized factory.
We
tion inside China.
and
of her.
garment
sewed I
That was
According
to
in
1979 and worked
I
garment
have three brothers. I'm the sec-
China for eight
years.
I
also
a
medium
and women's apparel for
distribu-
factory] in Toisan. It
suits
started
as a
my
my younger brother went at first. My there in Hong Kong, so my mother
to school in
gave most of my wages to myself.
Hong Kong.
in
in a metal factor}7 After they got married,
mother was over
went there
ond
in
was
working when I was around 1 7 or
1 8.
my parents, and just kept a little bit for
how it was
in China.
14
Bo Yee, an Oakland garment worker with 27 years Hong Kong garment industry, conditions in
of experience in the
Hong Kong's garment In
shops were
Hong Kong workers
fairer
than in the United States.
get 17 paid holidays each year, paid sick
leave,
and bonuses. Seamstresses seldom work more than eight
hours
a day. If
you If
you do have
also get overtime
you get
Sewing
is
to
laid off, at least the
not such
a
work overtime
for a special order,
pay and the company provides your dinner.
bad job
in
company pays you severance pay. Hong Kong; at least you can make
25
Holding Up Half the Sky
a decent living
In
above the minimum wage sewing by piece
Hong Kong,
ployers.
For example, when sewing
work out first to
rate.
.
.
workers have more bargaining power with em-
see if the
a
new
style,
proposed wages are
workers
fair.
try the
workers
If not,
will
come
together for a brief work stoppage until they can get a
fair
wage
for the
new
compromise with
style.
But usually they can work out
a fair
15
the supervisor.
The Globalization Nightmare: Second Stage Capital Flight Relations between the United States and China were normalized after President
Mao Zedong Minister
visit.
Shortly after the death of
1976 and the routing of the Gang of Four, Prime
Deng Xiaoping's government pushed
the
into
Richard Nixon's 1972
in
capitalist
modernizations"
to reintegrate
science and technology,
(in industry, agriculture,
and national defense) and building a Chinese-style
economy. 16 As
a result of these changes,
Kong's labor-intensive
ment
who
factories
had shifted
to China.
carts,
socialist
by 1990 nearly
toy, electronics,
lost their factory jobs
dim sum
and mass-produced
were forced
to
gar-
choose between pushing
17
At the same
time,
women
scribed by Asian migrant rights activists as
"3D"
Hong Kong
workers from
the Philippines, South Asia, and mainland China to
dull."
market
of Hong
Women workers in Hong Kong
was drawing increasing numbers of migrant
and
all
laboring in fast food outlets, or working part-time as
maids and homecare attendants.
ous,
China
world market under a program of "four
fill
jobs de-
or "dirty, danger-
18
"In the early 80s, the nightmare started," says former factory
worker Lai Tong Chi, based
who works
Women Workers
aware as
I
am now,
and moving to other to China, training
I
wasn't as
down
parts of Asia," she says. Lai followed the jobs
mainland workers
in
production techniques
until
When she returned to Hong Kong
she could no longer find garment
room
Hong Kong-
but the factories already started closing
they learned and she was laid off.
hotel
with the grassroots
Association. "During that time
work and was turned away from
cleaner, sales, public transit,
and home helper
jobs.
Sweatshop Warriors
26
I
get angry as
think back to
I
when I was young and the employer
me
to work faster, exploiting me. And now they say, "you are too old." In the 70s when I was working in the factory, older women at the age of 60 or 70 were being em-
me and
beat
they pushed
Now
ployed. Employers needed them, so they had to work.
government
is
totally irresponsible
and job security for
ment and out
us.
government refuses
sides
the
And now we are being kicked
to
have any
it
But the
difficult to get jobs.
legislation safeguarding the right
19
the corporate perspective, the labor force
on
the
two
of the border are complementary, reflecting the integration of
two economies.
with
the
no insurance
A lot of the employers are using age restrictions,
as worthless.
From
is
We workers devoted a lot to the develop-
affluence of Hong Kong.
and women over the age of 35 find to work.
because there
New York's
20
One writer compared high-priced Hong Kong
Manhattan where only the
rich can afford to live.
South China increasingly houses poor people distances to work.
Hong Kong's
21
The Asian
transition
from
financial crisis
British
who commute of the
late
Commonwealth
long
1990s and
status to the
1997 "one country, two systems," integration with China only served to speed income polarization.
On
the China side of the border, hundreds of thousands of
young women workers have migrated in search of jobs economic zones on China's south tions in these zones fire that killed
ters
coast.
became apparent
in a
87 workers and injured 46.
to the special
22
The dangerous condiNovember 1993 factory
23
Export processing cen-
employ over 20 million Chinese workers, with some
migrant workers in
Guangdong province.
24
According
6.5 million
to the
China
Labour Education and Information Center, Most of the women working in these enterprises [special economic zones] are from the villages. They are driven by poverty at
home and are compelled to live away from their families. Popular among these peasant workers is the saying, "Wanna make money? rapid
Go to
Guangdong!" So the saying goes and regions with
economic development headed by Guangdong Province
have become the gold-digging dreamland of the Chinese peasantry.
However many of
these
young
women
encounter forced
27
Holding Up Half the Sky
overtime, lack of union protection, unsafe working conditions,
poor housing and
living conditions, physical
and denial of their basic
right to organize.
and sexual abuse,
25
Peoples' organizations affiliated with the Chinese Party, such as the All
Communist
China Federation of Trade Unions and the All
China Women's Federation, have devolved into toothless groups
and instruments of coercion
at best
Chan Wai Fun, as
Chinatown who worked
a seamstress in Oakland's
an office manager
port of Guangzhou in
at the
social
According to
at worst.
Guangdong prov-
ince,
The union
stand up for the workers or criticize the
really didn't
administrators.
One good
thing about union
membership was
sometimes they gave you discounts on events,
that
go see the
ets to
women's
association.
meant
just
It
like free tick-
remember much about
circus. I don't really
that
on
International
26
Women's Day,
they would give us a flower.
According
Lee Yin Wah, today's Communist Party
to
adopts a kind of "don't ask, don't
the
in
China
stance towards workers'
tell"
rights:
There's no real organizing less
about what you think.
women's conference
work going .
.
.
in Beijing?
of organizing method
used
is
on.
They
really
could care
Didn't you go to the international
From
that
in China.
whatever you do. Everyone from
all
you can see what kind
They can circumscribe
over the world was there, but
the government circumscribed you so you couldn't see really
see
going on. But
at the
how big a country it is.
ciety
is
not such an easy
When rights are.
privileges
As
r
The
task.
far as they're
tells
you what your
concerned you've already got
all
the
eight hours a day, get paid a salary,
The propaganda says, "This is the home You are in control." But the workers do not feel in
a living..
party
factor)',
what was
when you look at China you
Controlling and running such a big so-
you need if you work
and can make
Ever)
time,
you're in China the party never
of the workers. control.
same
7
is
.
.
very well organized in the institutional sense.
no matter how big or
small, has committees.
Au-
Sweatshop Warriors
28
tonomous organizations unconnected lowed.
to the party are not al-
27
Today, workers
who
dare to organize for their rights face
stiff
competition from the 150 million or more unemployed or laid-off
workers from
rural China.
Women Come to Gold Before
1
Mountain
875, Chinese women had trickled into the United States
forced prostitutes, or merchants' wives. Between 1875 and
as slaves,
women were
1945, Chinese
systematically barred
from immigrating
29
The 1945 War Brides Act allowed Chinese-American soldiers fighting on the Pacific front to marry hometown girls and bring them back to the United States. Between 1946 to the
United
States.
women
and 1952,
constituted almost 90 percent of Chinese immi-
grants to the United States.
More Chinese women than men con-
tinue to immigrate, furthering the feminization of migration.
The Chinese community
in the
30
United States was radically
transformed by the Immigration and Naturalization Act of 1965 that
removed
and
set preferences for the recruitment
cians,
racist
quota
restrictions,
allowed family reunification,
of professionals, techni-
and other wealthy immigrants. Chinese,
Indians,
and other Asians migrated
new
31
law.
Labor historian Peter
in massive
immigrants
who
in contrast to the
preceded them.
Many new immigrants
Koreans,
numbers under the
Kwong dubbed
immigrants from higher professional and social
"uptown Chinese"
Filipinos,
the
new Chinese
strata
backgrounds
"downtown" working-class
32
sought
US
citizenship so they in turn
could sponsor more family members. Since 1965,
some 40,000 Chi-
nese per year have migrated to the United States from China, Tai-
wan, and
Hong Kong. By
1980, the Chinese-American population
was once again mosdy foreign-born. By 1985, 81 percent of Chinese immigrants entered under family preference categories and only
about 16 percent as professionals. 33 Helen her husband and five kids to Oakland from the urging of her father-in-law.
very conscious strategy to bring
Wong
Her extended members to
its
immigrated with
Hong Kong in
1988
at
family developed a the United States.
29
Holding Up Half the Sky
We
Guangdong people but both my husband and
are
were born
in
Hong Kong.
my
After
Then
zenship, she sponsored the rest of the family.
sponsored one family ther-in-law's family
1977].
[in
He had
to
all
adults
Mei immigrated
over.
My
fa-
US
after
he lived here
34
New York's
to
Chinatown through
who worked in a laundry up-
the sponsorship of her mother-in-law,
town and had
lived in the United States for
newcomers,
took
it
citi-
after that they
by the time he came to the
sponsor them one by one
awhile and got his citizenship.
Wu Wan
come
another to
after
were
his father
mother-in-law got her
many
years. Like
many
Wu and her family some time to adjust to life in
the States. In the beginning
it
was very hard
with the decision to
after
to adapt
Our
here.
and
all.
Then
Jenny Chen,
I
wasn't
at
peace
sons had wanted to come,
But after they came here they decided
(laughs) it
come
they said, "Let's go back to
that they didn't like
Hong Kong!" 35
who was born in Toisan, went straight to work in a
garment sweatshop
after
lowing him back to
New York.
marrying a "gold mountain
man" and
She found adjusting to
US
life
fol-
very
stressful.
Aiyah!
I
regret
coming
here.
When I was
worked
in China, after graduat-
ing from high school
I
different things about
how to run a restaurant.
in restaurants. I learned a lot It
was
of
better work,
more interesting. Now I'm behind a machine all day, sewing away. Sometimes when they pay you, they hold back a portion of your pay. just
For the younger women go
to school
and get
like
some
me, we often wish that we could different kind of work. Lots
times you're not even getting paid, but you have to go in to
on Sundays. Then you've got (laughs)
You
just
to look at the boss's face.
wish you could be doing something
you don't have any time
to
spend with your
friends in San Francisco that the price
go
to
work earlier and get out earlier,
and you friend's
still
on
see lights
mother works
in the
in the day,
then goes back to work
is
And
heard from
my
You
Here work
varies a lot
My
daughter's
at night.
comes home
at night. She's
I
Yuhhh!
else.
not as good as here.
right?
shops
kids.
of
work
always
to feed her kids,
tired.
36
Sweatshop Warriors
30
After immigrating to Oakland with her husband and son at the invitation
ing
work
of in-laws, Lin Cai Fen followed the in
garment
Not speaking
trail
of women seek-
factories, including her mother-in-law. I
could get was sewing in a
sweatshop. All the Chinese immigrant
women seemed to work in
garments.
I
English, the only job
sewed
at
piece rates and could only
make one
per hour. The job was terrible and the pay was too
support
my
English,
men work
dustry. This
for
dollar
me to
For new immigrants who know very
family.
is
little
in restaurants
the reality that
women
and
new immigrants
in the face.
little
garment
in-
37
New Migrant Streams: Refugees and Ransomed Workers Along with
the growing legal immigration of Chinese are
newer
streams of undocumented immigrants from China, refugees and im-
migrants from Vietnam and elsewhere. For example, the Sino-Viet-
namese War of 1979 and
earlier
Vietnamese measures
to break the
control of ethnic Chinese entrepreneurs over trade and
nesses created a large
United
wave of Chinese-Vietnamese refugees
States. Eighty-five
Vietnam
retail busi-
to the
who fled 38 Chinese. Many
percent of the "boat people"
for the United States in 1978
were ethnic
A
of these families had lived in Vietnam for several generations. large proportion trace
their ancestral roots
back to
villages
in
Guangdong and speak both Cantonese and Vietnamese. Since the late 1980s, undocumented workers from Fujian province in China have immigrated to the United States. Fujian province
has long been the source of Chinese immigration to Indonesia, laysia,
the flow of undocumented immigrants
big
Ma-
Singapore, Thailand, the Philippines, and Taiwan. In 1993,
US news
story
when
from Fujian
briefly
became
a
the Golden Venture, a steamer carrying 286
undocumented Fujian immigrants ran aground a few hundred yards from Rockaway Beach in Queens, New York. The workers had promised to pay $30,000 to
their smugglers, called luo
heads], if they successfully reached the United States.
39
ti
[snake
Headlines
men from Hong
were made again
in January 2000,
Kong stumbled
out of cargo containers carried aboard the giant
when
15 Chinese
31
Holding Up Half the Sky
freighter Cape
May, which had docked in
had agreed
pay
to
their
ture wages. Inside
Seattle,
Washington. They
smugglers tens of thousands of dollars in fu-
were the bodies of three of
had died during the crossing.
40
their
comrades
who
This credit-ticket labor trafficking
is
the current version of the 19th-century system that brought Chinese
migrant male workers from Pearl River delta villages to Hawaiian plantations, Californian fields,
and transcontinental
Other immigrants overstay
from Mexico. In the
late
railroads.
border
tourist visas or cross the
my
1960s,
second-generation, Chi-
nese-American husband Belvin was asked to go meet some "cous-
from the home
ins"
village to help
them
cross the
Mexican border
into the United States. Eventually, they entered the United States
without him having to make the run to the border. Arranged marriages
of convenience are another way to
facilitate legal
immigrant
status.
Sweatshop and factory employers frequently
pit
undocumented
workers against those with documents. Both ethnic subcontractors
and Euro-American businesses labor, according to Peter Illegal Chinese
rights.
government
Kwong' s
from undocumented workers'
excellent
book Forbidden Workers: Government agencies
Immigrants and American Labor.
are often unable,
workers'
profit
41
and organized labor unwilling, to defend these
Kwong
describes
officials, travel
how
organized crime, corrupt
agencies in China, and
US
employers
have developed a lucrative underground smuggling industry that taps into family groups in search of work.
"In says. rip
this case ethnic solidarity brings
about its opposite,"
Kwong
"The people who know you the best also know the best ways to 42 off." The enclave community entraps workers and justifies
you
their exploitation
under the ideology of "ethnic
solidarity,"
by which
employers claim they provide jobs for poor people no one
wants to hire and that "outsiders don't understand us and
else
how we
43
do
things."
ers
from Guangdong and Hong Kong against undocumented work-
ers
from Fujian province.
Jenny Chen describes
how garment
sweatshop bosses
pit
work-
Sweatshop Warriors
32
A
of the shops are run by Cantonese, Taishanese. or
lot
Kong
people. The
diet than the
Broa
They don't even
hours.
no
[eat rice],
1990 and
ear that
would cam-
much.
domes
the
over for
And when we
We
time to even sikjaan
leave
sew 14 hours
.-:
When
about
\
sew so
to
now
even go
it.
I
came
wouldn't have to
I
the boss says, 'That's vour
to
work
the Fukinese are
eight it night, they're
still
people would
day. In the past
a
that a lot of the bosses wiO actual!]
is
those wil in that
dis-
less willing to
put
hours. So the Fukinese Are being usee, and we're be-
mpared
;
on
discriminate against
because they tend to be
latus,
many
al-
there.
criminate against those without legal status. But what's going
now
in
The boss
but the Fukinese work even longer.
.:ours, I
me
But
stuff
A lot of nme before we ready there.
No
k jock [eat rice porridge].
:
lift
Sometimes
of Fukinese. They work long
was pregnant, the boss
I
op and
lot
are
ere
Hong
shops on East
against
mem
Ify
a don't reel like
working
as
many
hours, you get a lot of pressi
Near
A
die Triple
East Broad
Restaurant
it
of Pukinc
m
ig
Trie women usi
g
and
3
I
down
at
the end of the block
under the Manhattan Bridge you see fai
work, mostly
men
a lot
[day laborers].
work m the factories. A lot of times the
Fukinese will go around selling mantou [steamed buns]. The
Made In grant
in
the
USA
New York women
City,
Chinese and other Asian and Latina immi-
comprise the majority of the garment industry's
workforce, replacing the
earlier
pool of European and Puerto Rican
immigrants and retired African Americans. Over 60 percent of New York"-
_
~.
nent factories are sweatshops.
there were e:^
lent
sweatshops
in
New
York
town. By 1984, there were 500. Between 1969 and 1982, the
of Chinese >cd
women
from
93,000 worker
workers 2
in
aVim .~
In 1960,
City's
China-
number
Chinatown garment sweatshops Today, there are an estimated ;:uring in
nent workers produces
New York
1
City."
The
an effect that ripples
33
Holding Up Half the Sky
beyond the garment
industry. Entrepreneurs
who began
as
sewing
subcontractors frequently reinvest profits into bigger businesses
and
real estate.
Women
working ten
to twelve
hours a day,
six to
seven days a week, buy prepared food and other convenience items, boosting local restaurant and grocery businesses.
Los Angeles
is
now
the nation's garment manufacturing center
with the greatest number of employees: 120,000 people, of whom 14 percent are Asian, including 7 percent Chinese, 4 percent Korean,
and 3 percent
are other Asians.
Among
Ladnos, Mexicans ac-
counted for 47 percent, Central Americans, 14 percent, and other
Ladnos 6 percent.
Of the
remainder, European Americans were 8
percent, African Americans 2 percent, and the remaining 9 percent unidentified.
48
20 to 25 major
There are about 400 garment manufacturers, about labels
producing for the mass market, and 5,000 sub-
number operating underwork home. Chinese women workers
contractors including a relatively large
ground.
Many workers
take
average §5,464 annually, other Asian
women
$6,500
—
a far cry
an owner of Guess?,
who
nuses, and perks in 1992.
from
women
$7,500, and
Mexican
such as Georges Marciano,
fat cats
pocketed a cool $8.7 million in
salary,
bo-
49
In the San Francisco Bay Area, there are an estimated 20,000
garment workers, 85 percent of whom are Asian immigrant women. In 1960, there was only one garment subcontractor listed in the
Oakland phone
directory.
By
1990, 150 East Bay garment factories
were registered with the Department of Industrial Relations' Division of Labor Standards Enforcement, with 478
more shops
in
San
The actual number of shops is probably higher because some owners do not register. The industry generates about $5 billion in annual sales and accounts for more than one-third of San Francisco's manufacturing jobs. San Francisco's three big garment manFrancisco.
ufacturers, Levi Strauss,
Gap, and
Esprit,
have outsourced the bulk
of their manufacturing overseas, so smaller manufacturers predominate in the local industry.
Nationwide, toiling
home
workers earn
as
little
as
$2 an hour, often
60 to 70 hours a week without overtime pay. Regulators
port that the practice of
home sewing
is
most widespread
in
re-
New
Sweatshop Warriors
34
York, California, and the Dallas-Fort Worth area, where the
home-sewing population ranges from 20,000
home
bor organizers and advocates say that gally use child labor.
51
Many
sewing workshops
la-
ille-
52
Until the 1950s almost States
to 80,000.
all
of the clothing sold in the United
was accurately labeled "Made
in the
USA." Today, 60 percent
of the clothing sold in the United States
imported.
is
53
Quicker
turn-around time, lower shipping costs, and sweatshop wages paid to
immigrant
women workers
anchors some production within
NAFTA, APEC
borders. Global trade agreements such as
GATT
Economic Cooperation),
Pacific
Trade and
Tariffs),
on Investments) and
FTAA
(General Agreement on
MAI
and the proposed
US
(Asian
(Multilateral
Agreement
(Free Trade Area of the Americas) pit
global assembly line workers against each other in
have dubbed "the race to the bottom" ronmental and labor standards to
—
what
activists
a global effort to slash envi-
attract employers.
"When GATT goes into full effect in 2005," says Lora Jo Foo, Law Caucus attorney and founding member of the Sweat-
an Asian
shop Watch
coalition, "all the jobs are
know this
controversial, but
is
I
think
going to run away to China.
we need to
keeping a certain number of jobs in
women in
our communities."
this
start talking
I
about
country for immigrant
04
Sweatshops Go from Bad to Worse The global
factory has trapped
women across
China's vast dias-
pora in a roller-coaster ride of rushes and dead seasons, expansions
and expulsions, lurches and
backfires. Despite corporate assertions
to the contrary, the reversion to 19th-century is
part
sweatshop conditions
and parcel of the globalized expansion of the bottom of the
industry pyramid. Immigrant
women workers
with years of experi-
ence working on both sides of the Pacific complained
bitterly
about
the deterioration in working conditions over the past decade.
They
described plummeting pay and benefits, ever-longer hours, production
speedups, increased injuries, and harsher treatment from
bosses.
One problem
is
the piece rate system, in
which workers
are paid
35
Holding Up Half the Sky
according to each procedure they
They
finish.
are paid a certain
amount to sew a collar, attach a zipper, or hem a skirt. Piece
rates are
determined by what the manufacturer pays the subcontractor
by the wages workers need
—not
above the poverty line. This wide-
to live
spread system of underpayment encourages subcontractors to abuse
workers, and intensifies the self-exploitation and competition be-
tween workers.
"The pay
same on Sunday. There is no such thing
just the
is
if you
can take a break
means you don't
get paid for
56
broke
Helen Wong. says
rate
You
as overtime.
piece
55
"I almost
it,
want
to.
But sewing by the
" says former garment
down
in tears
when
I first
worker
started,"
Jenny Chen.
When I was in China I I
So
didn't have to.
who
never touched a sewing machine because
was very tough. Really the boss
me how to do
taught
working
started
it. I
it
at
it.
Eventually
I
learned
is
the one
could handle
I
nine and usually finished by eight at the
earliest.
Wages vary depending on piece rates, but if you get some good work, you can sew faster. I'm young and us younger ones can do more and
move
do. a
It's
not like// tau gwat
good
is
[pig
a
see you
guy work. See that's easy to
at
soon
as
Like sometimes you
you put
day if you work really
in
like
that are
your mouth, (laughs)
work seven long days but you can only
fast.
But that's pretty
can't concentrate, you're in a
other
it
bunch of bones
When you get seeyou guy you can make about §70 to §80 a
get §300.
do
get
head and neck bones] that looks
piece of meat, but turns into a
hard to swallow
can't
when we
nickname for sewing
quickly
you guy [soy sauce chicken]
it.
little
I
rare.
A lot of times you
bad mood, you're
sick,
you
sew the seams and sometimes the seams have
must go
pieces that
money. But sometimes
it's
inside
really
just
a lot
of
and you can make more
hard to do. If you average out
what you make over the long term,
it
doesn't really add up to
all
much money. During Chinese New Year you're very, very busy. You don't even have time to visit friends, clean your house, that
and cook
months
like
[April
you're supposed
Most people if
to.
But during the
last
couple of
and May], the work has been very slow. can't
you make $7,000
make $10,000
a year.
a year to qualify for
Forget about $10,000;
union medical benefits,
Sweatshop Warriors
36
A lot of times
you're lucky.
for different reasons,
not able to make that amount. In
them
to.
Even
if
fact
many
many people
you make the money, but you don't get you have no proof, you
the boss pays you in cash and health coverage. You've got to
do whatever you can
books. Sometimes people have
to
lieve it?
Say you were able to work
at the
pay $10 or $20 to buy your paycheck.
"In the beginning
when
paid, or
can't get
to get
on
the
buy their paychecks. Can you bebeginning of the year, but
you couldn't make enough by the end of the
year.
So you have
started working," says
I first
to
57
The union
Mei, "the hours were better.
are
bosses don't want
also
seemed
to
Wu Wan
be a
bit
little
better."
Now it's
totally different.
For example,
that
you make
fore
you were only required
up
to $7,000
at least
now
$7,000 in order to get medical benefits. Beto
make $3,000, then $5,000.
and a lot of people don't make that much.
now we're working longer hours Working in
who work a "mere"
day and night. According to
Lai, jobs in the
garment
little
but
58
New York's Chinatown, says Annie Lai, "really kills
undocumented seamstresses from Fujian who district
Now it's
Of course,
but with no overtime pay.
you!" Bosses pit older seamstresses against
demands
the union
used to be a
10-hour day
literally
work
mid-town Manhattan
better than those in Chinatown,
now bosses can pressure workers to come in six days a week. 59 Lisa quit Streetbeat Sportswear in
hours exceeded 100 hours a week.
keep working
like this.
day
off And
left.
We couldn't take
in that
shop."
'No you
City
told the boss,
We're getting destroyed.
the boss said, it
"We
New York
can't
have
a
We
when
"We
just can't
need to have a
day off So
we
60
"Many of my
friends develop pain
and
illnesses related to their
to
move
their
hands
in the
same motion over and over
some women have very sore hands and shoulders and back pains. They have to sit for a long time and many develop again so that
bad is
just
anymore. There were about 60 to 70 people
work," says former garment worker Helen Wong.
They have
her
circulation or hemorrhoids.
so thick you can see
it
The
in the air
dust in
some of the
and you develop
factories
allergies.
So
37
Holding Up Half the Sky
sometimes we work with masks made by ourselves. Otherwise, we'd be sneezing
I
worked with
of some
When
the time.
all
went home from work
I
when I would blow my nose,
sometimes,
that day
women who
the colors of the fabrics
my
would appear on
Kleenex. I've heard
have had lung and breathing problems be-
cause of having worked in garment manufacturing for so long. I
now work
tel
rooms.
have
I
also 1
8
do the work
rooms
irritated
Sweatshops
in
quickly.
We
leave the
to clean ho-
We push heavy
often get bruises and
our fingers become
liquids all
is
we
day. It
use. is
My thumb
very stressful
61
tired.
Other Industries
Garment workers
are not the only sweatshop workers subjected
low wages, and occupational health hazards. Immi-
to long hours,
women
do, which
furniture. Also,
from pulling sheets
and we come home very
electronics,
I
and cracked from the cleaning
also gets very sore
grant
that
to clean in eight hours.
and move around very bumps from banging into the carts
women who
and many
in the hotels
garment industry
working
in restaurants, convalescent
homes,
hotels,
and other secondary sector jobs also endure sweat-
shop-like conditions.
Amy
Xie
is
originally
from Guangzhou, the
capitol
of
Guangdong Province in China and lives in the Bronx. She used to work as a hostess at Silver Palace Restaurant for 12 to 14 hours a day, six days a week. The restaurant had promised her a monthly salary of $1,600, but
ended up only paying her $800 with no overtime,
sick or vacation leave, or health care benefits.
worked Xie over her
lifts
her long
legs,
Sometimes she
through her lunch hour.
straight
skirt to reveal startling
caused by standing
all
day
at
dark purple bruises
running to keep up with her young son.
They would
yell at
many people, eat
you from the back room when there were too
especially
on weekends when everyone comes
dim sum. The bosses would curse and swear
walkie
talkie.
Everyone could hear them.
Now I walk so
slow after working there.
compensation from them.
all
work. She has a hard time
I
It
at
in to
you over the
was so humiliating!
never got any workers
Sweatshop Warriors
38
fell down when it was snowing in the front of the The boss makes so much money, but they are so cheap. They wouldn't even let me go to the hospital to see a doctor of my choosing. They said I had to go to their company doc-
One time I
restaurant.
tor,
to
who
work
told
me I
that day,
wouldn't have been paid. They don't give you
anything.
They
happens.
You know
Lew Ying weeks
for the
gone back
didn't have any problem. If I hadn't
I
didn't
tell
me
about workers comp. That's what
Chinatown.
Choi, a Chinese
62
home
worked 72-hour
care worker,
Evergreen Residential Care
Home
in the
Bay Area
with only one day off a week and no overtime pay. She suspected that her boss
was cheating her out of her pay when she received
payroll deduction stubs but
when
no paychecks. The owner
yelled at
she asked about what happened to her paychecks and
five
Lew Lew
quit.
Disempowering Messages
"We must organize for our rights," says former restaurant worker "We can't just worry about our families. We have to come together to protect our interests." Today, Lee is the sympa-
Lee Yin Wah.
thetic
and
skilled organizer
woman moving
stealth-like
workers
meet
first
behind the scenes
event, the clear voice behind the bull-horn at
picket
A
at
CSWA,
at
every successful
many
a
Chinatown
line. lot
of
new immigrants from China get trapped inside Many are not highly educated. They
closed community'.
what the restaurant and garment bosses' associations Because they don't speak the language and
happy
to get a job.
wages back
working
They compare
in China. That's
whole month
a
They
is
a very
accept
them.
going
are just
the $20 they get paid a day to
more than
in China.
tell
know what
on, they put up with the bosses' controlling them.
But
they
living
would have made
expenses here are a
lot higher, too.
When
first
I
came here my
relatives told
me, "As long
as
you've got a job and aren't starving don't pay attention to anything
else. If
don't take
it.
someone
tries to
hand you
Just take care of yourself."
a leaflet
the
on
They told me
the street,
that
I
had to
39
Holding Up Half the Sky
be more back
was
selfish
home
just a
hard,
and that
all
the stuff the
communist party
told
me
about helping other people wouldn't work here, that
bunch of
you can
People here also
crap.
start a business,
make
a lot
you
tell
if
you work
of money, go back
to
China to buy a house, and make more money. All of the immi-
documented or undocumented, who came by boat or by
grants,
plane, this
is
thinking. But they'll
People
their plan.
in reality for
most
just
go along with
this
way of
people the chances are nil that
be able to get rich through hard work. In China they say
you don't need
rights, you're already
don't even think about
bother?
it,
you'll
provided
for.
never get your
Here they rights, so
say,
why
63
"Even if workers want to join picket lines, many are afraid to come out in front," says Amy Xie. "The first time I went to the picket, I was scared, too. You know the bosses have all of these Mafia-type gangster guys in the
afraid to
come out
back to support them so the workers are
in front."
64
Problems Can't Be Solved Alone In describing
how
movement,
they got involved in the
women
own acCommuwomen with
often spoke about the dynamic relationship between their tions
and those of the broader struggles they labor
nity-based
organizations
provided
joined.
the
infrastructures of solidarity, resources, training, accumulated experi-
ences, ties with other struggles and sectors, and strategic vision.
course, each
woman
faced her
moment
of reckoning,
cided to stand up for her rights whatever the
risk.
As
when
Of
she de-
the conflicts es-
demands on each woman's commitment and Throughout the process, the women brought their own
calated, so did the
leadership. life
experiences,
skills,
and networks into the movement, shaping its
reach and direction. Lee Yin
Wah
Committee helps women break
women workers They
"Quite a few of the
are very strong," says Lee.
get a lot of pressure
back down. But many
women
CSWA's Women's
explains that
their isolation.
workers to
from the bosses, from
stick to the fight
fight for justice.
anyway.
They have
their families to It's
not easy for
to deal with sur-
Sweatshop Warriors
40
vival,
how to take care of their kids, and what to do with their husThrough our activities we try to stay in touch. We stress
bands.
problems
that
can't just be solved alone
by oneself.
65
According to Lee, most of the women workers who
visit
CSWA
complain about back wages they are owed. Although workers often resign themselves to violations of their rights, their bosses' failure to
pay them for work they've already performed
often the straw that
is
breaks the camel's back.
In 1992,
CSWA started a back wage campaign. Some employers
were arrested and convicted for
"Most employers
see
pay back wages.
their failure to
owing back wages
as just part
of the business,"
says Lee.
Almost
all
factories
owe
at least
one month of wages. Some owe
workers for nine weeks, or longer. Sometimes the bosses owe
Maybe the boss gives a little money to string The boss keeps saying, "Oh, I don't have the money now, but when I do, I'll give it to you." 66 them
for half a year.
them
along.
Unfortunately, labor unions are not always willing to help these
Chen and her 19 co-workers
workers. Jenny
New York when
their
On
City
first
employer
The owner reopened
again and ran off. a thing..
.
.
I
their union,
it
in
at the
needed medical benefits when doesn't really help you.
shop because
yell at
They scolded this
is
it
The union
come
in.
But
it
was union and
a lot
if
you
are
owed your
of times when you go there,
you. Like in our case, they treated us very badly.
us,
basically a
[It's I
I
runs ads and press releases in
"Why did you done
deal."
take so long to
They
come
here? Look,
say they're going to help you,
but things drag out and you never hear from them again.
phan
the
down
was pregnant. But the union
the newspaper that they have a hotline, and
they just
came and closed
November, then closed
I
Ho ma
a hassle].
heard from some friends that the boss was out of
told them,
"These workers don't speak
a
in
ILGWU/UNITE,
We went to the union first, but the union didn't
had stayed
hard-earned pay,
Empress Fashion
pay them $60,000 in back wages.
failed to
April 17, 1993, the federal authorities
shop.
do
approached
at
jail.
He
word of English. What
41
Holding Up Half the Sky
do you think back in I'm
jail?
still
money.
they're going to
Even if I go
very angry
to
jail
Do you
do?
think they can put
at this boss.
He
took our sweat and blood
67
who were
In the Streetbeat Sportswear case, workers
UNITE
buffed by
took
First the pressers
and got
come like
me
I'm not giving them a penny back!"
in
their claims to
here and
to CSWA. After that they talked to people me and other seamstresses and told us to too. We came, so now here we are. We felt
came
talk,
to us
tractors paid
was not
our
in fighting for
demonstration,
stration.
to Lisa,
touch with
what the boss did
and united
CSWA. According
also re-
rights.
.
.
We were very
some workers $25
we were
We went to every rally, every
to
come
to their counter
picketing and giving
pressure they were afraid that their business
They were looking
active
manufacturers and Sears. Streetbeat con-
at the
Because
fair..
for
ways
them
all
demonkinds of
would go down.
to sue us.
A lot of young people came out to support our campaign because they saw how our boss was treating us a lot of pressure.
how we
unfairly.
A lot of the garment bosses were
We were under
all
talking
about
were troublemakers.... The bosses put our names on
blacklist [of the Kings'
County Apparel Association].
In June 1998, sweatshop owner Jian
Wen
and arraigned for 31 counts of criminal labor
a
68
Liang was arrested
violations. In
October
1999 the Manhattan Supreme Court dismissed Streetbeat's $75 million
"SLAPP"
(Strategic
Lawsuit Against Public Participation)
against workers, Chinese Staff and
suit
Workers Association, National
Mobilization Against Sweatshops, and Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund.
Victories Against McClintock
One ers
of the most
began
Company, laid off
at a
visible
sweatshop
and
in
and Gifford
effective actions
by garment work-
Oakland. In 1992 the Lucky Sewing
a subcontractor to fashion designer Jessica
Bo
McClintock,
Yee, Fu Lee, and their co-workers without paying back
wages owed. The
women
were shocked when they discovered that
dresses for which they were to have been paid $5 retailed for $175
Sweatshop Warriors
42
each. Similar to a
number of emergent
Bo Yee had experience
in
leaders in other campaigns,
workplace actions before immigrating to
the United States. She had also attended leadership training sessions
organized by Asian Immigrant the layoffs
Women Advocates (AIWA)
before
hit.
The Lucky Sewing Company garment workers joined with
AIWA to launch a campaign against Jessica McClintock in September 1992.
At
the
women were
first
demonstration
at
corporate headquarters, the
wore Halloween
so afraid of being blacklisted that they
masks. Soon, they stopped wearing the masks.
Besieged by protests, on December 17, 1994, Jessica McClintock offered a "charitable donation" through the Northern California Chi-
Garment Contractors Association
nese ers
would
their
the
sign a contract releasing
—on
the condition that work-
McClintock from responsibility for
back wages. Then on January
8,
names of workers who refused
1994, the contractors published
to sign in the Sing Tao newspaper,
an act tantamount to blacklisting them. The
women two
only grew
The
tactic backfired.
more angry and determined. In March 1996,
sides finally reached a settlement that included
payment of back wages, an education fund
for
the
an undisclosed
garment workers, a
scholarship fund for garment workers and their children, and a bilingual hotline for workers to report any violations of their rights in
shops contracted with McClintock.
Former home healthcare worker Lew Ying Choi
AIWA
for support in
to attorney
winning back wages.
Eugene Pak
at the
AIWA
Employment Law
also
went
introduced
Center.
On
to
Lew
Octo-
ber 19, 1994, the Labor Commissioner ordered Lew's former employer to pay $53,820.24 in back wages, interest, and penalties.
The
employer appealed the Commissioner's decision and the two parties reached a settlement for an undisclosed sum. 69
Workers' centers have also seen successes of runaway shops. Garment workers
wear and toiled 12
MSL
Sportswear shops in
in getting
at the
Laura
&
New
York
City
money out
Sarah Sports-
commonly
hours a day, seven days a week, under a union contract ne-
gotiated by
UNITE Local 23-25, producing garments
Lee Gifford, Jaclyn Smith, and Tracy Evans
labels.
for the
Kathy
WTien the boss
43
Holding Up Half the Sky
told workers not to
come
they got suspicious.
When
in
November
1997,
worker saw the boss
starting to
move
in over the a
weekend
the machines out at night, she alerted coworkers, the union, and
CSWA. CSWA
organizer Lee Yin
The workers were thing.
so smart.
Wah
They knew
recalled:
the boss
was up
to
some-
We was We brought a lot of cars and people stayed in the cars all helped the workers stake out the factory
at night. It
so cold. night.
On the second day the union and the police came. When the workers told the police what happened, the police said they couldn't erty,
ion
do anything, because the machines were
and that workers had said, "yeah,
yeah."
to
go
private prop-
to the labor department.
The workers got
The un-
They had
very quiet.
spent the whole night staying out in the cold, and then they had to stand there and watch the machines being taken away. the union didn't
over to our
do anything
office.
to help them.
They
said
So 90 workers came
We didn't have enough chairs for people to
sit!
(Laughs)
We told the workers that they needed to go to court to get an order to stop the boss from selling the machines. This was important because if the boss got rid of the machines,
wouldn't be enough
were owed,
right?
money left to pay the workers
We
maybe
the
there
wages they
helped them go to the state attorney gen-
The garment workers network helped build a lot of support for the workers. Through their own experience they learned that they have the power if they work toeral's office
and do a big
case.
gether to defend their rights.
70
After a two-year battle with pickets, community education
—
in-
cluding production of a play that was performed in the East Village
—and
court action, in January 2000, the workers
settlement of $400,000.
won
a
71
Workers' Centers Build Bridges Annie Lai worked 60
to
70 hour weeks sewing garments for the
Donna Karan label (DKNY) at a garment shop in New York City, unionized by UNITE. Despite the long hours, weekly salaries averaged $270.
Sweatshop Warriors
44
being in prison. If
It felt like
we were two minutes
docked one half-hour of our pay. all
the time once
we
machines and
all
the
end of the
padlocked.
No
was
No going to the bathroom calls,
back for the second time, close.
phone
call
But
help, a
sponsibility
workers
at
Lai's
her
DKNY
the contract, forcing the
With
CSWA
and
DKNY calling for corporate re-
On June
2000, on behalf of Lai and
7,
DKNY subcontracted shops, the Asian American Fund
action lawsuit
filed a class
for failure to pay overtime to workers forced to
work 75-hour weeks,
in
some
"CSWA really helps," and
After Lai tried to win her job
ill.
co-workers.
campaign against
Legal Defense and Education against
No
72
courage in standing up to the boss and the
was launched.
other
was often
from her daughter's school
DKNY pulled
manufacturer emboldened
NMASS's
it
not even for emergencies.
informing her that her daughter was
shop to
—
water, with the drinking fountain broken.
fired for receiving a
73
talking
rows and rows of
They checked our purses before we
did.
day.
making or receiving phone Lai
A big room with
of us looking down. Three surveillance cameras
watched everything we left at
We had to No looking up. No
started working.
Can you imagine?
to anyone.
we were keep our heads down late
cases for
below minimum wage. 74
she says. "But
fighting. If I don't fight,
CSWA's
it
really requires
me
going
help would be of no use."
and a movement infrawhen unions fail to address
Bilingual, bicultural workers' centers
them
structure to support
workers' needs. "If a lish
little
are crucial
kid goes to school and doesn't speak
and has an Asian teacher
right?" says
Jenny Chen.
bridge. Imagine
how
that speaks the language,
"It creates a bridge. Well,
these workers could
CSWA
Eng-
it
helps
is
like a
communicate with the
CSWA." CSWA, AIWA, and immigrant women worker organizers recognize the need for women to have family support for their activoutside society about their issues without
some family members fear reprisals from employers and women's activism detracts from precious family time and
ism. While feel that
household
women's
responsibilities,
others
provide
crucial
support
for
activism.
AIWA has sought to organize the children of garment and elec-
45
Holding Up Half the Sky
tronics workers. AIWA's Youth members have been learning the
Build Immigrant
Power
leadership training, workplace outreach to immigrant
Amy Kwong
fundraising.
because
I
wanted
issues
women, and
organized her fellow Berkeley High
School students to boycott Jessica McClintock. "I
worker
Project
of community organizing,
tools
first
joined
to be involved in helping to fight for
AIWA
garment
and do something positive for the community," says
Kwong.
My mom is a garment worker and I have seen and heard about the day-to-day issues in garment shops. AIWA is important because it
allows the garment workers a place to
problems
in their
workplace that
come
to
when
they have
their bosses are ignoring.
makes the community aware of the
AIWA
unfair treatment towards gar-
ment workers. 75 Similar to a
number of other leaders, CSWA's Wu Wan Mei had
prior organizing experience in her
home
country. She
was
active in
revolutionary youth and educators' groups throughout China's tur-
bulent post-Liberation years.
Her
CSWA
staunch women's liberationist
who
stresses the
nizing both
friends admire her as a
importance of orga-
men and women.
In terms of women's position,
I
have to say that the situation has
never changed. People always look
modern world we women should
down on women. But
stand up for our rights.
in the
We are
We face a lot of pressures. Raising chiljob. Women have to go out there into the community to work and survive economically. Women make up half the world and hold up half the sky. We have to break down the old backward ways. We must continue to fight for responsible for the family.
dren should be seen as another
women's
liberation
ing is
and
rights.
we face in organizwomen. Because of the extremely long hours women work, it There
are
many
obstacles and challenges
a big challenge to bring
time crunch with so
work
is
people together.
much work and
Women
are in a real
responsibility.
Women's
never done. But we're beginning to open up some space
in that area.
We also organize men. We reflect the whole commu-
nity, multi-trade, multi-issue,
workers
ment, and restaurant industries.
It's
in the construction, gar-
not right to
just
organize
Sweatshop Warriors
46
women. Men
listen to
they have to
talk,
spect as workers.
women
Every time
in this organization.
I
We encourage people to have mutual re-
listen! 76
"We Women Must Stand Up Now!" Lin Cai Fen immigrated to the United States in October 1987.
Formerly
a teacher in
housekeeper a
butcher
Guangdong
in a convalescent hospital while her
at a
meat market. She
making only $1 an hour
AIWA
at piece rates.
As
Cai
Fen
May
in
Copenhagen
shops.
first
Louie,
World
about conditions in
to testify
learned about
now
a retired
Social
Board,
Summit
US garment
With catchy Chinese proverbs always on the
tongue, Cai Fen has written stirring appeals calling for
AIWA while
her husband attends
AIWA
sweat-
of her
tip
community
support for garment workers' struggles. Her mother-in-law active in
as
garment industry
member of AIWA's Worker Membership
a
Cai Fen traveled to the 1995 United Nations
as a
husband works
started out in the
through her mother-in-law Sun
seamstress.
now works
province, she
is
also
gatherings,
and
her son helps do outreach to workers in the sweatshops.
During an animated meeting, Cai Fen
member
listens as
an AIWA board
laments that the Japanese, Koreans, Latinas, and African
Americans are more united than the Chinese. Another member says that Chinese people only
"people that
who
just
worry about themselves,
whip the snow from
IVe got snow on
my
roof." Cai
their
as in the saying,
door steps do not mind
Fen chided her fellow board
members. Let's not get too disappointed with Chinese people. is
also a
in the
Chinese organization.
work
they've
We
Look,
CSWA
should have some confidence
done and the work we've done,
too.
We
should be looking for better methods to organize more people.
We need to wake up the masses. Three thousand Chinese workers in New York demonstrated to open up construction industry jobs Each organization has its own strength Our members need to meet people from we can share these experiences. We all
to people of color in 1992. that
we can
learn from.
other organizations so
need
to start
somewhere.
Now I'm
learning English so
I
can be more effective in
this
Holding Up Half the Sky
when people
society.
Before
them,
couldn't say anything.
I
yelled at I felt
me
47
for not understanding
just terrible.
Now
at least I
know enough to say, "Hey, why don't you help me learn?!" Unless we fight for our human rights, we can never change our
fate.
But the most important thing
is
that we, as
immigrant
human rights and link our arms other workers, immigrants, women, poor people, minorities,
workers, should stand up for our
with
the homeless, and everyone else that
We women must stand up
now!
life.
Chinese and Mexican workers almost simultaneously en-
tered the rock
bottom of the US labor market with the 1848 annex-
ation of Mexico and the 1849 rush to a half later as
"from
Mexican by
fighting for a decent
beyond the borders of Chinatown
Lin's call to action echoes far barrios.
slavery
is
77
Chinese immigrant can't see in the
sisters
Gold Mountain.
women
morning
A century and
fight against
sweatshop
to can't see at night," their
staunch the hemorhaging of tens of thousands jobs
NAFTA.
Chinese garment workers and
AIWA
activists picket Jessica
corporate headquarters in San Francisco.
Photo by Tu-Minh Trinh (1992)
McClintock, Inc.
Sweatshop Warriors
48
BoYee Seamstress, Janitor, was born
I
Kong when
Guangdong
in
We
band, (laughs)
big
that
crowd gathering
portant decisions. see. It
to
was laying
I
I
went
It
marry
a blind date.
me in China. Actually, what happened
bed reading
in
Hong my hus-
to
had already met
old. I
were kind of matched up through
Then he came back was
province, in China.
was around 20 years
I
AIWA Organizer
outside.
a
famous novel when
My big sister
used to make
turns out that she had brought a
I
heard a
all
the im-
man
was kind of like checking out the goods! Well,
for
me to
at that point,
my sister had already decided we should get married, so I did so during my second year in middle school. First we were engaged for about a year. there
were
My
husband
of short
a lot
is
At
ten years older than me.
women
around.
that time
My husband jokes
that he
could have just grabbed anyone, but he decided to go for a
woman like
My first
moving early,
self
so
when
now.
was
I
got married
1
I
was
still
young
1
went to work.
sew
for a big place.
958,
Two
when
I
was
1
7 and had
my
We were married for two years before My husband did not want to have kids too
20.
Hong Kong. we took some precautions
started to
shops.
I
to
because
Kong in I
kids are old
child
taller
me.
then. I I
at first. Plus I liked to
As soon
as
enjoy my-
we moved
to
Hong
haven't stopped working since then!
changed around to a lot of different
of the shops folded. The
first
department that they were going to close
one did not
down
tell
because
it
the labor
happened
The second one knew beforehand. When the boss was going to close down secretly, we found out and sent a letter to the Department of Labor. That made the boss so scared that he started so suddenly.
to
meet with the workers. In the next incident at that same shop,
we workers were not
happy about the holiday pay they were giving us. Holiday pay used be calculated in relation to our the boss unfair
wanted
to just
pay us a
salary, flat
to
divided by 21 days. But then
HK$20
to $30.
Because
this
was
we sent a group letter to the Department of Labor again. I was
not a leader in
this case,
but
I
learned a lot through this experience.
49
Holding Up Half the Sky-Interview
my
Especially in
team
department we worked
was not
If the price
spirit.
right,
group and had high
as a
we would
negotiate with the
supervisor. If we didn't get what we wanted, we would
The boss would come running after
just
walk out.
us to get us to go back to work.
Hong Kong, even at that time. of immigration of new workers from
This was an unusual situation in Afterwards, with the rush
China, the bonds of solidarity were broken and undercut.
you work with
come
of people from mainland China,
a lot
together as a team.
for shortcuts to get
Maybe
this is
hard to
due to some of the
political
from mainland China
history there. People
Whenever
it's
are practical.
They look
what they want rather than working together
over the long term to make change. Since I've
work
come
together. In
to the
my
US,
I've
found that people can't seem to
experience, seven out of ten
from mainland China. Maybe
this is their first
job sewing.
here. In
China they were farmers plowing the
feel like
making $1
is
is
a lot
One
here are
They learn
land. That's
why
they
of money and that finding any work
to jeopardize their jobs.
two kinds of psychology among people from mainland
I've seen
China.
a day
They don't want
precious.
women
is
very frugal, economical, and hard working.
ond doesn't work hard because they didn't have China and got off to
Hong Kong also
to
eat snacks in the afternoon.
have had a more comfortable
The
sec-
work hard jobs in
Some people from
life.
When
they
first
You just look at all those hard working people and you wonder how you are going to make enough money to live and get accustomed to this way of life. My first job was come
at a
here
it's
very hard to adjust.
white guy's garment shop. The older immigrants there worked
with a bowl of rice in front of their machine. They'd just work and eat,
work and
eat. I
thought
be easier to go back to
it
was
terrible
and that maybe
it
would
Hong Kong.
Now I've adjusted to the work. I've got three jobs —one sewing, one
as a janitor,
and one
even counting the work I
started
grated to the
I
as
an organizer with
do
at
AIWA. And
I'm not
home!
month after I got here. I immiUS because of my two sons. They were not going to be working
at a factory a
Sweatshop Warriors
50
happy
Hong Kong
in
not want to
come
after the
US
working
started
I
the
at
come in 1985. Lucky Sewing Company
Working there was
like
dows were
They wouldn't
had
locked.
My
1997 changeover.
husband did
but he did
June 1986.
in
being a prisoner in a sealed cage. All the winlet
you go
to the
bathroom. They
"No loud talking" signs posted. There were about 20 of us
working ten hours a day, seven days a week,
there
endlessly, without rest.
Most of the workers were from mainland China, although some came from Hong Kong and there were a few Latinos. The boss' wife created a tense, competitive atmosphere between the workers. She
would praise some people and downgrade perience,
not as
I
They would
skillful.
to catch up. I hated the
sacrifice their
way
the boss
Because of my ex-
who
are
lunch and break time to
try
made
one department who had
three of us in
would push us
to see
who
ple to exploit themselves. I
others.
can work faster than newer workers from China
couldn't
could finish
to
us compete. There were
produce 200 pieces. They
They were
first.
How disgusting!
hate
I
getting peo-
this!
communicate with the Latino workers, but you can
have fun without speaking each other's language. use body language and whatever Latinos were better.
We
You
method you can. The
were not forced
motion.
You
relations with
compete with each
to
other. I
thought America was a very advanced country, but working in
sweatshops here,
compared bosses. It
to
I
see that the garment industry
is
Hong Kong. I see workers exploited by Chinese me feel very sad and unhappy. I feel like we should
makes
be standing up for our rights and doing something. people in the public
Hong Kong write letters.
guage.
I
is
know what
my
is
my
I
can do what
mind. But here
can help
need to
let
me
speak
I
I like. I
can
do not have the
lan-
my
mind, of course I'm
it.
The Lucky Sewing Company workers got boss's daughter called the police
They
We
going on in the sweatshops.
country. There
can speak
Now if someone
going to do
pay.
very backward
are the ones that
police to kick us out!
when
the
on us because we wanted our back
owed
Can you
so angry
us money, but they
believe
it?
We
still
used the
tried to tell the police
51
Holding Up Half the Sky-Interview
how unfairly we had been treated so the
down the address of Department of Labor and drew a kind of map for us. First we went to Oakland Chinese Community Council [OCCC]
for help.
Someone
at
they wrote
OCCC said they could help us file a complaint
with the Department of Labor, but after that
was
a
member of AIWA and had
ment Program
class
discussion gave
when we Our case
shops.
me
I'll
a very strong impression
I
never forget the
of AIWA. So
ran into problems at Lucky Sewing
it
That
rang a
Company.
plays a very important role in the fight against sweat-
It is setting a
precedent for other workers to step forward and
bring forth their grievances.
are very
AIWA.
talked about the distribution of profits.
gether, especially people
who
to
attended the Leadership Develop-
about the garment industry.
workshop where we bell
we came
good
It is still
who do
very difficult to get people to-
know each
not
other.
Even people
friends get scared to criticize the bosses' actions.
They worry about themselves and their own families and are afraid to come out to protest. I think the campaign has already affected the contractors. They are not treating workers as harshly as before. They
know to
they'd better behave themselves. For example,
change the shop to paying by piece
because of me, since he knows
I
rates,
am
my
boss tried
but was hesitant to do so
involved in the [Garment
Workers Justice] Campaign. I
think
AIWA can improve its work by organizing a wide variety
of activities to bring more people
in.
Let the people talk about their
broad experiences. Let them pinpoint where the problems
from
there,
how
are,
and
to organize themselves to solve these problems.
me for sticking my neck out like this. This my sons and my husband believe that I am doing the right thing. They agree with me. (laughs) Perhaps my husPeople have
is
criticized
the Asian mindset. But
band would even push harder because we share
similar
ways of
thinking.
—Oakland, May
17,
1994
Sweatshop Warriors
52
Kwan "Annie"
Oi
Lai
Garment Worker, Campaigner against DKNY was born
I
in
Hong Kong in
passenger vans that carry
mom worked in a
factory
came
when
province. I'm not sure
born
there.
they
lived in
US
in 1998.
Pun Yu, Guangdong
to Hong Kong, but they Hong Kong, and we were all
moved
residents, got married in
We
My
for radio batteries. I'm
to the
parents were born in Dai Luck,
were long time
one of those
six to eight people, like a small bus.
making packaging
the oldest of five children; another
My
My dad drove
1953.
Kowloon, near the
airport.
We
always saw
the airplanes flying overhead.
went
I
I've
working when
to school until fifth grade. I started
12 in toys. First
I
made packaging
and
for toys
worked in the garment industry
for
also
I
was
sewed samples.
more than 20 years. The
fac-
Hong Kong mostly get business from American, Canadian, or European companies; at my factory we got work from all three. I tories in
did a lot of sample sewing.
We made underwear and stuff. The label
was pretty well known.
my
my parents because our family was very poor. At that time in Hong Kong we had to pay money to go to school. [Her eyes water.] I couldn't study long because my mom didn't have the $8 a month it cost to go to school. Mo chin [no money]. gave
I
So
that's
was
all
why
I left
better for
until
salary to
all
early to start working.
my
brothers and
sisters,
Because
I
was working
and they were able
Hong Kong
factories are not as
For instance,
it's
bad
as
New
York; actually
not as crowded as here. Also the
much pressure on the workers like work overtime, they paid you. sewing when I was 17 or 18, in 1969 or 1970.
bosses aren't putting as
when in the
garment industry
in 1979.
I
here,
and
they had you started
I
that's
go
middle school. After that they started working, too.
pretty good.
time
to
it
it
Then
I
was easy
sewed to
working
Hong Kong until I immigrated
for a
come
how I ended up started
in
French company
to the
US and
1
worked
to
Canada
in Montreal. At that
apply for a green card. So
over here. in
Chinatown garment
factories right away.
Holding Up Half the Sky-Interview
home
I've taken samples
When
I first
came over
to
to
work on and
Chinatown,
me
ada the boss was already giving
by the piece, but if you didn't sew
53
sewed
I've
in factories.
didn't like
I really
it.
$7 an hour (Canadian).
fast
In Can-
He
paid
enough, he would give you $7
anyway as the minimum. But I exceeded
that so
about $8 an hour. Every year in the summer
could usually
I
we
make
got off two weeks
vacation and also two at Christmas. Canada also has a five-day work-
week. After coming over here, fore in Canada.
Oh,
I
thought about
didn't like
I really
it
how life had been be-
here!
New York's Chinatown really kills you! When I first came to New York, a friend of a friend working in a Chinatown garment factory said that there
In one week
I
ing in Canada.
was
at night.
make
was
The
at first.
in 1982.
We
kind of
My husband works
it
to stores.
Our daughter Winnie was in 1991. The whole time
was born
New York, I've lived in Brooklyn.
I feel like all
hard
goods. In Brooklyn there are factories that
tofu and he delivers
I've lived in
really
factories are dirty, really filthy.
me and my husband
in 1988; Jennifer, this one,
Because
it
for a year or so before getting married.
as a driver, delivering
born
went. But
to $160, much lower than what I was makAnd you would go to work at nine in the morning and
friend introduced
went out
I
made $150
not get out until seven
A
a job so
these last few years have been the worst, the hardest.
these
undocumented Fuk Chau people
are coming,
and
they will just work day and night because they have to pay back the money they owe for their fares. The bosses especially exploit them. When we go to work at nine and leave at seven the boss is not all that happy that we're working a short number of hours. I see so many Fuk Chau people working until nine or ten o'clock at night. They still
don't want to leave. So, the boss likes those
workers more and doesn't nerable. They're very in
like us
undocumented
because he knows they're so vul-
— some have
young
left their
children behind
—and now we're older. We can't work those kind of long We have families here. Even getting off at seven, by the time
China
hours.
you get home
it's
eight-something.
Before in Midtown hardly anyone worked on Saturdays. You'd
be afraid
if
you had
to
work on Saturday
that
someone might
take
Sweatshop Warriors
54
your purse or something. But
is
now these last
competing for
When
jobs.
sometimes the boss would
first
I
of other people
I
started
it, it
working
My East Points
to work.
doesn't matter, I've got a lot
[factory]
calls at
there six or seven years.
boss fired
work
—even
me in
if your
But sometimes
they were smaller, would get fevers and
my
1997
my husband
fainted but
as
an example to
kids get sick.
I
worked
kids, especially
stuff.
My
and ask about what to do, but they wouldn't time
Midtown,
in
come
can hire."
workers not to get
One
Everybody
there.
with us to
really plead
Now they just say, "If you don't do
call
or seven years, Oh!
six
many Latino and Chinese workers up
there are so
let
when
husband would
me take the call.
no one was supposed
to call
me.
When my daughter got a high fever and the school said, "We have to call your mom," my daughter said, "No! Her boss is mean and will get mad about it." They tracked me down via my social security number and But right.
I
called.
also feel the boss did a lot of other things that weren't
For instance, she would pressure us
"Don't
raise
your head.
to
keep our heads down.
From when you start until you finish your One woman pulled her spine because
work, put your head down."
of
this.
They locked
the bathroom, too, and wouldn't let us use
Also, in the summertime, the water fountain broke.
They
it.
didn't get
someone to fix the thing for two weeks even though it was so hot. Maybe they wouldn't let us drink water so then we wouldn't have to go
to the
bathroom
at
all!
One time when they laid off a worker, the person went to the labor department, sued, and won some of their money back. After that the boss came in and pressured all of us to say that we had accepted cash and forced us
all
to sign these papers.
Everyone was
mad if they didn't sign, but no one knew what the paper said. But when the boss ordered them, everyone quickly signed. Because I don't speak English, I didn't know afraid that the boss
would
what the paper
and
didn't
want
said
to sign
it
I
get
didn't sign
or one day
I
to
come
to
I felt
that if
it's
not
clear, I
might run into a problem. Several
dozens of people signed it, everyone
and people
it.
else.
They got all
these foremen
my machine to try to pressure me. I
said,
"No
55
Holding Up Half the Sky-Interview
I
want
to take
says. If
it
it
"No! You
said,
home and look at it more before I sign it." And they You can't take it home. We'll just tell you what
can't.
you don't
sign
then you don't have to work here." So
it,
they were always using intimidation and
felt like
all
I
kinds of tactics to
pressure and control us.
When there
I
was
first
November 1998, how we were before among
reinstated to the factory in
was nothing unusual.
It
was
like
the workers. People were friendly and asked
then the next day on
No
day.
November
one paid any attention
how
10th, the change
to
me. As soon
had been. But
I
was
like
as they
night and
saw
would avoid me. Ahhh! At lunch time everyone would from me.
It
would
just
be
me
just the Chinese; the Latinos
that the big boss
cause
it
didn't
at
all
one
eat
And
they
away
it
wasn't
me too. So I got the
feeling
table
avoided
by myself.
me
and the foremen were controlling everything be-
make
sense that even the Latinos
would be
like this
toward me.
They said they were
closing the factory
had opened
found out
that the factory
went back
to the factory to get
all
the rest of the workers.
who were I
went
there
on December 31,1 998.
again.
On February 4,
my W-2 form
at
lunch time and saw
Everybody was working,
on December
31st
to talk to the boss. I said,
when
1999,
the factory
all
those people
was
closing.
"Don't play with me!" She
So
said,
"Leave!" don't
I
know how
long they had been open; probably always.
The boss has two company names. One was Couture, and one, Choe. They closed the Choe company. Couture continued to operate, but I don't know when they actually called the workers back. I kept
this
newspaper ad from February 3rd
people. After reading the newspaper,
covered everyone was working
I
that said they
were hiring
went back on the 4th and dis-
there.
my boss a lot of opportunities but she doesn't want to me down, shoving me down, but I have to condnue fighting. Some people got mad at me because I've given
meet
me
halfway. She keeps putting
the boss told them,
"Oh, wages used
Now
it's
totally paid
want
me
to
to be paid half cash, half check.
by check because of her." The boss doesn't
win because
if I
go back
there, she can't
commit any
Sweatshop Warriors
56
more tem
she can. This abusive sweatshop sys-
illegal actions; if I lose,
not
is
right.
On January 4th
had gone
I
boss had just closed the factory.
nothing
we can do about
manufacturer,
DKNY,
it.
to the
union and told them that
The union people
"Oh,
said,
time so
the manufacturer
me
for suing!
why shouldn't I be
that, isn't that directed at
is
mad
at
your boss and
The union
go
better get a lawyer to
hundred
ple
So
"My
I said,
boss didn't pay for over-
suing them? If they are closing
me?" The union
of the money they owe you yet?"
rest
there's
Because you're suing the boss and the
not giving them any work. So your boss had to close."
was blaming
my
after
it.
asked,
said no.
I
down like
"Did you get the They told me I'd
How come every year we pay a cou-
dollars dues but the
union doesn't even help us?
It just
helps the bosses.
At
didn't
first I
know
Department of Labor
come
to
to
CSWA because I went to
to complain. This Chinese person
was
the
trying
me get my overtime pay and took my case. After finding out that I'd gone to the Department of Labor, the boss gave me a 1099 to help
Form
for $6,000.
My
boss was going to use
this
Form
1099
back at me for suing, saying I'd have to pay a lot of taxes. so I
I
called
do.
are
He
Mr. Chun
said,
working in
boss
is
at the
a
union
doing an
factory.
ally
me
this
Lai. You're a union worker. You You shouldn't get a 1 099 Form. Your
to
go
cash.
I
I
said,
UNITE
to the
said, "Right,
1099 Form. In
angry and upset.
me
afraid
illegal thing."
Local 22, the business agent
giving
was
Department of Labor asking what should
"Don't worry Mrs.
Mr. Chun told
posed to get
I
to get
asked
if
"Why
fact,
my
office.
you got
When I went
cash. You're sup-
you should pay
taxes."
boss wasn't the one
aren't
to
I
was
re-
at fault for
you saying anything about
my
The union told me they couldn't do company was controlled by an "evil force." I got really angry. So I called Mr. Chun at the Department of Labor again. Then he told me to go to CSWA and said, "They might boss doing anything wrong?" anything because the
ask you for a I
can afford
little it,
money." But by then
I will
March or April 1998,
pay." But since
I
I
was
furious.
started
they've never asked
me
I
coming
for
told him, "If to
money.
CSWA in
If this asso-
57
Holding Up Half the Sky-Interview
would
ciation did not exist, things
mine who would help us? Look not
like a lot
of power.
from the boss, don't
I
I
me,
at
know where
can go. I'm
I
be bad
just
we
With
When
I
a case like
fighting;
it's
got the letter
home crying and saying, "I But if we have CSWA sup-
at
lost."
can do a
off.
one person
don't speak English.
could have just stayed
porting and helping us
After
really
lot.
CSWA and NMASS sent letters to Donna Karan demand-
ing that she take responsibility for the sweatshop conditions of her
subcontractor, not only did she not take responsibility, she pulled
out
all
her garments and took them someplace
name,
how can it have this kind of sweatshop
clothing to rich people.
make on my
salary. It's
poor people
to wear.
to accept this kind
ments
a
week.
I
I
mean,
I
can't afford any
more than $1,000
of sweatshop system?
was
careful in
ments for thousands of and Chinese workers
factory?
my work
I
of the clothes
I
Why do we have
used to sew about 80 gar-
because they
The Koreans got
dollars.
They sell
for a garment. It's not for
was making $6.50 an hour.
I
causing the fac-
had no work. This company has such
tory to close. Seventy workers a big
else,
sell
these gar-
paid $7 an hour
Latinos did the cleaning, pressing, and
less.
hand work, and got the lowest wages. So
in
May 1999 we had a press conference in front of the Donna
Karan headquarters seven of the Latinas
telling
who used to work with me came we
our campaign. Together
of
everyone what happened. After
that,
out and joined
held another press conference in front
DKNY in June. Since then many other garment workers, young
women, and
students have also supported us, and
we picketed a new
DKNY store in August. Other DKNY garment workers are similar conditions
facing
and coming forward. Then we had a big meeting
November with women workers and students where we talked how we need to fight back. We all picketed her store again. We are saying to Donna Karan that she has to take re-
in
about our case and
sponsibility to reinstate
owed, that
all
all
of
us,
her clothes will be
that 75 percent of her clothes be
to us for the treatment
we
pay the wages and damages we're
made in factories obeying the law, made locally, and that she say sorry
suffered
making her
clothes.
Sweatshop Warriors
58
I
feel like
Hong Kong is
cess to control
to fight.
and intimidate workers.
is it
such a bad system? this
It's just
kind of
this
outrageous!
pressured me, pushed
really
me
pro-
I just
to
have
Because the conditions in the factory and the way the boss
DKNY has treated us were so bad,
hope we win fight
why
such a big country that they have
is
This time they
feel so angry.
but
such a small place that you wouldn't have
treatment. But Meigivo
and
US now,
I'm in the
this
campaign so
I
have
that other
felt terrible
women
pressure.
see that
I
we can
and win.
My husband has supported me all along the way. But my mom is yelling at ily
to get
me.
Why? Because the boss is putting pressure on our fam-
back
worry about my fluenced by
Ehhhh!
My
at
me.
My mom
mom. I
my mom's
feel like
lives
thinking
two daughters
with us in Brooklyn.
what I'm doing is I
right. If I
I
can't
were
in-
wouldn't go anywhere, [laughs]
are really
mad
at the boss.
They
say,
"Don't mess with our mom!"
—New York City, March 28, 1999, and April 2, 2000
%NV
Chinese and Latina workers, protest to a
York
City,
Photo by
DKNY
November
CSWA
CSWA, and NMASS
take their
subcontracted shop on 8th Ave., 29, 2000.
New
59
Notes to Holding Up Half the Sky
1
National Mobilization Against Sweatshops, 1999b.
2
See
3
Peter, 1987:151-154 on the 1982 strike by 20,000 New York Chinatown garment workers; Lam, 1 976; Yung, 1 986:290; interview with Bea Tarn Dong and Harvey Dong, May 4, 1997, on the 1974 garment workers strike against the Great Chinese American (Jung Sai) Company, owned by Esprit de Corps and the Lee Mah electronic workers strike against Farinon; interview with Lorajo Foo, April 11, 1997 on the Jung Sai garment workers strike and 1980 San Francisco hotel workers strike.
Salaff, 1995; Asia Monitor Resource Center, 1998a; China Labour Education and Information Centre, 1995.
Kwong,
Wu Wan Mei, March 26,
4 5
Borchard, 1995:117-122.
6
Borchard, 1995:122.
Interview with
Women
7
Chinese
8
Schadler, 1995:128.
9
Horn, 1992a:173-191.
10 11
Salaff, 1995;
24 25
26 27 28 29 30 31
999.
Borchard, 1995:121.
Hook, 1996a; Hook, 1996b; Mei, 1984; and
To
Interview with Linda
March
12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23
Investigation, cited in
1
of
Solinger, 1999.
Hong Kong Women Workers
Association,
15, 1996.
Interview with
Wu Wan Mei, March 26, Wong, August
Interview with Helen
7,
1
1
999.
990.
Interview with "Lisa," March 30, 1999.
Bo Yee testimony, May 1, 1993. See AIWA, Kwan and Leung, 1998:191-241.
1995a:6.
Salaff, 1995:xvi-xxiii.
Asian Migrant Centre, 1996b.
Committee
for Asian
Lee, Ching
Kwan,
Tsang,
1
Women,
1995b.
1998; and Salaff, 1995:xvi-xxiii.
994: 1 25-43, cited in Salaff,
Solinger, 1999;
1
995:xviii.
and Spence, 1990:673-74.
Asia Monitor Resource Center, 1996.
Kwan
and Leung,
1
988: 1 92.
China Labour Education & Information Centre, 1995:2-9. The Chinese government calls this labor reserve the "floating population." Kwan and Leung, 1998:203, 191-241. Interview with
Chan Wai Fun, June
Interview with Lee Yin
Kwan and
25, 1990.
Wah, October
24,
1
996.
Leung, 1988:203.
Hing, 1993:36. Hing, 1993:48. See also Yung, 1986 and 1995.
Compared
to previous
and educational
waves of Asian immigrant laborers, the higher income of the more professional and wealthy strata of
levels
Sweatshop Warriors
60
newcomers and
their children later
gave
rise to the
"model minority" myth of
pan-Asian upward mobility.
32 33 34 35 36 37
Kwong,
Peter, 1987:5.
Hing, 1993:81. Interview with Helen
Interview with
Wong, August
1990.
7,
Wu Wan Mei, March 26, May 1 8, Fen, May 7,
Interview with Jenny Chen,
Testimony of Lin Cai
1
1999.
997.
1995, in Center for
Women's Global
Leadership, 1995.
38 39 40 41
Strand and Jones,
Kwong,
44 45 46 47 48
49 50 51 52 53 54
985:28, cited in Hing,
1
993:283.
Verhovek, 2000: Al. See
Kwong,
1993:20; and
42 43
1
Peter, 1997:1-7.
Peter,
1997; also 1994a:25-29 and 1994b:422-425; Ying Chan,
Warren Hodge, 2000.
Kwong, May
Interview with Peter
21, 1997.
For an example of the view of the Chinatown garment industry as an example of ethnic resiliency, see Zhou, 1992.
May
Interview with Jenny Chen,
18, 1997.
Center for Economic and Social Rights, 1999:5.
Kwong,
Abeles, 1983:23-25; also see
Peter, 1987:30.
Center for Economic and Social Rights, 1999:5.
Bonacich and Appelbaum, 2000:171. Bonacich and Appelbaum argue that ethnic subcontractors, particularly Korean owners who employ mainly Latina/o workers, play the role of "middle minorities," buffering white and Jewish manufacturers and retailers from the Latina and Asian sweatshop workers toiling in post-Rodney King LA. Bonacich and Appelbaum, 2000:181 and 218.
Angwin, 1996:C1.
Houston Chronicle
Service, 1994:23A; Gerlin, 1994:B1.
See Bonacich and Appelbaum, 2000:184-187.
Sweatshop Watch, 2000:1-3.
Sweatshop Watch presentation at "Sweatshop Labor on the US Marianas Islands" Community Forum, February 3, 1999, UNITE office, San Francisco.
55 56 57 58 59 60 61
Bonacich and Appelbaum, 1994:177-181. Interview with Helen
Wong, August
Interview with Jenny Chen,
Interview with
May
7,
1
Wu Wan Mei, March 26,
Interview with Oi
990.
18, 1997.
Kwan "Annie"
Lai,
1
999.
March
28, 1999.
Interview with "Lisa," March 30, 1999.
Testimony of Helen Wong at community hearings on health problems Asian immigrant communities, April 20, 1990.
Amy
62
Interview with
63
Interview with Lee Yin
64
Interview with
Amy
Xie,
March
29, 1999.
Wah, October
Xie,
March
24, 1996
29, 1999.
and March 29, 1999.
in
61
Notes to Holding Up Half the Sky
65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73
Interview with Lee Yin
Interview with Lee Yin
Wah, October 24, 1 996. Wah, March 29, 1 999.
Interview with Jenny Chen,
May
Interview with "Lisa," March 30,
Asian Immigrant
18,1 997. 1
999.
Women Advocates,
Interview with Lee Yin
Wah, March
2000b.
29,
1
999.
Chinese Staff and Workers Association, 2000. National Mobilization Against Sweatshops, 1999a.
See the Center for Economic and Social Rights, 1999, for a detailed analysis
of the specific violations of the workers'
rights
and the
manufacturer, subcontractor, government agencies, and
74
culpability
of the
UNITE.
Greenhouse, 2000. Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund. 2000.
75 76 77
Amy Kwong,
1998.
Interview with
Interview with
19,1994.
Wu Wan Mei, March 26, 999. AIWA Workers Board members, including Lin Cai Fen, April 1
PODER
Viola Casares and Petra Mata of Fuerza Unida and Geri
Almanza of
demanding corporate
San Francisco.
responsibility at Levi's headquarters in
Photo by Pamela Chiang (1998)
Chapter Two
Mujer Luchando, Mundo Transformando! iLa
El
Women Workers
Mexican Immigrant At
their
November
Dia
de
Los Muertos [Day of the Dead] celebration on
1994, las mujeres [the women] look gaunt but on a The women are members of Fuerza Unida, the organization they created with their own hands and hearts when Levi Strauss & Co. laid them off and ran away to Costa Rica in 1990. They have trekked all the way from San Antonio with sleeping bags 1,
spiritual high.
to
haunt Levi's plaza and corporate headquarters
in
San Francisco,
California.
So
that
CEO Robert Haas will hear their cries
sponsibility loud
and
clear, the
women
shout
for corporate re-
at the
tops of their
lungs, /No tenemos hambre de comida; tenemos hambre dejusticial [We're not
hungry for food; we're hungry for their 21 -day rolls]
ers.
hunger
justice!].
strike savoring the miracle
and steaming cups of coffee carted
Their comadre
[girlfriend]
revolutionaries]
Pancho
who
Villa, the soldaderas
in
Puerto Rican
these huelgistas de hambre [hunger strikers]
new
feet as
their
by
of pan duke [sweet
their
activist
many
support-
Luz Guerra
calls
las nuevas revolucionarias [the
picked up where Emiliano Zapata,
and
adelitas
[women
panions] of the 1910 Mexican Revolution
Throwing back
The women gendy break
soldiers
and com-
left off.
heads in laughter, they clap and tap their
QMQ2.no poeta / musico / activista Arnoldo Garcia serenades them
with his
new
rendition of a traditional Mexican song:
63
Sweatshop Warriors
64
La Fuerza Unida
En
los /rentes de liberation
de este pueblo de trabajadores
Existen mujeres fuertes j
valientes
Existen mujeres que saben luchar
En
ciudadesj campos seforman
dando fuerza j
vision
Son trabajadoras
a
los pueblos
radientes de luchas
Son trabajadoras dejusticiajpa^
Su
culturay trabajo respeten
Con
la fuerza de su dignidad
Son
las costureras pidiendo justicia
Son
las costureras
Son
las despla^adas de la
que saben luchar
Levis
Luchadoras del gran movimiento
Son
las costureras de la
Son
las costureras de liberation
tle
Fuerza Unida
As Mexico's former dictator Porfirio Diaz lamented, "Poor lit2 Mexico, so far from God, so close to the United States." Mex-
ico's fateful
proximity to the developing "Colossus of the North"
3
has long shaped the destiny of its working people and the national, race,
and
States
class
formation of the United
annexed half of Mexico's
States.
territory
Ever since the United
by seizing Texas
in
1836
and launching the Mexican- American War (1845-1848), Mexican workers have served the
bumps and
as a giant labor reserve
potholes of
2,000-mile border with the
its
US economic
and shock absorber for 4
development. Sharing a
powerful neighbor to the north, Mexico
is
3
homeland of an estimated 40 percent of US immigrants. Migra-
tion to the United States also serves as a safety net for Mexico's eco-
nomic and a year,
political system, yielding remittances
one of the
along with the
oil,
largest sources
of at
least
$6 billion
of Mexico's foreign exchange,
tourism, and maquiladora industries.
6
Chicana labor historian Vicki Ruiz says that Mexicanas crossed
{La
65
Mujer Luchando!
the border as "farm worker mothers, railroad wives, and miners'
daughters" to join male relatives recruited by those burgeoning industries during the spate of post-Civil
War US industrial expansion. 7
Especially since the 1920s, Mexican immigrant women and
US-born
Chicanas have emerged as the backbone of many of the lowest-paying,
most back-breaking jobs
orado, Arizona, and shelling,
Illinois,
in Texas, California,
New Mexico, Col-
such as the agribusiness, cannery, pecan
food processing, garment, and domestic service
Mexicana labor migration has
also increased to the
US
industries.
Northwest,
8
Midwest, East, and South. By the end of 1 996 there were 9.6 million Latinas in the United States, including 5.7 million
can origin,
1.1
and another
million Puerto Rican
2.3 million
women
of Mexi-
women, 485,000 Cuban women,
women of Latin American descent. 9 Latinas
continue to have the highest concentrations of workers in "blue col-
and the lowest
lar" operative jobs
in
management and professions
10
among all races of women. The rise in export-oriented production rations along the
US-Mexico border
for transnational corpo-
since the 1960s
and other
as-
pects of economic restructuring have accelerated Mexicanas internal
and
cross-border
labor
revolucion arias started
Many of
migration.
today's
working on the global assembly
line as
nuevas
young
women in northern Mexico for foreign transnational corporations. Some women worked on the US side as "commuters" before they moved
across the border with their families. Their stories reveal the
length, complexity,
and interpenetration of the
economies, labor markets,
histories, cultures,
US and Mexican
and race
relations.
The
women talk about the devastating impact of globalization, including massive layoffs and the spread of sweatshops on both sides of the border. Las mujeres recount what drove
ments for economic,
racial,
them
and gender
to join
and lead move-
justice, as well as the chal-
lenges they faced within their families and communities to assert their basic
human
rights.
The women
featured in this chapter play
leadership roles in La Mujer Obrera [The
Woman
Worker]
in El
Paso, Texas, Fuerza Unida [United Force] in San Antonio, Texas,
and the Thai and Latino Workers Organizing Committee of the Retailers
Accountability Campaign in Los Angeles, California.
Sweatshop Warriors
66
Growing up Female and Poor Mexican
women
and
were
girls
traditionally
expected to do
all
the cooking, cleaning, and serving for their husbands, brothers, and sons.
For
from poor
girls
sponsibilities
families, shouldering these
proved doubly
difficult
farm, sweatshop, or domestic service
"Cuca"
Arrieta, the only daughter
Jimenes, Chihuahua, reluctantly I
stayed
I
went
home because I had
to school
At
third grade.
and
re-
work
simultaneously. Refugio
of farm worker parents in Ciudad school
left
early:
of my younger brothers.
to take care
and finished no more than the
the nearby ranchitos
[little
read and write. Before starting school to read
domestic
because they also performed
I
farms]
first,
second, and
we learned how to
had already learned
how
11
write. I taught myself.
whose mother died heavy housework she did as the
Petra Mata, a former seamstress for Levi's shortly after childbirth, recalls the
only daughter: Aiyeee, I
was
let
me tell you!
It
was very hard. In those times
raised with the ideal that
you have
wash your —cook, make wanted you way they —
thing
house very tell
tortillas,
just the
strict. I
to learn to
clothes,
in
Mexico,
do every-
and clean the
My grandparents
to.
always had to ask their permission and then
let
were
them
me what to do. I was not a free woman. Life was hard for me.
didn't have
much of a childhood; I
or 13 years old.
started
working when
I
I
was 12
12
Neoliberalism and Creeping Maquiladorization
These
women came
the relationship
Puerto Rico,
of age during
between the Mexican and
Hong Kong,
of the global assembly
1965 the Mexican government
Program (BIP)
that set
of major change in
US
economies. Like
South Korea, Taiwan, Malaysia, Singa-
pore, and the Philippines, northern stations
a period
line
Mexico served
as
one of the
first
tapping young women's labor. In
initiated the
up export
Border Industrialization
plants, called
maquiladoras or
maquilas, which were either the direct subsidiaries or subcontractors
of transnational corporations. Mexican government incentives to
US and
other foreign investors included low wages and high pro-
ductivity; infrastructure; proximity to
US
markets,
of the
women worked
Antonia Flores describes her co-workers
where she worked
as purasjovenas
supervisors vjzizpuros varones
[all
[all
life-
13
and garment
electronics
in
maquiladoras before crossing the border to work in
plant
and
facilities,
loopholes; and pliant, pro-government unions.
styles; tariff
Many
67
Mujer Luchando!
;La
US plants. Maria
in the Juarez electronics
young women], while the
male]. Describing her quarter-cen-
tury-long sewing career in Mexico, Celeste Jimenez ticks off the
names of famous US manufacturers who hopped over
the border to
take advantage of cheap wages: I
sewed
name
for twenty-four years
factories
when
maquiladoras. Everyone was
down
Levi
there.
called Blanca Garcia.
status
the
wage
the maquilas because of the un-
I
worker
was born
who
ran a
in
first
Mexico City
little
in 1959.
workshop about
worked
to get a contract
My mom
this size.
brothers. I'm in the middle.
school so tro
Marta Martinez, a
I
mom:
But
got to be a teacher.
...
I
1
Once in a while
had four
I
983,
a seamstress
a maquiladora.
was able
In
was
[She points to Fuerza
area.]
and work for
as a campesino [farm worker].
are ei-
below the "family wage,"
learned to sew from her
Unida's small sewing coop production
was able
—where men
sufficient to support a family.
laid-off Levi's
company might it would be
a
Mexico
in
of male family members
ther absent, unemployed, or earning well i.e.,
in big
and Lee
14
Many of the women worked in economic
Chihuahua
Strauss,
Here
under the brand name of Lee; there
sell
stable
lived in
I
Kid,
the
Billy
like
1
sisters
she
Dad
and three
to finish 12 years
worked
of
for the Cas-
company on this side, making baby clothes. It wasn't hard to I already knew from my mom how to use an industrial ma-
learn.
chine.
15
Transnational exploitation of women's labor was part of a
broader
set
of policies that
critical
opposidon movements
Third World have dubbed "neoliberalism," British Liberal Party's
the rising
program of laissez
European and US
19th centuries.
colonial
i.e.,
the
new version of the
faire capitalism
powers during the
The Western powers, Japan, and
in the
espoused by late
1
8th and
international finan-
Sweatshop Warriors
68
the
rial institutions like
World Bank and International Monetary Fund
have aggressively promoted neoliberal policies since the 1970s.
Mexico served
as
16
an early testing ground for such standard
neoliberal policies as erection of free trade zones; commercialization
of agriculture; currency devaluation; deregulation; privatization; outsourcing; cuts in wages and social programs; suppression of workers', women's, and indigenous people's rights; militarization;
free
trade;
and promotion of neoconservative ideology.
Neoliberalism intersects with gender and national oppression.
Third World
women
constitute the majority of migrants seeking
jobs as maids, vendors, maquila operatives, and service industry
workers.
Women
also pay the highest price for cuts in education,
health and housing programs, and food and energy subsidies and increases in their unpaid labor.
The human economic
17
costs of Mexico's neoliberal
crisis are
program and extended
evident in the 60 percent drop in real
wages between 1982 and 1988 and the 30 percent drop
minimum in internal
consumption of basic grains during the 1980s. 18 In 1986, some 62 percent of the economically active population of Mexico earned
sub-minimum wages. 19 In 1994,
the
World Bank estimated
that 38
percent of the total population of Mexico lived in absolute poverty.
Two
out of five households had no water supply, three out of five
had no drainage, and one
in three
had no
The deepening of the economic
electricity.
crisis in
20
Mexico, especially un-
der the International Monetary Fund's pressure to devaluate the
peso in 1976, 1982, and 1994, forced many the
to
work in both
formal and informal economy to survive and meet their
childrearing
was forced ily,
women
and household
to
work two
responsibilities.
21
Maria Antonia Flores
jobs after her husband
abandoned the fam-
leaving her with three children to support. She had
to leave her children
home
alone,
solitos,
no choice but
to look after themselves.
Refugio Arrieta straddled the formal and informal economy because her job in an auto parts assembly maquiladora failed to bring in sufficient income.
hours
at
We
To compensate
for the shortfall, she
worked longer
her maquila job and "moonlighted" elsewhere:
made
chassis for cars
and
for the headlights.
I
worked
lots!
I
69
Mujer Luchando!
;La
worked 12 hours more or less because they paid you worked more, you got more money.
I
us so
little
that if
did this because the
You have to buy the And I had five kids. It's very expensive. I also worked out of my house and sold ce22 ramics. I did many things to get more money for my kids. schools in Mexico don't provide everything.
books, notebooks,
todos, todos
[everything].
In the three decades following
its
humble beginnings
in the
mid-1960s, the maquila sector swelled to more than 2,000 plants
employing an estimated 776,000 people, over 10 percent of Mexico's labor force.
largest source
23
In 1985, maquiladoras overtook tourism as the
of foreign exchange. In 1996,
petroleum-related industries
counted for over US$29
in
this sector trailed
only
economic importance and
ac-
4
The
billion in
export earnings annually.
maquila system has also penetrated the interior of the country, as in the
case
of Guadalajara's
assembly
electronics
Tehuacan's jeans production zones.
25
industry
and
Although the proportion of
male maquila workers has increased since 1983, especially in auto-transport equipment assembly, almost 70 percent of the workers continue to
As
be women.
26
part of a delegation of labor and
human
rights activists, this
author met some of Mexico's newest proletarians
nous
—young
indige-
women migrant workers from the Sierra Negra to Tehuacan, a
town famous
for
its
refreshing mineral water springs in the state of
Puebla, just southeast of Mexico City. Standing packed like cattle in the back of the trucks each
morning the
sewing for name brand manufacturers (producing Lee brand clothing), The
like
women
headed for jobs
Guess?,
VF Corporation
GAP, Sun Apparel
(producing
brands such as Polo, Arizona, and Express), Cherokee, Ditto Apparel of California, Levi's, tion
members
that their
12-hour work days, to
do
six
and others. The workers told
US
delega-
wages averaged US$30 to $50 a week for
days a week.
Some workers
reported having
once or twice a week. Employees often
veladas [all-nighters]
stayed longer without pay
if
they did not finish high production
goals.
Girls as
young
as 12
were searched when they
and 13 worked left for
in the factories.
lunch and again
at the
Workers
end of the
Sweatshop Warriors
70
day to check that they weren't stealing materials.
when
tinely given urine tests
were promptly
Women were rou-
hired and those found to be pregnant
fired, in violation
of Mexican labor law. Although the
workers had organized an independent union several years Tehuacan's
Human Rights Commission members
told us that
Carmen Valadez and Reyna Montero, long-time Mujer Factor
social justice
X in
had
activists in the
movements, helped found Casa de La
1977, a workers' center in Tijuana that organizes
around women's workplace, reproductive, and health against domestic violence. Valadez
and Montero say
wages and dangerous working conditions
rights,
and
that the
low
characteristic
of the
maquiladoras on the Mexico-US border are being "extended to eas
it
27
collapsed after one of its leaders was assassinated.
women's and
earlier,
all ar-
of the country and to Central America and the Caribbean.
NAFTA gion."
represents nothing but the 'maquiladorization' of the re-
28
Elizabeth "Beti" Robles Ortega,
who began working
in the
maquilas at the age of fourteen and was blacklisted after participating in independent union organizing drives
now works as AC (SEDEPAC)
border, Paz,
tion].
on Mexico's northern
an organizer for the Servicio, Desarrollo y [Service, Development and Peace organiza-
Robles described the erosion of workers rights and women's
health under
NAFTA:
NAFTA has led to an increase in the workforce, as foreign industry
has grown. They are reforming labor laws and our constitution
more
to favor even
our labor
from us
free organization
Because foreign
we must have
capital
shamelessly.. are
.
is
now
unfair against
is
trying to take
away
which was guaranteed by Mexican law. investing in
Mexico and
is
dominating,
The government is just there with its always had them out but now even more
guarantees.
hands held out;
women
foreign investment, which
For example, they are
rights.
.
it's
Ecological problems are increasing.
—
coming down with cancer
skin
A majority of
and breast cancer,
leukemia, and lung and heart problems. There are daily deaths of
worker women. water and the in
Acuna and
You
air.
can see and
As soon
as
you
feel the
arrive
Piedras Negras [border
and
cities
contamination of the start
breathing the
between the
states
air
of
jLa
Coahuila and Texas], you sense the heavy •
•
vomiting.
71
Mujer Luchando!
air,
making you
feel like
29
X
Like Casa de La Mujer Factor
in Tijuana,
and the
women
workers' centers and cooperatives whose work the Frente Autentico
delTrabajo (FAT) has prioritized especially since 1992, also participates in national
networks of Mexican
SEDEPAC
women
workers
such as the Red de Trabajadores en Las Maquilas, which meets annually in different cities in the northern border region, as well as in
binational networks like the Southwest
and Economic Justice.
Network
for
Environmental
30
Maquiladorization Accelerates Migration
Many of
the Mexicanas migrated to the United States in a
two-stage migration process, similar to
many of
the Asian
workers. Migration to the northern border region offered
proximity to family
members working on
the other side, and after
the initiation of the Border Industrialization tential
employment opportunities
women women
Program
as well. Patricia
in 1965,
po-
Fernandez-Kelly
has suggested that by recruiting mainly young female workers, the
border maquiladora program ended up drawing even more migrants to the border, yet failed to reduce male farm workers'
ment caused by termination of the Bracero Program government had
originally planned.
Many
border eventually cross into the United
unemploy-
as the
Mexican
migrants to the northern
States.
31
For example, La Mujer Obrera organizer Irma Montoya Barajas
was born she
in the central
Mexican
moved with her parents
father
found work
nine brothers and
state
as a carpenter while her
sisters. Similarly
the central state of Zacatecas, but
when
of Aguascalientes. At age ten
to Juarez in northern
Mexico, where her
mother took care of her
Maria Antonia Flores was born
moved
with her family to Juarez
she was eight years old. There her parents found
working in maquilas,
restaurants,
Fuerza Unida traces her roots to
and
as
Nuevo
little
village
of Bustamente,
odd
jobs
food vendors. Petra Mata of Laredo, Tamaulipas, across
from Laredo, Texas. But she and her parents were the
in
actually
born
in
Nuevo Leon. They moved when
they could no longer survive through farming, and Petra's grandfa-
Sweatshop Warriors
72
and
ther
many Mexican and Chinese immigrant men,
father, like
got
jobs working for the railroad.
Over time Mexican migration networks have become more
re-
Antonia Flores explains that while many
gionally diverse. Maria
workers migrate from areas adjacent to the border: People come here from almost
Mexico the
to find
nation
work due
to the
all
of the
states in the
south of
economic problems throughout
and precisely because
of the
of
pull
all
the
maquiladoras located on the border. So every day people arrive
at
the maquilas from the south looking for work and trying to better their struggle to
survive.
But they find
Around here many people come from
nada [nothing].
nada,
Coahuila, Durango,
Zacatecas, and Chihuahua, but over there in Tijuana, there are also people
almost
all
from Chiapas, Oaxaca, San Luis Potosi,
of the
states.
that
is
to say
32
Alberta "Bed" Carino Trujillo, a dedicated organizer for the hu-
man
rights
commission
in
Tehuacan, Puebla,
the southern coastal state of Oaxaca.
originally
comes from
With her mother and
siblings,
Carino struggled to survive in Oaxaca while her father worked as a migrant laborer picking oranges up in California.
Carino
anxious to
is
make
contact with
US
immigrant and
workers' rights groups to develop an information network. She and her co-workers teach a night school for garment workers and their children in Tehuacan.
on
The human
rights
workers are concentrating
the fight for better wages and working conditions locally, and
against
toxic-waste
dumping and water contamination by
the
maquilas, lack of childcare and educational opportunities, domestic
and
street violence,
pecially
among
unwanted pregnancies, and high
single mothers.
information about what
They
life is like
also
for
want
stress levels, es-
to provide accurate
immigrant workers in the
United States to dispel any illusions potential migrants might have. 33
Indeed the information "grapevine" extends into the farthest corners of Mexico. In the colonia [newly
built,
ban settlement] of Nezahuacoyotl on the
members of a
local
poorly served, subur-
outskirts
poor women's group shared
the United States during a visit
of Mexico
their
City,
knowledge of
from international participants of
a
]La
73
Mujer Luchando!
November 1989 garment workers' conference in Mexico City. Many
women were themselves internal migrants to
of the
est city fast
the world's larg-
and they proudly told conference delegates of a
free break-
and milk program they developed so that poor children would
not go to school on empty stomachs.
A Chicana activist's description of her work with immigrants in Los Angeles, unleashed an animated exchange with the Mexicana colonia organizers.
"Chicago
is
bad place
a
Mexican workers."
for
"Don't go to Fresno, they already have too many Mexicans; you can't find a job
does not
like
anymore." "Orange County
Mexicans."
"Go
cousin got a job there, and she for her
very conservative and
Washington
to
likes
it
so
to pick apples.
much,
she's
My
going to send
34 two daughters." Perhaps some of such Mexicana organiz-
ers contributed their experience to the
ton's apple orchards.
the Border
United Farm Workers Union
Mexican immigrants
efforts in the 1990s to organize
When
is
in
Washing-
35
Was Just a
Bridge
between Neighborhoods The wide variety in the immigration and citizenship
women and their family members
status
reflects the permeability
der that workers of Mexican descent have criss-crossed since
nexation in 1848. After centuries of relatively free the region, only in 1924 did the
US government
of the
of a bor-
US an-
movement within create the
Border
Patrol and the notion of the "illegal alien," thus transforming Mexi-
can workers into potential fugitives of the law unless they could
se-
cure official permits. Yet employers escaped responsibility and often
used the fear of deportation to lower the wages of undocumented workers.
36
The period from World War marked the
first
big
I
until the
wave of migration when
Great Depression
the
US government
launched a contract-labor program for male migrant workers, the predecessor of the Bracero Program. cruitment efforts states
initially
targeted
37
Mexican government
men from
re-
the central western
of Michoacan, Jalisco, and Guanajuato. These workers served
as the links
of migration chains stretching between
rural
Mexican
Sweatshop Warriors
74
communities to ies
from
all
the
US
specific
Mexican
farms and towns.
38
Over
states contributed to the
time, tributar-
flow of Mexican
workers across the border.
The elder relatives of many of the women interviewed for this book had worked in the United States, especially as farm workers, railroad workers, States or
and miners. Some had been born
had become
US
in the
United
citizens at other times in their lives, yet
continued to migrate across the border in both directions. For example, Celeste Jimenez was born in the northern state of Chihuahua
Yet she
in 1939.
My
father
explains:
was born
in Candelario, Texas,
Blanca. I'm 100 percent Mexican.
and
my mom was
and two boys.
I
My
and
father
my mom
worked
in Sierra
raising cattle
There were ten children, eight
a housewife.
was born in Mexico. I'm the
third oldest
girls
among the
My dad was a US citizen. My mom was a Mexican citizen. She was born in California but lived in Chihuahua most of her life. My mom's parents came here [to the US] in 1942. In 1964, my mom kids.
and dad came here too, but they didn't work anymore because they were getting too
old. In 1982, 1
I'm a permanent
came here directly from Chihuahua.
legal resident.
Similarly Maria del
39
Carmen Dominguez
describes the peripa-
wanderings of her farm worker father and
tetic
moved
how
her mother
closer to the border, anchoring the family:
My father was born in California and lived and worked in Mexico many, many years. to
Los Angeles
other jobs.
and
He also worked in El Paso, Texas and traveled
to
work
in the fields with
machines and doing
My mother was born in Chihuahua, Mexico.
raised four children.
She stayed
in
She bore
Ciudad Juarez most of her
40 life.
Although Carmen "Chitlan" Ibarra Lopez was born hua where her father worked
as a
miner and her mother
in
Chihua-
as a
home-
maker, she traces her cross-border roots to her grandparents' generation: I
became
US citizen through my mother because my the US. She was born in the US but she went
a naturalized
mother was born
in
jLa
back to
live in
Mexico.
What I heard was
Revolution [1910-1920] nia.
They went
cotton.
Wasco. while.
My Me
to
75
Mujer Luchando!
that during the
my grandparents came
Wasco. They were farm workers. They picked
mother and her brothers and
my
and
Mexican
to live in Califor-
sister lived
sisters
with one of
were born
mom's
in
sisters for a
41
Following the
trail
of Mexican migrant
chili
workers, long-time
Juarez residents Alicia and Carlos Marentes packed up their belong-
and crossed the international bridge separating Juarez and El
ings
Paso in 1971. After serving ion, they helped
Paso ful
a stint in the
Texas Farm Workers Un-
found the Border Agricultural Workers Union in El
in 1984. After a
decade of struggle, the union opened a beauti-
workers
who
auction system to
toil
center in 1995. This shelter acts as an oasis for
are hired through a humiliating
human
chili
New Mexico under a haze of toxic pesti-
12-hour days in Texas and
cides at temperatures that alternate
between scorching and
freezing.
Women and undocumented workers get paid the lowest of the low, averaging a scant $5,300 a year, while even male workers with docu-
ments earn only $6,000. Alicia coordinates classes
where
women
learn to
make handi-
when
they can find
during the dead season
crafts that they
can
no work
Her friendly face clouds with sadness as she many of the campesinos Carlos and I started working
sell
in the fields.
reminisces, "So
with back in 1980 have already passed away because of their hard lives.
We have
that workers
are to
lost
whole generadons of farm workers." Carlos
must become
improve
their lives.
visible within the
manizing and criminalizing these workers. "I
remember when
broader society
Yet the anti-immigrant backlash
the border
He
is
if
says
they
dehu-
shakes his head saying,
was nothing more than
a bridge
you
crossed from a poor neighborhood to a richer one. That was before they started enacting
all
the anti-immigration legislation, rounding
immigrants, and militarizing the border." Ironically,
ment of people
and some is
edented flow of
up
42
insist intentionally,
cross-border move-
increasingly restricted precisely during an unpreccapital, trade,
culture, especially since the
goods, services, information, and
enactment of the North American Free
Sweatshop Warriors
76
Trade Agreement
(NAFTA)
and environmental
proven
a total disaster for
During NAFTA's were
lost.
1
994. According to immigrant rights
a
first
Arnoldo Garcia,
NAFTA
has
Mexican workers, farmers, and small busi-
more
ness people and spurred
Mexico grew by
in
justice activist
migration:
year and a half, the
whopping $4
billion
US
trade deficit with
and some 80,000
Mexican workers' wages declined 40
US
jobs
to 50 percent, rav-
aging their buying power. While the cost of living has risen by 80
percent in Mexico, salaries only increased by a mere 30 percent.
Mexico's inflation rate runs over 51 percent; 2.3 million Mexican
people have lost jobs and the peso has been severely deval-
ued
—from
March
3.1
1996.
gone belly-up
pesos to the dollar in January 1994 to 7.6 pesos in
Over 20,000 in the face
And NAFTA's much ments have proven
to
small and
medium
businesses have
of increased multinational competition.
touted labor and environmental side agree-
be weak and
ineffective.
4
The Clinton administration doubled the budget of the INS after NAFTA. The 1996 "Illegal Immigration Reform and Im-
enacting
migrant Responsibility Act" then mandated hiring another thousand
border patrol agents. According to the Urban Institute, only four out of ten individuals
who
US
are in the
illegally
crossed the south-
ern border while the other six entered with legal visas as visitors, students, or temporary employees expired. tact
who
when
failed to leave
their visas
These immigrants have documents and have been
in con-
with the INS. Only about one-third of the undocumented pop-
ulation
from Mexico. Yet 85 percent of
is
all
the resources of the
INS, including the Border Patrol, are trained on the border with
—
Mexico
reflecting
both
racist
backlash against Mexican workers
and the INS's evidendy unquenchable hardware.
thirst for
money and
military
44
Mexico's extended economic
crises
prompted
a
major demo-
graphic shakeup in migration to the United States. These stresses forced
previous traditions of
and middle
new
workers from large industrial urban centers without
classes;
US
migration;
more people from
and more women, children, and
risk crossing the border. Political scientist
the urban
elderly people to
and immigration expert
Wayne grants
77
Mujer Luchando!
jl_a
Cornelius dubbed this new,
los
migrantes de la crisis*
5
more heterogeneous pool of miCommenting on the utility of the bor-
der to politicians and employers, La Mujer Obrera organizer
Carmen It's
Ibarra
like
reflects:
very hard for us as Mexican workers to understand the line
the border.
on
Lopez
I
think that's
why nobody has
the border's workers because
another world
kinds of problems
really, really
on
put attention
a very different situation. It's
it's
when you come through El Paso. we are seeing workers come in with
I
think the
are not just
because of the lack of good opportunities, but also because of a
lot
When I say discrimination, it's because we have a lot of members who under the amnesty law have a perfect right to come to the US and become citizens. 46 of discrimination.
Feminization of Migration
Women do not always migrate or stay home based on male family
members' unchallenged
decisions, but
sometimes play the
princi-
pal role in initiating migration. In her insightful study of the
immigration of undocumented Mexican workers, sociology professor Pierrette Hondagneu-Sotelo warns that contrary to popular stereotypes, extensive research families suggests that not
all
on Chicano and US-based Mexican
ization
by uniformly
families are characterized
extreme patriarchy. Although sexism
and women's growing
role as
persists, she says that
urban-
income earners have begun
to
erode male dominance to varying degrees, and that traditional social relations
and
cultural resources neither disappear
nor stay the same
but are being constantly reshaped through the processes of migration
and resettlement. Indeed, women
47
made decisions
to cross the border
ety of circumstances, including invitations relatives,
and
I
came
to El
family.
their partners, other
Some initiated the move themselves. For exCarmen Dominguez decided to move from Juarez
Paso because she got
my
a vari-
friends.
ample Maria del to El
from
under
At
Paso
in
is
of commuting to work:
1972 because
that time
another child that
tired
I
I
needed to work to support
had two children. Eight years
my baby right now who's
1
later
8 years old.
I
I
had
came
Sweatshop Warriors
78
to
work
in the factories.
I
was
1
5 years old
when
I
was pregnant
my first boy and I got married when I was 1 7, almost 1 8 years old. I met my husband through friends and the family. He worked in the construction of houses and putting up fences. When I was
with
living in Juarez, I
worked
for
two years
in El Paso, crossing the
bridges everyday from Mexico. That was too hard so to
come
to live in El
Paso and
crossing the bridges,
Mata
Petra
I
I
we
decided
stayed here. During the time
was coming to work in a garment
I
was
factory.
48
began working in the United States
also
cross-border commuter. She started working as a maid
was 12 or 1 3 years old after the quent abandonment by her
tragic
as a
when
she
death of her mother and subse-
Although she worked hard and
father.
scrubbed floors on her hands and knees, she only made $10 a week.
She
recalls,
highest pay
"During the
five years I
worked
for the
same
ever got was $16 a week." Later Petra
I
family, the
moved
to the
United States permanently after she got married. She and her hus-
band took up
their friends' invitation to
come,
first as
mented immigrants. Later Petra and her husband got US to
"have a voice, a right to vote."
undocu-
citizenship
49
Lucrecia Tamayo, a garment worker and leader in the Thai and
Latino Workers Organizing Committee of the Retailer Accountability
Campaign decided
make
to
Guerrero to Los Angeles
the big
move from Acapulco,
after her marriage failed.
During her "stop-
over" in Tijuana, that famous "travelers advisory and transit center," she secured the tion
on
means
to
make
the crossing and picked
up informa-
possible job leads in Los Angeles, the metropolis with the
second largest Mexican population in the world,
on a female
Lucrecia relied
relative, the
after
Mexico
City.
well-developed migrant "un-
derground railroad," and a waiting job market: I
got married in Mexico, but the person
bad, so
I
moved
(laughs)
I
came by
Oh,
it
was
scary!
I
married was treating
here 15 years ago in 1982. elcerro
[
I
came by
through the mountains], with a coyote.
There were so many people,
I
was
in the front
with the driver, and over there, a mountain of people. driver
I
And
was very nervous about running into immigration.
had one
sister
came
who was
to the
me
myself,
I
the
only
living here.
United States because
after
[my former hus-
band]
left, I
had
a
Los Angeles.
months was
after
I
I
had
I
here,
heard about
they teach you.
sister for
this
to
new life. about a
working
Mexico
told us
I
my
parents'
came
year.
all
get. If
straight
About
garment.
in
six
When I
word of mouth.
kind of job by
work you can
here, about the kinds of it,
to find a
started
I
The people who came back about
my
lived with
coming
in Tijuana
to take care of. It wasn't
little girl
obligation to raise her. So to
79
Mujer Luchando!
{La
about
how life is
you don't know
50
Working al Otto Lado [on the Other Side] Until recently able to land jobs in ilar
to
lished
women who
crossed the border were frequently
El Norte [the North], often performing work sim-
what they had done
Mexico. Arriving in such well-estab-
in
Mexican immigrant communities
and Los Angeles, the women found jobs even before they
settled
El Paso, San Antonio,
as
fairly quickly, in
permanently in the United
some
States.
cases
They
heard about work through family members, friends, and neighbors.
Women changed jobs as they got adjusted to US working conditions and "learned the ropes." After moving from Juarez to El Paso with her husband, Irma Montoya of La Mujer Obrera got a job working as an electronics assembler and inspector at a plant that made thermometers:
My cousin's husband told me about the job. 1987
until they laid us off in 1995.
I
I
worked
there
made good money
from there,
$6.30 an hour and the working conditions were good, too. But in
1995 they shut us
400 of us
who
down and moved
lost
our jobs.
ing for 20 years making Tony
work
as a janitor.
to Mexico.
There were about
My husband lost his Lamas boots.
job after work-
Now he can only find
51
Maria del Carmen Dominguez heard about jobs through the grapevine. After as she gained I
worked
commuting from Juarez, she changed
more experience and for 15 years in
Rudy's Sportswear where
worked
for
one year
at
learned what was available:
garment I
to better jobs
factories.
worked
The
for almost
first
five years.
Emily Joe and almost nine years
Industries as a seamstress.
one was
at
I
CMT
Sweatshop Warriors
80
My friends told me about the job in the first factory. minimum wage
got paid
sometimes up
At
to $5.50 or S6 an
the other factories
overtime. In the last
I
hour because
some
holidays.
The
shop
I
worked
CMT, we
at
was so
went bankrupt. The second one was ugly!
I
didn't like
it,
so
I
think
I
got paid more,
was by the quota.
some
small. It
benefits, like
expanded, but
their contracts
a small factor}',
(laughs).
I quit,
I
didn't get paid for
I
got
problem about wages and
then they had a
it
was paid by the hour.
factors', at
vacations and first
one
there. In the last
but
it
and
it
was too
32
Tina Mendoza of Fuerza Unida started working in Mexico
when
she was 16
United
States,
it
first I
did not like
so
I felt
really
it
here.
I
here. First
as
maquiladora
job:
come from a family that is very close I made friends I got used to the
alone here. After I
got a job working with chemicals that they put on
animals [insecticides] for about two years. After that
working
to the
took her some time to adjust and find the right
At
life
came
years old as a secretary. After she
a
cook
Then
frying chicken.
After that
factor}*.
I
stayed for eight years until they laid us off.
I
got a job
got a job
working
started
I
at
a
at Levi's.
I
33
many US-born Chicanas who work in low-waged indus34 Viola Casares, a alongside Mexican immigrant women, third-generation Chicana, started out doing farm work. Her father had picked cotton in Lubbock, Texas, and worked in Arizona. Over Like
tries
her husband's objections, she eventually landed a sewing job: In a year first
[after getting
the fields.
matoes.
my
married
daughter Sandra. After
We went
When
I
to
job packing onions..
kids
let
home
I
went back
to
.
.
My
I
my
work
used to get morning sickness
husband was
real
macho and
in
toat
jeal-
me work. I was supposed to stay home. The
were grown and going
stayed
got pregnant, then had
months,
Michigan and picked strawberries and
was pregnant
ous and would not
at 18] I
six
for a while.
to school.
...
Because of his jealousy
But the children
really
I
needed extra
things.... I
[started]
months. Then
work[ing] for Farah making pants for a couple of it
was the same thing again with
[began] harassing
me
until
I
quit.
But
I
really
my
husband.
needed
to
work.
He He
had started drinking. I
was
work and I
began working
I
going to have a secure
finally
that
was not going to
I
could make a better
Levi's
thought
I
and support us
we
our
lost
do?"
It's
it
jobs. I
I
let
home and
could
at Levi's in
job.
1980.
1
told myself that
I
him stop me
again.
thought I
had
that
I
some
retire
would be
time.
But
was so worried, "Wow, what
so hard being a single mother.
able to
At
work
of a sudden
all
are
to
With work
get things for the kids....
would be okay,
until
81
Mujer Luchando!
jLa
we going
to
55
Wages, working conditions, and benefits tended
to
be better
at
the larger factories than the smaller shops. For example, even
though the Farah Manufacturing Company in El Paso was the
target
of a major struggle and national boycott by the Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers
Union (1972-1974),
as a large factory
of
some 4,000 workers, wages and working conditions were better than what women had experienced in Mexico or in smaller US shops. 36 Carmen Ibarra Lopez learned about job openings at Farah through her younger It
sister.
was good pay
an hour.
I
at the time.
The minimum wage I think was $1 .60 We worked in very good condiFarah on Gateway was in a new build-
got paid by the hour.
tions especially because the ing.
was there when the
I
pay too much attention. ferent.
I
just
strike began.
remember one day
workers walking out.
And
I
it
even though
I
noon
at
was
asked "WTiat's going on?" But tion about
why
think
was
it
it's
not
just
don't give out as
until
just
remember
I
we
lunch time
didn't have too
worked
now
at
I
didn't
inside.
that
I
it
and
informa-
Probably they had a
strike,
realized
much
dif-
saw the
trying to find out about
workers' or union committee to lead the That's
I
of all, in Mexico everything was
First
but
how
I
don't know.
unions work.
I
because the unions select a few workers, but they
much information as other organizations do, like
La Mujer Obrera does. Yes,
that
is
what you need,
a lot
of infor-
mation.
Despite low wages and
less
than optimal working conditions,
many of the women expressed satisfaction w ith being able to work outside their homes and contribute to their family's well-being. Thev T
were proud of
their skills
and job performance and enjoyed the
Sweatshop Warriors
82
friendships and camaraderie they developed with their co-workers.
Refugio Arrieta worked in a variety of restaurants and garment facEl Paso:
tories in
maybe about 100
The garment
factories
small to me.
worked at Tex-Mex International. They made
I
worked
I
were
as a seamstress,
small,
people.
an operator. They paid us the
It's
jeans.
minimum
by the hour. Sometimes we worked overtime. There were no ben-
Sometimes
efits there.
when I put
hours
cause that's four years. all
how
worked 40 hours
I
At
in overtime.
it
was before they
We were all friends
schoolmates.
the last
a week,
one
closed.
I
sometimes 50
was 20 hours be-
it
worked
there, (laughs) It
was
Tex-Mex
at
like
we were
58
Maria del Carmen Dominguez's close relations with co-workers
deepened
as they
banded together
on
to confront the boss
failure to
pay holiday leave as promised:
The
CMT factory was large and busy. I was working very well. It
was comfortable there
I
for
me, and
I
liked
it
a lot.
maybe
1,000 workers.
skilled
work.
others.
We also sewed vests. I
They sew garments
Devon was one of the
sewing men's clothes. ...
I
And I would
love to help the people.
Since she's easily
the for
my
we
area and
say, "I love you, too."
would
We were all
And I would
fight, fight,
(laughs) Yes, that's a long time to fight!
59
now a highly skilled and vivacious organizer, one can
imagine Petra Mata as a highly competent and outgoing
worker before she I
more
more money
(laughs). Yes, elks [they]
say "I love you."
CMT, every day.
in
It's
remember
don't
was the organizer
partners. Yeah.
I
tuxedos.
like
labels. I
think you get paid
had ten women and I controlled it.
fight in
When I was working now they have
think there were about 250 workers. Right
did the hard,
on the
sides
lost
more
of the
her job
at Levi's:
difficult operations, like
For
coat.
sewing the pockets
three and a half years
I
sewed
this
way before they put me on utility so I could do any operation. Then they made me a trainer to teach the new people. I liked working with the girls and helping out. Finally they made
was very happy with
pervisor for eight years.
I
got to work closely with
my
co-workers.
60
my
me a su-
job because
I
jLa
83
Mujer Luchando!
NAFTA the SHAFTA Hong Kong and Korean
Like the corporations
who
workers
transnational
dumped during the second stage of globalization, hunUS manufacturing workers, many of them
dreds of thousands of
women
of color, also found themselves out on the
jobs ran
away
street as their
Mexico, Central America, the Caribbean, and Asia.
to
After the Border Industrialization Program had begun in 1965, the
Reagan administration launched the Caribbean Basin 1983 during the height of US military adventures ica.
Initiative in
in Central
Amer-
US military intervention in and capital export to the region accel-
erated the migration of workers, including Salvadoran, Guatemalan,
women who
sub-
sequently found jobs working in the garment industry in Los
An-
Honduran, Nicaraguan, Dominican, and Haitian
geles,
New York,
and Miami.
Prior to the enactment of nies utilized tariffs
Item 807 of the
NAFTA in
US
1994, US-based
compa-
which specified
Tariff Code,
that
applied only to the value-added portion of products assem-
bled abroad. If US apparel firms cut their garments at
them sewn
offshore, they only had to pay tariff
—which could be very
added by sewing of Third World
women
home and had
on the labor value
small, given the
low wages
workers. Item 807 was principally used to
exploit seamstresses in Mexico, Central America,
because of the region's proximity and the States has exercised in the
and the Caribbean
political clout the
United
hemisphere since the days of the Monroe
Doctrine. Thus, government trade policies effectively encouraged
corporations to take jobs overseas to bolster jectives.
61
US
foreign policy ob-
In 1960, 2 percent of apparel was imported; in 1980, 30
number of US employment peaked
percent; and in 2000, 60 percent. Conversely the
manufacturing jobs plummeted. While apparel in
1970 with 1,363,800 jobs, by 1999 the figure had
696,000.
In
1990,
Levi's,
whose brand name
jeans
synonymous with ers
to
together with
Coca-Cola and McDonald's hamburgers have become
closed
fallen
62
its
the
"American way of
life"
practically
around the world,
San Antonio plant and moved to Costa Rica where work-
earned in a day what the average San Antonio seamstress had
Sweatshop Warriors
84
made
in half an hour.
manufacturing
With
was
women
Levi's largest
some
1,150 mainly
suddenly lost their jobs. Fuerza Unida,
"we were
in 1990, asserts that
early victims
of
NAFTA."
consequences of "free trade"
direct experience in the
Fuerza Unida actively organized against the passage of sporting fly,
"AFTA NAFTA
your greed
company had
is
the
SHAFTA!" and
showing!" picket
signs.
"Levi's,
policies,
NAFTA,
button your
Between 1981 and 1990
back demanding corporate
first
to organize a sustained
administrations alike, begin-
ning with Reagan's, corporation-friendly politicians extolled the
of globalization and
63
responsibility.
Under Republican and Democratic tues
the
already closed 58 plants laying off 10,400 people.
But the San Antonio workers were the fight
US
back organization the laid-off San Antonio workers
fight
founded
factory
the time. Overnight
facility at
Mexican- American the
The San Antonio
vir-
free trade policies while maintaining a
conspicuous silence on the devastating impact of these policies on
workers and
communities. The San Antonio workers' painful
their
testimony gave voice to the economic and psychological trauma
workers go through every single time a plant closes or a company "downsizes."
64
Denied useful
mer Levi's workers
lost
and other
retraining
and peace of mind. Viola Casares says she
ment
Levi's
In
less
company
as I live,
said they
thing I
is
representatives
than 15 minutes, the
As long
had
that
I'll
men
never forget
to shut us
no one
down
will
our whole
man
the white
We
stood there tell
We didn't want to lose our jobs.
cret preparation session
on
closure: lives.
in the suit
The funny like mummies. us in Spanish,
Nothing can
re-
65
Petra Mata says she experienced the trauma twice,
again
mo-
never forget the
in suits ruined
how
homes,
to stay competitive.
said anything.
place a job with dignity.
cars,
announced the plant
heard some people fainted. They didn't even
just in English.
assistance, the for-
not only their jobs, but also their
management convened
first at
a se-
for supervisors,
and
the plant floor with the rest of the workers. Staff were told
to
keep the company's plans secret pending a general announcement
to
all
the workers. Petra recalls:
At
7:30 a.m.
BOOM! they called for a general meeting in the mid-
die it.
of the
plant.
of our
A guy got up on one of the tables and announced
That was something
jHijole!
lives, like
that we'll never forget for the rest
happened
just
it
we
heard the announcement other, crying
85
Mujer Luchando!
jLa
When
yesterday.
started screaming,
everybody
hugging each
and asking, "Why? Why? Why?" But they have
never answered. They never told us why. There was no reason to shut us tas
down
We made good quality clothes and high quo-
really.
May 1 989 we got the $200 we made such high production levels.
every week. In
cause
.
A
lot
feel like
nothing but
They
take
we had
now
nothing.
sends
many
work
machine
get scared.
to
be thrown
How
are
you
house, the kids to eat and go to years of
working for
Levi's, over-
to
some 700 sewing and
From 1997
finishing sub-
to 1999, Levi's closed 29
of
manufacturing and finishing plants in North America, slashing
some 18,500 employees
—
nearly half
Levi's also sacked workers in
of
a
You
66
contractors in 50 countries. its
dignity.
car, the
school? jHijoie! After so
Levi's
be-
how When you lose your job you
remnant,
trash, a
away your
going to pay for the
night
Bonus
of people went crazy because they didn't know
they were going to live without a job.
out.
Miracle ..
human
rights
67
Belgium and France. Over the protests
68
CEO
Robert Haas told the San
most of the work from
Chronicle that
remaining work force.
groups the company announced plans to restart
production in China.
moved
its
the closed plants
to contractors elsewhere in the Americas,
Francisco
would be
most
likely to
Mexico and the Caribbean. 69 In another example of what
March 2000,
Fitch, Talbots,
now means,
in
Brooks Brothers, Abercrombie
&
"Made
Levi's, Calvin Klein,
in
and Woolrich were added
America"
to a class action lawsuit al-
leging violations of garment workers' rights in Saipan, the Marianna Islands, a
US
ment workers
"trust" in the typically
Western
Pacific
work 12-hour days
where over 13,000
gar-
for $3.10 or less an hour,
seven days a week, often without overtime pay. The $1 billion-a-year industry in Saipan relies the Philippines,
on "guest workers" mosdy from China and
many of whom must pay
for a one-year contract to work.
70
a cash
bond up
to $5,000
Sweatshop Warriors
86
El Paso has been also been devastated by plant closures. The
some 10,000 workers in El Paso had lost because of NAFTA by 1998, the most anywhere in the
Labor Department their jobs
United
States.
71
said
For example,
which had been El Paso's
Levi's,
employer, closed three of its
est private
1,400 workers in 1997.
72
On
August
six plants, laying
larg-
some
off
Texas
29, 1997, the Greater
Finishing Corporation, a division of Sun Apparel, Inc., closed
its
El
Paso operations to send production to Mexico, including the
Tehuacan
At
free trade zone.
tracted label
the time
Sun Apparel's
largest con-
was Ralph Lauren's Polo brand. Some 200
workers included veterans
who had
served the
company
laid-off
for
more
than 18 years. In a statement calling for support, the laid-off workers said,
"Most of us were let go with little more than
rections to the
the
more than 7,000 other workers
jobs to
a
good-bye and
NAFTA training and unemployment offices Paso
in El
who
have
di-
to join
lost their
NAFTA and have been unable to get new jobs." 73
La Mujer Obrera (LMO)
is
a
Mexicana/Chicana
women work-
organization founded by garment workers and Chicana/o
ers'
movement
organizers in El Paso in 1981.
passage
the
of
NAFTA,
having
LMO fought hard against
first
hand experience with
maquiladorization enacted under the "twin city" arrangement be-
tween El Paso and Juarez during the Border Industrialization Program. Since
of workers
NAFTA's off by
laid
passage
LMO has organized the thousands LMO says that of the 20,000 dis-
NAFTA.
placed workers in El Paso by 2000, 97 percent were Latino; two-thirds,
women; one
third, single
mothers; 50 percent, between
30-45 years of age with the majority of the rest over 45 years old; and 4,000 were in job training programs. state
74
After a running battle with
and federal agencies, NAFTA-displaced workers
lion extension in
government-funded training
won a $3
addition to the original $4.2 million allocated. But Maria del
Domfnguez of
says that
mil-
for laid-off workers in
Carmen
workers in El Paso remain in a profound
state
crisis:
The economic crisis is the big, big problem right now. The women come to La Mujer Obrera because of unemployment. The factories are closing left and right now, and more of the
jLa
87
Mujer Luchando!
women are becoming single parents. Problems within the families are rising because of this situation. It's hard when women don't have the money to pay the utilities, the rent, or food. When they are confronted with the denial of public services
food stamps.
—no
welfare,
no
75
While workers
in large
and medium- sized plants
to globalization, like their Chinese counterparts,
women working in
lost their jobs
Mexican immigrant
small sweatshops also reported declining wages
and working conditions. Los Angeles, the apparel manufacturing
some 122,500 employees in Lucrecia Tamayo, an undocumented worker from
center of the Untied States, employed
April 1998.
76
Mexico, describes her experience working in Los Angeles sweatshops:
The
day
first
started
O sea [that
24 hours! I
I
working
is
to say], ever since
have worked over 12 hours
without Sundays
ery day.
worked
I
I
I
worked
from 7 a.m.
in this country
to 8 p.m. at night,
siempre trabajando [always, always
off, siempre,
I
place
a day,
was working the whole
earned $100 a week, working from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. ev-
working].
first
I felt like I
in four factories over a
worked
1
5-year period. In the
there were about 30 people, in another about
60. I
worked
20 Latinos working
We were
El
six years in the
there, with
Monte
two-hour break
if I
In the case of emergencies,
child or else the
Much
.
.
There were about
Thai workers in another room.
about $260 a week. Oh, that owner!
Joining the
.
paid by the piece, so the pay varied. Sometimes
year, like for a tor.
shop.
owner would
I
I
had
...
made
used to only get off twice a to take
had to ask
start
I
my child to the docmy sister to take my
screaming
at
me.
77
Movement
of the education and leadership training the
women
re-
The women talked about how much movement had changed them. They
ceived took place "on the job." their participation
in
the
learned how to analyze working conditions and social problems, who was responsible for these conditions, and what workers could
do
to get justice.
was
to
They learned
government
to speak truth to
representatives, corporate
power, whether
this
management, the me-
Sweatshop Warriors
88
They
unions, or co-ethnic gatekeepers.
dia,
ferent kinds of sectors
built relations
and groups and organized
a
with
dif-
wide variety of
educational activides and acdons. Their activism expanded their
world view beyond that of
their
immediate families to seeing them-
of peoples' movements fighting for justice. The women joined the movement through a variety- of routes. Some women sought out workers' centers when they experienced a particular grievance at work. Maria del Carmen Dominguez just showed up at La Mujer Obrera with over a hundred co-workers one selves as part
day.
People packed into the tiny
street.
Workers complained
office,
soon
that the boss
spilling
was
out into the
trying to cheat
them
out of holiday pay promised in the personnel policy. La Mujer
Obrera provided an infrastructure of support their wildcat strike
new
process the organization gained ing
for the
workers during
and negotiations with management. Through
Dominguez. She
leaders
this
and members, includ-
recalls:
We won! They had to give us back pay for our holidays tions, yes, for everything, for
Mujer Obrera before the
all
strike
the workers.
I
and vaca-
knew about La
because their organizers used to
come to the factory, outside the doors, and bring leaflets. So when we had problems (laughs and snaps her fingers), we remembered them.
For
a
8
long time Dominguez
felt
angry that she had not
known
and about what women workers could do to defend their Through her participation in the movement, she developed
the law rights.
her
skills,
leadership,
When
stayed at
I
and awareness:
work
in the factor}',
I
was only thinking of my-
—
how am I going to support my family nothing more, nothing less. And I served my husband and my son, my girl. But self
and
when
I
more
respect for myself.
started
working with La Mujer Obrera
We
(laughs) Pero [but] this also too! (laughs). years. I
He
I
thought, "I need
need more respect for ourselves."
meant big changes
But he supported
me
so
for
my
husband,
much through many, many
died three years ago.
also learned so
much about how
to use the
computer and
communicate with other people because the kind of communica-
;La
tion
you need to work in an organization is learned about the law and
tory. I
89
Mujer Luchando!
with people, whether they were
different
from in
a fac-
I learned how to organize classes men or women like me. I learned
how to
develop curriculum and citizenship materials in Spanish.
made
book, yeah!
a
Dominguez
I
79
also cherishes her friendships with
women worker
organizers from communities across the United States and overseas: I
did a lot of traveling for the organization. This
cause
now I know more
United
how we
good be-
very
are living in the
got the opportunity to meet with other
States. 1
worker women, which
Lucy Parsons
about where and
is
is
women,
very important to me. Projects like the
Initiative [a collaborative
of Mexican, Chinese, and
Dominican women leaders from workers' centers supported by the Funding Exchange]
the
women I
I love And I got to know difwho is doing what kind of work, and who are
are very good.
ferent organizations,
it!
representing these groups.
have also gone to international meetings ....
La Mujer Obrera quake] in Mexico.
good with
so
was the big
in 1989, after there
We
represented
was very
participated in a giant march. It
many women
We
in the streets.
September 19th Garment Workers Union. In other instances,
I
temblor [earth-
women
80
came
first
worked with the
into contact with the
workers' centers through family members, friends, and recruitment
programs and
into specific
Carmen
Ibarra
organized by the centers.
activities
Lopez learned about La Mujer Obrera from her aunt
Esperanza Rodriguez, a veteran seamstress the garment industry and continues to
She invited gan doing
me
to
a lot
come
to the meetings so
of volunteer work, and
Board of Directors and of the Comite
me
group's former director] asked started out, per.
I
I
just
gave away
participated in meetings,
Obrera could attend I
helped
room. to
flyers
I
in ordinary
don't
come and
a
meeting
who
work
I
I
labored 37 years in
as a janitor: started coming.
was
a
I
be-
member of
the
de Ljdcba. Finally Cecilia [the
to
work
When
here....
I
and La Mujer Obrera's newspa-
and when no one from La Mujer I
was
in
charge of going.
And
also
ways, cleaning, mopping, doing the bath-
mind doing it.
I still
see this place clean.
do '
it
because
I
like the
workers
Sweatshop Warriors
90
The confidence and skills women gained while standing up their rights at work spilled over into other jobs. Ibarra adds: I
remember, about
ing his IRS
bills.
She asked us
we
support him. So she said
if
six years ago, Larry, the boss, sent his
She said that Larry was having a
to talk to us.
we
asked
name of Larry if we wanted to
in the
how he wanted us
By
that time
La Mujer Obrera and
I said,
Why?" She
said, "Well, es que
the factory.
You
March
had
I
"No
just
1
991.
become
rest said yes.
to a special
where she worked
became an
organizer.
federal legislators
said,
I
"No
But even with
summer camp
One
Times.
I
way!" So
that
a
he shut
day
that
La Mujer
after the electron-
Mexico. Montoya stayed on and
when
she went to testify to state and
NAFTA
and workers' need
and placement, her picture appeared
in the
83
Refugio Arrieta
came
fled to
about the impact of
for quality job training
New York
it.
he doesn't want to close
Obrera organized for NAFTA-displaced workers plant
member of
a
82
Irma Montoya came
ics
And
to support him.
way! I'm not going to do that]
[it's
can keep your job." But
few of us said no, but the in
daughter
of problems pay-
could work eight hours but he was going to just pay
us for seven hours.
down
lot
for
first
became involved with La Mujer when she
to attend English classes:
came
to classes
ended up
one or two days
staying.
Some of my
here to attend the classes.
demonstrations, president of
a week for
friends
We worked a lot to
we have meetings
La Mesa
Directiva
some
also
help out.
with the politicians.
came
We have I
am
[Board of Directors] here.
ceived the La Mujer Obrera award.
In
two hours each, and I
from the factory
the re-
I
84
cases the organizations conducted systemadc political
education to consolidate a core of
women
worker
leaders.
Maria
Antonia Flores, Maria del Carmen Dominguez, and Eustolia Olivas
were trained
as the initial
Obrera. Flores
On some
worker leadership core of La Mujer
recalls:
occasions Cecilia gave the training, at other times
Guillermo, people
who came from
political teachers, including
different parts of the city,
from Mexico.
[Cecilia
and
Rodriguez and
91
Mujer Luchando!
jLa
Guillermo Domfnguez Glenn helped launch La Mujer Obrera
and the Centro Obrero and everything
El Paso.] They gave classes in politics
in
from Paolo
related to study,
economy of Mexico.
the political
Freire's
methods
weeks, a month, three months, or sometimes daily teachers were here. •
practice.
What we got
to
Trainings lasted two or three
from study we
first
when
the
put into
later
85
If one meets Flores today,
it is
hard to imagine her as the person
she describes before her involvement in the movement: I
have learned so
much
here.
was a submissive housewife. ican
woman who was women it's
used to be shy. all
in
mind when
I first
came
not even
know
one
labor.
that such a thing as
just thinks its
When you
came out in
I
I
as a person.
did not
At
least I
got
I
my
and limited to the
the world. Before that
I
did
women's oppression even
ex-
normal.
are just sitting there listening to your husband,
you think it's perfecdy natural
Your rights
that you have
are violated
what has made
me
no
rights as a
woman,
and you don't know it.
you go out into the outside world, you that's
here.
know what it meant to be part of an organization.
house and home
I
Mex-
made for marriage. But once we came we all learned something. For working
liberation after being suppressed for 15 years
isted;
hardly spoke.
I
the characteristics of a
harder to develop ourselves as leaders.
have these experiences did not
I
had
only
here to this organization, class
I
find another reality.
When I
so protective of this organization.
think 86
"I don't want other people to go through what we went through"
The government
raid
on
the El
Monte sweatshop on August
1995, marked a turning point in Lucrecia Tamayo's
formed from being ter
who
big
name
a frightened
relishes speaking out
worker
retailers that profited
from her
The second of August woke me
woman tions.
before
Before
that.
when
I
like
to the
and going
up. It
life.
She
2,
trans-
campaign nerve cen-
to demonstrations against labor:
was
like I
was
a blind
going to the actions and demonstra-
the owners screamed at me,
I
got real small.
I
Sweatshop Warriors
92
wondered what
know we have I
had done wrong
I
make them
to
have had two jobs since the raids
a.m. in the
call at six
come
or not you could
contract. Everything
in. I
paid $80 a week. But since the hours
to do. After a year,
I
morning
didn't like
I
started
worked and how many
I
El Monte. Because of
There
it.
went with me
me soon
I
my calculations to KIWA
took
migrant Workers Advocates]. Paul [Lee, a to talk to the
no written
is
sewed,
I
am. The
was only getting
I
working there pieces
I
you whether
telling
done by his word.
just
is
at
owner knows who
the publicity around our case, the
owner would
Now I
so mad.
rights.
wrote
like I
down
learned
[Korean Im-
KIWA
organizer]
owner and they paid what they owed
after.
I'm the information source for our group of workers. If a
problem comes up,
I call
everyone up to
let
them know what's
going on. Ever since the raid on the El Monte shop, track of all the
ger have any
I
have kept
paperwork and keep workers informed.
fear.
I
no lon-
My only fear is immigration. But the rest, no. I
do not want other workers
to suffer.
I
don't want other people
to
go through what we went through. This experience opened
up
my eyes.
It
made me
conscious.
It
gave
speak up and fight against the owners. crazy.
I
always ask Paul
demonstration?" stores that
"This
is
made
I
"When
like to yell
so
are
the motivation to
we going
and scream
much money
me
My husband to
thinks I'm
have the next
at the retailers in the
off of us.
87
the best school you could have"
Fuerza Unida allowed laid-off Levi's workers to channel their anger and sense of betrayal, while building on the friendships and ties
they had relished in their jobs.
revenge I
first
A combination of curiosity and
attracted Viola Casares to Fuerza Unida:
remember when people were passing out information.
curious and wanted to find out what they wanted to
cause of
my
curiosity,
I
started going to the meetings.
there were 25 to 30 ladies hall.
who
started
meeting
I
was Be-
tell us.
at a small
At
first
church
We began talking about how we have to do something. We
needed
to get
We needed
more information about what
to find
is
really
going on.
out what the company was going to give
us.
jLa
We
needed
down
93
Mujer Luchando!
do something because of the awful way they shut
to
the plant.
got interested.
I
to us without warning.
At
I
was angry about what they did
first I just
started as a volunteer, then
wanted
became
a
to get
back
at
them.
board member, then
I
a
88
co-coordinator.
Casares expanded her vision and network of friends through
her involvement with Fuerza Unida: I've
done
of traveling and met wonderful people. I've
a lot
learned that
am
I
not the only one
experience has opened up
my mind
who
has had problems. This
and views. For example, be-
way I was being homo-
cause of lack of information and education and the
my
raised
by
sexual
was
man
family, I used to think that being gay,
But
a sin.
beings....
Fuerza Unida.
I
don't believe that any more.
I
learned from
I
have
a
my
We are all hu-
broken marriage,
my
and
job,
second chance to pass on what the move-
ment taught me. I never thought I could have done the things that I have. Losing my job opened my eyes. I used to work and live in
my own little world. We were
taught to just look out for our
family and to compete with other people. Levi's taught us to
own
com-
pete against other workers to be part of their machine. Fuerza
Unida taught us
that
we
care about our sisters.
are part
of a bigger family, that we should
89
Marta Martinez ran into problems making her way through the
company
rehiring and
government job
layoffs but stuck with Fuerza I've
programs
training
Unida through thick and
after the
thin:
been with Fuerza Unida from the beginning. They offered
some of
us
months.
I
work
had
at the
other plants.
other workers there were their jobs.
The
I
worked
there for three
to quit because they treated us so bad.
mad
at us.
They
said
Even
we were
the
stealing
supervisors accused us of being lazy, saying that's
why the plant shut down and moved out. They were very rude to those of us who came in from the old plant. I went through the ESL, GED, and job training classes. The training mainly helped the people who could speak English. But they didn't really help people find jobs. With Fuerza Unida, the hunger strikes, everything.
90
I
worked on
the protests,
Sweatshop Warriors
94
Tina Mendoza put her energy into Fuerza Unida
Similarly,
af-
ter the Levi's layoffs:
been working with Fuerza Unida for eight
I've
two years
just
I
went
The
years.
to meetings, but after that I started
to the office regularly to help out.
We work on
first
coming
everything.
We
never say
we
We
these things so that Fuerza Unida can live on, so our
do
all
do
can't
Our
it.
problem
biggest
struggle can continue, so that
we
women
We work to
about what
women.
are
I
is
possible.
have learned a
is
with English.
can serve as an example to build pride that
met
lot here. I
so
many
we
different
people and learned about what they do, about different struggles.
For
At I
me
first I
my
tried
face.
was
great pride to be a part of this struggle.
afraid
and ashamed
best to cover
Now when to
I feel
I
go,
I
Fuerza Unida
my
scream injects
God/Allah] that we
Fuerza Unida members ers in other plants
to
and
as
loud as
you with
will
go the demonstrations.
to
face so that I
later
industries.
would not be I
move
seen.
do not cover
of energy. Ojala
a lot
continue to
I
can.
ahead.
[I
my
hope
]
reached out to low-waged work-
Obdulia "Obi" Segura
first
came
Fuerza Unida after hearing about the food bank available for un-
employed workers and low-income I
try to
can.
I
help out at Fuerza Unida, doing whatever kind of work
started
because office
I
coming here about two and
heard about the food bank.
I
a half years ago, first
Now I help with sweeping,
work, and whatever needs to be done. Even though the
women have all
families in need:
their
give a lot to the
own
families
and homes to take care
work of Fuerza Unida,
to help other
of,
they
people in
women in this world who will not do anything else, who are very egotistical. But that is not the way
need. There are for
anyone
of Fuerza Unida. Petra and Viola do everything they can to help the people, to build cooperation. That
ing with Fuerza Unida. Here
we
each other, to work together. This teer here in
whatever way
Petra Mata,
who had
as a daughter, wife,
I
can.
is
the character of work-
are always ready to help, to love is
what moves me
to volun-
92
already picked up
many
leadership
mother, and seamstress, got baptized
of fighting the world's largest garment manufacturer:
skills
in the fire
I
much
learned so
at
95
Mujer Luchando!
jLa
Fuerza Unida. This
is
you
the best school
could have, working with people, listening, chairing meetings
—
all
the things
you have
to understand to carry out the struggle.
We go to support and participate in all struggles in the movement. We work with Asian, Filipino, African American, Mexican, white. We are part of the same viHere we
are not just individuals.
sion, the
same movement. In the past when Levi's
blah,"
we
said,
don't like
"yes
sir."
Now we
ask,
They should do what's
it."
panies cannot do without workers,
right, it
said,
"Why? Wait or
"blah blah
a minute.
fair at least.
Com-
should be half and
50-50, not just 100 percent going to one side. That's
I
half,
what we
learned through Fuerza Unida.
"Sometimes God knocks us around a
little bit"
For some of the women, showing compassion, faith in the face liefs.
God knocks to
of hardships
is
Viola Casares says she us around a
solidarity,
sustained by deeply held religious be-
tells
little bit
Petra Mata, "I think sometimes
to
make
us think and to remind us
be thankful for what we have." Casares reaffirmed her
ing a
maquiladoras in Honduras with a
visit to
US
faith dur-
delegation hosted
by the Mennonite Church: Sometimes when scheduled to
get discouraged
visit different
I
pray for right.
got there, the
maquilas including a place called
first
thing
find there. But when we saw when we walked through the
door was women sewing Levi's and Dockers given
me
a big sign to see that
showed us run away
We America. really
exactly
to. It
saw
just
We
what was going on
was
in the factories
The
Levi's
was doing to our
that their chairs
our jobs had
sisters in
Central
and working conditions were less,
with no
place looked just like a prison and workers were
treated like prisoners.
angry.
God had He
right.
a miracle!
what
saw
label pants.
what we were doing was
uncomfortable and that they got paid so much
benefits.
ally
God to give me a One day we were
No one knew what we would
Interfashion.
we
I
me know if what I am doing is
sign to let
I
saw
That company
and
that with
just cares
my own eyes. about
profits.
It
94
made me
re-
Sweatshop Warriors
96
Carmen
Similarly
"All the time
Lopez of La Mujer Obrera
my job with/f
Yes,
[faith].
I
explains:
have a
lot
of
—
9:>
do
Bringing
the
Ibarra
do
to
God period. I feel very, very respectful of all the religions. my job because I have faith in God."
faith in I
I like
Home
Women's Rights
the Fight for
Work, migration, and activism are all threads that run through women's histories. But as working class women, they also en-
dured distinct challenges
their participation in
seeking to overturn oppressive
have come changes in
mothers,
as daughters, lovers, wives,
and grandmothers. With
ters,
their
class,
sis-
movements
gender, and racial practices
views of gender and family
roles.
Viola Casares complained that her husband had run around
with susmujeres de la cantina his jealousy
on
to her.
[his
women of the bars], while projecting
He refused to let her work outside
despite their poverty. Casares swears that 1990
worst year in her
That dark time she
life.
lost
the
home
was absolutely the
not only her job of
nine years, but also her marriage. She finally separated from her
husband who had become during a beating.
The
a jealous alcoholic
stress
from the
combined with her declining I
told him, "If you
want
loss
and broken her nose
of her job and marriage,
health, put Casares in the hospital:
to get
back together
it's
got to be 50-50,
not 90 percent going to your side." But by that time
had gotten
really bad.
separated for six years.
He'd come and
age.
When we
He
didn't
want
to give
stay for a couple of weeks.
loved him dearly.
He was
were
his drinking
We never got a divorce although we were
such a strong
living together
Our
me
a divorce.
oldest daughter
man with
his
macho im-
he would run around with
women. I was a good wife and faithful, but I told him, "One of these days, I'm going to leave." He would come back and ay. He had his regrets. I think a lot of it was because of his other
drinking. I've lost a lot of uncles
ther used to drink.
and cousins
to drinking. His fa-
My husband died from drinking when he was
I guess that's why I loved, hated, and pitied man all at the same time. He lived in his own way. Maybe he not know how to show love because he was not shown love
only 46 years old. this
did
since his father also drank a lot
and ran around with women.
jLa
97
Mujer Luchando!
Casares managed to climb out of the well of depression by
channeling her energy into taking care of her children and grandchil-
dren and building Fuerza Unida
as a
women like
support center for
She explains:
herself.
I'm glad that
I
became
part of Fuerza Unida.
It's really
changed
my life. What I went through with the plant closure and my marme for the work I am doing right now, even for the of my husband and coping with the loss of my job. I think
riage prepared
death that if
I
didn't have this organization,
I
would be completely
now. Fuerza Unida made us strong women, strong mothers. to be independent.
back,
"You have
to
only stayed home."
The status
barriers
I
told
my husband when
want the new
he
lost
I like
come
tried to
Viola, not the old Viola that
97
women
had
were made doubly
to
surmount because of
their
gender
because of economic hardships
difficult
women. The women worry about their and siblings. A number had experienced the loss of family to substance abuse and violence. The workers' centers acted as a women's support network. Remedios Garcia tried to manage her stress and loss by staying active:
they faced as working class
children, grandchildren, parents,
been almost seven years that
It's
That affected
me greatly.
illness to illness, (starts crying) I It's
been seven years or more
was out with his thought
it
friends.
I
oldest son
was murdered.
When
haven't been able to recuperate.
that I've stayed like this. Aieee!
He
the telephone rang that night and
must be an emergency
doctor said
my
Since that time I've gone from illness to
I
Azeee/ The
soon
as I
heard
must not always think about
this
and move on to do
as
it.
my son, I told him. So a lot of problems have come from this. I started having problems with my husband, with a lot of things because it affected me personally. But, nevertheother things. But it's
one has
less,
been
to
like this,
go on
living. I can't
do you understand?
spend enough time with another. For this
working. ...
me.
And
I
it is
have
my son.
good
to
98
recuperate so that's feel a lot
I've
have
my mama, my
they have me.
I
why
of guilt, that
I
had one complication
a lot
I've
didn't after
of friends and continue
children,
and people
who need
Sweatshop Warriors
98
Many of
the
women met
had children, and
their partners,
working outside the home when they were teenagers. They
started
described a range of positive and negative experiences with partners.
A
number of
the
women
had separated from
Despite her high levels of
husband who
jealous
skills,
their first
Elena Alvarez
is
husbands.
suppressed by a
not permit her to work for pay. She can
will
only leave the house with his permission, even though their house-
hold
is
Carmen Ibarra Lopez experienced when her first marriage did not work
in dire financial condition.
a serious bout of depression
out, so she started going to beautician school
and worked
mani-
as a
many years before she returned to the garment industry. the "honeymoon" phase of her new marriage, Carmen is
curist for Still
in
crossing her fingers and says that she
her "a second chance."
is
praying that
God
will give
99
Tina Mendoza says her husband has been very supportive of her involvement with Fuerza Unida. She his
just tries to
make
sure she has
meals ready and makes sufficient time for her family: I
no longer have babies
band supports useful,
not
at
my work
just staying
home.
My children are grown. My hus-
with Fuerza Unida.
home watching TV.
husband's meals ready and make his
much
I
He
sure
life easier. I try
to
me I
be
to
get
my
spend
as
time with the family as possible. He's a second level super-
visor after working for the city for over 25 years. is
wants
make
unionized. Before the union
came
in there
Where he works
used to be a
lots
of
discrimination against Mexicans. But thanks to the union, minorities
have been able to
Petra
her
work
Mata at
raise their positions.
also says her
husband has been very suppordve of
Fuerza Unida. Indeed, he has continued to work
low-paying jobs to support the family, especially
at
when funding
two runs
out and she and her co-coordinator Viola Casares stop getting paid. his friend rib him when they see her speaksome demonstration on TV, but she says, "at least he can see
She says that sometimes ing at
what I'm doing." 101 Maria del Carmen Dominguez takes pride
in her scrapper stance
towards her father, brothers, and schoolmates growing up, in her children's strength:
as well as
jLa
99
Mujer Luchando!
My family made it possible for me to organize the strike at the facwork
tory and I
Yes, because I
here, (laughs)
fought in school. I
my father. my husband, (laughs) jAiiyaiiyaii! Come on! With the boys at school
started out fighting with
I
fought with
I
am very strong!
played baseball, (laughs) First
wanted
I
no, not only
think,
I
my daughter, but my boys, too, yeah. My daughter is
a very, very fighting fighting, crying.
Carmen
My
to bat, to pitch....
daughter has some of the same personality as me. Well,
woman,
(laughs) Yes, but she
is
also crying,
102
Ibarra
Lopez
well as proud to break the
is
both
mold
critical
of her
own
upbringing as
in raising her daughter
and son:
You know, I was born and grew up in a culture where the women didn't have a voice.
So
I
said
I'm not going to do the same with
my children. I want to teach them to be different. I'm not the kind of a person who wants to do the same thing that my family does, did with me. No, I'm not. Especially with my daughter. You know my son is the oldest, and my daughter is the youngest. I taught my son how to clean house, wash dishes, and all kinds of tasks because
I said,
"Your
going to be your
sister is
sister
and
not going to be your maid. She a
human
each other very much. They are not very, very
the
same thing
Through the
good and that
family did.
just
being." So they both respect just
close friends. Yes,
my
is
I
brother and a
sister
but
don't want to keep doing
No, no way!
103
participation in their organizations
and
el
movimiento,
women gained new skills and awareness, underwent major trans-
formations, provided leadership to communities under siege, built
women and won victories.
working friendships with Asian immigrant
low-waged workers across the globe, and
During
a protest at Levi's
posh
glass, steel,
other
and brick corporate
headquarters in San Francisco, to the surprise, consternation, then chagrin of management,
las mujeres
suddenly chain themselves to the
front door. Calmly awaiting the arrival of police paddy wagons, over
the bullhorn they issue a friendly Texas home-style invitation to their
upcoming
Band. Las
benefit dance with Dr. Loco's Rockin' Jalapeno
mujeres luchando inspire stanzas in the band's catchy cumbia
rhythm, "El Picket Sign" (1992):
Sweatshop Warriors
100
From San Anto
to
San
Francisco Fuer^a
Unida has been saying
Desde San Anto hasta San Francisco Fuer^a Unida an da diciendo
Don't buy Dockers or Levi'sjeans and stop
the Free
Trade Agreement
j Levi'sjeansj alto al fibre comercio!
jBoicot Dockers
Elpicket sign,
elpicket sign
jQue Viva
Mujer Obrera!
"La
Elpicket sign,
elpicket sign
iQueremos justice for Janitors!
Elpicket sign,
elpicket sign
We say jChale con Elpicket sign,
Coorsl
elpicket sign
'Vorque la union es
La
Fuer^af
m
X
Carmen
Ibarra Lopez, Maria Antonia Flores, and Maria del Carmen Dominguez of La Mujer Obrera. This banner on their office wall reads: "Stop the Hemorrhaging
of Our Jobs by
NAFTA."
Photo by Miriam Ching Yoon Louie (1997)
jLa
101
Mujer Luchando!— Interview
Maria Antonia Flores La Mujer Obrera Director,
Popular Educator I
was born
in
1954
Ciudad Juarez in 1962.
my
oldest. In Juarez
as
vendors I
and
1
in Zacatecas,
have eight
parents
worked
My
Mexico.
sisters
family
moved
and brothers, and
I
to
am the
in maquilas, restaurants, [and]
selling food.
studied through middle school, then a year to be a secretary,
in a school for teachers. I
was studying ploma.
I
to
worked
become for
was an adult
a teacher, but
two years
as
literacy teacher
and get
didn't finish
I
an educator, and
while
a di-
two years
later
I
in a
maquila.
The maquila was
a rather large electronics factory called
Labs Components; about 400 people worked
there. I
old then. For that period of time the pay was
wage, and one could earn 700 pesos, but started
work at three in the afternoon, left at
Saturdays. like a
it
I
dough
don't
know
the name, but
to cover the capacitors,
we
and
it
Centra
was 19 years
good
—minimum
was very hard work.
1 1
p.m.,
also
I
and we worked
used a paste, mixed
smelled really bad.
We at-
tached different components between the two edges so the current
Then we carried the capacitors and dipped them That work gave you a lot of headaches besometimes when we handled such tiny capacitors, we had to
could pass through.
in alcohol or acetone.
cause
use a big lens to see the small pieces well enough to grab them. After a while they
changed
me
department where
to a
I
worked
at a
ma-
chine that cut the capacitor wires, squared them, and sent them to be
packaged
in
boxes for shipping. The majority of workers were
most puras jovensitas varones I
[all
[all
young women];
the supervisors
male].
got married
when I was
1
8,
almost
1
9,
on August
daughter Paula was born August 18, 1972, a year after
My son Gerardo was born in July ary 1977, and
1
973,
my youngest son in July
children, four girls
daughters.
al-
were puros
and one boy.
I
21, 1971.
My
got married.
my other daughter in Febru-
1988.
Now I have
[laughs] They're
five
from
grand-
my two
Sweatshop Warriors
102
My
husband and
1974 because
came
I
his parents
to the
US from Juarez
to El
Paso
in
had residency here, and we lived with them
Then he left the house and us to live with his mama when I moved out of my in-laws' house. Already he had gone running around with other women. I was separated from him, almost since 1977. We got to know each other because he lived near me and came to a fiesta [party] at my house. He used to work as a facfor
two
years.
until 1985,
operative in El Paso.
tors'
I
years
came here when I
was only
I
was about
the family, the in-laws.
But afterwards
I
started to
tory workshops, cleaning offices, doing special training to take care
was with
for another year.
tor}'
1986 to 1990
and
I
Then
and weekends
at night
of a sick person
I
did both jobs. I
work in
homecare
who
person for two years and after that
this
During the
22, 23 years old.
first
doing anything but taking care of
a housewife, not
small fac-
for adults.
I
got
could not move. I
worked
I
at a fac-
returned to cleaning offices and from
During the day I worked in the
factor}',
cleaned offices, [groans]
The garment factor} was so difficult. I left my children home solitos [alone]. They went to school and we didn't see each other because I didn't get home from work until one Aiiee!\ never got any sleep!
7
or two in the morning.
The worked I
first factor}-
at
worked
worked was named Emily Joe. Later
was Eddy Wad. With the
my husband
and sweet young
left
me
first
job
I still
didn't have
my
while he ran around with his
he knew about jobs and told
me where
On other jobs I had my own references, people that I worked
with and knew.
I
always
came with good recommendations.
the last job because the factor}'
After
Obrera.
1985
I
But because he was always working
things.
in these different industries
to go.
I
CMT and at other small shops, Elias Lavalla. The last one at
papers because friends
where
I
I
was near where
got off from the factor}-
volunteered because
a friend
of mine
women's meeting on
who was
I
started
enjoyed
I
a
topics given
it.
neighbor
I
found
lived.
coming
In
I
to
La Mujer
March or April of
first
brought
me
for a
bv Cecilia [Rodriguez, La Mujer
Obrera's co-founder], workshops on the oppression of la mujer, and
planning for
a festival for children.
During those days
I
only partici-
103
Mujer Luchando!— Interview
jLa
pated in small meetings and visited, not as a member. In 1986
I
be-
came a member, worked on committees, then part of the leadership. After a year they started to organize special workshops to train me and two other companeras, Maria del Carmen [Dominguez] and Eustolia [Olivas] as the
three organizers trained to advance the
first
organization.
On some
occasions Cecilia gave the training; at other times,
Guillermo [Dominguez Glenn,
came from
different parts of the city,
ing from Mexico. to study,
They gave
from Paolo
and
political teachers, includ-
classes in politics
Freire's
methods
who
husband]. People
Cecilia's
and everything related
to the political
economy of
Mexico. Trainings lasted two or three weeks, a month, three
months, or sometimes got
first
Since about 1988 stronger membership.
when
daily
from study we
later
What we
the teachers were here.
put into practice.
we began
to develop
more
and
activities
a bit
We started the first cooperative food project
through a committee organized by Maria del Carmen. She also created the newspaper for educational work.
It
was about eight pages
long and came out every month. Maria del Carmen developed educational material, leaflets and brochures, and gave classes. teacher, yes,
my past
from
them
leafleted
came
in 1988, 1990, 1991.
to every meeting. It
Cooperativa [the
health tional
clinic].
We
had over
a
was so busy!
a
thousand
a
week. Fifty work-
We
were running La
food cooperative] and also La
workers
Clinica [free
Fifteen to twenty people helped us operate our educa-
program and the coop. There was
ber. That's
the
was
in the factories during this period so
members, with educational meetings four times ers
all
training in Mexico.
There were big problems
we
I
when we had
all
a huelga [strike] in
Novem-
the problems with the union, the
divisions. I
was
moved
in charge
into
of political education. In 1995 and 1996
economic development.
we were who came from
I
we
also
prepared the curriculum
based on what
planning, for the workers, volunteers, and
people
outside El Paso.
from Spain.
We
group, whether
made it
was
We
even had
a volunteer
presentations according to the needs of the religious, progressive, or
more
conservative.
Sweatshop Warriors
104
We
conducted
The
School].
one hour
political
education in our Escue/a Popular [People's
courses lasted three months, two hours a week, with
and then one hour on econom-
in English or citizenship,
We made murals, drawings, and leaflets to reinforce the learning process. We do more murals and dinamicas [skits] and show videos. We developed plans for the Comite ics, politics,
de
and
Lucha and
social issues.
when
the people developed as stronger leaders, they
took on more responsibility for planning.
We have to design the curriculum so that everyone can understand. We do not rely much on writing because a lot of our people do not know how go
to read.
to sleep like in
tired
Doing murals together is
and hungry so we have to capture
engaged.
When
so people don't
church; they're so colorful. Workers
people
first
come, we
their interest start
come
here
and keep them
with very basic stories
and simple questions. If they go on to the second level, we cover more political economy and advanced topics. We talk about what money is, what transnational corporations are, why factories are
and neoliberalism.
closing,
We
draw
pictures of the transnational
corporations and their activities around the world and ask what does this
in
have to do with us?
We talk about what is happening to people
Chiapas and what that poor people's struggle has to do with work-
ers in this I
community.
love doing educational work!
We
started before the big gar-
women were
ment
factories started closing, while the
Then
the different corporations began setting
still
up twin
working.
plants along
the border in the 1970s here in Juarez and El Paso; later the biggest factories started to leave.
Through our
Canada we learned more about the in
Canada and the United
stories
ences
with other workers.
is
States.
relations with
disasters
We
made many
One of the most
workers in
workers went through trips
and shared
beautiful of
all
experi-
when workers support each other. Different people from La
Mujer Obrera
participate in these exchanges. It sets a
information. But the governments
We
started
working
still
[in solidarity]
passed
good base of
NAFTA.
with the [independent Mexi-
can labor union federation] Frente Autentico del Trabajo [FAT],
founded
in I960.
105
The FAT works
in four sectors. First,
it
works
in
{La
105
Mujer Luchando!— Interview
now has various national level unions, like
the workers sector, which
the unions of iron and
steel,
from northern Mexico
to the
farm,
textile,
and shoemaker workers,
southwest part of the central
Second, the cooperative sector organizes savings,
and producers cooperatives, including ers
won
valley.
consumers,
a glass factory that the
people living in the
after a strike. Third,
credit,
colonias
work-
[neighbor-
hoods] developed similar consumer cooperatives; in the urban sector colonia residents organize around
all
kinds of questions, like
water, electricity, and sewage. Finally, the campesino sector
con-
is
ducting a survey of the people in the countryside to estimate the results
of the harvest so they don't get exploited by some company.
They work with
the
damental goal
to
is
Our groups no
who
[owners of communal land].
important]....
[is
that
The
us.
Trabadajores Mexicanos] ing party. ers,
working in
col-
we want and who
decide what
situation in
Mexico
is
is
very different from
CTM
[Confederation
de
part of the official
government and
rul-
unions; is
[that are]
to develop
We are based in self-determination
who
are the ones
US AFL-CIO
of
we belong to
The FAT had
completely independently from the unions laboration with the government.
going to represent
fun-
or government, and the workers themselves are
feel this
where workers
The
improve the conditions of life of all the people.
are organizing independently because
political party
the ones
ejidotarios
the
The government's physical repression can't stop the workmany obstacles before them. For example, when
but does place
workers
really start organizing, the first thing they [the
ernment] do
is fire
everyone
commissions give people to vote
false
who
[in
the union].
Mexican gov-
Or the government labor
counts of the election votes. They bring in
really
don't
work
there.
Through
these
same
laws and government bodies that are supposed to protect the workers, the
administration carries out
many
tricks.
Since around 1963 they started to establish maquiladoras along the border and added
came necessary border,
Centro
many more
for the de
FAT
Estudios
in the
1980s and 1990s. So
to establish a workers' center
y
Taller
L^aboral,
to
train
it
be-
on
the
women
maquiladora workers about everything related to their labor rights to
defend themselves whether
at the individual
or collective
level.
Es-
Sweatshop Warriors
106
pecially here in the
United States where there
what an independent union or organization
know how
is is,
no understanding of
we want workers
to
things could be different.
In general people
who work
in the maquilas
experience in these kinds of jobs.
have no previous
Some maquiladoras
require that
workers have completed primary school, but in others, many do not
know how
to read
because
the
all
and
work in
write.
Workers receive no study or
the maquiladoras
training
very easy and routine, so
is
one needs only a certain amount of manual aptitude. They contract mosdy young people, from 16 to 35 years old, depending on the factory. If the work involves a lot of tiny pieces, they gready prefer women's labor; when the work is a little more heavy, they contract more men. The rado is about 60 percent women and 40 percent men. About 50 percent of the workers in Juarez are not from here, but from all the other states of the republic. Some 55 percent of the
women also
have children, averaging one or two. People often can-
not secure the necessities of centers to
to leave their children
Most of United
life.
accommodate so many
States,
There are not enough childcare people.
The
times parents have
by themselves.
the factories are transnational, headquartered in the
Canada, and Japan, [and more recendy, subcontractors
from South Korea and Taiwan] with maquilas.
Many
average pay
is
also
some Mexican-owned
$4 a day. [exclaims] Yes,
that's
what it
is!
That includes bonuses for productivity, good attendance, punctuality, so that workers will prizes,
work even harder
but the pay offered
us needy.
Many
is
to survive.
so low because
maquilas have people
it
They
benefits
who worked
give
them
some
to keep
ten, twelve years
doing the same thing, but have not been trained to do anything else.
At La Mujer Obrera we have lose hold
classes twice a
of our education program, or we
will
week.
We try not to We
have no power.
need to motivate the workers so they can struggle for Before
NAFTA
passed
we helped
their rights.
organize a big march
on
the
bridge between here and Mexico and had problems with the police. It
was very
many
cold!
We
stayed in the Plaza
all
night together with so
groups, including from Canada and Mexico.
Now the
education
we do
is
on
the results of the
crisis,
the di-
jLa
saster, the
unemployment, the people out
of workers
more with
like
they didn't
exist.
visible
and take on
NAFTA is
not
this
in the streets, the treating
Workers
and whatever part of the world. But
here,
107
Mujer Luchando!— Interview
are invisible in Mexico,
how can workers become
problem? The problem we are having
one affecting El Paso;
just a local
worldwide problem of neoliberalism.
also the
it is
We have to educate workers, We must understand the
both immigrants and non-immigrants. roots of the problems.
work, but why
Women
we
We need to know not just that we don't have
don't have work.
are not the only ones
working woman
is
the
one who
is
who come
in the
in
our name, La Mujer Obrera [The
in
our methods of organizing,
leadership.
for help, but yes, the
worst need.
Woman Worker];
initiatives,
with her needs,
is
ready to help her, whether she stays or
unprotected. But
pate in this organization because
it is
we also want women to in
continue to be used as objects,
partici-
our interest to strengthen the
group to promote the development of women.
strong,
comes out
a name people know so women come how we can support them. When a woman comes
we should be
not, because she
ers
it
development of women's
La Mujer Obrera is
here directly to see
We
You can hear it
We
don't want to
like furniture, right?!
have been through so many experiences that were good,
and brave.
One of the most important
of this organization
way they do routine. If a
this is
is
to
things for us as lead-
have the support of our
families.
One
no
fixed
by accepting our schedules, since there
husband or children oppose our
activities,
is
we would
have to leave our work only half done. Working together with
women through hard times like the hunger strike or the organizing of Camp Dignity [a popular education, two-week summer camp
LMO
organized for NAFTA-displaced workers and their families]
we saw how far each how the organization could grow. We have the experiences of building relationships among workers to have been great learning experiences. [There]
of us
as
an organizer could go and
better express themselves
and communicate with others.
Now I can say what I want, what I want done
expect,
what
I
in the organization, in the family, for myself.
do or do not But
if you're
only inside your home, you don't learn anything. Development
is
108
Sweatshop Warriors
very important. Lots of
good and bad
The
things
happen
one goes
as
we know how to get the strength to face problems and whatever lies ahead. If I know that my health could affect the orthrough
life.
negative ones affect your health and psyche so
must be prepared
to
ganization, then
have to think not only of myself, but also of the
my
group, of tion,
one
I
co-workers.
I
think that once one joins an organiza-
not completely free because one has to think about the
is
organization, the family, and the
and you are not alone. You have
self.
So you turn into many parts
to think about
respond to these different parts of your
life
how you are going to because you cannot
abandon them.
Our litical,
workers are in three
priorities for
and
ideological. In the future,
I
areas: the
hope
that
goal of having an economic base from which
we
we
economic, powill
can
reach our
live
and sup-
port the community and ourselves, so workers will be able to take care of their families.
hope
I
that
we
will achieve the best for the
workers, the dreams we've always had about creating a bilingual school and cultural plaza, which would be the greatest, most fabu-
Our political priority is to strengthen the workers to confront the bureaucrats to make them implement workers' rights. We must be conscious of what is happening so we can defend ourselves. We know what kind of politics we want and that we must exert eflous thing.
forts so that the voices I will ily
of the community will be heard. Ideologically
continue to uphold
my ideals
for the organization
and
my fam-
to build a better future. If the conditions
of the community improve, then
my
family's
condition will also improve. If the community's conditions do not improve, then
my family will continue to live in the same poor situation
they are in now. Without this organization ture for our children or all
we cannot have a better fu-
our grandchildren.
We have
to
keep fighting
we are conscious of our goals, we won't lose our Any woman who is a real leader has to be in the fore-
three fights. If
way, our vision.
front of continuing to struggle to better our conditions.
—El
Paso, Texas, February 24, 1997
jLa
109
Mujer Luchando!— Interview
Mate
Petra
Former Levi's Garment Worker, Fuerza Unida Organizer and Miracle Maker I was born on May 31, 1946 in a little town called Bustamente, Nuevo Leon, Mexico. My parents worked as farmers. When there was no more money in farming, they moved. My mother died at the very early age of 28 years old, when I was only 5. She had a baby in this small town they say is only a rancho. The hospital services were
women had their baat home. I think they did not take care of my mom very well, so
very poor, no doctors, nobody. In those days bies
she developed problems.
My
litde sister, the
my mom
baby
my mom
that
bore, died.
A
few days
my four brothers and myself. I was in the middle. When my mother died, my father felt lost. He couldn't stand that my mother had died, so he left us. After that, my grandfather moved me and my brothers to Nuevo Laredo. He took care of us kids until we got married. later
was sad
It
That
died, too.
for
me.
was young because
I
left
made
my ma
us five kids,
a lot of sacrifices
died.
I
you the way your mother does because you That's what life." I
I tell
my kids now, "You good
for
are
But
in a
me because now I
born from
way,
can
When I was young I had to respect myself. I was I
her.
my grandpar-
live
with dignity.
always praying that
would not do something that was going to degrade me.
my girls,
I
only have one mother in your
didn't have a mother, [eyes water]
ents did something
and suffered when
don't think anybody cares about
always
tell
"Respect yourself no matter what. You've got to have
re-
I
spect to receive respect."
After years and years
But
I
my father came back and we accepted him.
don't have the kind of love for him
cause he never lived with us
When I got married I
I
when we were
would litde,
like to
have be-
when we needed
my heart that I had to let go of, that used to bother me. But now I have my family and a wonderful husband. He helps me a lot. I've got my four kids. My daughter turned 27 in August. My oldest boy is 26, my small boy is 22, and my girl is 17. him.
had
all
this
sadness stored up in
Sweatshop Warriors
110
met
I
my
Laredo when
husband
[future]
was
15.
three or four years.
We
I
Then knew
in
el
I left
mercado [the market] in
to
work
this family
Nuevo
United States for
in the
very well in Laredo, Texas.
They asked my aunt if I could work for them. I worked in their house for two straight years without going to see my family. I had to clean the floors on my hands and knees and wash windows and change everything every month.
When I was
was able
17, 1
go home
to
Nuevo Laredo on
to
weekends, then come back to work by Monday. forth like that.
I
cleaned the house because
I just
I
the
went back and
went
to six years
of
school in Mexico. At that time there was no opportunity to go to school or college. So
I
had
to jHijole!'work as a
maid and serve them.
They had two kids, and I had to put them to bed every night, give them their clothes, prepare them for school, make breakfast, and do all the housework. There was a wife, but of course I was the maid! [laughs] I only made $10 a week. I went back to Nuevo Laredo to the same place where I had worked and started talking with my [future] husband. One time,
when
was getting off from work,
I
"What
are
you going
to
I
do today?" He
called his
house and asked,
"Well, nothing."
said,
I said,
Do you want to go with me?" My sister-in-law told me, "The day you
"Well, I'm going to go to the movies.
He
said right away,
we were
called,
was going [laughs]
to
But
I
ready to go out, but he got so excited because he
all
go with you." So I'm the one who took the it
was only
chicklet with me.
when
"Yeah!"
one day
for that
was 23 years old and Domingo was
were born here. cold.
I
later
we came
remember
the
to the
first
saved and began buying things.
tory,
27.
United
my third
counting
during the day.
child
tortillas
Then
I
We
was born
on
I
States. All the kids
days were very bad because
We didn't even have blankets
the house didn't have any windows.
After
just like a little
We have a very good relationship. We got married
Three months
was very
he was
that
first step,
Oooh! Then
are
in this
still
started
little
by
working in
of the kitchen and they paid
to a restaurant
me
a very, very
litde
we
house now. a tortilla fac-
the night shift and taking care of
moved
it
and
to cover ourselves
where
I
was
my
kids
in charge
low wage, about $60 or
jLa
$70 a week.
I
was hired three making
day, even Saturdays,
and
fied
felt like this
was not
and worked 6am
years
Zarzamora
Street.
I
4pm
was
every-
unsatis-
could do.
all I
and decided
Levi's factory
at the
The pay was very good.
this!"
to
and everything.
tortillas
People said that they were hiring
would like to do
111
Mujer Luchando!— Interview
I said,
to apply. I
"Well,
on
wow!
I
went one morning and
didn't even get back home before I already got a call. me to come in for an interview. So I went right away, and they hired me in 1976. When I started working there, they were paying by levels A to D,
took the
They
with
test. I
told
D getting higher pay—which
difficult operations, like
For three and ity
so
I
I
qualified for.
I
did the hard,
more
sewing the pockets on the sides of the coat.
a half years
I
sewed
could do any operation.
this
Then
way before they put me on utilmade me a trainer to teach
they
new people. I liked working with the girls and helping out. Finally made me a supervisor for eight years. I was very happy with my
the
they
I got to work closely with my co-workers. The layoff happened on January 16, 1990. The Friday before the
job because
Martin Luther King holiday, they told us that trainers
had
thing was
to
go downtown
all
for a meeting.
wrong because we had heard
the supervisors
We
a lot of rumors. Usually at
Christmas they gave us a $500 bonus, but not that year. out
later that
to shut us
and
suspected some-
We
found
they decreased our hours because they were planning
down. Nobody got the benefit of a pay increase based on
40 hours because we were working
less hours.
We [supervisors] went downtown to a very fancy hotel on Tuesday.
Everyone
sat
sudden we saw a
down around lot
"What's going on?"
and to
said that they
tables in a big
room. Then
of people coming with folders.
Finally, the
We
all
person from Levi's started to speak
were planning to shut us down because Levi's had
be competitive in the market. Everything turned black.
started screaming
They
We
and saying "Why?"
already had the package ready,
took us to
of a
thought,
different, individual
what you're going
knew who we were, and
rooms. Then they
"This
is
They
told us, "Yeah, yeah, calm
to get."
I
was very
down.
I
sad.
start explaining, I
started crying.
know how you
feel, I
11?
Sweatshop Warriors
know." Ahhh!
know how I for this
"How in the hell do you my job. After the 14 years I worked
told her [eyes water],
I
feel?"
I
mean I
company, they
"You're going to
love
just turn us
out
Our jobs are over. You still have a job!"
like this.
me you know how I
tell
feel?
We said,
just
came back and went outside. We hugged each other and "What are we going to do?" "Ahhh!" "I just bought my car." "I
got
my credit card to buy Christmas gifts." A lot of people were
buying houses, then lost them. They lost their the time.
had two
cars at
We lost everything because we couldn't pay no more, sabes When they turned us away they said, "Oh, we want you
[you know]?
to cooperate with us.
ple
cars. I
We want you to help us to work with the peo-
tomorrow." Everybody went back and
said,
"Oh
no!
You want
you when you are doing this to us?" They had a lot of advisors [who] told us, "You poor lady, you're going to be all right." They gave some money to the city to provide us to help
but those services did not help Levi's workers direcdy, but
services,
instead jobs.
went
They
buying a
to the
[also]
lot
whole
city
with close to 10,000 people out of
mishandled that money by renting a big office and
of things.
We didn't get anything. About 1,150 workers
were displaced.
When Levi's closed, it was a disaster for most of the families. My husband has had
to
work at two
evening he's a cook
at the Marriott
working with vegetables job
I
sent
one of
my
in a lot
member
When
I
down. In the
Hotel and in the morning he's
of grocery
kids to college.
thing that they needed, not
needed.
jobs since they shut us
My
stores.
Before
I lost
my
two older kids had every-
what they wanted, but
at least
what they
The ones who suffered most were the small ones. They rethat we could buy five pairs of pants, one for each day. lost my job my small boy said, "Mom, how come we can
only buy two pants, one to use today and the other one tomorrow?"
He
asked,
them
"Why did Junior have
this
and
I
cannot?"
It
was hard
for
to understand.
About two months before they shut us down, they started reducing personnel. They paid us whatever they wanted. Workers didn't know how to calculate their pay. So we started comparing.
"How much
do you have?"
"How much
did you get?"
And
they
jLa
said,
"Well, look
That's
I
when we
113
Mujer Luchando!— Interview
got less than you and
I
was working more
started to get together, decided to
years."
form Fuerza
Unida, and declared the boycott against Levi's.
At
first
we
didn't have any office.
Ruben's house. Ruben
[Sob's
We
did
of the work from
all
of the Southwest Public Workers Un-
ion]
was the one who helped us
The
first
start to
day they made the shut
down announcement, Ruben was
there protesting in front of the plant.
had meetings and formed the
put together Fuerza Unida.
We got a lawyer right away. We
Concilio
[Board of Directors].
The
workers got involved, and we decided to put together our demands.
Then we
got a very
little
Center on South Flores
For
six
place at the Esperanza Peace and Justice
Street.
months we got unemployment
we
two weeks. After that ran out,
more
felt
benefits,
very bad.
attention and time into Fuerza Unida.
$200 every
We put more
and
We put aside our per-
We We started having trainings and participating conferences — locally, nationally, internationally. We moved
sonal and family problems.
used to cry noches [nights] to see the
people with no food. in
again to 3946 South Zarzamora and stayed for almost two years until
we moved over here
rent
is
[to
cheaper. We're low
710
New Laredo Highway] where the
on income. The owner
is
a very
good,
cooperative man. Viola, Irene [Reyna],
time
For the
first
and
year or two the people
nated by the Board.
First, there
and another lady whose name tro,
who
in a lot
were the co-coordinators
I
I
volunteered so much.
worked
was Frances
at that
for free,
nomi-
Estrella, Raquelina,
don't remember, and Margie Cas-
A lot of girls got involved
and put
of time. Then they decided to make Fuerza Unida a
non-profit organization with papers and everything, and get a grant to pay full-time coordinators. Irene, and, because
February 1992.
We
Irene had to leave
I
was putting
in
They nominated Viola and
my
time volunteering,
me
in
worked as a team, Viola, Irene, and myself.
when we
ran out of money.
sources to hire technical assistance.
I
wish
We need someone
we had resit down
to
and use the computer. Then we could move more quickly, with our sewing cooperative, food bank, and everything.
Sweatshop Warriors
114
Every several weeks, we went at Levi's
families. It
was good but hard.
corporate headquarters.
be good leaders to head the
want to do something, we a lot
who do
just
not
need
ing clothes only for their
own
families.
households; not enough attention
We
also
must
Of course, we
My
A lot of women are heads of women
make
changes.
fall
deep
you have
two oldest
time at home.
ways wanted
My
to
into
I
We
tell
women
that if
When we
started picketing
held the poster up to cover
my
face. I
was
to look for
and create opportunities.
[children] got
married
You
the door.
son
is
I
when
I lost
job. I
did not spend too
very independent, but
my little
girl
It's
hard for
me
to decide
how many hours
plan your day, but something comes up, people
Most of
friends say, "Hey,
learned so
the time I
much
has
al-
my
family supports me.
My
to work come in
husband's
saw your wife on TV."
much
at
Fuerza Unida. This
is
the best school
—
could have, working with people, listening, chairing
you have
my
be with me. If I go to town and work late, she comes
here to help me.
to understand to carry out the struggle.
all
you
the things
Here we
are not
We We work with Asian, Filipino, African American, white. We are part of the same vision, the same move-
just individuals.
the
down
you must speak up.
missed them a lot. With the two small ones
I
see them-
Now if people don't call me, I call them. If you are denied op-
portunities,
a day.
They
paid to the problems they face.
learned these things.
and going to protests, afraid.
own goals. I have
need to be motivated by other issues and aware of
trying to abuse you,
is
our
they can do.
learn to cross so they can get to the other
other people's problems to
someone
is
very poor. Sometimes
is
that depression they side.
to develop
know what
and mother, washing dishes, cooking dinner, or mak-
selves as a wife
San Antonio
San Francisco to organize the
We had to leave our We needed to walk so far and learn to campaign. We have learned that if we
campaign
of friends
to
go to support and participate in
all
struggles in
movement.
Mexican, ment.
People come here to cry
if
want
to complain, laugh if they
tions
and advice about what
they want to cry, complain
want
to do.
to laugh,
if
they
and get recommenda-
We started a food bank two years
jLa
115
Mujer Luchando!— Interview
ago, after the Levi's layoffs, to help people during emergencies with
We didn't have many resources. We suffered and We know what many people who are out of
groceries. sacrifices.
need
—
flour, oil, rice, juices,
detergent, bread,
made work
canned goods, beans, crackers, laundry
We pay 12 cents a pound to the food bank
tortillas.
and give the bags away for
free.
People come to volunteer and sew in
exchange.
We
have a good group of volunteers working closely with
The group ing coop curtains,
is
us.
mixed between ex-Levi's and other workers. Our sew-
sells
ready-made items such
and aprons.
raising events.
a single needle.
as bedspreads, tablecloths,
We bought sewing machines after many fund-
We really need two more commercial machines with We also need a new truck to pick-up the materials for
the sewing coop and the food coop.
When sales are good, we try to give volunteers a little something for their gas expenses.
Through our
I^oteria
Mexicana [bingo] every-
one can take something home. Everyone brings something
we cook and something.
eat together.
When women
in
and
Anyone who comes here goes away with get frustrated we tell them, "Hey, come
over here!" They leave with a piece of material, bingo pri2e, advice,
make them feel good. We are trying to expand the organization. Our dream is to make pants. Now we are
and friendship
work of the making
to
miracles.
We never knew we were going to be around this long. When we met with La Mujer Obrera years ago, we asked "how could you survive so long?" They told us, "You have to think about and plan how you
are going to survive that long."
years
from now,
I
would
We have
more
established or-
boom, boom, boom!
We need tech-
like to see a stronger,
ganization that can keep going
nical assistance to stabilize the organization.
Unida do not only other
survived this long. Six
local,
I
want
to see Fuerza
but more global projects together with
women.
When we
first
came here my husband and
I
were undocu-
my husband got his citizenship. About two years ago made myself a citizen, too, because I felt that it was not right for me to be in this struggle when 1 didn't have a voice, a right to vote. I got
mented. Then I
Sweatshop Warriors
116
to
be somebody in the United
States.
life. I
go to school and
be good
college, to
I
want
our people to have a better
want
to continue to
to teach
citizens,
work
for
my grandchildren to
and participate
in
mak-
ing decisions.
My health
bothers me.
sew, to pray, and get the
knows what
down and
he's doing.
take a
husband works me.
He
want?
I
helps
rest.
at
me
two
I
want
power
Maybe he
My
to talk
to
my
uses
husband and
jobs.
He does
more with
down
sit
the people, to
for a while.
health to
kids are in
only want to see Fuerza Unida
make me slow
What
become an
God
good shape.
not go out to drink.
clean house, wash, and cook.
But
He
else
My
talks to
could
I
established orga-
nization working especially for gender equality.
—San Antonio,
Texas, October
7,
1997
117
Notes to ;La Mujer Luchando!
1
English Translation: In the liberation fronts
of working people There are women who are strong and valiant There are women who know how to struggle are women developing In the city and the countryside Giving strength and vision to the people
They
They They
are are
working working
class
class
women women
luminous with struggle for justice and peace
Respect their culture and work With the force of their dignity They are garment workers demanding justice They are garment workers who know how to They are the women displaced by Levis
struggle
The strugglers of the great movement They are the seamstresses of La Fuerza Unida They are the seamstresses of liberation. Traditional music with lyrics adapted by Arnoldo Garcia (1994).
2
Porfirio Diaz ruled
Mexico with an iron hand from 1877
until the
1910
Mexican Revolution.
3
Jose Marti, Cuba's beloved poet, writer, and leader who died May 19, 1895, fighting Spanish colonialism, coined this term and warned against US designs
on
Latin America. See Roig de Leuchsenring, 1967.
4
For example, while an estimated half million people of Mexican origin, including US citizens, were deported during the Great Depression, World War II brought Mexican workers back to the United States on a massive scale via the US government-sponsored "bracero [working arms] program," a contract labor project designed to address wartime labor shortages in agriculture. In 1954 during the post-Korean War recession, the Immigration and Naturalization Services (INS) implemented "Operation Wetback," which deported over one million undocumented Mexican workers. At the same time nearly five million temporary labor contracts were issued to Mexican citizens between 1942 and 1964, while apprehensions of Mexican workers without documents also numbered over five million. The bracero program ended in December 1964 due to strong opposition to abuses of migrant farm workers. (Hondagneu-Sotelo, 1994:22-23; Fernandez-Kelly, 1983:26). As of this writing, immigrant rights organizers feared that the George W. Bush administration will enact a new version of the bracero program to use guest migrant workers to work for one-year periods, making it difficult for them to organize without being deported, and forcing them to leave their families home in Mexico (Interview with Eunice Cho, National Network for Immigrant and Refugee Rights, February 26, 2001).
5
Fix and Passel, 1994:24-25.
6
Falk, 2001;
7
Ruiz, 1998:7; Hondagneu-Sotelo, 1994:20.
McDonnel, 1999.
Sweatshop Warriors
118
8
By
many growers sought
the 1920's
1994:21-22). During the
war
more
a
women and
workers, including Mexican
years
stable supply
children.
of immigrant
(Hondagneu-Sotelo,
many Mexican and Chicana/o
families
migrated from Texas to California. As the population became increasingly urban,
women moved from
the
into
fields
garment
factories
the
in
Southwest. (Amott and Matthei, 1996: 79-80; Blackwelder, 1997:71-72). For
more on
the role of Mexicana and Chicana labor, see feminist researchers like
Mora and Del Castillo, 1980; Ruiz, 1987 and 1998; Mary Romero, 1992; Leeper, 1993; Blackwelder, 1984 and 1997; Soldatenko, 1993 Rose, 1990 and 1995; Calderon and Zamora, 1990: 37-40; Vargas, 1997 Honig, 1996; Blackwelder, 1997:71-72; Ruiz, 1998; Amott and Matthei, 1996 and Fernandez-Kelly and Garcia, 1989and 1992; Fernandez-Kelly and Zavella, 1987;
Sassen, 1991.
9
10
US Department of Labor, Women's Bureau, 1997:1. US Department of Labor, Women's Bureau, 1997:
6-7. According to US government statistics, leading occupations for "Hispanic Origin" women were as cashiers, secretaries, sales, retail and personal service workers; janitors and cleaners; nursing aids, orderlies, and attendants; textile sewing machine operators, cleaners and servants in private households, and cooks in
1996. Segregation into lower-paying, secondary labor market jobs, layoffs and high unemployment, and lower educational attainment all combined to keep incomes low and poverty rates high for Mexicanas and Chicanas. The 1995 median incomes for full-time workers put Latinas at the bottom of the income scale averaging $17,178. While Mexicanas and Chicanas earned only half as much as Anglo men, their male counterparts also made only 61 percent of white male earnings in 1990 (Amott and Matthei, 1996: 91). 7
11 12 13
Interview with Refugio "Cuca" Arrieta, February 26, 1997. Interview with Petra Mata, October
7,
1997.
Fernandez-Kelley, 1983:4 and 19-46. For more on the border economy, see
&
Southwest Network for Environmental
14 15 16
Economic Justice,
Interview with Marta Martinez, October
The
9,
1997.
problems of the slump in commodity prices and markets, and ballooning rates of foreign debt which international banks feared deeply indebted nations would be forced to default. See Martinez and Garcia, 1997; Vickers, 1991; Garcia, Arnoldo, neoliberal
program was designed
to address systemic
1970s, such as the falling rates of profit, global recession,
1
996; Asian Migrant Centre,
Democracy
17
1996.
Interview with Celeste Jimenez, February 26, 1997.
in
1
996b; Zamora,
1
oil crisis,
995; National
Commission
for
Mexico, 1997b.
See Sparr, 1994; Vickers, 1991; Rivera, 1996; Suarez Aguilar, 1996; Louie and
Burnham, 2000.
18 19 20 21 22 23
Stephen, 1997: 115.
Chant, 1991:41, cited in Stephen, 1997:115.
Economist
Intelligence Unit, 1994:13, cited in Stephen, 1997:1 15.
See Beneria and Roldan,
1
987; Stephen,
1
997: 111-157; and
Thompson,
Interview with Refugio "Cuca" Arrieta, February 26, 1997.
Human
Rights Watch, 1996:2.
1
999.
119
Notes to ;La Mujer Luchando!
24 25 26 27
Fernandez-Kelly, 1994:263.
Bustos and Palacio, 1994:19; Louie, Miriam, 1998. Fernandez-Kelly, 1994:265.
Delegation meetings organized by National Interfaith Committee
for
Worker Justice and hosted by the Comision para la Defensa de los Derechos Humanos del Valle de Tehuacdn, Cetili^chicahualistli (Tehuacan Human Rights Commission), February 22-23, 1998. Interviews with "Maria" and "Araceli," February 22, 1998. See National Interfaith Committee for Worker Justice, 1998; Louie, Miriam, 1998.
28
Carmen Valadez and Reyna Montero, February 17, 1998 in November 8, 1998. See also Valadez and Cota, 1998. Valadez and Montero explained that their group chose the feminist name "Factor X," after the X chromosomes which Interview with
Tijuana, Mexico. Interview with Beatriz Alfaro,
distinguishes females
29 30
from males.
Interview with Elizabeth "Beti" Robles Ortega, July
Author interviews with Elizabeth Robles of
1 0, 1
998.
SEDEPAC,
July 10, 1998;
Mathilde Arteaga of FAT, February 20, 1998; Carmen Valadez and Reyna
Montero, February
17, 1998;
and Beatriz Alfaro of Factor X, November
8,
1998.
31
Fernandez-Kelly, 1983: 62-63, 70-71. Between 1995 and 2000, for example,
more than 1 million Mexicans moved to the northern border, search of work in the maquila industry (Thompson, 2001 :A1).
32 33
largely in
Interview with Maria Antonia Flores, February 24, 1997.
Delegation meeting organized by the National Interfaith Committee for
Worker
Justice with the Comision para la Defensa de
'Valle de Tehuacdn, Cetili^chicahualistli
(Tehuacan
los
Derechos
Humanos
del
Human Rights Commission in
Tehuacan), February 22, 1998.
34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44
Louie, Miriam, 1990.
Egan, 1997.
Gomez-Quinones and
Maciel, 1998:37-38.
Hondagneu-Sotelo, 1994:21.
Monto, 1994. Interview with Celeste Jimenez, February 26, 1997. Interview with Maria del Interview with
Carmen Dominguez, February
Carmen "Chitlan"
24, 1997.
Ibarra Lopez, February 24, 1997.
Interview with Alicia and Carlos Marentes, February 25, 1997. Garcia, Arnoldo, 1996:6.
Fix and Passel, 1996.
1
994:25. For
more on militarization of the border see
Palafox,
See also Michael Moore's spoof on the inconsistencies of
US
immigration policy, "Not on the Mayflower? Then Leave!," 1996:33-42.
45 46
Cornelius, 1988, cited in Hondagneu-Sotelo, 1994:31. Ibarra Lopez, February 24, 1 997. The 1 986 and Contract Act contained provisions for an amnesty-legalization program for undocumented immigrants who could
Interview with
Carmen "Chitlan"
Immigration Reform
Sweatshop Warriors
120
prove continuous residence in the United States since January 1, 1982, and for those who could prove they had worked in US agriculture for 90 days during specific periods (Hondagnue-Sotelo, 1994:26.)
47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57
Hondagneu-Sotelo, 1994:2-20. Interview with Maria del
Carmen Dominguez, February
Interview with Petra Mata, October Interview with Lucrecia Tamayo,
Montoya
Interview with Irma
Interview with Maria del
7,
24, 1997.
1997.
March
3,
1997.
Barajas, February 28, 1997.
Carmen Dominguez, February
Interview with Ernestina "Tina" Mendoza, October
For more on second and third generation Chicanas' Zavella, 1987; and Ruiz, 1987 and 1998. Interview with Viola Casares, October
7,
8,
24, 1997.
1997.
labor, see
1997.
See Coyle, Hershatter and Honig, 1980; Honig, 1996. Interview with
on
Carmen
1 997. For more top-down leadership within the union Coyle, Hershatter and Honig, 1980.
"Chitlan" Ibarra Lopez, February 24,
race and gender insensitivity and
during the Farah
strike, see
58
Interview with Refugio "Cuca" Arrieta, February 26, 1997.
59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70
Interview with Maria del
Carmen Dominguez, February
Interview with Petra Mata, October
7,
24, 1997.
1997.
Bonacich and Walker, 1994:86-87.
Sweatshop Watch, 2000: 1 Kever, 1990. See Bluestone and Harrison, 1982; Moore, 1996. Interview with Viola Casares, October
7,
Interview with Petra Mata, October
1997.
7,
1997.
Colliver, 2000; Schoenberger, 2000.
Landler,
1
998; Frost,
1
998, Emert,
1
998.
Emert, 1999.
Sweatshop Watch, 1998:1-2.
UNITE
had
initially
Liz Claiborne not be included in the original
71 72
Romero, 1 992;
requested that Levi's and
suit.
Verhovek, 1998.
For information on the lawsuit
filed
by injured workers
at Levi's plants in
El
Paso, see Tanaka, Wendy. 1997.
73
74
Greater Texas Workers Committee, 1997.
La Mujer Obrera, "Desastre causado por NAFTA-caused Disaster,"
Flyer,
2000.
75 76 77 78
Interview with Maria del
Interview with Lucrecia Tamayo,
24, 1997.
March
3,
1997.
Carmen Dominguez, February 24, 1997. After organizer, Dominguez in turn leafleted factor}' gates to
Interview with Maria del
becoming an
LMO
inform workers of
79
Carmen Dominguez, February
Bonacich and Appelbaum, 2000:16.
their rights
Interview with Maria del
during impending
NAFTA
Carmen Dominguez, February 24,
de Trabajadores and La Mujer Obrera. 1993.
closures.
1997. See Centro
121
Notes to {La Mujer Luchando!
80
Interview with Maria del
independent union adopted
Carmen Dominguez, February 24, 1997. The as its name the day in 1985 when angry workers
launched the group as Mexico City sweatshop owners retrieved machines first, instead of injured seamstresses trapped under the earthquake's rubble.
81 82 83 84
Interview with
Interview with
Carmen "Chidan" Carmen "Chidan"
Ibarra Lopez, February 24, 1997.
Ibarra Lopez, February 24, 1997.
Verhovek, 1998. Interview with Refugio "Cuca" Arrieta, February 26, 1997.
annual awards dinner honoring outstanding
women
LMO
labor and
holds an
community
leaders.
85
Interview with Maria Antonia Flores, February 24, 1997. For discussion
about popular education, see
Freire, 1990; Bell,
Gaventa and
Peters, 1990.
Interview with Maria Antonia Flores, February 24, 1997. 86 87 Interview with Lucrecia Tamayo, March 3, 1997. 88 Interview with Viola Casares, October 7, 1997. 89 Interview with Viola Casares, October 7, 1997. 90 Interview with Marta Martinez, October 9, 1997. 91 Interview with Ernestina "Tina" Mendoza, October 8, 1997. 92 Interview with Obdulia "Obi" Segura, October 8, 1 997. Interview with Petra Mata, October 7, 1997. 93 94 Interview with Viola Casares, October 7, 1997. Interview with Carmen "Chidan" Ibarra Lopez, February 24, 1997. 95 96 Interview with Viola Casares, October 7, 1997. 97 Interview with Viola Casares, October 7, 1997. 98 Interview with Remedios Garcia, February 26, 1997. 99 Interview with Carmen "Chidan" Ibarra Lopez, February 24, 1997. 100 Interview with Ernestina "Tina" Mendoza, October 8, 1997. 101 Interview with Petra Mata, October 7, 1997. 102 Interview with Maria del Carmen Dominguez, February 24, 1997. 103 Interview with Carmen "Chitlan" Ibarra Lopez, February 24, 1997. 104 Dr. Loco's Rockin' Jalapeno Band, 1992. Reprinted with permission. 105 The FAT started organizing on the northern border at the General Electric plant in Juarez in 1993. On September 28, 1996, the FAT inaugurated its new center for maquila workers, the Centro de Estudios
(CETLA) [Labor Workshop and Study Lujan Uranga,
CETLA
organizer,
the
FAT,
FAT, Mexico
City,
see Hathaway, 2000.
Taller Eaboral,
A.C.
Ciudad Juarez, February 25, 1997.
Interview with Mathilde Arteaga, in charge of national within the
j
Center]. Interview with Beatriz E.
women's organization
February 20, 1998. For more information on
Rally in support of
Photo by
KIWA
Nam Gang restaurant workers in L.A.'s
Koreatown.
Chapter Three
"Each Day
I
Go Home with A
New Wound Korean Immigrant On June
6,
My
march demanding
(KIWA)
Heart"
Women Workers Korean Immi-
1998, workers, their supporters, and
grant Workers Advocates sive
in
organizers
embarked on
a
mas-
Korean and Ladno restaurant
justice for
workers in Los Angeles' Koreatown. Snaking through mini-malls with
tilled
growled mae-un
shoppers,
surprised
as the
the
mouth-watering smells of
tang, dwenjangjikae,
favorite restaurants.
soon
stomachs
marchers' kalbi,
bulgogi,
kimchee,
and pa-chun wafted out the doors of
The march ended
in front
their
of the Shogun Sushi
Restaurant where workers were paid just $2 an hour. Koreatown
Han Hee Jin
restaurant worker
surged to the front of the
rally
delivered a fiery speech. Just a week before, her boss fired her naeng myon [cold noodle] specialty restaurant
about having to simultaneously wait
Han
tables,
when
Even though we need each
And
Even in
other,
yet employers
a small restaurant,
owners always
want
we are always
"Yes, Boss," "Yes,
Madam," while we
comments such
"you are only
carrying a tray
as
all
your
life"
to
she complained
treat
be treated
forced to
call
workers
as Master.
employers,
are subjected to degrading
a servant" or
"you are made for
or "you, waitress bitch." After seven
years of being subjected to these and
stand here today to state that
more degrading remarks,
we will not tolerate them anymore.
123
a
cook, and wash dishes.
told the marchers,
with suspicion.
and
from
1
I
Sweatshop Warriors
124
Han's impassioned appeal signaled a major new twist in a drama unfolding within the emerging Korean community. Despite black-
and censorship,
listing
lence and stand counterparts,
up
women like Han have begun
to break the
many Korean immigrant women workers worked
global assembly line, service, and finance industry jobs before
ing to the United States. soldiers in
Dragon formal
As young women they served
2
They labored under
economy
on
the
up from the
that sprang
shadow of South Korea's in-
ruins of their war-ravaged
many Korean immigrant women found
in factories like those they
started
as the foot
and globalized sex industry and within niches of the
country. After immigrating,
work
in
com-
South Korea's rapid march to industrialization and Four
status.
militarized
si-
and Mexican
for their rights. Like their Chinese
had worked
in at
home; others
the lowest rungs of the service industry, especially within
economy
mushroomed with the jump in KoSome brought their experiences with independent workers movement in South Korea.
the ethnic enclave
that
rean immigration after 1965. the
Women
Finance South Korea's "Economic Miracle"
Many Korean women workers have grown up under gender regime expressed in the proverb, "the
real taste
a harsh
of dried
fish
and tame women can only be derived from beating them once every three days."
3
Korea's traditional neo-Confucian ideology dictated
women's subordination der the
Sam Jong Ji Do
—
first
[triple
jangban [outside lord] while der the
to father, then husband, then
order instruction].
woman was
Man was
son un-
the bakkat
the anae [inside person] un-
Nam Jon Yu Bi [man's predominance over woman]. Women's was to serve as Hyun Mo Yang Cho [sacrificial mother
ultimate role
and submissive
As
wife].
4
the "inside persons" within poor families,
Korean women's
labor was central to family production, planting, weeding, harvesting,
processing foods and
ferns,
fish, raising
and other time-consuming
bean and pepper paste, dried and
hemp
fabric, clothing, foot,
animals, collecting roots and
tasks such as
salted fish,
making
kimchee, soy
and creating cotton and
and head wear. Korean
traditional folk
songs lament the hunger and hardship of farming and fishing people
Korean Immigrant
who
harvested the land and
Women
Women
sea.
125
continue to culdvate the
cucumbers, onions,
rice seedlings, red peppers, cabbages, squash,
and
garlic.
Along Korea's ample
and
coasts
islands,
women hang
squid and seaweed on their clotheslines to dry in the spring breezes, while sesame leaves blanket the
shigo/ [countryside].
Years spent working in Korean
Koreatown kitchens have brought
paddies and sweltering
rice
soft wrinkles to
Paek Young
Hee's smiling eyes and strong dark hands. In Los Angeles'
mandu
[potsticker] house, she deftly
of the succulent
fillings
and
light
tastiest
combines the secret ingredients
wrappings and serves these
treats
steamed, pan- fried, floating in a garlic pepper broth, or cloaked in a
steamed bun and christened whang mandu [emperor potsticker]. Like her Chinese and Mexican female peasant and working-class counterparts,
Paek had
Because ous.
I
I
less access to
have
little
education than her brothers.
education, immigrant
went to elementary school in Korea
old days in the countryside
it
life
for a
was customary
here
very ardu-
is
little bit.
But in the
for the people to
only send their sons to school, not their daughters. Because
was very hard, there was not enough money dren to school.
all
life
the chil-
5
The Korean proverb "when whales broken" captures Korea's rivalries
to send
fate
of Japan, the United
fight,
shrimps' backs get
sandwiched between the great power
States, Russia,
and China. Forcing the
"hermit kingdom" into the global economy, Japan colonized Korea in
1905 and used
ket,
it
for the next
40 years
as
its
combination
rice bas-
mine, railroad, factory, slave labor reserve, brothel, and bridge-
head to conquer the Asian mainland.
The left
defeat of Japanese imperialism at the end of World
Korea
as only
War
II
nominally independent, with occupying forces
from the Soviet Union and the United
States.
At US suggestion, the
The Soviets supported leftist guerrillas in the north, while in South Korea a US military government from 1945 to 1948 paved the way for rightwing conservative regimes to follow. The clashes between the r>orean peninsula was divided in half
at the
38th
parallel.
south and north erupted in the Korean War, which killed a
total
of
over 2 million Koreans and Chinese and over 50,000 Americans,
Sweatshop Warriors
126
and
left
the
Korean peninsula
still
divided in 1953 and in ashes.
6
The
leading role played by the United States in Korea's division and the
war cemented
its
long-standing military,
and economic
political,
penetration of South Korea and on-going state of war with North
Korea. Seeing South Korea as a bulwark against
communism,
United States provided massive military and economic aid to a
of repressive military regimes. After seizing power through a
coup
tary
in 1961,
program of
mili-
General Park Chung Hee launched an aggressive
industrialization that used state
and
hot-house capitalism and build up the chaebol porations] that control
Women's underpaid workers, financed
the
series
up
to 80 percent
labor,
both
military
power
to
[giant family-run cor-
of the Korean economy.
as industrial
workers and
7
as sex
In a pattern that was repeated in
this process.
other developing countries, South Korean companies recruited yo'kong [factory girls] from the countryside to port-oriented industries, such as
wigs, food processing, and shoes.
tics,
To assuage community fears awaiting
young country
girls
the
day and night in ex-
8
about the temptations and dangers
going to work in the "sinful city" and
placate the "inside vs. outside person"
dichotomy
government portrayed factory work Anthropologist
patriotic duty.
toil
garments, electronics, plas-
textiles,
gender
in
as fulfilling one's national
Kim Seung-Kyung
says that the
state's call for sanop chonsa [industrial soldiers] stressed the
loyalty
and obedience, exploiting
traditional
women's
messages of women
as
daughters willing to sacrifice themselves for the good of the na-
filial
tion.
9
Hierarchical gender relations were maintained at
male management,
discipline,
work
whose
true vocation
Koreatown earlyjo 'kong.
poor peasant
was marriage and motherhood.
restaurant worker
Her
South Korea's
helped
all
women
10
Kim Chong Ok was one
story reads like the timeline of the
of the
development of
much touted "Miracle on the Han River." 11 Born into family, she
and her older
part of a family strategy to find I
via
and sexual harassment, and employers
portrayed factory work as only a temporary arrangement for
a
roles,
my parents work on
work
siblings migrated to Seoul as
in 1971.
the farm a
lot. I
did whatever they
Korean Immigrant
Women
127
me to do, whatever needed to be done, everything from till-
asked
ing the land to sowing the seeds, to harvesting the crops.
extremely hard
was growing everyone
few people were able
on jook
was an
when
I
to live well, but
porridge] and kamja [pota-
[rice
times got really tough, you could take one bowl of
and add enough water to serve four people for
meals.
It
often didn't have enough food
up. I'm sure a
else survived
When
toes].
rice
We
life.
couple of
a
12
Kim's work
and sweatshops
in the factories
in Seoul
continued
through her marriage and the births of her children. Her husband
worked
as a chauffeur, driving elite
rendezvous and After
I
got married,
working. full-time I
I
did a
was hard.
life
I
a factory
I
to help out so
I
kept
never had [permanent]
make money
to survive.
I made the homework making electric cords. I 1978, when I gave birth to my first child,
I
industrialization
and service
officials to their
where they made walking shoes. did
made flowers, too. After I made envelopes while I was
tail,
wanted
kept myself busy to
holes for the shoelaces.
With
I
of everything.
little
work, but
worked in
government
trysts.
taking care of the kids.
13
came expansion of Korea's
industries. In jobs
demanding
finance, re-
interaction with the
on women's
public, employers often discriminated based
physical
appearance and "attractiveness," a practice that has re-emerged
among some Korean employers
in the
United
States.
Sex Industry Shapes Service Sector The
sex industry
is
a
omy. Eight decades of
huge part of South Korea's informal econmilitary occupation
—
and dictatorship
cluding sexual slavery as "Comfort Troops"
14
to
in-
the Japanese
Imperial Army, compulsory military service and training in the use
of deadly force for
all
in
Korea, and the continued occupation
—
US troops have made women intense. 13
by 37,000 against
men
Cho
sex trafficking and violence
Ailee, an English literature professor
Research Center for
Women's
and member of the
Studies in Korea, says that violence
and sexual exploitation of Korean
women
is
rooted in militarism.
Sweatshop Warriors
128
You have
to understand that
have lived
directly
Korea
though the [government] of Roh Tae tensibly civilian, in reality the military
Tae
Woo
die.
The
to reach the position
military
a very violent society.
is
under military governments for 30
Woo
still
killed
We
Even
[1988-1992] was os-
wields power. For
of general, a
and police have
years.
lot
Roh
of people had to
people demonstrating for
democracy. Kusadae [Save the Company] thugs beat up workers.
women
In this violent military climate, men's violence against sanctioned.
is
16
During the Vietnam War, the Park regime developed the sex industry to entice foreign exchange out of Japanese businessmen and
US
on "R and R"
soldiers
once again
officials
ers to sacrifice cies offered
called
and recreation)
(rest
on women
and sex industry work-
factory
themselves "for the sake of the nation." Travel agen-
"sex tours," which included
transportation,
Government
leave.
and
prostitutes.
air travel,
hotel lodging,
17
women women working in res-
exploitation of women sex workers spilled over to
The
workers in other service industries. Korean taurants, bars, snack houses,
and barber shops are often expected
put up with male customers' sexual advances and harassment. rean Immigrant Workers Association restaurant
worked
worker
Kim Seung Min
in a variety
of odd jobs
She used to work
after her
as a donjang sa
son
money
who
ploitative
for a high interest rate.
connected people.
and led
to a lot
I
a
her single mother
husband
person
left.
who was
willing to
She would be the middle per-
didn't like her business. It
was ex-
of people crying. But even though
didn't like the kind of business
my mom was
doing, that
I
was the
money she fed us with and that I grew up on. Isn't it ironic? Our father was a playboy. He was never home. Everyday a different woman would come to our house and ask, "Where is your father?" One time a woman came to my mother's home and
me as a kind of ransom to get hold of my She threatened my mother, "If you don't tell me where
kidnapped me. She used father..
he,
is
.
.
I'm going to
kill
her."
I
was only four or
something that I'm going to remember
to
Ko-
organizer and former
how
[money lender] .... She would find
someone who needed money and lend
(KIWA)
recalled
18
five then,
my whole
life.
but that is
Korean Immigrant
We used
to live in a
house that
Women
my
129
father built, but after
he
we decided to move out. We didn't have much money so we moved into a rented room. There were times when for a month straight we only ate flour-based soup. Do you know sujiebi [flour dumpling]? Sometimes we would take a paper bag and go to the left
market and pick up potatoes and other stuff that the vendors
My wish
behind.
drink
Like
back then was to be able to
the milk
all
I
eat
all
left
and
the rice
19
wanted.
many women working in service jobs, Kim's mother had to
deal with sexual advances
My mother would
from male customers.
put us
all
to sleep early in the evening before
One day I pretended that I was followed my mom when she left. I was afraid that I might
she went away somewhere.... asleep.
I
lose her, so
I
ran to keep up.
I
saw my mom go into zpochangmacha
Wine House]. know what kind of work she was doing. I peeked into the little grass window and saw my mom sitting next to a few men and drinking with them and singing some songs. [outdoor tented restaurant], called Sun Suljib [Pure
At
that time
I
didn't
They hit their chopsticks on the ing in for a long time.
was surprised and
thigh. I
Then my from the
work
restaurant.
there. I think
Korean
living in
way
mom
for her to
it
table in rhythm, [cries]
I
was
star-
Then I saw one of the men touch my mom's I
screamed "Waaahhh!"
dragged and spanked
But
after that
was very hard
my mom
I
all
really loud.
the
way home
never went back to
for a single
society in those days.
make money. When
me
Maybe
woman to make a
this
was young
I
was the
easiest
didn't hate
my
mom for doing these things. I tried to understand her situation. 20 Minjung Workers' Movement Labor organizing in Korea's formal economy has
a long history
of radicalism. The highly politicized and militant character of the
South Korean minjung [mass or
common
people's] labor
stems from the fusion between the militarized
state
movement
and corporate
capitalism.
When demanding their most basic rights, workers imme-
had
to confront not only their bosses, but also the dictator-
diately
ship and
its
national
security
agents, including the
Korean CIA (KCIA), draconian
and labor laws, police
tactical
squads called
Sweatshop Warriors
130
baekgo'ldan [White Skull Squadron], government-controlled unions,
and ex-military company thugs.
On November worker
set
13, 1970,
21
Chun Tae
a 22-year-old
II,
garment
himself afire to protest employer and police repression of
workers organizing for
Peace Market.
their rights in Seoul's
Some
20,000 young women slaved in the one-block, four-story high maze
of tiny cubicles for less than $30 a month each. As flames consumed his
Chun grasped a copy of Korea's Labor Standards Act and "Obey the Labor Standards Act! Don't mistreat young His mother, Lee So Sun, who witnessed his death, founded
body,
shouted, girls!"
the
22
Garment Workers' Union,
Chunggye Pibok, immediately after his
funeral.
Women
spearheaded
throughout the 1970s.
pany waged
23
Women
workers
at
a pitched six-year batde (1972-1978) to
They took on the company union and elected their faces,
the
win
first
their rights.
woman union
up workers, company thugs smeared excre-
president. Police beat
ment on
movement Dongil Textile Comunion
democratic
the
and bosses
fired
and blacklisted the leaders to
smash the movement. 24 Labor unrest continued lence against
women
to
grow and
in
May
1979, police vio-
Kim Kyong In May 1980,
workers, including the death of
Suk, incited riots as far away as
Masan and Pusan.
25
US government and military complicity, the military regime of Generals Chun Doo Hwan and Roh Tae Woo dispatched some
with
40,000 troops to Kwangju City in South Cholla Province to crush citizens
who had peacefully run
their city for five days in
hopes of a
"democratic spring" after the death of dictator Park. Government troops brutally massacred hundreds of
civilians.
army's brutality catalyzed the workers' and people's
Korea.
26
Horror
at
the
movements
in
The government imposed martial law, completely sus27 rights, and oudawed the Garment Workers' Union.
pended labor
During the 1980s, South Korea gained for the world's longest
dents.
28
workweek and
international notoriety
highest rate of industrial acci-
In 1985, the struggles of women workers in the
industrial estate
on
in the minjung labor
Kurodong
the outskirts of Seoul laid the basis for advances
movement. Kuro included
large estates
of shop
Korean Immigrant
Women
131
compounds, which employed some 58,000 workers, including
women who
38,000 young
called taakjang [chicken coops].
company
barracks, tiny
rooms
Daewoo Apparel company
got the
lived in
government to declare its workers'
wages
strike for better
illegal,
and
unionists were beaten, fired, and imprisoned. In a preview of the ex-
plosion that was to come, actions spread
from other Kuro shops staged dent, religious,
Launched
and human in
the country, the
proved key
in
stu-
1987 amidst the eruption of labor disputes across
Korean by
Women
Workers Association
(KWWA)
women
workers'
and forced retirement upon
state repression
marriage and childbirth. in
and women,
groups lent their support.
overcoming the fragmentation of
struggles caused
working
solidarity strikes,
rights
workers
like wildfire as
KWWA organizer Yoon Hae Ryun started
garment shops when she was
14,
from 8 a.m.
to 2 a.m.
every day. She decided to join the 1985 cooperative strike in Kuro.
When we
started to strike,
told
I
my
family about
it
in order to
prepare them for what might happen. They were shocked and cried
and
cried. I
was the only wage earner
the kids were in school and
my
father
job as a laborer lifting materials.
months
in
jail
work were sleep.
there. It
You had to
tory to work, but
where
I
his
got arrested and spent
six
was
was so crowded
that there
sleep like a knife [draws
I
was no place
When I got out of jail I went back to the
kept getting dismissed from jobs.
blacklisted
to
arms close to her body fac-
got to the
It
and could not get work. So together
women workers, I began to work 29 support women workers in their struggle.
with other displaced
KWWA to
because
with workers and students. All of my friends from
to resemble a knife].
stage
I
in the family
was too old to continue
with the
In 1987, Korea's federation of independent unions, Chunnohyup, seized world headlines as hundreds of thousands of students and
workers demanding democracy battled with helmeted, baton-wielding police and government troops while blinding tear gas choked
Some
major
cities.
strikes
and organized 1,200 new unions. 30 In 1995, the democratic
1.3 million
workers participated
unions institutionalized their national structure federation of Trade Unions
(KCTU).
as the
in
over 3,600
Korean Con-
Women workers
played a
sig-
Sweatshop Warriors
132
nificant role in the health workers' unions, particularly the nurses'
union, as well as in unions of teachers, department store employees,
Kim Seung Min explained that the 1987 Pal Nyun Nodongja Dae Toojaeng [Great Workers' Struggle], was a "nationwide rebellion. Most people who had jobs during that period and garment workers. Chil
felt
the impact of the uprising at their workplace because
it
was
a na-
tionwide rebellion, not just a union-based struggle at individual 31
workplaces."
As Korean workers unionized and
raised their
wages and work-
ing conditions, employers began to use migrant workers from China
(both Koreans and Chinese), the Philippines, Vietnam, Indonesia,
Hee
Nepal, and Bangladesh. Lee Jung
joined a democratic bank
workers union during that period. She compares wages, working conditions, and treatment of immigrant workers in
United
Korea and the
States:
When I was in Korea I worked at a bank for about ten years. I was able to work my way up to a certain position within the bank.... There was
a
union that formed
at the
bank so
I
started
those special white T-shirts as a union member. 1,200,000 won. So
it
was more than [US]$2,000
a
I
wearing
got paid
month. They
me a lot of bonuses at the bank, too. I got vacation pay and I would get a bonus the size of my monthly pay. ... In Korea you gave
only had to work eight or nine hours a day. They never make you work 12 hours a day like here. Nowadays some of the Southeast Asian immigrant workers in Korea have to work 12 or more
hours a day.
I
think their situation
grants face here in the US. lar to
those workers
Korea.
is
very similar to what immi-
my situation here is very simi-
are coming, almost like slave labor, to
Kim Seung Min was
movement while became
strike
feel like
32
In 1990,
I
who
I
is
swept up in the minjung student
attending high school in Inchon, Korea.
the leader of the third-year students.
going to
boring." So
I
last for a
I
thought "this
long time so we'd better not make
it
organized plays, singing, and games during the dem-
onstrations. Students started
coming out
to
watch the perfor-
mances. Close to 2,000 students came out, almost the whole
Korean Immigrant
So the
school.
133
call
the students to
undong chang [sports stadium] to demonstrate.
dium with cook. lot
It
the teachers.
was
we were
that time
come
to the
We slept in the
We brought sleeping bags During
really fun.
We used
with the 2,000 students.
real fight started
the public address system to
Women
sta-
and burners to able to
spend a
how it we were
of time talking with the teachers about the society and
runs.
The
teachers told us about the importance of what
doing.
While we were
at the
school camping out, the police and our
members would come and
family
ask us to go home..
.
.
A lot of
the riot police use buses with barbed wire, like chicken wire.
These buses
are called taakjang [chicken cages].
those buses outside the school and
Those
None
reds!
Why
are
They would park
"Those communists!
yell,
you guys supporting them?
Come
out!"
of the students went out so the baekgo'ldan [White Skull
Squadron], a special riot police, charged in and took away almost all
of the teachers. They beat up the students and then stacked
them one by one
criss-cross
In 1987, the police
killing
on top of each
other.
people that forced
Han Yol set off and many middle
of college student Lee
nationwide demonstrations of workers, students, class
33
Chun Doo Hwan
to
concede to demands
for direct elections before the 1988 Seoul Olympics. Popular pres-
sure
on succeeding governments
resulted in the
November 1995
in-
Roh Tae Woo for corruption A Seoul district court sentenced
dictment of Chun and his collaborator
and the 1980 Kwangju massacre.
Chun
to death
34
and Roh to 22 and
preme Court later reduced
a half years in prison.
the sentences, and in
December
The
Su-
1997, af-
only two years in jail, the two were freed by a presidential Koreatown restaurant worker Paek Young Hee comes
ter serving
pardon.
30
from the Cholla province region nation and where the
only had harsh words for I
am not satisfied with
tence but then
knowledge
it
36
Chun and Roh:
the judgment. First they got the death sen-
got changed to a
that they killed
many people, how can live?
that has suffered historic discrimi-
Kwangju massacres were committed. Paek
life
sentence.
many, many people.
justice
be served
if
It is
common
If they killed so
they are
still
allowed to
Sweatshop Warriors
134
Second-Stage Capital Flight During the 1980s,
women
workers launched determined cam-
paigns against plant closures by Pico Products, Tandy, Control Data Electronics,
and the Sumida Corporation. 37 In 1992,
Women Workers
local
Korean
(KWWA) branches united to form a nadonal network, the Korean Women Workers Associations United (KWWAU), or Yonobyob. As
the labor
Association
movement
gained ground, however,
nese transnational corporations fled overseas to
more
US and Japa-
fertile fields in
Indonesia, Vietnam, China, Mexico, and Central America.
companies discarded Korean women workers
like
38
The
old shoes, leaving
many with crippling injuries. At the 1 995 UN 4th World Conference on Women NGO Forum in Huairou, China, Choi Myung Hee, an injured worker, ten-year veteran of the shoe industry, and
KWWAU
organizer in Pusan detailed the devastating effects of this sec-
ond-stage globalization.
During the 1970s and 80s companies and
like
Nike, Adidas, Reebok,
LA Gear flocked to Korea. We worked long hours with toxic
glues and chemicals.
Those
Now
50,000 workers have lost their jobs.
that can find work, can only
and the
in restaurants
do so
in the service industry,
39
like.
Nearly a million workers in Korea waged a general
new
restrictive labor laws
cember
26, 1996.
40
the legislature
But by the end of 1997, the Asian
shattered South Korea's to a halt as the
rammed through
strike against
on De-
financial crisis
economic bubble. Economic growth came
won plummeted, banks folded, and seven of the coun-
40 largest conglomerates went bankrupt or were unable to pay
try's
their debts. Basic
food and commodity prices skyrocketed. The De-
cember 1997 International Monetary Fund bailout package lated
austerity
measures
that
subservient to foreign capital. legalized cies.
mass
layoffs
41
made
the
stipu-
economy even more
In February 1998, the government
and the use of temporary employment agen-
42
Following the dictum of "last hired, grants were hit hardest.
More than
first fired,"
women and mi-
a million workers, including
Korean Immigrant
some 622,000 women,
lost their jobs.
over 270,000 migrant workers.
44
Women
43
135
The government
Union
repatriated
support for migrant workers
shrank as unions focused on supporting local workers.
45
In the wake of second-stage global restructuring and the 1997 financial crisis,
KWWAU
women
contingent
focused on the plight of displaced and
KWWAU
workers.
unemployment insurance
women
to
won
extend
legislation to
working for small and me-
dium-sized businesses and developed an employment and training center
On
displaced workers.
for
August
29,
1999,
workers
(KWTU), the first nawomen. Veteran labor activist and KWWAU director Maria Choi Soon Rhie says, "Now we've got two wheels to make our bicycle move faster KWTU and launched the Korean Women's Trade Union tion-wide, multi-industry labor union for
—
KWWAU!"
46
KWTU
women golf caddies,
TV
writers for
has organized contingent workers such as
and restaurant workers, and freelance
cafeteria
KWTU president Choi Sang Rim says
soap operas.
the union has a big job ahead.
The
present situation confronting women workers at the gateway
summed up
to the 21st century can be
in the following facts:
64
percent are employed in workplaces with
less
70 percent are employed on an irregular
basis.... [They] are the
than four workers;
primary targets for dismissal [and] pressured to resign upon marriage or pregnancy....
percent.
Since
its
inception,
workers in Korea and cies like
The
rate
of organized
women
is
only 5.6
47
KWWAU
has built
in other countries.
ties
between
women
Spurred by free trade poli-
NAFTA and Asian Pacific Economic Cooperation, 48 South US
Korean subcontractors
for
Nike, and Reebok have
moved
lands, Mexico,
companies
like J.C.
Penney, Sears,
into Southeast Asia, the Pacific Is-
and Central America.
A number of these companies
use the same kind of abusive tactics overseas that have been em-
ployed against Korean workers since the 1960s. 49
Women
workers
groups in Asia and Latin America are increasing calling on
KWWAU and KCTU for solidarity in fighting these Korean-owned companies.
Sweatshop Warriors
136
America Fever Given the history of US intervention as
no
surprise that
Korea,
in
many Korean immigrants view
come
should
it
the United States
with a mixture of admiration, curiosity, anger, fascination, and lusionment. Koreans
these ambivalent emotions
call
[America Fever] and miguk byong [America Sickness].
disil-
miguk yol
31
Like many Koreatown restaurant workers, Chu Mi Hee comes home from work late. She looks great, despite having just come off a
long work
shift,
and serves guests
ing hot tea and anju [snacks]. Mrs. to
a tray loaded with cups
Chu
why
explains
of steam-
she was drawn
Miguk [America/Beaudful Country]. I
came to
this
the
was the
US in
of admiration.
was
My
living here. I
help.
1
993 by myself.
wanted to
from church who
friend
came
I
me. In Korea, the
right place for
in July or
August
sidiary
I
worked with
I
worked
for marriage,
prove myself, (laughs)
I
disintegration of
colonialism propelled the
to the
I
if
the object
me
that person's
a half.
I
I
more
related to
only had a high
was not married, so
wanted some chance
US when I was
Korean feudal first
on
as a clerk,
school diploma and not a higher degree.
when I reached the age
The
and
The pay was not bad considering
came
out and see
youth organization that was a sub-
a
of a youth foundation.
accounting.
it
is still
younger than
is
relying
We lived together for about a month In Korea,
try
US
rule
and
30.
rise
to im-
2
of Japanese
wave of Korean migration
to the
United States between 1903 and 1905, principally to Hawaii for 33
work
as agricultural laborers.
tuals,
were drawn by the influence of
Others,
mosdy
US
Korea. Between 1910 and 1924, Korean brides")
were allowed into the country
had migrated
earlier.
to
students and intellec-
Christian missionaries in
women
(called "picture
marry Korean
men who
34
In the 1950s, a second
wave of migration included Korean
wives of US servicemen and their children, war orphans, and professional
workers and students. 33 Since the war, the
US
military has
functioned as an economic enclave within South Korea, dispensing military contracts, jobs,
the black market
—
that
and is,
US
surplus and commissary goods for
survival opportunities to an economically
Korean Immigrant
Women
137
strapped population. Korean women's labor constitutes a central aspect of this enclave economy, through providing companion-
Korean
ship, cooking, cleaning, translating, interacting with
tutions,
US
and other services for
industry, rape,
table byproducts of militarization.
women
with American
"whore."
Despite
are
direct
all
The epithets
men oiyang
and
leveled at
Korean
kongju [western princess]
derogation, scholars estimate that
this
inevi-
and
have come to be synonymous with
Jiang nuna [western sister] 57
GIs. Prostitution, the sex
and violence against women 56
insti-
Korean
wives of US servicemen have assisted in the immigration of an additional 400,000 Koreans.
58
The third and largest wave of Korean immigration to the United States occurred after the
ization
enactment of the Immigradon and Natural-
Act of 1965. Between 1976 and 1990, from 30,000
Koreans immigrated annually to the United
to 35,000
States. In the 1970s and
1980s, Koreans were the third largest group of immigrants after
Mexicans and
Filipinos.
59
Rapid
industrialization, urbanization, the
commercialization of agriculture, militarization, and political repression in
Korea
all
pushed Koreans
to immigrate to the
The South Korean government promoted Korean in order to earn foreign as the Philippines
and
countries were to do.
United
exchange and relieve employment pressures,
later
Indonesia, Bangladesh, Nepal, and other
The South Korean government
and mercenary troops
States.
labor migration
to
sent workers
Vietnam, male miners and construction
workers to West Germany and the Middle East, female nurses to western Europe and the United States, and migrants to Latin America,
some of whom
later relocated to the
Since the war, Korean States at high rates in the gration. Girl 61
ilies.
women
United
States.
have migrated to the United
Korean version of the feminization of mi-
orphans were preferred over boys by
Additionally,
60
Korea sent more
girls
US
adopting fam-
than boys given the
higher value placed on sons than daughters in Korean culture.
62
By
1974, one-third of Korean immigrant professionals admitted to the
United States were nurses. During the
second
largest nationality
legislation to discourage
late
group among
US
1960s Koreans were the nurses.
63
The passage of
immigration of foreign health professionals
Sweatshop Warriors
138
1976 and 1977
in
nurses.
64
and
reduced immigration of Korean
Korean women nurses made a major contribution to
US Korean community,
lishing the
first
their
they sponsored for immigradon visas.
Anthropologist Kyeyoung Park says that tion often differs based origins
come
on economic
for survival reasons;
class people, for better well-being
those
ers, like
who went
"all legitimate trades are
strata:
husbands,
many of
65
modvadon
for migra-
people from lower-class
most middle- and upper-middle and
capital investment;
bankrupt or were
new beginning. Some Koreans
estab-
within the health industry,
by stardng small businesses with
later
whom
drastically
and oth-
fired mid-career, for a
see the United States as a place where
equally honorable" in contrast to Korea.
Park also says that middle- and upper-class Koreans find
it
66
easier to
manipulate immigration procedures, usually through sponsorship
But lower-class Koreans who have no kin
by
relatives already here.
to
sponsor them may be smuggled into the United States by way of
South America, Mexico, or the Caribbean.
Women-Centered Migration Chains
Many Korean women place rea.
where they would be
67
immigrants saw the United States as a treated better than they
Paek Young Hee's younger
States as a nurse
she
—
to
go
as the
sister
and then sponsored the
had been
in
Ko-
immigrated to the United rest
of the family. Because
—had only been
daughter of a poor farming family
able
school for a couple of years, Paek worked hard in
to
Koreatown
restaurants to
make
sure that her children could take ad-
vantage of educational opportunities in the United States. That
is
why we made sure our children got an education after here. When we first came we stayed with my younger sisabout 20 days. After that we got a place in Hanin Town
coming ter for
[Koreatown].
a
68
Kyung Park, her parents, siblings, and children were able to start new life in the United States with the help of her elder sister. I
came
rea.
At
to the
US
that time
in
1990 without
we were having
my husband. He stayed in KoHe wanted a di-
big problems.
Korean Immigrant
Women
We were separated for a while. After I came here I filed the
vorce.
divorce papers and sent them back to Korea.
and had
a lot
of girlfriends. His job was
of those women
with
all
with
my
1
139
family and
990 and got
ever since.
at night.
...
He treated me badly
terrible,
hanging around
When I came to the US I lived
my mom took care of me. I came in October
a job after
two months,
[laughing] I've
been working
69
Kim Chong Ok immigrated at the invitation of her 70 Lee Jung Hee mother-in-law, who had obtained US citizenship. immigrated to the United States for the sake of her husband who had enrolled
But the high cost of living
in the
United
States coupled with unanticipated medical expenses for their
daugh-
ter
as a student.
soon wiped out
Koreatown
their savings.
She ended up working
restaurants after the family
in various
bank account was depleted.
We sold our apartment in Korea in order to come here so we lived on that money for about one year. We didn't work at first because my husband was going to
we didn't really know much about American society. We brought about $50,000 when we first came. But our daughter broke her leg so we had to pay for her medical bills. With the car and apartment payments we pretty much spent all the money we had saved in Korea within one year.
71
Han Hee Jin series
school and
immigrated to the United States after suffering a
of economic disasters
in
Korea. As an undocumented worker,
she was vulnerable to her employer's abuse. I
my immigration status at the beginning of emnow the boss is trying to use this to silence me. I
was frank about
ployment, but felt
powerless and even more angry. The employer says she
church-going Christian and cannot use bad words she uses terms don't
should
"servant" to abuse
those
are only
who
is
a
But
me and the other workers.
I
kind of praying she does at church but she
self-criticize at
members feel
like
know what
like I do.
home
first.
And,
I
hope her fellow church
made up of citizens and green
are hurt
glected by churches.
72
and
truly
card holders.
I
need to be consoled are ne-
Sweatshop Warriors
140
Korean immigration
to the United States
35,849 and then began to decline.
peaked
1987
in
at
The number of Korean Ameri-
cans returning to Korea rose from 848 in 1980 to 6,487 in 1992. Stories
of hardship and long working hours
in
Korean small
busi-
nesses in the United States fueled this trend, as did the return to vilian rule
backlash against the Korean community during the civil
ci-
and the improving South Korean economy. In 1992, the
Rodney King
unrest in Los Angeles also reverberated back to Korea, further
slowing immigration.
73
In
late
1997, the Asian financial
crisis
sent
US shores. Many Korean immiUS currency to relatives in Korea
shock waves across the ocean to grants in the United States sent
who had lost their jobs and homes and been sent to debtors' prison. In Los Angeles, some Koreatown employers cut back on wages, hours, and jobs, blaming the Asian financial
restructuring measures gutted gains by the labor tion for
from Korea became
ways to improve
attractive again as
As South Korean movement, migra-
crisis.
working people looked
their lives.
Working Women The model
minority myth has obscured a sizable portion of the
Korean community, namely low-waged workers,
A
greater proportion of
especially
women.
US-born and immigrant Korean married
women work for pay than do white women. 74 While 28 percent of all US women work in service or factory jobs, 40 percent of Korean 75 working women are concentrated in these areas. A large portion of Korean women work in low-wage jobs in globalized industries, such as garment and electronics assembly, in hotels
and
janitorial services,
as restaurants,
and in ethnic enclave
Korean seamstresses working las,
service jobs, such
supermarkets, and stores. For example, in a study of
Texas, sociologist Shim Ja
for ethnic
Korean contractors
of the 74 women surveyed worked in poorly ventilated eraging 53.7 hours per week, but sometimes sons.
Many
also
worked
at
home. These
factories, av-
more during peak
women
76
sea-
workers did not
have paid vacation leave, nor health insurance, and piece low.
in Dal-
Um found that more than 80 percent
rates
were
Women
Korean Immigrant
Many Korean immigrant women Clara County, California,
work
San Jose and Santa
living in
as electronics assemblers.
Valley's 172,400 electronics production
male 70 percent are Asian or Latino. that 10 to 15 percent
141
77
workers
Of Silicon
—60 percent
Community activists
of the Asian production workforce
are fe-
estimate
is
Korean,
10 to 15 percent South Asian, 30 percent Filipina/o, 30 percent Viet-
namese, and the
rest other
made up 47 percent and blue-collar workforce, skilled just
Southeast Asians and Chinese.
78
Asians
Latinos 21.6 percent of the semi-skilled
and 41.2 percent and 35.8 percent of the un-
workforce within the industry.
above the minimum, without
79
Wages average $6 an hour,
benefits, opportunities for raises,
or upward mobility, even for women who have worked ten to fifteen years
for
the
company. The
women
pressured to
are
work
twelve-hour days and six-day weeks during rush seasons, but are
let
off without pay during dead seasons. Production lines are segregated
by gender, immigrant lish-speakers
status,
and
age, with older, limited
working the most hazardous and tedious
jobs.
Eng-
Korean
immigrant women assemblers commonly experience problems with repetitive stress injuries,
poor vision, nausea, rashes, headaches, and
on
miscarriages.
Korean community organizers a million
Koreans
in
live in the greater
Los Angeles estimate
that half
LA area, constituting the largest
concentration of Koreans in the United States.
Some 70
percent of
the immigrant population are workers, contrary to the popular view
of all Koreans square area
as business
filled
shops, churches,
Tae
owners.
81
"Koreatown" covers
a 20-mile
with restaurants, markets, professional services,
community and
civic organizations,
herb shops,
82
Kwon Do studios, and media outlets. Koreatown serves as the
diaspora's
social
and
cultural
Several thousand
center.
Korean
women work as waitresses, cooks, hostesses, and cashiers in the 300 83 restaurants in the enclave. Korean men work in Koreatown markets,
and
as janitors,
handymen,
painters,
While Koreatown functions
as
Korean restaurant and market owners do
a lot
in
Los Angeles' downtown garment
and construction workers.
an ethnic enclave economy, also
employ Latino men
to
of the heavy "back of the house" work. Korean contractors district
employ Mexican and
Sweatshop Warriors
142
some Korean women workers
Central American immigrants and
The
pattern and sample makers.
may have States.
84
migrated to Ladn America
garment industry before migrating to the United
in the
Koreans constitute some 10 percent of all Koreatown
Asians and African Americans.
New
85
immigrants from Korea find jobs
Women
Koreatown.
hometown
says that the
resi-
and the remaining 12 percent, other
dents, Latinos, 68 percent,
tances,
who
originated with Koreans
and worked
as
practice of hiring Latino workers
relatively quickly in
learn about jobs through friends, acquain-
and
contacts,
women restaurant workers' ages
to mid-60s, with the majority
Lee Jung Hee
local newspapers.
run from the early 20s
aged 35 to 40. The majority of women
86 have children, and older workers also have grandchildren. Ad-
justing to a
was
new industry and
fired after
country can be
working only two hours
at
her
difficult. first
Chu Mi Hee
job in the United
States.
After
1
5 days [from
for jobs here.
I
when
soon found different
my
started looking
I
places.
I
I really
got hired for only two hours and then they kicked didn't have any restaurant
say oh so oh seyo [please
So I
I
made
them
work experience,
come in] and things
for giving
like that to the
me
maybe
more....
a job since I
I
At
worked
first I
ing at the big restaurants where
I
out.
custom-
didn't
ally didn't feel that
I
I
didn't
started
work-
was paid by the hour, I
tried to stick
know any better when
anything was wrong.
Paek Young Hee found jobs
about four grateful to
had no other choice.
the reality of what the pay should be. I
at
was
complain even though the base pay was low. Once
ger restaurants.
me
[laughs] I didn't
mistakes.
continued to work in restaurants. ...
different restaurants,
friends
I
When I was honest about how short
immigration experience was, they wouldn't hire me. At one
place
ers.
she arrived in the US]
looked for shik dang [restaurant] jobs mostly, and
in
I first
I
learned
with the bigstarted.
I
re-
87
Koreatown through hometown
and other acquaintances. As an older woman, she did "back
of the house" labor
in the kitchen
and worked her way up from
part-time cook's helper to a full-time cook.
a
Korean Immigrant
At first I worked
at a ddokjib [rice
who came from
same
the
work. So so
it
I
went
for
me
to
there. I didn't
I
found out about
I
worked
.
Korea
told
me
very hard so the
first I
as
The other women
me. People who are
wasn't a
as a cook's helper, peeling potatoes,
things like that.
are older
cook.
full
I
dif-
and
worked
chopping vegetables, and
88
Kim Seung Min work
I
jobs.
work in different jobs. Usually the cooks At
newspaper
to read the
about openings where
in five or six different places.
the waitresses are younger.
restaurant
owned by someone I came from, a
that
The work was
working there were about the same age ferent ages
143
go to some other restaurant to
know how
was only when other people
might go that
cake house]
area of
kohyang chinku [hometown friend]
owner recommended
Women
also followed the trail
of immigrant
women
to
in 1997.
My plan was to make lots of money for six months and then move to New York, [sighs] So I got hired at a restaurant where I worked Someone introduced me to me that I didn't have much experience a day from my share of the tips. After that
ten days straight without any day off. that job.
so
I
The owners
only got paid $1 5
they fired me, saying
The
told
restaurant
someone
I
wasn't fast enough. But
was always
The day
anymore, the new worker got really upset.
still
busy.
it
was
They
to cover for ten days, but they never told
hired only temporarily.
I
really, really
insisted that
I I
they told
me
who was supposed
all
planned.
just
needed
me that I was come back
not to
to start
showed
up.
said they couldn't use people like this, but they leave.
89
Long Hours By before
law, restaurant workers should get paid
sub-minimum wages of Twelve-hour days and
Depending on and $3,000
a
tips,
just
six- to
over $4 an hour
at big restaurants.
seven-day workweeks are standard.
Koreatown
waitress can earn
between $600
month, and cooks, depending on whether the wait-
resses share tips, split shifts,
minimum wages
In Koreatown, restaurant workers are often paid
tips.
between $600 and $1,500. 90 Some
women work
taking off between meals, and returning to finish up.
Sweatshop Warriors
144
Thus, their waking hours are completely dominated by
their work The long hours exact a toll on women workers, shortchanging the amount of time they have to spend with children,
schedules.
spouses, friends, or at church.
Paek took
a
pay cut to work for an acquaintance. She worked 12
When
hours a day, 6 days a week.
the business did not go well, the
boss tried to lay her off without paying $1,200
She eventually found another
owed
job, but the president
Restaurant Owners' Associadon tried to get her
in
back wages.
of the Korean
new boss
to fire her
for speaking out. I
used to go to church but
The people
Sundays.
many
hours, there
with friends.
many
Like
is
I
now I
wash
are
my
I
have to work on
friends.
But working so
never enough time to socialize and spend
91
other restaurant kitchen workers in Koreatown res-
Paek works with Latino
taurants,
can't because
work with
dishes,
lift
men who,
heavy things, peel potatoes and things
like that.
How do we communicate? (laughs) By gesturing sonjit,paljit [with our hands and
words and
I
feet],
know
what we want.
I
our eyes and heads. They a
know a few Korean
few Mexican words so we point and show
have never had any problems communicating
with the Mexican workers.
92
Choi Kee Young found
a restaurant job
through the Korean
newspaper. As with the case of many immigrant and African- American families where finding a job, even a low-paid one, can be easier for
women
than men, Choi was thrust into the role of the family
"rice winner." It
was
really
hard to get used to
life
here at
first
because
I
had
to
pretty much 12 hours a day when I first started. Of course, my husband looked after our kids. But I'd come home so late that I couldn't really give my kids their baths. So during the summer, my daughter's hair smelled pretty bad!
work
I
lost a lot
hard to gain weight, but
work
that
I
came
to America. I've really tried
just can't
because of the amount of
of weight since I
I
have to do. But if I don't live
The apartment payment
is
the
this
way we can't survive.
most important because we need
a
Korean Immigrant
place to stay.
need
We
at least a
work so
I
about
a car to get
late I can't
hours or so and
six
my kids
need
thousand dollars
I'd
be
had the
that the potential for your kids to
for
him so he doesn't
dren very
well.
He
really
If
I
in
We
America.
could just work after
of the hours are so long
all
has
by
of the time to look
rest
go bad are
my husband
get the family together and
to get
my kids.
OK. But in Koreatown
biggest complaint that
145
around and go to work.
month
a
look after I
Women
really high.
cook them dinner. look after the
It's
.
..
The
he has to
that at night
is
very stressful
homework of our chil-
has turned to drinking by himself and he feels
lonely.
Sometimes
Korea
a lot, so that's
he'll
joke with
me and
why he's ended up
say he's really missing
drinking.
93
Health Hazards
Low-wage Korean women workers in the restaurant, garment, hotel, and electronics industries face a number of health hazards. In the high-stress restaurant industry,
women work with boiling liquids
and hot stoves and dishwashers, and carry heavy pots and
trays.
In
the poorly ventilated sweatshops of the garment industry, workers are engulfed
motions behind
repetitive
cramped
by dust, threads, chemical dyes and sprays, and perform industrial
machines for long hours in
spaces. In the hotel industry,
women work
with strong
cleaning agents and perform heavy labor that can lead to back, shoulder, neck, and wrist injuries. In the electronics industry,
women work with toxic chemicals, and often suffer from eye dizziness, headaches, rashes, miscarriages, injuries,
when
and cancers
that
do not become
stress
visible until years later
hard to hold employers accountable because the small
it is
shops have closed
down and
Lee Kyu Hee worked the position of parlor started
chemicals changed.
94
luxurious Fairmont Hotel in San
at the
Francisco for nine years as a
I
strain,
back and repetitive
room cleaner before being promoted
maid and restroom-cleaner.
working there when
I
was 48 years
old.
The
first
day
I
cleaned seven rooms, the second day eight, then nine, ten, eleven
rooms. didn't
.
..
It
took
me one month
know I was on
probation.
to get ...
up
to cleaning 16
rooms.
I
Now I get paid $8.20 an hour,
to
Sweatshop Warriors
146
every two weeks.
need
to survive
I
even think about quitting because
can't
even though the work
have problems only working part-time, but
I
I'm not feeling so three days....
I
well.
went
Sometimes
I
to see the doctor
OB/GYN
to the
x-rays.
I
week or
who
took x-rays but
my
stomach.
I
and internal medicine to take more
have Kaiser insurance, but can't see
because they don't cover
a
Korean doctor
95 it.
Lee Jung Hee described skin burns,
have to since
I
get laid off for a
couldn't find out the cause of the pain around
went
I
hard.
is
how she
suffered serious back injuries,
and a miscarriage because of unsafe working conditions
at the
Sa Rit Gol Restaurant where she worked as a waitress. As in
many
other Korean-owned workplaces, her boss did not offer
workers' compensation nor pay her medical a very old restaurant so the
It's
were no mats on the
tile.
They
tile is really,
just
on
of people
the boxes and
funny to watch people I fell
lot I
a lot
would get
even
that
I
was
fired.
I just
if I
falling
afraid to
There
injury,
if
you
a lot
fall,
but because
so
it's
down.
tell
was
... [I]
in a
my employer because I thought
With few exceptions the restaurants
are pretty
ronment. So
down. Sometimes
and ended up hurting my lower back.
of pain, but
Koreatown
fall
really slippery.
kind of covered the floor with
not about the
just laugh,
for her injuries.
When it gets wet a lot of people
old boxes, like Budweiser boxes. just slide
bills
much
same
the
in terms
kind of tolerated the conditions because
went somewhere
else
it
in
of the work envi-
would be
pretty
I felt
much
the
same. also suffered a miscarriage
I
tell
when I was
A
lot
I
didn't
of times they would skip
month. There were four other
women
went
to the
My
have
a scar
entire
didn't
tell
same gynecologist.
on my hand.
A
workers besides me.
back was hurting
that.
But
me anything about treatment or resting. I
was hurt so
I
told her,
choice but to keep working. In the end just couldn't
a lot
a
We
and
I
customer got drunk and pushed me.
hand was swollen because of
got annoyed that
I
.
my employer. A lot of my co-workers actually didn't have reg-
ular menstrual cycles either.
My
there. .but
work anymore. 96
my
employer
Instead she just
"No, I'm OK."
I
had no
my back hurt so much that
Korean Immigrant
Women
147
Sexual Harassment and Age Discrimination
Women complained about employers' expectations of women's physical appearance, demeanor,
establishments.
and conduct
in restaurant
Women working for Korean employers
and bar
sometimes
confronted discriminatory gender practices "imported" from vice industries in Korea.
Kyung Park ended up
ser-
leaving her restau-
rant job to escape the sexualized atmosphere.
The manager was kind of jealous and didn't like me talking to the customers. Her title was manager but she was kind of like a They madam, someone who sat and drank with the customers. had rooms sectioned off, and I saw her kissing customers and .
things like that.
didn't like seeing that
I
of environment so
Korean and
half
rean,
changed jobs
and working
.
in that kind
At lunch time it was
right away.
half American, but in the evening
drinking.
all
I
.
it
was
all
Ko-
97
Lee Jung Hee described
similar
especially those selling liquor to
work experiences
in restaurants,
male customers. Rituals of male
"bonding," unleashing pent-up aggression, "letting
it all
hang out,"
drinking oneself into a stupor, and being served by and groping
women in Korea out Asia
is
and Japan and around
US
military bases through-
notorious.
A lot of employers work, stuff like
ask the waitresses to go out for a drink after
that. If you
don't do
it,
they won't think very well
of you. Even while I'm working, employers
you
to
ate,
very hard to
have
a drink.
started
working
place
went
I
evening. tional
to
Those kinds of things
see. I've
again,
had
a lot
The employer
housewife
I
I
applied to about four places.
of customers
told
I
who came
that because
I
why
I
at night
had to leave that that
I
went
When
The
I
first
to drink in the
looked
up
like a tradi-
to the
wanted so
I
atmowasn't
job.
to for about ten days
and
That restaurant had these rooms where you can close
quit.
The sushi person told me if the owner asks you to go room late at night, don't go in because some bad things
the doors. into that
me
who came
There was another job then
are very hard to toler-
couldn't really match or play
for the job. That's
sometimes ask
seen a lot of that around me.
sphere the male customers fit
will
.
.
.
Sweatshop Warriors
148
go on
in there. I
was
quit the next day. lot
of those kinds of
Koreatown to attract
I
was
a
and the employers told
time
I
out.
good worker and I could get
men come hurt.
They
there at night to drink.
I felt like I
a job
A
anywhere. But I
my
a
hole and
case
their bosses.
Han Hee
on Korean-language
who
bit the
hand
100
for guests. sat
[too
couldn't get
your
on would
101
Park
my
machine, so he said that
and cursing
is
friend refused that
had sit-down
told her that the mats that the
friend should take
refused,
This
said,
get ruined if they were put into a washing
wash them by hand. She at her.
boss called
radio calling Lee an ungrate-
that fed her.
The employer
Jin's
liars,
Lee Jung Hee's boss
friend of mine... worked at a restaurant that
customers
I
restaurant workers are treated like
and servants by
rooms
because a
crying every
like
Aughhh! Nomu
age.
was deep down in
women
I felt
workers "servants" or "you, waitress bitch." delivered a tirade
I
old you are; they look at your body."
Many Koreatown
ful charity
too old.
act like they're picking Miss Korea: they look at
how
at-
of age discrimination against waitresses.
a lot
was turned down because of
face; they ask
thieves,
faces
down by employers
me I was
Japanese restaurants especially prefer younger
much]
young
women.
for interviews
thought
of
I just
98
Park was repeatedly turned
was wrong. There's
lot
that so
eyes, but I hear a
male customers for drinks. Despite her youthful and
searching for younger
went
stories.
me
he told
my own
restaurant owners often prefer pretty,
tractive appearance,
I
really scared after
didn't see that with
I
them home and
and the employer started
yelling
the reality for restaurant workers.
work because
after ten
My
hours of demanding
work, she knew that she would have no energy left to do anything except
fall
asleep
when
she got home.
disobeying her employer.
And
yet,
she was fired for
102
Living in Post-Rodney King Los Angeles
—two weeks can-American Rodney King— Soon On March
video
footage
16, 1991
after the nation
was rocked by
of Los Angeles police viciously beating AfriJa
Du,
a
Korean- American gro-
Korean Immigrant
cer shot
and
killed
Latasha Harlins, a
1
Women
149
5-year-old, African-American
teenager after a fight over a shoplifting charge for a $1.79 botde of
orange
juice.
The shooting was videotaped by an and-theft camera in what many saw as another mockery
and repeatedly played on TV,
of the value of African- American
103 life.
A year later, the announcement of a not-guilty verdict for police officers
dubbed 1992
who had
beaten King ignited three days of what some have 104
During the April
Los Angeles' Korean community paid
a high price for the
the nation's
riots,
first
"multi-racial riot."
African-American and Latino rage
at a legal
and economic system
dominated by white racism. Over 2,000 Korean-owned stores were looted, burned, or both.
One Korean was killed and 46 were injured.
Korean merchants suffered almost
half of the
damages incurred,
even though Koreans constituted less than 2 percent of Los Angeles county's population at the time.
105
Korean Americans have wresded with the causes of the what the community could do ing again.
Koreatown
to prevent such violence
restaurant worker Lee Jung
show more
rean owners must
Hee
riot
and
from erupt-
says that
Ko-
respect towards their workers and
customers. She urges Koreans to be less status- and
more commu-
nity-oriented.
In the
LA Uprising, the question I ask is why is it that Koreans be-
came
the target?
Tokyo.
When
that the
owners
ers
It's
I talk
not something that to people
are very, very respectful
and the owners are on an equal
That's what I've heard.
Finding Chun Tae
II
in
hit
who work
Chinatown or
Little
Tokyo I hear of waitresses. The workin Little
level in
terms of treatment.
106
Koreatown
in the
March 1992, a mere month before the LA riots, progressives Korean community came together to address the rising ten-
sions
between Koreans and other
In
needs of working
class
ethnicities
and
to address the
Koreans. Korean Immigrant Workers Advo-
(KIWA) was created as a place all Koreatown workers could come to when they ran into conflicts with their bosses. The workers' cates
center organizes restaurant, janitorial, construction, garment, and
Sweatshop Warriors
150
who work
other low-wage Korean and Latino immigrant workers for
Korean employers. As
shares a
common heritage
cratic labor
a diaspora labor organization,
and perspectives with the Korean demo-
movement.
In 1997,
Kim Seung Min was looking for information about US Koreatown
labor law after getting laid off from a
Korean democratic movement cate
KIWA
KIWA although
veteran,
it
As
restaurant.
a
didn't take her long to lo-
she was skeptical that such a creature actually
existed. I
started looking through the
ganizations.
wanted
director}7
was going out of
labor law, not necessarily to get counseling.
my
mind.
was
I
KIWA for me. He told me that called him, "Babojah! [Hey,
My
crying.
there anyway."
was
came
in
When
a picture
I
was
got here
of Chun Tae
November when
zation
I
Il's
can
picture
I
began
I
[the
II
KIWA was
I
said, "Let's just
go
because
to gain trust
garment union martyr].
I
planning to have an event
Oh,
started crying.
flyer up.
this
When I saw
must be an organi-
107
trust.
After concerted pressure,
Korean Restaurant Owners
the
KIWA in October 1996 to set
Association signed an agreement with
up a $10,000 workers' defense fund; conduct workers' nars for almost
I
boyfriend called
a
commemorating Chun Tae Il's life and had a
Chun Tae
I
movement organization. I Dummy!] There's no movement orit
ganization in the US, only in Korea." But
there
under service or-
saw Korean Immigrant Workers' Advocates.
I
know US
to
Korean
all
the
KROA
ment law notices; and initiate
rights semi-
restaurants; post bilingual
a joint research
conditions. Lee Jung Hee, a former
employ-
committee on working
member of the democratic bank KIWA when organizers con-
workers union in Korea, learned about ducted a seminar where she worked. I
learned that there were
wages
that
I
was supposed
that these things existed
had
maximum hour
to get. That's the first time
under
US
law. Before that if
to quit, then the other waitresses
with no rest days at like the
all.
Everyone puts
law in Koreatown;
minimum
laws and
had
learned
to put in 12-hour days
in that kind
that's the rule
I
somebody
of work. That's
people follow.
108
Korean Immigrant
KIWA's
In 1997, with
Women
151
support, Lee filed a
civil suit
for a serious
back injury she received because of dangerous working conditions.
She talked about
how KIWA
KIWA could do
a lot in
could address workers' needs.
terms of teaching workers about what's
going on in the US. But the
work
in restaurants
just that the
work
is
bad, but
ourselves more, and be a bit
English
of knowledge of people
work
we want
experience.
who
It's
not
opportunities to develop
more conscious about society.
I
need
the most. Ninety percent can't speak English, but I
skills
feel if people
level
limited to their
is
could learn English
gressively. I think these kinds
we could think a little more pro-
of problems are the most urgent for
the workers. I really, really
I'm doing
possibility that
back
agree with what
this also for
my
KIWA's doing 100
children, [cries
percent.
and pauses] There's a
US without going my kids could end up working in a res-
I'm going to keep living in the
to Korea. In that case
taurant. If the consciousness of Koreatown employers doesn't de-
velop,
I
think
my
children
After resolving her
Kim Seung Min I
joined
would
suffer as well.
own layoff case and volunteering at KIWA, KIWA's staff in November 1997. and
see workers outside of the meetings
them
talking, eating,
109
and having
try to
spend time with
tea or coffee. I usually listen to
what's on their minds and the difficulties they are facing at this point in their
how
to
lives.
That occupies
a lot
form an on-going workers
husband. their
It's
feel that
standing up for themselves,
they are under the family system, under the
very difficult
husband and the
We talk about
association.
The biggest problem they have is because they
of my time.
when
family.
they don't have the support of
Even though they think
this
work is
women cannot dismiss their husband's 110 opposition. So the women face a lot of dilemmas and conflicts.
very important, a lot of
After coming to the aid of restaurant workers in a disputes,
number of
KIWA began to lay the foundation for an independent res-
taurant workers association, the Restaurant
Workers Association of
Koreatown (RWAK). An outgrowth of KIWA's across race lines with Latino as well as
efforts to organize
Korean restaurant workers.
Sweatshop Warriors
152
made up of two language components, one
this association is
for
Korean female workers and one for the Latino male workers. In addition to fighting for workplace issues like better wages
and working conditions and workers compensation,
RWAK
is
be-
ginning to address the lack of healthcare benefits and childcare for the
women who
working such long hours.
are
RWAK
relationship with
La Clinica Oscar Romero
ance for both
Latino and Korean members.
its
RWAK
component of
bership
building a
is
to provide health insur-
The Korean mem-
gathering resources to set up a
is
many of the workers own ID card system for its
childcare center for restaurant workers. Since are
RWAK created
undocumented,
members,
its
in addition to a check-cashing
program and micro-credit
system.
Lee Jung Hee started working
as
an organizer for
RWAK in
Her co-organizer, Kang Hoon Jung was active in the South Korean federation of student organizations, before migrating
May
2000.
to the
United States in 1 992. Lee learned
how to deal with employers
and organize workers "on-the-job."
we have when doing outreach
Usually the problem rants
is
sometimes
ers
employers. the bosses raise
act different
Most of want
money
rants have
when
they are in front of their
the information
we
to kick us out. Lately
bring
is
about labor, so
RWAK has been trying to
for earthquake relief in El Salvador
and the restau-
been unexpectedly open to getting information.
employer that had ally
to the restau-
not with the workers, but with the employers. The work-
a lot
of claims against them
said,
One
"You're actu-
doing something good for a change," because of the informa-
tion
we had on
immigration
rights.
the employers as well. Sometimes
That kind of thing appeals to
when we go
to the restaurant,
But
the boss just tears
up the
earthquake
one employer, even though he did not want
relief,
leaflets in front
of our
faces.
for the to,
put in a $20 donation.
When stressful. I tally
I
first
started going to the restaurants
was scared
unafraid. Mostly
other organizers.
I
I
to
go and would
suffer.
But
go by myself, but sometimes
have worked on cases where
sent a worker and I've
done
that
on
my
own.
111
I
it
was
now I
had
I
really
am
to-
go with the to
go repre-
Korean Immigrant
Lee wants
RWAK to
which labor
ing,
What
153
combine labor and community organiz-
activists characterize as "social
motivates
me
to
do
this job
happening to the Korean workers are
Women
is
when
I
unionism."
think about
what
in the restaurant industry.
working so hard for such long hours
just to
112
is
They
support their fam-
ilies.
Because they are immigrants, they suffer for their whole
lives.
We need to work on a lot of the issues that surround and im-
pact the lives of immigrants. erything the worker needs.
I
hope
My
that
RWAK can work on ev-
second hope
for restaurant
is
workers to become more a part of the community and do more
work to build the community. When we do good work.
things
happen and we can
up
at
Women, Releasing Han
Immigrant Korean
women
oppression not only
families
of work together,
113
Organizing
class
a lot
release the stress that builds
workers confronted gender and
at their
workplaces, but also within their
and the Korean community. In the course of organizing, the
women began to develop a women's rate gender-specific education
support network, and incorpo-
campaigns and services into
their or-
ganizing work.
Despite Korean women's long work hours in the United States, they are their
still
expected to perform almost
homes, while
their
deremployment and nections,
and
the domestic chores in
husbands cope with either long hours or un-
a big
stability.
all
114
drop
in
economic and
social status, con-
This creates a volatile environment in
which alcoholism and domestic violence often
erupts.
A 2000 com-
munity needs assessment survey on the problem of domestic violence conducted by Shimtuh, the
Korean Domestic Violence
Program, found that 42 percent of the 347 respondents said that
knew of a Korean woman who had experienced physical violence from a husband or boyfriend, while 50 percent knew of a Kothey
rean
woman who had
experienced regular emotional abuse, and 33
percent reported that their father had
once."
5
hit their
mother
at least
Sweatshop Warriors
154
The combined gender and class oppression women face became evident during a sharing session held in April 1999 among some Korean women workers (who wish to remain anonymous). The women began by drawing charts plotting the highs and lows of their lives.
One woman
business, into
which she had poured
she had borrowed
band then
money from
fled to the
business and pay off
United States to fight
described the collapse of her husband's
United
of her labor and for which
States, leaving her to close
debts by herself.
its
start life
an abusive boss.
all
her family. She told of how her hus-
Once
over again, she found herself having to
Another woman, "Mrs. H.," family suicide.
the
116
told of
how
poor and hungry while struggling to survive
river while
down
she arrived in the
she and her husband,
in Korea,
had planned
They would drown themselves by jumping
a
into the
holding their kids. But she couldn't bear to pass the baby
over the fence.
Then her husband
days. Since his
body never turned up
pect that he was
still
alive.
bolted.
She searched for him for
in the river, she
began to sus-
He later appeared, and they eventually mi-
grated to the United States with their children. Laughing bitterly and
make
joking to
light
of her
story, she described
how
she went
through many hardships because of her husband's drinking and
gambling and her family's extreme poverty. Later when another
woman recounted being beaten black and blue by her husband, Mrs. H. shouted out, "That's he never beat me."
These and
tears,
why
I
never
left
him
in spite
of everything;
117
stories released a flood
of pent-up anguish, resentment,
mixed with exclamations of sei sang
eh!
[what
is
this
world
coming to]" and other expressions of shock, sympathy, and support. Sometimes the women's
faces glistened with tears; at other
ments the room erupted
in peals
other about the absurdity of it
of laughter
as they teased
moeach
all.
The women workers' consciousness
raising session
combined
popular education methodology and the cathartic release of han.
Han
is
the
Korean term used
ns
to described accumulated suffering,
sadness, and hardship. According to psychiatrist
Luke Kim, ban is an
"individual and collective emotive state of Koreans, involving feel-
Korean Immigrant
Women
155
ings of anger, rage, grudge, resignation, hate
and revenge.
form of victimization syndrome of Korean people, with and indignation suppressed and endured."
injustice
side" of ban, tragedy,
and
is
The "down
of fate suffered by Korean people. But the
cruel twists
and
ban, a socially
women workers expresses
culturally shared
the "up side"
understanding that acknowl-
edges and articulates Korean women's pent-up suffering, and
and allows for
fore, facilitates
of support,
solidarity,
Joining the
of
the sadness, oppression, injustice, colonialism, war,
sharing of han between the
of
119
[It is a]
feelings
release
its
there-
through a collective process
and sisterhood.
Movement
Korean women workers joined
the
movement when
they
when they could no longer tolerate their bosses' Some women organized together with their co-workers,
reached the point abuses.
while others started out fighting because of an individual grievance.
Because of the close-knit character of the Korean community and ethnic enclave,
women's
decisions to stand
up
for their rights
had
immediate consequences. Restaurant owners quickly blacklisted
some of
the
first
Korean women
who dared women endured
restaurant workers
speak out. In addition to the bosses' attacks, some
censorship from their ministers and the ethnic media, and pressure
who
from worried co-workers and family members
would never be
able to
work in Koreatown
Chu Mi Hee worked as a waitress for
two
at
Koreatown's
years. In 1996, she
feared they
again.
largest restaurant, Siyeon,
was
fired
and
blacklisted af-
ter participating in a struggle against the boss.
Him
dul otjiyo!
things did not
would kick
[It
was
go
his
things,
a strain,
it
was very hard]
to
work
way, he [the boss] would use his
even people. The
same. She didn't use her
fists,
woman owner was
didn't like,
there....
and also to cut
He
about the
but she did the same thing with her
words. They treated the workers very inhumanely. At
36 people worked
there. If fists.
Then
first
about
they started firing people they
their labor costs. That's
when our Mex-
ican chinku [friends] started opening relations with
KIWA....
Sweatshop Warriors
156
Without
me
knowing, the owners found out and
fired
our Mexi-
can friends.
We wanted
be treated with dignity and not have to work
to
under physical and verbal abuse. Most of the Mexican workers
and Korean waitresses united. With KIWA's help, we the customers.
demanded
We made a wildcat strike that lasted one hour and be kept that the owners
that the original promises
made when
leafleted
they opened.
leaflets, talking to
people,
hoped
I
...
all
that protesting, passing out
of these things would bring about
we were demanding were
good
results. I feel that the things
basic.
We were not asking for anything outrageous. 120
very
After she was fired by Siyeon for fighting for a collective bargaining agreement, she took a
new job at a coffee shop
which was owned by
of one of the Siyeon owners. She was
disoriented at
when
a cousin
Prince's
called Prince,
manager and then her minister
called her
home. I
was awakened by
phone
a
where the manager and
you
are suing [Siyeon]
I
from the minister of the church
call
went.
The
minister said, "I heard that
on behalf of the workers.
How can you do
such a childish thing?" The minister said he had gotten a phone call
from the
[Prince]
manager and heard
all
about what was going
on and that it was hard for me to continue working Then I knew that I was being blacklisted.
When
the Siyeon
owner found out
son
like that?"
The Prince owner
cause she was the one told
who
referred
me
talk to the
At
quit."
I
to
had to work.
She
[the
The manager
How could you is
I
[partici-
really small. It's
demanded
manager]
going
[that she] let
said, "Let's all
talk
To find a new job, show my experience
after resting for a while.
show my work
121
directly.
to Prince.
business."
manager be-
couldn't go back to church and face the [manager].
found another job
had
me
in you.
to find another job."
owner
at Prince,
that time I felt really disappointed in humanity. After
that incident I
you
"None of your
Koreatown
pate in the Siyeon dispute]?
worked
to consult with the
me, "I'm very disappointed
to be hard for
said,
I
"How can you hire a per-
he went to the Prince owner and asked,
But the Prince owner wanted
that
at [Prince].
experience, but to
about Siyeon. So
I
was
afraid to
go
I I
to places to look for
Korean Immigrant
The Siyeon workers had
had
scales,
to
March of 1996,
On
KIWA
and Prince operatives for
Paek Young Hee worked 12 hours at
wages
helped
file
and
firing
lawsuits
blacklisting
February 15, 1997, however, Siyeon went out of business
and the case was subsequently dropped.
boss
establishing
meal times, and the conditions for discharge, but they
keep fighting for compliance.
against the Siyeon
Chu.
157
successfully negotiated a collective bar-
gaining agreement in February and
wage
Women
Ho Dong in 1996.
122
a day, 6 days a week, but her
demanding unpaid
restaurant blacklisted her for
As
with Chu, the owners association contacted
Paek's next boss to get her
fired.
123
Luckily, her
new boss
told her
what had happened.
One day when I was working at my new job, the owner called me and asked why did I go against the restaurant
into the office
where
I
was
fired. I told
him
that
was only because
it
I
was not
my rightful wage. The owner confessed that he had received a call from the Korean Restaurant Owners Association who told the owner to let me go because I was a troublemaker. But the owner ended up telling me that I was a great worker and that they needed me and were not going to fire me. I am still working at this paid
restaurant now.
124
Paek weathered the wages she I
am
of criticism because she spoke up about
was owed and how she was
very grateful because
powerless. a
a lot
little
I
try to
ashamed.
KIWA
feel like I
and
blacklisted.
who
are
But I
feel
helps poor people
be active and help out
I
fired
all
that
I
can.
.
.
.
have done something that
not have done. All the people around
I
should
me are telling me, "Why are
you stabbing somebody from your own
nationality? If they didn't
pay you that
accepted
that.
well,
Why did you
shouldn't
I
you should have
just
have to take these actions?"
be paid for the work that
I
it,
I tell
and
left it at
them, '"Why
did?" But at the same time
me dirty looks like I did something wrong. Both my children and my husband were not at all supportive of my actions. .especially after they saw the news on the TV. The they give
.
children said that the fact that
negative impact
on
barrassed because
I
came out on
their future as students. all
his
TV
might have
a
My husband was em-
co-workers were talking about
it.
They
Sweatshop Warriors
158
were saying it was that
it
a disgrace.
was not right to
did to
me and
ing to
do these things
Speaking Up
let
.
.
the
.
Although
the other people.
I
to people.
did
criticized,.
to stop her
.
.1
feel
do what she
from continu-
Powerless
for the
new
it
was
restaurant
125
Immigrant women workers have to write a
I
owner of the
said kajal
[let's
go!]
and begun
chapter in Korean-American history. This story be-
gins with their labor struggles in their
homeland and continues in the and on the picket
kitchens, dining rooms, hotels, factories,
lines
of
inner city barrios, tossed together like chap chae [mixed vegetables
and noodles] with co-workers.
Mexican and Central American immigrant
their
They have endured long hours, low wages,
rassment, age discrimination, insults,
and
ship, criticism,
and keep
fear.
mouths
their
They have been urged shut.
sexual ha-
firings, blacklisting,
to
censor-
be patient, endure,
Yet these pioneers are taking
a stand
and beginning to change the climate and thinking within the community, winning respect for women workers' multi-racial solidarity,
securing
more
human rights, building
opening up new spaces for democracy, and
justice within the
Korean and other communities of
color within the United States.
The November Koreatown
An
1998 community town
restaurant workers
mocracy" conveyed tions.
14,
a
demanding
hall
"justice, dignity,
and de-
tumultuous mix of images, languages, emo-
angry gauntlet of restaurant owners taunted
enter the towering union hall hosting the gathering. ringleader boasted that he learned
by workers and
meeting of
KIWA.
all
seeking to
The owners'
how to picket after being picketed
Inside the hall the atmosphere was simulta-
neously welcoming, protective, and edgy as Korean and Mexican restaurant workers delivered testimony to elected officials, govern-
ment enforcement press,
community
agencies, Korean, Spanish, and English language
supporters, and family
the abusive behavior by her ex-bosses, I
go home every day with
a
members. After describing
Kyung Park
new wound
my heart because of all am a wife and mother at
in
the hurtful things that
happen
home, but
am viewed sometimes
at
work,
I
at
work.
said:
I
as a servant,
some-
Korean Immigrant
times as a
thief.
This
is
ing able to get paid as
the
government
are
supposed
in
—
is
rights
because
this is
Koreatown.
... I
it is
Not
be-
and suffering through
what makes up
the" lives
would
like to say to all
and
the other
all
mem-
very possible that by com-
may face the possibility of losing my job. But I come to this gathering today in spite of all that.
ing forward today
have chosen to
[to]
leaders, media, workers,
bers of the audience present today:
This
159
the reality of restaurant workers.
we
each day facing insults and curses
of restaurant workers
Women
I
I
believe that unless
of the powerless workers
in
someone speaks up
for the
Koreatown, we would have no
choice but to go on living with bruises in our hearts.
126
Sweatshop Warriors
160
Kim Chong Ok Economic Miracle Maker, Koreatown Restaurant Worker
My memory's not so good,
was born July 16, 1955 in Chungchong Namdo, Nomsan-kun, Yangchon-myon, Paramni Ilko. I
went to school
there, too.
When I was
16, 1
came up
to Seoul.
I
my older brother's house and learned some trades. My par-
stayed in
were nongbu
ents
[laughs] I
[farmers].
rather small, just big
They had
enough
There are nine of us
their
own piece of land.
It
was
for us to feed ourselves.
kids, six
daughters and three sons.
I
was the
fourth daughter and seventh child in the family. All of my brothers
and
sisters
They
all
turned out well. Actually, I'm the poorest
got married and had children. They never got divorced or
had marriage
went
I
among them.
troubles.
to school
up
to junior high school.
me about what happened, I can't stop! lings couldn't
Once you
[laughs]
start
asking
A lot of my older sib-
even go to school. They learned hangul [the Korean
phabet] by themselves.
Us younger ones were
able to
go
al-
to school
and get some education.
When I got older, both of my parents and my older siblings all urged me to come up to Seoul. During that time people looked to Seoul as a better place to side.
a living than farming in the country-
Farming is such hard work. Life
staying with a machine. ers'
make
is
better in the city.
While
I
was
my brother up in Seoul, I learned a trade, how to knit on
My brother was a taxi driver. I stayed at different brothMy brothers took care of me because I was one of the
houses.
youngest
kids.
Life in Seoul
homework
at
was OK;
someone
at least
else's
they had machines there.
it
home.
was better than farming. It
was
like a private
I
did
home, but
A bunch of women would get together to
Maybe six or seven women worked there. The owner divided up the work between us. I was told that they would export these items, after we finished. We knitted sweaters for export. I also make
things.
worked
No
at a lot
of small, small
regular hours
were
factories.
set for the
homework.
If you
wanted
to
Korean Immigrant
Women— Interview
161
The hours depended on how much work you wanted to do, how much money you wanted to earn. The other workers were also young women. Everybody who worked there came from somewhere else. I lived in Mapo, Shinsu-dong, I think. The big factory area was in Kuro-dong dan. I do more, you could;
if
not,
you
didn't.
lived close to there.
came up
I
cated time].
to Seoul in
band.
.
of places
met him through
I
971 Bok chap hae [that was a very compli-
could write a book about
I
at these different kinds
we
1
friends.
brought guys to
talk
But it turned out
kept following
me
that
One
hus-
had a kind of club where Friends in that group
It
was
like a
"meeting"
[a
who came was
thought he was probably mar-
he got interested in me.
for
He picked me and
government
Chung Hee
one of the government
criticized that job so
plained because even though for these
my
around, [laughs]
husband was driver I
worked
I
and met
of the guys
This was during the time of the Park
for about a year.
was too much.
talk.
and introduced them. date], [laughs]
my husband. He looked very old so I ried.
It
We girls
got together to spend time and
group introductory
it!
until I got older
we were
officials.
Then my husband had
officials.
regime.
My
He did
that
com-
he ended up leaving.
I
married, he was
driving
They would go
still
women's
to different
to stay out late to wait for them,
and
home
late
because of that. After I criticized him, he never consulted me, he
just
houses.
them home,
take
[sighs]
quit. I hate to talk
about
things about Korea.
Haaaahh, he was always coming
this
127
Through my husband,
He had
because people are going to think bad
I
was able
to
come
to the
United
States.
members here. His mother was here and she had her We came November 30, 1985. Life here was very month after I came I found work at Saint Joan's [a com-
family
[US] citizenship. difficult.
pany
think the a year.
A
Los Angeles],
in
I
that
clothes.
I
company is very famous and big. I worked there for about on Olympic [Boulevard, in the heart of Koreatown]
lived
for six years.
At
first I
didn't
band took me back and the bus.
produced knitted sweaters and
know how to get Then I
forth to work.
my hushow to take
to work, so
learned
Sweatshop Warriors
162
worked
I
eight hours a day
had the weekend
days. Since I
garment work.
When
and got off on Saturdays and Sun-
off, I
used the time to learn
got laid off from that factory,
I
When
get a job sewing for four or five months.
I
how to do
was able
to
Saint Joan's called
me back to work, I decided not to go. I had problems understanding English and there were a lot of colors to remember for knitting the
when I knit the needles would break and I wouldn't be able to get much done. When the work went smoothly it was fine, but when things went wrong, it was a big hassle. Sewing is much easier. Also sometimes
patterns.
When I
started
working
at Saint Joan's, the
to unionize, so I also participated.
what was going on, but the ting paid enough. It
but
Korean
ladies
They
They were
while.
afraid that they
I
got used to
hall],
Street. I don't
there that did not
knitting
itself,
the details of
know
might lose
exacdy,
some
want
get-
older
to partici-
but other kinds of work.
their jobs there
and not be able
money and
fell I
May
My hus-
followed him around and helped him for a
it.
I
to death to climb
got
all
up on the
sunburned with
really hard. Later
we opened
but the business didn't go very
Restaurant.
for
all
the garment industry for about three years.
a painter, so I
The work was
I
do the
At first I was scared
a while
in
was on Alvarado
who were working
did not
worked in
band was
chess
know
any other work.
to find I
didn't
I
were saying that we weren't
think they couldn't unify fully because there were
I
pate.
strikers
workers were trying
down. So then
I
went
to
a
But after
on my
face.
badukjang [Korean
well.
work
roof.
freckles
So we ran out of
at the
Korean Soup
stayed there a long time, from 1991 or 1992 until
I
quit
1998.
was
a cook's helper
when I
started. I
worked
as a cook's helper
about seven months and then became a cook.
I
started out at
$1,400 a month, working more than 12 hours a day, 6 days a week. After
I
shift. I
became
a
cook I got $100 more. The restaurant ran a 24-hour
worked four days on the night
shift
and two days on the day
shift.
We
couldn't negotiate about our wages.
negotiate, as
soon
as the
words came
Whenever we
tried to
out of our mouths, the
em-
Women— Interview
Korean Immigrant
on and on
ployer would start cussing us out, and go that.
We
didn't
to face them.
didn't
I
not good to switch jobs too often.
there. It's this
want
everywhere so
needed to
I
ing there. During this process
were about four or
Our
years like me.
My wages
five
just I
people
friendship
163
want
I
for days after
working
to quit
figured that
it
was
like
bear the hardship and keep work-
to my co-workers. There who had worked there around ten
grew close
grew and we decided
to stick together.
increased to $1,800 a month. But in April 1998, the
em-
ployer complained that the business was not doing well. She said the
IMF
crisis
was
affecting the business over here in the
The cooks' wages were
they had decided to cut our wages.
we
$1,400 a month. So
US, and
that
cut to
decided to walk out.
Since the restaurant ran 24 hours, there were three cooks to
work
the three different shifts.
cook's helpers.
We
We
used to have dishwashers and
need that help to cook, but the employer
really
cut three people out. So the cooks had to
do everything
in the
on us and we already worked long hours. The owner kept oppressing us and acting like she was doing everything within the law on wages and hours. But when we calculated how much we should have been earning, the figures just didn't match up. So we confronted the employer. She kept saying if you don't like kitchen. It was very hard
it,
you can always
work but
leave.
did not reduce
She started [paying me] for eight hours of
my hours
to that
amount. So the problems
started there.
The wage ple
—
cut
was
for example,
duced the wages and the people
problem, but the employer also
demanded
also
who were laid
talked about
off).
that
That upset
what we could do about
taking acdon.
cause
a
We
eventually
went
jobs.
me and
everyone
this situation
to
laid off peo-
The employer we do all of the work
worked four peoples'
I
KIWA
and
it
else.
re-
[of
We
led to us
for consultation be-
my employer emphasized that she was doing things by the law.
She kept on saying "The law
is
this
and
that."
So the workers de-
cided to find out what our rights were.
KIWA more than
[told us]
about labor laws. For example,
eight hours a day then they
overtime. Before going to
if
workers work
need to get compensated for
KIWA DOL [the US Department of La,
Sweatshop Warriors
164
my restaurant
The Korean Soup Restauwas operating 24 hours a day. But when the investigator came my employer told us not to tell our true work hours, but we
bor] investigated rant out,
1998].
[in
were supposed to say whatever she told us to
my employer got upset with us
gation,
to investigators.. ers
and
.
.
During the
say.
investi-
for not answering "correctly"
[Eventually] the negotiations [between the
KIWA and the employer]
broke
work-
down and we ended up
su-
ing the employers.
KIWA
The
restaurant workers so
ever
I
The owners
are the
the
Korean to use
The treatment
law.
How should I
you
for their benefit.
feel like,
"Why
of
will participate in.
I
say
should
is,
it? It is
Do
on an American holiday? No. Even employers
to the meetings
always think that what-
I
same wherever you
percent satisfied with you.
want
come
to
participate [d]....
can do to be of help,
I
me
organizers ask[ed]
They
go.
well,
are not 100
not the
half-half.
US
law or
The employers
they allow us to take a day off if
I let
there are
no customers, the
you
when
rest
I
am
paying
you?" Well,
I
work from 10
a.m. to 10 p.m.
spective of the employers, to serve
them even if it is
ers leave
then
when
Of course from
the customers
come
in,
the per-
they want
past closing time. If I stay until the custom-
who knows when I will leave? My legs cannot stand it my husband to pick me up at 10 p.m. So I leave.
after 12 hours. I tell
The employer I
also says to leave.
feel that there is a division
between the kitchen and
hall
work-
ers.
There needs to be an understanding between the kitchen and
hall
workers. For example,
then
it
ruins the food.
[the] others'
needs
Both
if
the food does not
come out
sides should be able to
in time,
understand what
are.
When I first visited KIWA, I was so frightened. My heart started
KIWA for the second time and the third time, I passed the frightening stage. Now we have become like neighbors. When KIWA [was] not in Koreatown, when was] to
pound and pound. But as
I
visited
[it
so far away, near Korea Times
occur to curious.
[at their
former
office],
it
did not even
me to visit. But when KIWA was right in front of us, I I am sure a lot of people felt that way. I knew KIWA
got ex-
Korean Immigrant
who knew where? I
isted,
but
cases
must have
I
think
Women— Interview
165
believe ever since [they]
moved
[their]
increased.
KIWA
is
doing great work, nomu nomu choun kot [too
many good things]. We didn't know what KIWA was doing before we came here. But now I have seen for myself that they're doing such good things. By coming here we've seen how much effort and energy they put into better
this
and we are going
work. In the future things are going to get
to see
improvements
in the
working condi-
tions.
—Los Angeles, November
17,
1998
Sweatshop Warriors
166
Kyung Park Koreatown Restaurant Worker and Fighter was born Christmas Eve, December
I
was an
electrician.
He
ran a
medium- sized
business.
He
out electrical lines from one mountain to the next.
helped him in his business for awhile, but
homemaker.
full-time
and
I
They
[laughs]
ents, like
sister
later
and
a
like to
complain and never
father
used to
My
lay
mother
she became a
younger brother
I'm the second oldest. The second child
sister;
know,
have an older
I
My
24, 1953....
is
very bad you
listen to their par-
me.
Chun Chon. I didn't get accepted into moved there after graduation from high
finished high school in
school in Seoul, but
I
school and worked as a hotel receptionist for almost seven years.
The
job was
good and
I
was very happy.
I
learned about the job in
the newspaper. I
met
my husband during that dme, when I was
in the cafe. in
He was a musician,
downtown
Seoul.
sang,
drinking coffee
and played instruments
We got married in
1984. After
I
in clubs
got pregnant,
I
my job. My daughters were born in 1986 and 1993. My sisters, brothers, and parents decided to immigrate to the US I wanted to come, too. My elder sister came to study here after
quit
so
graduating from college in Korea, and she sponsored the whole family. I
came
to the
we were having
US
rated for a while. After
sent
them back
friends.
in
1990 without
big problems. I
to Korea.
His job was
He wanted
came
He
here,
treated
terrible,
my husband. At a divorce.
I filed
me
that time
We were
sepa-
the divorce papers and
badly and had a lot of girl-
hanging around with
all
of those
women at night. Looking back I think he might have come to the US maybe he would not have on in Korea. [In the United States] first I worked as a furniture store sales person. Then I worked at Joong-Ang I/bo [Korean Central Daily] on the directory, answering phones and so on in San Diego. Then I
if I
had sponsored him. But then
come because he had something
started
working
again,
better going
as a waitress.
San Diego was
a very small
community, so people knew
me and
.
Women— Interview
Korean Immigrant
167
my family. I got my first waitress job through one of my sister's contacts. When she first came to study, my sister volunteered at this organization that helped immigrants who couldn't speak English. One of the persons she helped worked as a head waitress. I went to .
an interview and found out that they knew each other and
up getting the I
worked
very friendly.
I
.
ended
position. in a Japanese restaurant
and
of the customers were
all
The work was good because at that time all I had on of money because of my financial difficul-
my mind was earning lots had
ties. I
broken up with
just
my
where I was going to get money to tember 1993 when too much!
The
.
I
couldn't
my
a lot
there until Sep-
second
child.
[laughs] Everything?! It's is
someone
that
I
met
in
was working here before he came. kyeh don
[money
bought a car and had everything ready
But when he came, he
we went through
so
worked
money and won $26,000 of
a mutual credit union]
for him.
second child
to the US. I
saved up some
I
from
Do I have to tell?
father of the
Korea and brought So
became pregnant with
I
a very sad story.
It's
husband and was wondering
survive. I
just couldn't adjust to
of hardship. Then
I
American
life
got pregnant and
work anymore. He ended up spending all my money. He his income was not enough so I had to work, too. He
worked, but
beat [and] cursed
me
and
called
me
names.
I
think his frustrations
came from making less money than me. Everyone
me to
in
my
family told
we had a child we wanted to try make it work once more so we moved from San Diego to Orange to break
up with him, but
since
County. But that didn't work out
either.
So
I
ended up moving
to
LA. While we were married, we used
we ended up owing he said
I
from
my
kids.
pay the
$10,000. Since the cards were under
had to pay for
and leaving my kids
credit cards to
at
it.
So
I
ended up having
to
bills
my
and
name,
pay off the debt
my parents' and sister's house. I got separated
The second
relationship
was even harder than the
first. I
moved
friends in
to
LA
in 1996,
maybe
LA, only an acquaintance.
I
in
March.
started
I
didn't have any
working
Japanese restaurant inside the Radisson Hotel. Since
right I
away
didn't
in a
know
Sweatshop Warriors
168
anyone,
learned about the job through the newspaper.
I
minimum
When I worked holidays,
wage.
worked overtime,
had
them
same
pay,
but
was having a hard time myself.
I
to help cover
even though
other Japanese restaurant.
work from
at night
and
I
It
too. It .
.
.
you had
to report to
work in
I
during the day, then go to work
restaurant
is
had only wanted
My
At a lot of the Japanese morning then
the
home I
at
all
I
res-
take a two-
would
once. Night
to
hours were
is
rather
when
the
busy anyway. A lot of people who go to work during the
day have kids, so they don't
work
worked at an-
I
or three-hour break midday, then go back to work. rest
wait-
was getdng the
OK at the beginning,
was
to get that position.
5 p.m. to midnight, six days a week.
taurants
when I OK.
The other I
After that job
was good because
was able
got paid
got holiday pay;
stayed there for about eight or nine months.
I
resses couldn't handle their tables, so
I
I
got overtime pay. So everything was
I
I
early. I didn't
have
like to stay to close up.
my
kids staying with
They want
me, so
I
was
to
go
able to
at night.
never made a mistake
the customers order a
at that restaurant
la carte
they get a
little
to ring that up, too, but I forgot. I think
it
except just once.
When
was supposed
receipt. I
was about $12. The man-
me around demanding that I pay half and saying it was my fault. I got upset because he should have talked to me about it after the shift instead of bothering me while I was working. ager kept following
So
I said, "I'll
made
pay the whole thing and I'm quitting."
that mistake
working there
I
all
It's
not
the time, just that once. So after five
ended up
like I
months
quitting.
After that came the hard times, [laughs]
I
went
for interviews
and the employers told me I was too old. Ehhhh! I thought I was a good worker and I could get a job anywhere. Uhhhh! But I was wrong I'm going to count how many owners turned me down.
Maybe
it
was
five
Before that
I
or six owners.
was hired
at a different restaurant briefly
through a
man I knew. I got fired because the relationship between man and owner turned bad, and the sushi man left the res-
head sushi the sushi taurant.
owner
I
tried to stay,
didn't like
me
but after a
since
I
month
was brought
I
in
had
to leave
because the
by the sushi man, so she
Women— Interview
Korean Immigrant
started giving
me
a hard time.
My
169
co-workers told me, "Try to en-
work together." I wanted to continue but the employer said she couldn't work with me. I got rejected by so many Korean restaurants that I didn't want to deal with Koreans anymore, so I went to a Japanese restaurant. dure and bear
Let's just
it.
owned by a Korean. My friend who worked at this restaurant said, "I'm moving to Texas so why don't you come and replace me?" So that's how I got this job where I'm working. The
Yet
was
it
also
OK and the owner
hours are
only in the restaurant briefly, so
is
it's
good.
At one
restaurant
I
received hourly pay; at another
by the hour, but
I
think the pay was pretty close to
got about $700,
1
think
it
was about 46 hours
hours per week, with some 49-hour weeks. 5 [p.m.] to
I
a
in the
work.
We
morning, got off
at
ended up picketing
I
week, sometimes 42
work from
reported to
midnight for four days. Then for two days
work
wasn't paid
I
minimum wage.
reported to
I
midday, and then reported back to
this restaurant
paid for three days of work. After
I quit,
because
I
didn't get
they said they wouldn't pay
me. I
kept on calling the restaurant and demanding
quit, I
deserved to be paid for the work
upset that
you
I
try calling
it's
had already done.
I
got so
A co-worker there told me, "Why don't KIWA?" So that's why I called. KIWA does good
couldn't sleep.
me do
work. They helped think
I
my pay. Even if I
something that
I
couldn't
do by myself.
very powerful to have this organization. Before
was not important,
that the
work I
did in restaurants
I
this, I felt I
was very mean-
But now I'm able to stand up for my rights. When I went to the restaurant to demand my back wages, one of
ingless.
my
other co-workers
said,
"Why
don't you just give up, what can
a lot
of power and money and was
you do?" The owner had well-known this
in the
community. But
money because I
I felt
had worked for
that
I really
needed
to get
it.
received the check from one of the business partners, not
from the
actual owner.
to the restaurant thing.
I
where
She said that
it's
Sometimes the partner who paid I
work now and
good
that
I
tells
me
stood up for
that
my
I
still
comes
did the right
rights,
and
that
Sweatshop Warriors
170
even
run into her partner
if I
only did what
I
had
to
should be strong and
I
do and
Their partnership broke up. So she
tell
her that
nothing to be ashamed
there's
how
asks
still
I
of.
I'm doing and
sometimes we have coffee together. Since that time
KIWA,
cause of
I
have been participating in
realized that so
I
worse conditions than me. I'm things like that.
come out
I
hope
that this
who work
just
are
coming out
working under
by looking
at
what
and
to meetings
helpful, [laughs] After
is
full-time. I think that
the kind of people
KIWA activities. Be-
many people
can
I retire I
KIWA does
and
with the organization you can better
how
understand
why
served.
very easy to just think about yourself and get on with
your
own life, This
tice.
part of It
nity
It's
but there are people
really
is
and
the world goes around
who work hard to win some
good and important work and I'm proud
town
hall meeting]. I
be done, so
decided
I
better to get
whipped
me to
decided in
to ask
just to first,
commuabout five minutes when some-
decide to speak out
me about it. do
it.
go up there
pure torture!
[laughs] I
to get punished.
One
part of
me
was
it's
I
want
true, the
justice
and
I
would be
I
like
first
me
is
only said
It
my picture came saying
I
w hat was T
employers won't be too happy
They're not going to
the
didn't true.
when
to
it's
When
like that in school.
hated the pain of waiting.
I
the newspaper. But the other part of
thing wrong.
the
something that had
It's
worried that
is
[at
There's a Korean saying that
everyone in the group was getting scolded,
though
jus-
to be a
it.
didn't take long for
one came to our house
to
can be
justice
one
was
out in
do any-
But even
they see
it.
it.
My family in San Diego doesn't know about the hearing yet. My in LA kind of joked and said, "Hey, that's how you be-
husband here
come
a star!" [laughs]
fired?"
and he
[That's so!] actly
My
said to
I
asked him, "What
go
to the labor
daughters, ahhh!
know because
scared, but
we chanted in
I
going to do
if I
At
But
first
I
get
sue. Karucbi!
The younger daughter doesn't
she's too small.
ters to the picket lines before.
am
commission and
have brought
my
ex-
daugh-
they were very hesitant and
English and people explained things to
older daughter so she has a better sense of
what
is
my
going on. After
Korean Immigrant
the rally she plains
would
say,
how it's unfair
Christmas.
171
"That was a very bad owner." She also com-
for
me not to get time
off for Thanksgiving or
My older daughter is very proud that I
Ommajalhaet dako. [She
ing.
Women— Interview
said,
"Mom, you
"Who's got the power?
[Chants:]
We
spoke
at the hear-
did well."]
got the power!" Some-
times the two of them play by chanting.
My husband also works in the restaurant business, but not here in
Koreatown.
working
He
hates Koreatown. He's Korean, but he's tired of
for Koreans.
year, after
.
.
.
My children came to live with me again this
two years of being separated from them.
I
have paid
all
my
my credit cards. Now I even make $20,000 a year, My husband helps me a lot and I've got my own money.
debts and for [laughs]
In the beginning when think time chest]
for
it
I first left
the medicine.
is
It's
my children I
better
cried everyday.
now. Kasum sokeh
about the two years that
really hurts to think
I
[inside
I
my
wasn't there
my children. Kunyang [that's how it is]. I'm satisfied now; my chil-
dren are with me.
Whenever I come to KIWA, they are always busy; they need help. They don't complain, [laughs] But I feel someone needs to donate a lot of money to them. Right now KIWA is looking into health insurance plans that workers can join.
away from cancer. sive.
Once
a year
It's
One of the workers
hard to go to the doctor because
women
need to go for
a checkup.
I
it's
passed
so expen-
think
KIWA
does good work, not only on our individual cases, but also by helping us to deal with other issues. Life things besides being waitresses
The media coverage about paign
[in
1998 was]
from the ones
in
all
is
day,
hard so all
we need
of our
do other
the restaurant workers' justice cam-
Korean newspapers here
terrible.
to
lives.
are different
Korea. They run the papers through advertise-
ments. Since the restaurant owners advertise, they have a bigger
The media should be less,
but
vember picture.
that's
in the
say.
middle or give more say to the power-
not the way it is.
I
was upset
16, 1998] Korea Times article
The coverage was not
fair,
after reading today's
about the hearing with
my
not objective. All of the news
coverage, even the Radio Korea interview, concludes that the one creating the problem.
[No-
What I want to
say to the
KIWA
media
is
is
that
Sweatshop Warriors
172
thev should go
work
that situation to
dia
tell
the story right.
I
how it really
don't get the
work in sense that the mefeels to
even knows where we are coming from. For example,
go inside a mine you don't know what ter
they are talking about for at
at the restaurants
week. They must go experience
least a
you go
lungs,
you
in
and sweat and breathe
will
know how it
feels to
it's
all
like to
be
down
better situation than the workers.
who
there.
Af-
be there.
It's
don't have as much.
you
of that black dust into your
Even when the business is not doing well, employers people
until
are
still
in a
very important to share with
It's
something that employers
should remember, that must become a part of their thinking.
—Los Angeles, November
16,
1998
Notes to Korean Immigrant
1
Han Hee
Jin,
Angeles, June
2
Speech delivered 6,
Women
173
of Shogun Sushi, Koreatown, Los
in front
1998.
Called the "Four Dragons," "Four Tigers," or the East Asian Industrialized Countries (NICs), South Korea, Taiwan, Singapore,
Kong
Newly
and
Hong
experienced rapid economic growth since the 1960s based on their
United States and Japan, and a system of development (Bello, Walden and Rosenfeld,
special relationship with the
state-directed
capitalist
1990:1-16).
3
Tieszen, 1977:50.
4
Kim, El-Hannah, 1998:23-33. Scholars assert that Yi dynasty (1392-1910) rulers in Korea promulgated a brand of neo-Confucianism that even outdid China in severity. A woman's own name was not entered into her husband's family register, nor could she take her husband's name. She was often referred to instead as "so-and-so's mother," "so-and-so's wife," or "third
daughter,"
etc.
(Kim, Yung-Chung, 1976:85). See Kim, El-Hannah, 1998 for
a lively feminist critique
of Confucius "the Man."
Young Hee, March
5
Interview with Paek
6
Spence, 1990:530-531; Associated Press, 2000. For role in Korea's division
27,
1
997. critical
views of the
US
and the Korean War see Stone, 1988; Burchett, 1968;
and Cumings, 1981 and 1990; Spence, 1990:530-531; Associated Press, 2000. 7
South Korea
is often promoted as a model for developing nations. But its "economic miracle" was created within a particular historical juncture during the Cold War. South Korea's chaebol [family-run corporations] benefited from US "favored nation" status, contracts during the Vietnam War, preferential treatment proffered the South government, by Korean and super-exploitation of its workers, backed by the Park, Chun, and Roh
regimes. In the post-Cold
War
era these conditions are not so easy to
duplicate for developing nations as
competition to
sell their
8
Koo, 1987:105.
9
Kim, Seung-Kyung,
10 11
Kim, Seung-Kyung, 1997.
12 13 14
Interview with
15
more and more
countries flood the global
exports on the world market.
1997:2-9.
South Korea's rapid industrialization under the Park government was called the "miracle on the Han River." The Han runs through the heart of Seoul and out into the West Sea. Ogle, 1990. Cumings, 1997
Interview with
Kim Chong Ok, November Kim Chong Ok, November
17, 1998. 17, 1998.
from the Comfort Women," www.hk.co.kr/event/jeonshin/w2/e_jsd_l.htm; and Puente, 2000. See
Howard,
1995;
"The
Stories
See Howard, 1995; Lie, 1991; Louie, Miriam, 1995a. Some 40 US bases remain on Korean soil. An average of 2,000 altercations between local Koreans and US military personnel occur each year, often involving Korean
women
(Interview with Lee
Yeung Hee,
Seoul,
May
27, 1992).
South Korea
has the world's third highest rate of sexual assault according to a 1989 study
by the Korea Criminal Policy
Institute
(Korea Sexual Violence Relief Center,
1991:11).
16
Interview with
Cho
Ailee, Seoul,
May
23,
1
992.
Sweatshop Warriors
174
17 18 19 20 21 22 23
Haruhi, 1985; Lie, 1991; Louie, Miriam, 1989.
See Chang Pil-wha 1986:255-281. Interview with
Interview with
Kim Seung Kim Seung
Min, Min,
November November
16, 1998. 16, 1998.
Ogle, 1990:86-92.
Ogle, 1990:72-75.
See
Committee
Women
Asian
for
and
Korean
Women
Workers
Associations, 1992:6-7.
24
During the 1970s,
women
workers also fought for their rights
at
the
Bando Songsa, Pangrim, Hankook Mobang, Dongsu, and Yanghaing companies. See Committee for Asian Women and Korean Women Workers Associations, 1992; and Korean Women Workers Associations United and Korean Women's Trade Union, 2000. Sygnetics,
25
Y.H. Trading Company had closed down when its president ran off assets, throwing 500 women out of work. Police clubbed and arrested protesting workers, killing Kim Kyong Suk, one of the strikers. On October 26, 1979, while discussing ways to handle the riots, KCIA head Kim Chae Gyu assassinated dictator Park Chung Hee, and on December 12, 1979, the military regime of Generals Chun Doo Hwan and Roh Tae Woo took power (Ogle, 1990:92; and Cumings, 1997:374-390). Seoul's
to the
26
United States with the company's
For an eye witness account of the Kwangju Uprising and subsequent massacre, see Lee, Jae-eiu, 1999. For a critique of
US
complicity in the
massacre see Shorrick, 1996.
27
Chun Doo Hwan
dissolved the union in January 1981, just before he was
received as newly elected President Ronald Reagan's
first
foreign dignitary
(Cumings, 1997:379).
28 29 30 31 32
Bello and Rosenfeld,
33 34 35
Interview with
Interview with
1
990:25
Yoon Hae
Ryun, Seoul,
May
28,
1
992.
See http://www. nodong.org/english/index. htm. Interview with
Kim Seung
Min,
November
Interview with Lee Jung Hee, February
1,
16, 1998.
2001. See Asian Migrant Centre,
1996b:30andVarona, 1998.
36 37
Kim Seung
Min,
November
16, 1998.
Cumings, 1997:386-391.
ToBak Yi Theater Company (of Kwangju), "Kumhi's May," Program Booklet, performed May 31,1996, Wilshire Ebell Theater, Los Angeles. Interview with Paek Young Hee, March 27, 1997. Committee
for
Asian
Women,
1993:12;
Liem and Kim, 1992: Ogle,
1990:172-175.
38
South Korean chaebol are also exploring investment prospects in free trade zones in North Korea. The collapse of the economy after the fall of the Soviet camp trading partners in 1989, followed by a series of floods and draughts since 1995, led to widespread famine in North Korea. North
Kim Jong II and South Korea's Kim Dae Jung met during a historic summit in June 2000, and family and other exchanges between the two nauons were slowly increasing before George W. Bush's administration.
Korea's
Notes to Korean Immigrant
Women
175
Perhaps in the future, North Korean workers may provide yet another source of low-waged labor for South Korean chaebol and subcontractors. Korean migrants from Chinese provinces bordering North Korea already make up a large proportion of South Korea's undocumented migrant workers.
39 40 41 42 43
Committee
for Asian
1995b.
SeeLeeJaiYun, 1998:17-19. Varona, 1998:10-11. Interview with Maria Choi Soon Rhie, Korean office, Seoul,
44 45 46 47 48
Women,
See Asia Monitor Resource Center, 1997:1-6.
May
Women Workers Association
24, 1999.
Lee, 1998:19.
Varona, 1998:11-12. Interview with Maria Choi
Soon
Rhie, February 9, 2001.
Choi, 1997:7.
APEC is a ministerial forum involving 1 8 countries and territories around the Pacific
Ocean, from Asia
APEC's mission
is
to Australia, Latin
America, and the United
States.
reduction of trade barriers, promotion of investment
between members, and borderless trade within the region by the year 2020. See APEC Labor Rights Monitor, 1996.
49 50 51
See for example, Greenhouse, 2001. Interview with Maria Choi
Soon
Rhie, February 9, 2001.
See Kyeyoung Park's insights on the complexities olmiguk byong and cultural colonialism, 1997:29-33.
The
interpenetration of the South
Korean and US
economies, military structures, and cultures since the country's division in 1
945 forms the basis for migukyoL For example, one of South Korea's main
TV
American Forces in Korea Networks (AFKN), which shows and tips for US military personnel and an opportunity to listen to English spoken by "native speakers." During the 1970s and 1980s, many brand name "American" products were actually manufactured by Korean workers. channels
the
is
features popular "stateside"
52 53 54 55 56 57 58
Chu Mi Hee, March
Interview with
25, 1997.
Hurh, 1998:33.
Kim, Warren,
1971:4; Hurh, 1998:37; Chai, 1988:51-63.
Hurh and Kim,
1
984, cited in
Hurh
1
998:35.
See Sturdevant and Stoltzfus, 1992. See Lee, Daniel, 1991:304-316. Lee, Daniel, 1991:301. Despite stigmatization and ostracism,
of
US
Korean wives
servicemen helped sustain extended families and communities
in
Lee says the women's human services in supporting immigration and setdement are immeasurable, and that it is easy to find kinship groups of 30 to 40 relatives, including parents, siblings, and their in-laws, in many US cities all connected back to one woman who came as the wife of an American serviceman. Yet many wives of US servicemen have a tough time isolated on military bases, facing language and
Korea and the United
States.
acculturation barriers, and domestic violence and spousal abuse, while bereft
of the support of Korean family and
59
Mm,
1996:3.
friends.
See also Kim, Bok-Lim, 1981.
.
Sweatshop Warriors
176
60
Kim, Ilsoo, 1981:52-53 and Light and Bonacich, 1988:103 Kyeyoung, 1997:15 footnote.
61 62
Min and Song,
cited in Park,
1998:52.
South Korea exported tens of thousands of orphans, principally with through church agencies after US christians Harry and Bertha Holt initiated the process in 1955, campaigned Congress to pass the Holt bill on
and launched the Holt International Children's South Korea became the largest supplier of children to the developed world. The South Korean government began to take steps to slow the sending of orphans after massive criticism of the practice, which had
international adoptions, Services.
persisted decades after the war.
Many Korean
adoptees have worked to
develop a distinct sense of identity, community, and support networks. couples also adopted children from Vietnam, and especially in
US
from China, the wake of the one-child policy and preferences for boys over
Deann Borshay,
girls.
See Liem,
63
Ishi,
1988:36, cited in Park, 1997:15
64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72
Min and Song,
73
Korea Times Chicago, 1994; and
recently
2000.
1998:55.
Park, Kyeyoung, 1997:15. Park, Kyeyoung, 1997:15, 25-34. Park, Kyeyoung, 1997:31, 94-138.
Young Hee, March 27, 1 997. Kyung Park, November 16, 1998. Interview with Kim Chong Ok, November 17, 1998. Interview with Lee Jung Hee, November 16,1 998. Interview with Paek Interview with
Korean Immigrant Workers Advocates, 1998a: 13.
1
New York Times, 1995, both cited in Hurh, Korean community, people hotly debated whether to 1992 "Sa-I-Gu" response to the Rodney King verdict a
998:46-47. Within the
call
the April 29,
"riot" or "rebellion."
74
more
KIWA uses
the middle-ground term "civil unrest."
Seventy-two percent of US-born Korean- American married women, in
US-born white women, worked in the paid labor 61 percent of Korean immigrant married women and 52 percent of Euro- American immigrants worked for pay (US Commission on Civil Rights, 1988. The Economic Status of Americans of Asian contrast to 61 percent of force.
75 76 77
Among immigrants,
Descent:
An Exploratory Investigation,
Moon,
1998:43.
p. 37, cited in Paik, 1991:256).
Urn, 1996.
Kadeskey, 1993b:517. See also presentation by Lenny Siegal of the Pacific Studies Center to Southwest Network for Environmental and Economic Justice Network's High-Tech Core Group Committee and Asian Immigrant Women Advocates, Oakland, California, May 5, 1996; Kadesky, 1993a; Ewell
and Oanh Ha, 1999a; and EweD and Oanh
78 79
Pacific Studies Center,
1990
80
Ha
Interview with Jennifer Jihye Chun, February
US Census
US
1999b.
8,
2001
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission,
cited in Abate, 1993.
Interview with Jennifer Jihye Chun, February 8, 2001. Asian Immigrant Advocates (AIWA) organizes Korean electronics assemblers and
Women
. .
Notes to Korean Immigrant
Women
offers workplace literacy classes, a Peer Health
immigrant
women
workers health
clinic.
177
Promoter Network, and an
See Asian Immigrant
Women
Advocates, 2000a.
81
Interview with Paul Lee, February
Chicago,
1,
2001. Other
cities
with large Korean
New
populations include
Philadelphia,
York, San Francisco, San Jose, Washington, Honolulu, Baltimore, and Dallas. Seattle,
DC, See
www.asianmediaguide.com/korean/k_p.html.
82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90
91 92 93 94
Hurh, 1998:118-120. Interview with Lee Jung Hee, February SeeMin, 1996: 59-61.
Yu, Eui-Young 1993, cited
in
1
,
2001
Hurh, 1998:120.
Interview with Lee Jung Hee, February
1
,
2001
Chu Mi Hee, March 25, 1997. Interview with Paek Young Hee, March 27, 1997. Interview with Kim Seung Min, November 16, 1998. Interviews with Chu Mi Hee, March 25, 1997; Paek Young Hee, March 1997; and Kim Chong Ok, November 17, 1998. Interview with Paek Young Hee, March 27, 1997. Interview with Paek Young Hee, March 27, 1997. Interview with Choi Kee Young, November 16, 1998. Interview with
27,
Interviews with Helen Kim, April 25, 1994, and Jennifer Jihye Chun,
February
8,
Kim
2001.
says that over 2,000 chemicals are used in the
electronics industry.
95 96
Interview with Lee
Kyu Hee, September 21, 1989. November 16, 1998. She
Interview with Lee Jung Hee,
employer
in
filed a suit against
1997 and says that such cases usually take about
her
five years to
resolve.
Interview with Kyung Park, November 16, 1998. Interview with Lee Jung Hee, November 16,1 998. 98 99 Interview with Kyung Park, November 16, 1998. 100 Speech delivered by Han Hee Jin in front of Shogun
97
Angeles, June
6,
Sushi,
Koreatown, Los
1998.
101 Interview with Lee Jung Hee, November 16,1 998. 102 Korean Immigrant Workers Advocates, 1998b:3 103 At first facing 1 1 years in prison, Du was sentenced
to five years probation,
fine for killing Harlins.
See
Chang and Leong, 1994; and Abelmann and
Lie,
400 hours of community
service,
and
a
$500
Garcia, Robert, 1990.
104
See
Kwong,
Peter, 1992;
1995.
105 Min,
1996:90 cited in Hurh, 1998:133. Forty percent of the damaged
businesses were Latino-owned. Pastor, 1993:1 cited in Navarro, 1994.
people arrested,
2% were 106 107 108
51% were
Latinos,
38% were
black,
9%
Asian Americans or "other" (Garcia, Robert, 1990.)
November 16, 1998. November 16, 1998. Lee Jung Hee, November 16, 1998.
Interview with Lee Jung Hee,
Interview with Interview with
Kim Seung
Min,
Of the
were Anglos, and
.
Sweatshop Warriors
178
109 110 111 112
Interview with Lee Jung Hee,
Interview with
Kim Seung
November 16, 1998. November 16, 1998.
Min,
Interview with Lee Jung Hee, February Interviews with Peter Olney, May and Roy Hong, March 26, 199'.
1,
1
,
2001
199"; Arnoldo Garcia, April 21, 199 7
;
113 Interview with Lee Jung Hee, February 1, 2001. 114 See Song and Moon, 1998b:l 61-: ? 115 Shimtuh, 2000. See also Korean American Coalition to End Domestic Abuse, 1999; and Song and Moon, 1998b:162-163. Song and Moon's 198" study that found that 60 percent of Korean immigrant having been battered by their spouses.
women
reported
116 Meeting of Koreatown restaurant workers, April 3, 1999. 117 Meeting of Koreatown restaurant workers, April 3, 1999. 118 Popular education is the process through which people process direct experiences as the knowledge base from which to make connections and analvze broader
relations in the societv
and economy. See
lived
with
Freire, 1990;
Bell etal, 1990.
119 Kim, Luke
Kmi-Goh, 1998:230. The cultural sector of the movement helped reclaim and transform the practice of kut
I, 1991, cited in
1980s minjung
and ban pun, Korean shamanistic exorcism and ban release rituals, such as those dedicated to the memory of the Comfort Women and the martyrs of the Kwangju Massacre. Luke Kim says that Korean psychotherapists and theologians have grown more interested in exploring the concept of ban as it sheds light on problems facing their clients and parishioners (Kim, Luke I., 1998:219.)
120 Interview with Chu Mi Hee, March 25, 199". 121 Interview with Chu Mi Hee, March 25, 199". 122 See Korean Immigrant Workers Advocates, 199". 123 Korean Immigrant Workers Advocates, 1996. 124 Interview with Paek Young Hee, March 2", 199". 125 Interview with Paek Young Hee, March 2", 199". 126 Korean Immigrant Workers Advocates, 1998b. 127 The interview took place during the Clinton-Lewinsky
scandal.
Chapter Four
Extended Families Small and spry, Mrs.
women
Yu Sau Kwan is
the
in their twenties. After immigrating
mother of four strong from Hong Kong
in
1972, she toiled in unionized Chinatown factories for over two decades, developing deep pains in her back, hip,
and
fingers
from sew-
ing 900 zippers a day. Neither the union nor her employers
know she was
entitled to
Workers Compensation
work and
After seeing the hard
injuries.
to endure, Mrs. Yu's daughters Betty
gravitating to the Chinese Staff
let
her
for her on-the-job
suffering their
mother had
and Virginia joined
their peers
and Workers Association (CSWA).
Virginia eventually participated in a 7-day hunger strike protesting the Jing
Fong restaurant owners' treatment of the workers in
The
rant workers in turn
drew Mrs.
"What kind of organization ter
want
myself!"
She
1995.
passionate identification of her daughters with the restau-
to fast?' So,
I
is
Yu to CSWA. Yu says,
CSWA that
it
"I
wondered,
would make
my daugh-
decided to go take a look.
I
ended up joining
1
now
organizes her immigrant
women
worker peers
as a
member of CSWA's Board and Coordinating Committee of
its
Brooklyn Center. As a co-founder of the Garment Workers' Health
and Safety Project, she works not only with injured Chinese workers,
but also Latina/o, Caribbean, and Polish workers. Betty and Vir-
work with CSWA as well. 2 Workers' centers draw their organizers and
ginia continue to
different generational pools
activists
from two
of the ethnic immigrant community:
low-wage immigrant workers and
their
179
"extended family members,"
Sweatshop Warriors
180
both figuratively and
members
join the
literally.
movement out of anger over
and health
exploitation,
The women workers' extended
women
risks that the
family
the discrimination,
and
in their families
communities confront. At the same time, these family members have
own
their
of grievances with the power pyramid and
set
their
own dreams of how they want to live individually and in relationship to their elders. And just as in women's families, their movements ofthe
include
ten
Japanese,
stray
Salvadoran,
Filipino,
Afri-
can-American, white, or Puerto Rican "in-laws" and friends in the
some of the family members who work women in their organizations and movements, and ex-
mix. This chapter introduces alongside the
amines the role
tween
women
"We Are the The
this
like
generation plays as translators and the fusion be-
Mrs.
Yu and
Children"
extended family members.
their
3
children and grandchildren of immigrant workers are often
thrust into the role of translators stitutions
and
their elders.
US in-
and intermediaries between
The youth
often feel responsible for re-
paying their families and the broader immigrant community for the sacrifices the older generation
better in this country.
scendants'
made
community
to get jobs with higher
from
1.5,
a range
are
abilities
would
grumble that
and organizing
of
class
backgrounds. Those of working-class origin
sweatshops, doing piece work at
home
or farm
and pop" businesses. Some raised younger
worked
come
or played alongside their immigrant mothers in
work
in the fields.
Others put in long hours of unpaid labor in small family-run
ents
skills
pay and prestige.
second, third, and fourth generation activists
may have worked
fare
proud of their de-
activism; in other cases they
they wish their kids used their bilingual
These
so their children
Sometimes the parents
siblings while their par-
late at electronics factories, restaurants,
sweatshops, or in private
homes
as
"mom
nursing homes,
domestic workers.
spent time working within these industries themselves.
A
number
Some of the
younger generation family members were swept up with the immigrant
women
into labor
and community movements. Had
their
mothers, grandmothers, or great grandmothers stayed in China, Ko-
181
Extended Families
rea,
or Mexico, these working-class leaders, both the youth and their
might well have been swept up in workers', peasants', and
elders,
poor peoples' movements
The
labor
movement
home
in their
sees working-
countries.
and middle-class youth
as a
great resource to be developed. Ethnic workers' centers have put
many youth campaigns, such as CSWA's Youth Group and its AIWA's Youth Build Empowerment Project, youth and student organizing initiatives of the US Commission for Democracy in Mexico, KIWA's Summer Activists Training program, and Fuerza Unida's forth
off-shoot National Mobilization Against Sweatshops,
links
student organizations
to
Estudiantil Chicano de Atzlan),
LASO
(Latin
The younger
generation
family gift shop
mom
at the
gentle
Koreatown
KIWA
nickname
and awesome restaurant
now, we have is
woman
I
power.
Trinh
take power. Julia's
fantastic!
We
My
nick-
fight the
cross the picket
boong!
We
line.
challenge so
young and we look
school kids to them. Especially when
Yeah,
We
machine gun.
who
go boong boong
stereotypes because we're
it.
her
onni [big sister] skills in her
boong-boong-boong! bazooka.
Julia goes da-da-da! and
stand
assists
workers.
owners and sometimes the customers
many
who
dabalchong, the da-da-da-da!
baksapo, the
is
immigrant
work Her "running buddy," immigrant Kim Seung Min said:
respect, laughter,
first-generation
have worked alongside book include women like
on her only day off from KIWA. She shows
Julia Song, a 1.5 generation
name
American Student Or-
women who
the immigrant organizers profiled in this
At
(Movimiento
and La Raza Student Organization.
ganization),
with
MEChA
such as
like
high
women speak up, they can't
4
Duong was born
in
Vietnam and immigrated
to the
United States with her Chinese parents in 1980, when she was years old.
Duong chuckled that when she first tried to join the
six
picket
line in front
of the Jing Fong Restaurant, the
New York's
Chinatown, she was inadvertently swept inside to the
largest restaurant in
owners' tea party, causing workers to suspect her of being
Now
an organizer for
CSWA, Duong
a spy.
and others received death
Sweatshop Warriors
182
threats
from
a
over 100-hour weeks."
ers slaving
Rodriguez
Cecilia
Paso'ico
sweatshop owner angry over the organizing of work-
E
dunng
a
is
am Her
third-generation Chicana born in El
father, a
US
citizen,
was deported
Hoover
the mass deportadons of the
years.
to
Mex-
His family's
land in Arizona was seized and he used to cross the river
illegallv,
mistakenly believing that he was undocumented. Rodriguez says,
"The it
Faiafa strike
was going on while
shook the whole
and
city.
I
was
still
in
middle school and
My parents moved out of the
neighborhood
spent high school watching skirmishes between whites and
I
Mexicans." Joining the Texas Chicana o movement in El Paso, she later
moved
to the
lower Rio Grande Valley and organized auto
workers and community residents around services and health needs.
Rodriguez helped co-found La Mujer Obrera
LMO
initially
,
with support from the US-Mexico Border Program of the American
LMO
Friends Service Committee, before ent organizauon. After serving as
Rodriguez ganizers
left
behind
to
an independ-
many
years,
movements with the National Commission for De-
build
Zapatistas in Chiapas through the
mocracy
as
Director for
of immigrant women worker or-
a strong core
and moved on
spun off
LMO's
sister
in Mexico.'
Kim
is
mother worked
in
Helen
a
1.5-generation immigrant
Chicago for 18 years
principally for Motorola.
from Korea whose
an electronics assembler,
Kim's mother soldered printed
boards that went into radios and the
first
She complained of headaches and came
peenng through
as
the microscope
all
generation of
home
cell
circuit
phones.
with teary eyes from
day, with her clothes smelling of
chemicals, and hair speckled with filament wires and fibers. She
sometimes brought her work home, including different log sheets be completed,
as well as the stresses
tive relations fostered
and
tears triggered
to
by competi-
between the women.
Kim says that she first stumbled into work at AIWA as a volunteer. Kim nurtured national support for AlWA's Garment Workers Justice
Campaign and
the Jessica McClintock boycott. She simulta-
AlWA's
Silicon Yallev workers leadership project, or-
neously built ganizing,
inspiring
breaking
bread
and kimbab [seaweed
183
Extended Families
wrapped
Kim
said the
involvement of
movement warms
mothers' This
with Korean electronics assemblers
rice]
the best thing
is
me
ing point for life
—
as
members' children
in their
her heart. She reflected:
could have stumbled into.
was the
It
start-
of
to put together the different pieces
my
an immigrant, as the daughter of an electronics worker,
regarding the role
of how
I
AIWA
mom.
her
like
could
I
I
should play within the immigrant community,
my
utilize
language
skills.
Geri Almanza was born in the United States to Mexican immigrants,
childhood
Guanajuato, Mexico, eries.
con
An
campesim
families
in
who immigrated to work in Los Angeles' nurs-
Almanza's mother worked
Vallev.
from
sweethearts
organizer for
as
an electronics assembler in
PODER,
an environmental
Sili-
justice
Almanza first enSouthwest Network for En-
organization in San Francisco's Mission District,
countered Fuerza Unida
as
an intern
at
vironmental and Economic Justice SXEEJ).
me so much of my who helped raise me. But then she was born here just like me. I saw how Viola and Petra [Mata] were doing all this work to create this big family that reminded me so much of my o-
Viola [Casares of Fuerza Unida] reminded
aunt Juanita
Yrene Espinoza
who grew up
in
mother assembled find
more
is
had
to
computers and moved to Minnesota
parts for
jobs in the school system.
wanted
go back
and get involved
a hard time as a single mother.
as the assistant to
now
GED
in the
Espinoza ''runs
to
various part-time
at
Her mother got her
to college
Obrera, started volunteering, and
She serves
Rio Grande Valley. Her
in south Texas'
work, while her father worked
stable
[Chicana Texan]
a third-generation Tejana
San Benito
and always
movement, but
visited
with
La Mujer
las mujeres
24/7."
ex-garment worker and La Mujer
Obrera's director, Maria Antonia Flores, whose story was featured in the earlier chapter It
wasn't until
I
on Mexican women workers. Yrene explained:
started
working here
stand what was going on.
background, started to see
it
Even
if
that
I
began
to better under-
you come from
that family
does not necessarily mean that you understand.
what
is
happening to our people.
9
I
Sweatshop Warriors
184
Pamela Chiang's mother worked
Hong Kong,
in
Taiwan before immigrating to San Francisco mother used
to clean
Shanghai and
in 1965. Pamela's grand-
house for the matriarch of the Koret family of
garment industrialists. Once Pamela enrolled in the University of California at Berkeley, she co-founded Nindakin [we are part of the earth],
a students of color environmental justice group,
and discovered
SNEEJ and Fuerza Unida after volunteering at AIWA. Chiang helped develop the campaign that brought
las mujeres
San Francisco headquarters. She
Levi's
now
of Fuerza Unida to
organizes Laotian and
other immigrant communities against toxic polluters.
De
facto
growing up
in
an immigrant family you end up being the
negotiator for your family, like citizen
Wong." All
dumped on my girl
my
bus passes for
days of "Suzie
single
I
go
to get the senior
grandparents?" Hey, those were the that racist
and
sexist stuff I
saw getting
mom felt pretty yucky when I was a young
growing up.
Nellie Casas Levi's workers
unteered
are the daughters
Rosa Casas and Petra Mata,
Fuerza Unida, worked there
at
and served
and Brenda Mata
as Kpromotora [organizer]
Levi's corporate headquarters. Levi's
"Where do
announced the plant
ents sent her to
Delaware
respectively. Nellie vol-
as a
when
of laid-off
SNEEJ
youth intern,
the campaign focused
As
closure.
the youngest child, her par-
to live with her married sister for a year, so
the entire family unit could absorb and weather the immediate
Brenda says
that period
her that she
left as a child
her
mom was
on
Brenda was nine years old when
of her life was
really hard,
and came back
and her
crisis.
mom tells
as a teenager. After that,
always there for her.
Brenda used
to play with the other kids during Fuerza
Unida
meetings and, by the time she was in middle school, she started understanding
more about the
struggle.
She remembers being
San Francisco headquarters, playing the Levi's being the
Grinch
who
role
of an elfin
at Levi's
a skit
about
stole Christmas, and the fear she
felt
when the women and their supporters were driven from the plaza by the police. "Whenever we go to demonstrations, I still ask my mom if
we're going to be arrested.
now;
I
have a baby!'"
I tell
her,
'Mom,
I
can't get arrested
/
185
Extended Families
Growing to
up, Brenda accompanied Petra and the other
San Francisco and on other organizing road
company
at the
Fuerza Unida office after school
late,
and
dren
Amanda and Joseph
same
started speaking at events.
thing.
ter the
Brenda
house the
mother refused
He
But she made him go home and change to college, but
is still
learned so
many
things
what
was born
rights. I
his pants.
own
she worked
in
because he was
you
serious?''
Brenda wants
field
to
of study could
imagination. She says,
from Fuerza Unida,
especially
about
all
know anything about Mexico where men tell the women
the rights you have. Before that
women's
home
asked, "Are
contemplating what
both help her parents and kindle her I
when
Casares' grandchil-
to let her boyfriend en-
time she brought him
wearing Levi's brand Dockers pants.
go
mom
Benitez and Stacy Olivares are doing the
says her
first
Now Viola
women
kept her
trips,
I
didn't
my family was never like that. I learned When they talked about the supposedly great
to do, although
about
US
history.
history of the Levi's
ten to this," so
I
company at school I
got sent home.
I
don't have to
said, "I
learned to speak up
when
None of my friends wear They don't want to get me started! 11
ple are not treated equally.
Dockers.
These
are just a
few of the talented young
graced the movement. They have
lis-
peo-
Levi's or
women who
wisdom beyond
have
their years be-
cause of the responsibilities they shouldered in their families and organizations.
Talented Tenth and Working-Class Youth
Some
W.E.B. DuBois dubbed these mid-
dle-class educated activists in the
"talented tenth."
young
12
The
radical
African-American community the
movement
radicals "patriotic intellectuals."
their lot with the
common
in
China
Having chosen
people minjungl lao pai
young people stand in
stark contrast to the
ethnic intermediaries
who
the
movement come from
organizers and activists in the
privileged class backgrounds.
to
throw
in
bsing/gente, these
"comprador class," those of the outside
elites:
minorities," or in
more
act in the interests
"good Hispanics," the "Asian model
called these
Sweatshop Warriors
186
pungent community parlance, the "vende patrias" "sellouts," "running dogs," "bananas," or "coconuts." In the United States the ranks of the "talented tenth"
among
hopes raised
—of
all
racial
victories that
housing.
the
groups, female and male, expanded with
civil rights
ended legal segregation in education, employment, and
At the same time
tion in 1965
—and
the other, under acknowledged "nine-tenths"
the removal of racist quotas
and the change
on immigra-
encourage greater mi-
in preferences to
gration of skilled workers, professionals, and business people, also
broadened the ranks of the educated middle and upper
classes
of im-
migrants. Additionally, due to reasons of history, policy, and geogra-
phy, the East and South Asian immigrant populations in the United States
now have a relatively larger proportion of the "talented tenth"
than the Filipino, Southeast Asian, Mexican, Central American, and
Caribbean immigrant groups.
During the
social upheavals
of the 1960s and early 70s, many
working- and middle-class youth got swept up in the social move-
ments for change.
13
Some promoted grassroots
struggles.
Some,
like
the Black Panther Party for example, also romanticized the "out-
laws" from the system.
14
Other middle-class youth responded to the
hypocrisy of what President Dwight Eisenhower called the "military-industrial
drop-out."
By
complex" by choosing
to "tune in, turn on,
the mid-1970s the gains of the
movements encountered
a period of backlash
activists either retreated to
civil rights
climb the corporate ladder or retrenched their
ganizations. In contrast, working-class youth
were
who
who
split
between
have had to endure decreasing access to
quality education, declining wages,
and
movement or-
scrambled for a good education, stable job, and upward
mobility and those
tion
and other
and many middle-class
by starting nonprofits in order to institutionalize
those
and
and increasing
slave labor in the globalized
rates
of incarcera-
economy.
These United States-based immigrant workers and workingand middle-class youth have counterparts their
homelands. For example,
in
in the
movements back in
Korea, the April 19th student
movement toppled dictator Syngman Rhee in 1960 and helped oust General Chun Doo Hwan in 1987. Enraged at the repression of
187
Extended Families
pro-democracy student demonstrators, workers constituted the majority
of those who took to the
and were cut down by govern-
streets
ment troops during 1980 Kwangju and 1989 Tiananmen uprisings. In Mexico, after the army massacred students protesting in 1968 in Tlatelolco Plaza, survivors
fanned out into various
poor, and indigenous movements. Thirty years
later,
left,
labor,
the offspring
of Tlatelolco can be seen in the strength of the anti-globalization activism initiated by the independent labor group
FAT in 1991, the in-
digenous Zaptista rebellion in Chiapas beginning in 1994, and the historic electoral defeat
of the PRI in 2000.
Youth Spice Up Movements Maria Rhie of Korean said, is
Women
Workers Associations United
relation to the workers' movement [MSG/monosodium glutamate] adding a little en15 flavor of the dish; too much ruins it." At the same time,
"The student movement's
like
—
mi-won
hances the
students in the United States and the class stratified,
community
between those based
colleges
women's homelands in elite schools
and vocational schools.
with
US
institutions,
immigrant
in
of
fa-
16
Because of the language barriers they face and miliarity
are also
and those
their lack
women workers
often rely
on English-speaking, sometimes younger generation co-organizers to help develop the workers' movement. These co-organizers struggle
hard to not take short cuts and substitute themselves and their
own
partial
knowledge, experience, and position for the immigrant
workers' consciousness, leadership, base building, and experience organizing against the sweatshop structure.
How to skillfully manage the tension between the different generations
and
classes that
make up
the workers'
movement remains
an ongoing challenge not only for workers' centers, but also for unions and
community
organizations. In the 1990s,
many AFL-CIO
unions and community groups started hiring organizers straight out
of elite colleges, while
failing to invest in the leadership
development
of rank-and-file workers, grassroots community people, and working-class youth.
The
politics
of privilege in a complex
movement
with members hailing from varying combinations of generations,
Sweatshop Warriors
188
classes, races, genders, sexual orientations, nations, citizenship sta-
tuses,
and language groups must be consciously confronted
these inequities will be mirrored in the
—
or
movement and can end up
hurting movements, organizations, and individuals.
Code Switchers, Bridge
Builders, Border Crossers
While the children and grandchildren of immigrant workers ten play the role of translators for
their elders, this function
performed under duress. Being forced
is
often
from an
to play this role
of-
early
age shapes the particular challenges that confront these 1.5 and
US-born generation organizers and
activists.
In a powerful piece
about the role of child translators within the social history of Tejana
farm workers, historian Antonia
What
I.
Castaneda asks:
cultural issues are at stake for child translators?
How
do
they interpret for themselves the cultures they must translate for others?
What
are the politics they confront each time they trans-
How do they negotiate their culture of origin, which
late cultures?
cannot protect them and in which the roles of parent and child are inverted as children
become
the tongues, the
lifeline,
the public
voice of parents, family, and sometimes communities.
How
do
they negotiate the culture they must translate for their parents: the culture that assaults and violates them, their families, and their
communities with well as with all
its
its
assumptions and attitudes about them as
language and other lethal weapons?.
.
.
[T]hey and
children in the United States are steeped in lessons about rug-
ged individualism, democracy, "American" nationalism, justice, merit,
farmworker
and
fair play.
families,
What do
children of color, children of
and other working
daily experiences belie the national myths,
about these myths?
equality,
class children,
whose
understand and
know
17
The challenges facing the extended family members who join the women's movements expand from acting as the translator for one's immediate family to playing that role for many workers and families. lary
This broadening of consciousness and action
of the transformation
women
described
is
the corol-
—from looking out
only for their individual families to accepting responsibility for other
workers and families within
their
own and
sister
communities. This
189
Extended Families
leads to the
mixed response immigrant parents sometimes have
their children's
to
involvement in the labor and community move-
ments.
Those
families
who
have not yet decided to join the movement
themselves have often invested in their children the advancement of their
of their plans, some are
own
family.
fiercely
all
their
While angered
proud of their
hopes for
at the derailing
kids for their ethics in
valuing people over profits in their work. In contrast, for those chil-
who
have grown up on the picket
line
holding on for dear life to the protective arms of the women and
rid-
dren of immigrant workers
ing
on
the broad shoulders of the
may be having bristling,
ents
exactly
Of
the right to decide for themselves
when, where, how, and whether they want
movement
the
same
to partici-
they can claim and fashion as their own.
course, joining the
dle-class
—with
hard-headed independence of their parents and grandpar-
—
pate in a
men in their families, the challenge
movement does not
require that mid-
youth drop out of school and take low-waged jobs or that
working-class youth
make their way through college. Down through many radicalized youth the world over de-
the decades, however,
cided to
jump off the
track
and gain
a
world of experience by walk-
ing a different path. Whatever the case, being part of the
means
linking
countability, ever
up with other people
to fight for justice, exercising ac-
and challenging pyramids of power and
one works,
studies,
and
movement
privilege wher-
lives.
As Castaneda indicates above,
translation
demands not only
lingual language fluency, but also the acquisition
bi-
of different ways of
thinking and knowing, of speaking and listening between different ethnicities, nations, genders,
to control
and oppress
and
classes.
particular sets
Because borders are used
of people,
a crossing
can be
some while no more than a tourist shopping What the child translators value in their families and communities may be despised when they cross into the outside world. While a worker may lack English fluency or formal educafraught with danger for
junket for others.
tion, that tells
tion
skills,
one nothing about her
organizing capacity, and
in the other direction, a college
actual
life
knowledge, communica-
experience.
To bend
the stick
and professional education may
also
Sweatshop Warriors
190
not
tell
much about a person's knowledge, communication skills, or-
ganizing capacity, and
life
experience.
Of course, one type of experi-
ence, knowledge, and training is derided, while the other
The lemma:
is
valued.
children of workers are confronted with the polarized di-
either destruction, mutilation,
and trauma via dropping out
of school, dead-end jobs, unemployment, drugs, incarceration, and violence, or a definitely
more comfortable form of mutilation
in the
form of escape from the ghetto/barrio/Chinatown/Koreatown the corporate or nonprofit professional ladder, during
work like, and
learn to think like,
talk like
those already in the upper
echelons of the power pyramid. Those who,
come before them, have experienced the myth,
who have glimpsed
that
like the activists
labor and other resistance movements,
moment of rupture from
still
face the continual strug-
and corporatization of the labor and
community movements. The reproduction of hierarchy and
movement
hazard of working
is
—
power or personal
failing
are
is
of the beast."
particularly difficult
weak and have not
positive alternative vision, participation of workers
trate
from turning into
yet
when
been able
the re-
to build a
method, and infrastructure based in the
and grassroots people. The movements
must develop strong counter-measures lators
will-
simply an occupational health
is
it
''inside the belly
movements
stratifi-
not just a matter of individual
Combating these tendencies sistance
who've
the big picture and decided to join the
gle against professionalization
cation within the
via
which they
elite
that prevent workers' trans-
professional organizers
who
orches-
workers' struggles top-down and use grassroots people to
leverage their
own
positioning within the
power pyramid. In
the
worse case scenario, within some labor unions and community organizations, these spokespeople,
rank-and-file
who may have even started out in the
and were democratically elected
acting like internal colonial police
to "represent," start
who get pissed
off when the base
threatens to jeopardize their well-paid buffer negotiating gigs with the
elite.
At the same
time, the workers
and grassroots community
organizations are crying out for the kind of programs that build the leadership
skills
necessary for poor people to defend themselves
from violation of
their rights
by well-heeled and well-connected
191
Extended Families
elites,
and
to create alternative visions, viable programs,
movements for self-determination. The role of translator and bridge
builder
gual and English-speaking extended family right in the laps
of the
women
is
and sturdy
not limited to
members, but
bilin-
also lands
themselves. These working-class or-
ganizers are themselves the translators and bridges between the or-
ganizations and
movements they
are building
and the broader base
of unorganized workers and community people that they are trying to convince to join them.
the
women were
As seen in their stories, at certain moments
confronted with ruptures that forced them to see
the big picture of the pyramid they were working
moments front this
power
ment
was sure
that
in.
During those
they had to decide whether they wanted to see more, con-
and subject themselves to the punish-
structure,
to
come
and do more depended on
for their actions. Their ability to their
own
know
resources and those of their
co-workers, extended families, communities, organizations, and
movements. The
women who
were not immediately rebuffed, ex-
hausted, or crushed had to keep remaking the decision about
what
they were prepared to do and the price they were prepared to pay.
But were
women tell us, their experiences in the movement not just doom and gloom. The women got animated talk-
as the
also
ing about what energized them, nourished their
them.
And
part of
what they were
spirits,
thirsty to learn,
and schooled even
as they
sighed and shook their heads in frustration, was the primary lan-
guage of the land where they worked and decided to
raise their chil-
dren and grandchildren. They are learning and transforming the English language
upon
this
sion.
The women
guage, food,
And
like the
country the
gift
African Americans
are enriching this polyglot
style, labor, culture,
as the
who
women build
and
rainbow nation's
and learning
races bring to their
their organizations together
communities. The
and
are challenged to not get sepa-
rated from, but stay closely connected with the
home
with their
new ways of work-
that the other generations, classes,
movements, they
lan-
identity.
extended family members and get exposed to the ing, thinking,
have bestowed
of Black English, a vibrant example of fu-
elites in their industries
women
in their
and communities
Sweatshop Warriors
192
women
have warned the other
women
shun and
to
silence them.
But the
continue to organize and build the power with their peers,
and help these
women translate
their life experiences into the analy-
and action
that will include
even more of
sis
and neighbors.
children,
The
their peers, partners,
fusion of different generations and classes within the immi-
grant workers'
movement is
a
complex, ongoing process of tension
and mutual interaction between these different sectors of the community.
and transformadon across both
requires a struggle
It
sides
of language, culture, and generation borders to produce a new, more durable entity.
When workers
and
their children
break through the
deadening constraints of poverty, overwork, alcoholism, substance abuse, violence, and
the other oppressive
all
mechanisms through
which the system entraps poor people, they may not use the guage of the "talented tenth" and the potential
intellectual class,
power of the "neglected
Workers have
their
own
life
lan-
but they show
nine-tenths."
experience, knowledge,
skills,
and
language through which they can access the broader analysis and build the
power
to liberate themselves
alongside and above
them
— from
the
and the broader society
bottom of the sweatshop pyr-
amid. If the radicalized "talented tenth" can refuse to be bought off,
and neutralized by
intoxicated, suffocated,
stead cast their lot with the workers
many
skills
that privilege
their privilege,
in-
and the poor, they can bring the
and access have given them
the people" and help reshape
and
power relations. And
to really "serve
this call to
bridge
generations and classes reaches far beyond the borders of the immigrant community, to include those
have lived in
this
youth, and children
and
intellectuals
The
who made up
of the
—
in the service
this role
sheer
have spoken English and
civil rights
like the
Black elders,
the rank-and-file leaders, workers,
movement. 18
challenge facing these translators and fusion artists
ing to code-switch and ders
who
country for generations,
move smoothly back and
learn-
forth across bor-
of the people. The delight and danger in honing
with sharper consciousness and
numbers and
is
collective finesse
skill is in
multiplying the
of ever more border crossers,
bridge builders, translators, code switchers, and leader-organizers.
.,
193
Extended Families
Fusion has produced some bumpin' music, screamin' food,
knockout fashions, and kick-butt movements that can invigorate
one and slaves,
all.
Fusion
mented with
Now
is
a creative art
immigrant laborers, and
that
members,
since they
let
us look
that indigenous peoples,
were thrown together on
we have met some of
movements
form
their descendants,
more
the
closely at
that these fusion artists
women
have experi-
this continent.
and extended family
some of the have created.
organizations and
.
.
Sweatshop Warriors
194
1
Chinese Staff and Workers Association, 1997.
2
Chinese Staff and Worker Association, 1998.
3 4
Ijima and Miyamoto, 1970.
5
Interview with Trinh Duong, October 21, 1997.
6
Interview with Cecilia Rodriguez, February 21 2001
7
Interview with Helen Kim,
8
Interview with Geri Almanza, April 24, 2000.
9
Interview with Yrene Espinoza, June
10 11 12 13 14
Interview with Pamela Chiang, April 24, 2000.
Interview with
Min,
November
16, 1998.
,
March
17, 2001.
4,
2000.
Interview with Brenda Mata, March 28, 2001
DuBois, 1903.
Elbaum,2001.
The Panthers and
a number of other revolutionary youth organizations lumpen proletariat, rather than the overall Black working class would lead the struggle. See Lusane, 1997. His insightful chapter "Thug Life: The Rap on Capitalism" analyzes this perspective as it has resurfaced and been commodified and globalized within gangsta rap.
debated
15
Kim Seung
how
the
Interview with Maria Choi Soon Rhie, January 25, 1991.
Some US
trade
unions also use the term "salting," or sending in organizers to "spice up"
workers organizing to get a union
16 17 18
at their
shop.
Omatsu, 1999. Castaiieda, 1997.
Carson, 1981; Grant, 1998; and Branch, 1989 and 1998.
Chapter Five
Movement Roots The Ysleta-Zaragoza
international bridge just southeast of El
Paso, Texas, and the Mexican city of Juarez artery
pumping products,
trade, cultures,
is
the mainline
and people
in
NAFTA
both direc-
some many of whom commute to jobs in El Paso. But on a blistering summer day in 1997, the teeming flow of traffic came tions.
Juarez houses a huge concentration of maquilas and
300,000 workers,
to a screeching halt as
NAFTA-displaced workers
seized control of
the bridge. Facing the pending cut-off of job training
money
for
Mexican immigrant and Chicana/o workers whose jobs had run across the border to Mexico, the workers' action served notice that
business as usual was unacceptable.
whelmed,
arrested,
and hauled off
The workers were soon overby SWAT commandos. While
the workers were not unionized, they belonged to
and
its
fraternal
La Mujer Obrera
organization, the Asociacion de Trabajadores
Fronterizos [Association of Border Workers].
1
These two groups
represent modern-day descendants of the mutualistas [mutual aid organizations]
formed by
earlier generations
of Mexicans
as they
fanned out across the Southwest border region and along the seasonal migrant worker
By
trails.
linking the mutualistas and other ethnically based independ-
ent labor organizations of yesteryear with those of today, the "big picture" expands from a single frame shot of a current struggle to a rolling
documentary
film that also
encompasses the ethnic- and gen-
der-based labor organizing that preceded today's movement. Reclaiming and elaborating this work-in-progress
195
is
important for
all
Sweatshop Warriors
196
groups, but especially for immigrants, due to the compression of historical time
one crosses
when
ture
and confusion of
a border.
their life-
meaning
social
that occurs
when
Immigrants experience tremendous disjunc-
and movement-related experiences prior to mi-
gration are invisible to the non-immigrants and other ethnic groups
with
whom
immigrants class,
work and
they
who do
and gender
ambush without
not
live.
relations can
so
Another aspect of
this split is that
know about the history of US
much
walk
race, national,
middle of an
straight into the
warning.
as a
This break in historical continuity impacts immigrants of classes
and people of all
who work
migrants
For example,
races.
skilled professional
in glass ceiling jobs in corporations, live in the
may
suburbs, and send their children to ivy league schools enly believe that their access to the
dream" history
is is
"good
life"
largely told
hide from
and the "American
by the conquerors and not the vanquished, na-
as "the
United States
communal knowledge not
is
a meritocracy" serve to
only the memories of the
hounding and beatings of economic miracle workers
home
mistak-
only a result of their individual talents and struggles. Since
myths such
tional
all
im-
in immigrants'
countries, but also the genocide, enslavement, criminalization,
and murder of indigenous, Black, and other not "risen" within Fortunately,
this illusion
new
ethnic-
told.
of color
This chapter
much
will
of prior movements, especially
featured in this
book
have
histories are
labor history, old and new, re-
touch on
how immigrant women
workers' ethnic- and gender-based labor organizing his ton:
who
equality.
and race-conscious labor
beginning to be produced. Yet
mains to be
of
folks
how the
five
is
rooted in the
workers' centers
are rooted in particular sections
of sweatshop
industry workers' struggles and in earlier stages of the Mexican/Chi-
cano, Chinese, and
Korean
radical labor
and community move-
ments. Earlier
Stages of Immigrant Organizing
Today's workers' centers are being built on the foundation of the
two prominent periods
nizing
—
the 30s and the 60s
in 20th-century
—
US
social
change orga-
as well as the preceding labor history.
Movement Roots
197
Before immigration from Europe was restricted in the 1920s, many Jewish, Italian, German, Irish, and other European immigrant workers organized
themselves along ethnic
Immigrant workers' or-
lines.
ganizations often fused radical political traditions from
new
home
with
organizing currents in the United States. Anti-racism was not
necessarily
one of those
traditions
and some of the
craft-oriented,
European immigrant-based unions attacked workers of color whom they saw as competitors, for example spearheading campaigns to exclude Chinese immigrant and newly emancipated Black workers.
Most mainstream
2
labor organizations mirrored the American
Federation of Labor's (AFL) racist exclusion of immigrants of color
and African Americans. Left
to fend for themselves, these
formed ethnic-based organizations such the Chinese Seamen's
as the
Mexican
workers
mutualistas,
Union formed in 191 1, and the Chinese Hand
Laundry Alliance formed
in the 30s. In order to revive business
and
reduce widespread unemployment stemming from the Depression, the Roosevelt administration enacted legislation that guaranteed
workers the right to organize, join unions of their
and bargain organizing.
3
own
collectively with employers, leading to a
The
choosing,
wave of labor
creation of the Congress of Industrial Organiza-
tions (CIO) in 1935 ushered in another
wave of rank-and-file orga-
nizing that began to break with the practice of racist exclusion.
Unskilled
first-
and second-generation immigrants from south-
ern and eastern Europe, as well as Mexicans and Asians in the
Southwest and West, and Blacks in the South became the core of industrial
unionism
in the 1930s.
grants predominated
during
this
Second-generation children of immi-
among CIO
activists.
4
Many
Black workers
period were racialized internal migrants, joining the
Great Migration to urban centers within the South and to the North spurred by the increased in
demand
for labor
and grinding conditions
Southern agriculture during the World Wars. 3 Puerto Rican and
Cuban immigrant cigar rolling workers
own unions,
as did
in
New York organized their
other Latin American, Asian-American, and Af-
rican-American workers. 6 By 1945 unionized labor had reached a high of 35.5 percent of
all
US
workers.
7
Sweatshop Warriors
198
Labor organizing during the 1930s and 1940s looked different
among
Latina/o and Asian workers depending
position of the particular
on
the gender
wave of immigrant workers
com-
at the time.
For example, given the focused recruitment of Chinese male laborers,
the Chinese Exclusion Act, and
female
men
to
fighting for their rights practically alone within a racially segre-
gated environment.
8
the immigration of
women
grew
nity
skewed composition of male
Chinese worker organizations consisted of immigrant
ratios,
Once immigration
policy changed to permit
workers, a multi-generational
women
In contrast, given the higher proportion of
Mexican-American communities,
women
Mexican and Chicana
that period also
saw
within the
historian Zaragosa Vargas, Tejana
Mexicano workers. According worker leaders
Minnie Rendon, Juana Sanchez, and
Manuela
like
time young and single Tejanas
emerged
cigar,
cluded over 10,000
made up 79 percent of
strikers,
Solis
At
the
that city's
and pecan-shelling workers. Tenayuca
of the 1938 pecan-shellers'
as the leader
to
Emma Tenayuca played
leading roles in Depression Era organizing in San Antonio.
low-waged garment,
by
struggles
food packing workers, and extended
family support for the struggles of
Sager,
commu-
to reinforce the workers' organizations.
and was the
strike,
which
largest labor strike in
in-
San
Antonio's history and biggest community-based labor struggle
among
the
Mexican population
nation's
Mexicanas and Chicanas, the wives of male role in the strike
Empire Zinc
in
Grant County,
ber 1950 to January 1952 tory.
10
the
1930s.
played a pivotal
by 1400 members (90 percent Mexican) of Local
890 of the International Union of Mine, against
during
strikers,
—
Mill,
and Smelter Workers
New Mexico between OctoNew Mexico's his-
the longest strike in
This struggle inspired the production of Salt
of the Earth, the
internationally
known
can
tears to the eyes of those who borrow it from their lo-
cal
still
brings
film that
Chicano or Labor Studies Social
McCarthy
was banned
in the
library.
unionism 11 severely threatened big
tamed labor and
capital,
government and right-wing
era the
center-left alliance a
United States but
and purged
leftists
but during the
elites
smashed the
from the labor movement.
A
chastened capital both endorsed a social pact
Movement Roots
promising ongoing
raises in
199
some workers' standard of living
in ex-
change for worker compliance. Under the new "business unionism,"
workers
exhibited
more
passivity
toward
and
bosses
supported the government's chauvinistic foreign policy. This period coincided with an extended interval of US economic growth following the country's rise to superpower status during
World War
II.
"Young, Gifted, and Brown"
US
Since the 1960s, three demographic explosions rocked the
workforce: massive Asian and Latina/o migration after the removal
of racially discriminatory quotas; growing paid labor force participation of women of all races, including
reverberations of the
and education
civil rights
children;
and the
employment
practices.
The workers' centers to sections
women with
revolution through
of the
book all have linkages back Asian and Latina/o radical movements that featured in this
erupted in the United States and internationally in the early 1970s. In those adrenaline- filled days,
color (the equivalent of singer
Black") connected with
first
late 1
many young
Nina Simone's "young,
960s and folks
gifted,
of
and
generation immigrant workers and
other grassroots community people to develop "serve the people"
programs and organizing drives within the key and gender
justice battles
12
racial, national, class
of the period. The struggles of immigrant
farm, garment, and restaurant workers inspired and galvanized that
generation of Latina/o and Asian-American sweatshop industry
la-
bor organizers. For example, the Filipino independent Agricultural
Workers Organizing Committee kicked off the 1965 Delano, fornia grape strike and
teamed up with the Mexican National Farm
Workers Association (NFWA) Organizing Committee.
movements
Cali-
later joined
to
form the United Farm Workers
13
Some organizers who emerged in these AFL-CIO unions, while others co-founded
workers' centers and other grassroots community organizations.
Many of the workers and youth those who got jobs working in
active in these struggles, including
unions and community organiza-
tions, eventually returned to "civilian life" after
victories
14
both winning some
and getting trounced by the reactionary backlash during the
Sweatshop Warriors
200
Reagan/Bush administrations. The mustered out troops continued to use their movement-acquired consciousness and skills at work and school, and
and communities.
in their families
Battered by the rupture of the social pact and economic decline
of the 70s, and the subsequent deindustrialization, economic structuring,
and globalization, the proportion of unionized workers
US workforce by 2000. 13
shrank to a mere 13.5 percent of the some 86 percent of
US
workers are not unionised.
the neoliberal assault grants,
re-
women,
on workers,
lesbians,
Today
During the mid-1970s
the poor, people of color, immi-
and gays shifted into high gear leading
the founding of workers' centers.
Many movement
to
organizations
dissolved and those that continued were forced to adjust to a harsh
new
political climate.
Today's workers' centers emerged in response to
By
this
vacuum.
economy and workforce transformed by immigrant workers and globalization, some sections of the broader labor movement had begun to raise many similar questions and experiment with new approaches. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, new organizing initiatives among immigrant the 1990s, in grappling with an
workers from Asia, Latin America, and Europe flagged major in the
US economy and new
stages in the
broader labor movement. In the
late
independent, ethnic-based organizing
shifts
development of the
20th and early 21st centuries,
among immigrant sweatshop
industry workers provided an early warning signal both of the deleterious effects
able workers
of global economic restructuring on the most vulner-
and of the means through which these workers can
organize to defend themselves.
Below ters, in
are brief
"work visa" snapshots of the
terms of their
initial origins;
ethnic community- base and
The
ties;
five
workers' cen-
worker and intergenerational
and victories and accomplishments.
centers are listed by order of their founding year.
Chinese Staff and Workers Association: Organizing Sewing Women and Kitchen
CSWA was workers met
born
at a
in
Men
1979 "when a group of Chinese restaurant
hamburger
joint in
Chinatown and discussed
their
Movement Roots
desire for rights
and dignity
201
in the workplace."
16
Some of CSWA's
founding members had accumulated experience in various mass struggles including the
residents in 1974 rights; the
marches of tens of thousands of Chinatown
and 1975 voicing support for low-income tenants'
campaign
to break racist hiring practices in the construc-
and campaigns against police
tion industry;
brutality, for quality
health care and nutrition programs, and for normalization of US relations with China.
17
CSWA
and
reflects the radical perspectives
methods of workers and youth from across the Chinese diaspora. Chinese immigrant
men
in
New York
have tended to take
low- waged jobs in the restaurant industry. In 1980, after being
spurned by the Hotel and Restaurant Employees and Bartenders
Union, Local 69, former workers from the Silver Palace Restaurant
formed
their
own union with
the support of CSWA.
the 318 Restaurant Workers' Union, in
on which they had been
honor of the
They named day,
March
it
18,
fired for protesting against the restaurant's
management. In the 70s and
after,
Chinese immigrant
women
well-beaten path to garment sweatshops, revitalizing
followed a
New
York's
then sagging rag trade, and yielding profits and start-up capital for
Chinese and other entrepreneurs and majority of Chinese garment workers national Ladies
The
Garment Workers Union (ILGWU), Local
23-25,
union reached agreements with the manufacturers and con-
after the
tractors
real estate developers.
became members of the Inter-
top-down in 1974. Chinese immigrant women hit the
streets
20,000 strong to defend their contract against the machinations of the
Chinatown bosses
failed to harness their
many
turned to
CSWA cessfully
has
in 1982.
When ILGWU
UNITE)
energy or adequately support their interests,
CSWA. 18 won many
precedent-setting victories.
brought shorter working hours to many
Chinatown
restaurants
and garment
factories.
ernment and
social institutions to allocate
for child care
programs
1985,
(and later
critical to
New
They York
suc-
City
They've forced gov-
more space and support Chinatown's working women. In
CSWA led the Concerned Committee of the Chung Park Pro-
ject to call for
community
space, including a day-care center.
That
Sweatshop Warriors
202
year ers
also
it
on
began organizing the
the
Lower East
low-income co-op
CSWA
project),
Side,
first
group of Chinese homestead-
who won
units, the Latino
a building that
Workers' Center
houses 12
(originally a
and the Committee Against Anti-Asian Violence
(CAAAV). In 1989
CSWA
helped Chinese workers
at the
China-
town Planning Council (CPC) and African- American construction workers protest underpayment of workers under a federally funded
CPC
These workers
training program.
won
a $2.15 million
CSWA helped workers send employers to prison
settlement in 1994.
when
finally
they failed to pay.
They have organized
injured workers and
fought for safer working conditions, and for workers to have more control over their time and
lives.
19
La Mujer Obrera: \La Unidad Nos Hara Fuertes! [Unity Will
A
Make Us Strong!]
"handful of
women, tempered by
the painful experience"
with the Amalgamated Clothing and Texdle Workers' Union
(ACTUW) and Nine years
La Mujer Obrera
in 1981.
some 4,000 workers had walked out on
strike at
the Farah strike founded
earlier
Farah demanding to be represented by the
ACTWU. 20
In those days [the Farah workers] sought out the tool best to
them
in order to
known
defend themselves: the labor union. After
many months of struggle they learned that the union, especially when it was governed by laws which favored big business and which allowed
it
solution for
their
all
to
be controlled by corrupt leaders, was not the problems.
Then
they sought to preserve their
struggle through a workers' center, an independent organization
where they could not only defend themselves against the bosses, but also defend their right to be organized, a right which the "union" continued to deny them. This right to be organized was even
more important crimination: the
labor force.
for a sector
which suffered
women who made up
a great deal
of
dis-
80 percent of the garment
21
Additionally
some of
Obrera had worked
the founding
in the Rio
members of La Mujer
Grande Valley
in
South Texas, which
served as a focal of point for organizing by the Texas
Farm Workers
Movement Roots
Union;
in
community
203
der Patrol assaults; and for decent housing, public
and health
tion, education,
care.
Chicana/o movement, Tejana/o across the region.
With the
activists
La Raza Unida Party
utilities, sanita-
of the modern
birth
organized in border
registered
and
cities
rallied voters,
Chicano movement, and "pissed off red necks," when
electrified the it
INS, and Bor-
struggles against racism, police,
swept the Board of Education and Crystal City and county
tions in 1970.
elec-
22
Given the
special bi-national character
Mexican and Chicana/o
activists
of the border region,
have created
"sister
movements"
and organized against the negative impacts of neoliberalism. The
army and death squads' massacre of students Tlatelolco Plaza
on October
2,
in
on both
the Olympics, shocked and radicalized Mexicans the border. Organizing spread
Mexico
City's
1968, ten days before the opening of
among
sides
of
the urban and rural poor, in-
digenous peoples, and within the church, via liberation theology. La
Mujer Obrera taps into these Chicana/Tejana/Mexicana bor, community, and indigenous
Over
its
movement
radical la-
roots.
20-year history, La Mujer Obrera has enabled immi-
grant workers to organize themselves to both win
and develop programs
to
meet
sive deindustrialization. In
to their sewing
1990
their basic
derground sweatshop system and
flight
strike,
outing the un-
of large companies. In 1991
the organization unionized three factories and
one laundry
(Sonia,
Conditioners Corp.), helping workers win
and mini-
collective bargaining agreements, including pay, vacation,
mal health package
disputes
LMO members chained themselves
machines and staged a hunger
DCB, H&R, and Apparel
many
needs in the face of mas-
increases.
The nine-month
strike,
which
in-
cluded a hunger strike during which a 60-year-old garment worker fasted for 23 days,
church groups,
won
broad support from labor, community, and
as well as elected officials. It also
prompted
El Paso's state legislators to immediately draft, lobby bill
that established criminal penalties including
non-payment of wages. LMO's
efforts also
for,
all
five
of
and win
a
imprisonment, for
convinced Texas' Attor-
ney General to prosecute various subcontractors, efforts which eventually recouped over $200,000 in back wages
owed
to
women
Sweatshop Warriors
204
garment workers.
23
La Mujer persuaded the El Paso government
invest $367,000 in expanding child-care services portunities for
low-income
women workers.
to
and economic op-
It also
took part in
lo-
tri-national mobilizations against
NAFTA
and organized workers facing impending plant closures to
fight for
national,
cal, state,
and
severance pay, benefits, and job retraining. In 1997 with the help of
LMO, NAFTA-displaced government funded
won
workers
a $3 million extension in
training for laid-off workers in addition to the
original $4.2 million allocated. In addition to lar
School and women's organizing projects,
running
its
own Popu-
LMO has generated in-
dependent organizations, including the Asociacion de Trabajadores Fronterizos.
Another
development projects nity,
spin-off, El
that create
Puente
[the Bridge], focuses
an economic base for the
on
commu-
such as the Rayito del Sol Daycare Center, Cafe Mayapan Res-
taurant, projects.
and other low-cost housing and job training and creation 24
Asian Immigrant Women Advocates: Community Transformational and Organizing Strategy In 1983, Asian Immigrant Women Advocates in
(AIWA) emerged
Oakland, California from discussions between Korean hotel
room cleaners; first and second generation Korean-American activists Young Shin and Elaine Kim of the Korean Community Center of the East Bay (KCCEB), a Korean community-oriented social service organization; Patricia Lee.
and Chinese-American Local 2 union organizer
KCCEB, AIWA's
co-founder, was the local Korean
version of the "serve the people" programs that young progressives
co-founded with immigrant elders to deal with pressing language, social,
and economic needs of
other ethnic communities,
community ple shift],
their
women
emerging communities. As
service organizations, as part of their "trvplzjornada"
of labor on the
in
played a central role in these
job, in the family,
[tri-
and in the community'.
In the 1970s and 80s, San Francisco's hotel industry was under-
going a tremendous change, with growing numbers of "back of the
house" Asian and Latino immigrant workers and "front of the house" college-educated waitresses, waiters, and receptionists. De-
Movement Roots
spite this influx
205
of non-English speakers, the Hotel and Restaurant
Employees and Bartenders Union (HERE) Local ers at the exclusive
although
2,
employed no
Korean language. Thus Korean hotel work-
organizers fluent in the
Fairmont Hotel atop
Nob
Hill in
San Francisco,
members of the union, could neither understand
contract nor participate in union
the union
activities.
After unseating the local's 35-year entrenched leadership, hotel
workers went on
strike in
1
980 for better wages and improved work-
ing conditions. Local 2 emerged as San Francisco's largest union and a
hotbed of radical organizing, with
comprising some 95 percent of
Filipina
and Latina hotel maids
strike picketers.
2:)
AIWA began organizing Asian garment workers in Oakland
As
and Korean hotel room cleaners
San Francisco, the Asian Law
in
Caucus argued the cases of garment workers and worked with Rev-
Norman Fong
erend
Church
in
Chinatown
center that, like
of Cameron House and the Presbyterian to develop a
AIWA,
San Francisco garment workers
offered English classes, information
on
la-
bor, housing, and immigration law to workers, and social activities
women and their families. 26 Many of the young people active in immigrant worker organizing, including at AIWA, had also been for the
politicized
grams
at
and influenced by the 1968
strikes for ethnic studies pro-
San Francisco State College and the University of Califor-
nia at Berkeley; the fight to defend the International Hotel,
had
many low-income
housed
residents
Manilatown/ Chinatown before they were gust
4,
1977;
27
the activities of the
of San
which
Francisco's
brutally evicted
on Au-
Chinatown Workers Sewing
Coop, housed
in the I-Hotel storefront
of the Asian Community
Center (ACC);
28
garment workers and Lee
Mah
the struggles of Jung Sai
electronics workers
who worked under ILGWU and Teamster
contracts for Esprit and Faranon respectively;
29
and the Filipino
farm workers
who invited young Filipina/os and other Asians
them
United Farm Workers Organizing Committee fight
in the
to join
against the growers.
In October 1990 set
AIWA also launched a project targeting a new
of sweatshop industry workers
—
electronics assemblers in Santa
Clara County's Silicon Valley. Tens of thousands of immigrant
Sweatshop Warriors
206
women from Asia and Latin America worked in shops, ranging from large factories to small fly-by-night
contractors.
The women
shops
set
up
in garages
by sub-
often worked up to 14-hour days handling
hazardous chemicals and inhaling toxic fumes
as they
assembled,
cleaned, and tested printed circuit boards for "everything
watches to warheads."
from
30
AIWA is strongly committed to developing grassroots women's leadership.
The group's many accomplishments
workplace
literacy
and
citizenship classes for
include providing
immigrant
women
workers in Oakland's Chinatown and in Silicon Valley; organizing worker-led leadership development institutes and peer trainings
around workers'
rights;
and leadership and organizing training for
the children of garment and electronics workers. initiated
In 1990,
AIWA
an environmental health and safety project for Silicon Val-
ley electronics workers, to help
toxic chemicals
the
31
workers protect themselves from
and other industry hazards. In 1992, they launched
Garment Workers
Justice
Campaign, which resulted
in
an un-
precedented setdement holding manufacturers accountable to their
women
workers and community. In 1997,
more manufacturers
to
hotlines
rights in the workplace. In 2000,
Asian Immigrant
pressured three
and
garment workers to report violations of
toll-free
women's
for
AIWA
establish multilingual, confidential,
Women
Workers
AIWA co-sponsored the
Clinic to address the health
needs of electronics workers. Their work has developed concrete strategies for advancing immigrant
and
women
workers' leadership in the struggles for economic
social jusdce,
and has catapulted
women
workers into various
networks of workers' centers and grassroots organizations fighting for environmental
and economic
justice.
32
Fuerza Unida: La Mujer Luchando Fuerza Unida was founded in 1990 by "early victims of
NAFTA,"
non-unionized workers
laid
off by Levi Strauss and Co.'s
on January 1 6. The laid-off workers first met at Our Lady of Angels Church on January 30, then launched the organization on February 6. Within a month the organization began
plant in San Antonio, Texas
Movement Roots
By May
negotiating for the workers. rated a detailed
about the
207
1990, Fuerza Unida had elabo-
of 15 demands ranging from a statewide study
list
feasibility
of re-opening the plant to transferring owner-
ship of the facility to laid-off workers, providing a specific severance
package, and offering retraining programs. Marta Martinez, one of the laid-off workers recalled back in 1991 First
we
organized 15
been getting
They have
larger.
women, then
After
1
8
and then each month
30,
it's
months we now have 650 members.
regular meetings, committees taking
sponsibilities, a general council
small coordinating committee.
where decisions It
doesn't
we're learning a lot about democracy as
up
work
we go
different re-
are
made and
perfectly,
along.
a
and
33
Fuerza Unida launched a national boycott of Levi's labels and carried out
hunger
against the
company, one
strikes
and
The group
pickets.
two
lawsuits
fund violations, work
in-
syndrome, and the other,
ra-
alleging pension
jury claims, especially for carpal tunnel
filed
discriminatory layoff practices towards the primarily Latina
cially
women
The work
workers.
injury
suit
was denied by the
right-to-work state of Texas and the discrimination suit by the federal district court,
which discouraged many of the workers.
Many Ladna/o and some legal
advocates offered
Levi's first
initial
announced the
white labor, community, church, and
support to the laid-off workers.
Southwest Public Workers
layoffs, the
Union (SPWU) demonstrated
When
at the factory
and met with workers.
SPWU represents custodians, school cafeteria, hotel, and restaurant workers.
SPWU's founding members Ruben
Lopez had been involved
in
the
Centro
Solis
de
and Chavel
Accion
Social
Autonoma-Hermandad General de Trabajadores (CASA-HGT), a mass-based undocumented workers' rights organization active dur34 ing the 1970s. CASA-HGT served as basic training camp for many labor, immigrant,
1980s
at the
and
civil rights
leaders
and organizers. During the
height of US intervention in Central America,
and other Tejana/o tion in Latin
activists
worked
in
ex-CASA
Chicanos Against Interven-
America (CAMILA), an organization
that fused the
Chicana/o support for national liberation struggles with a critique of the racial blind spots of the white-dominated, anti-intervention
Sweatshop Warriors
208
movement. 33 During
movement
tervention
of
tion
the 1990s,
women
shifted
much of the
from
energy of the anti-in-
military issues to the exploita-
inside proliferating maquiladoras in
Central America and the impending passage of
NAFTA.
whom
the
Tejana/o
women women shared
Unida
anti-interventionist activists introduced Fuerza
workers networks in those regions, with
Mexico and
to
language, cultural, religious, and class commonalities.
Fuerza Unida enjoyed support from the Esperanza Peace and Justice Center, the
American Friends Service Committee, the South-
west Network for Environmental and Economic Justice, and the
MEChA, many of whose members
had organized against
US
inter-
vention in Central America. Each of these organizations in turn
is
rooted in different sections of the Mexican, Chicana/o, and Latina/o
women's, mental
lesbian, cultural, anti-intervention, solidarity, environ-
justice,
and student movements. Organizations
like
Mexican
American Legal Education and Defense Fund, the League of United Latin American Citizens, and elected officials like zales
Henry
B.
Gon-
and Ciro Rodriguez also endorsed Fuerza Unida's campaign,
then became the object of intense lobbying by the corporation seek-
dampen their support for the women. The women of Fuerza Unida are recognized
ing to
leaders of the national
and against
NAFTA
campaign for
and corporate
as early grassroots
garment industry
justice in the
globalization. Their organizing
has scored impressive victories including the creation of a
women
workers' resource center for low-income residents of San Antonio's
South and Westside leadership through a
barrios.
women
They've developed
workers'
Promotora Leadership Development Cam-
paign and peer group trainings. In 1996, they worked with other local organizations to
legislation
and
force the city council to adopt pro-worker
legislation that requires
companies
pay taxes for job training and other programs.
been heard worldwide through
ment packages
36
their success in
to support
and
Fuerza's voice has
improving
settle-
for laid-off workers in the United States, Canada,
Belgium, and France. While the group was born fighting against the world's largest garment corporation, Puerto Rican feminist activist
Luz Guerra
says that the
group
"is
now engaged
in
what may be
Movement Roots
their
biggest battle yet:
nity-based organization dedicated to supporting and
women
the poor and worldng-class
terms."
37
Reflecting
on how
ing and Texdie Workers
commu-
themselves as a
establish
to
209
empowering
of San Antonio, on
the refusal of the
Union (ACTUW)
own
their
Amalgamated Cloth-
to help the laid-off Levi's
workers may have been a blessing in disguise, Fuerza Unida's Petra
Mata explained,
We have to be independent to be happy. We don't want people to tell
do and what not
us what to
to do.
can speak out and say whatever hearts.
A
lot
we
of people go where the
Through Fuerza Unida we want, whatever
money helps. But money is not everything. sion and
what you have
strong and
your mind.
in
we know how
to struggle.
is
money and power
in is.
our Yes,
It
depends on your vi-
We
have learned to be
38
Korean Immigrant Workers Advocates: Organizing Minjung Diaspora Founded in 1 992, one month before the Rodney King civil unrest, Korean Immigrant Workers Advocates (KIWA) in Los Angeles,
California,
organizes
restaurant,
construction,
janitorial,
garment, and other low-waged Korean and Ladno immigrants
work
for
who
Korean employers.
KIWA grew out of the Korean progressive community that had spawned, a decade
earlier,
such Korean- American organizing as the
intergeneradonal community campaign to free Choi Soo Lee, the inidadves launched by
first
by the Kwangju Uprising, such
39
and
generadon immigrant youth shaped as
Young Koreans United. 40 The leg-
acy of these early efforts of the Korean progressive
community
in-
clude an ongoing idendficadon with the history of progressive
organizing in South Korea, support for peaceful reunification with
North Korea, and opposidon
to
US
neocolonial policies
rean peninsula.
KIWA
members of
Korean Labor Associadon
the
had previously organized
wage claims and
also received early support
in
in
on
the
Ko-
from former
Los Angeles, which
support of immigrant garment workers'
against the South
Korean
military regime.
Sweatshop Warriors
210
KIWA had inside experience with the strengths and weaknesses of different grants,
AFL-CIO
unions' approaches to the rights of immi-
women, and people of color.
KIWA founders Roy Hong and
Danny Park had organized Korean janitors and
port,
Union (SEIU),
at
both the local and international
SEIU launched 1 1
and
in
air-
an organizer for Service Employees
Los Angeles cal
San Francisco
as
International els.
at the
Hong had worked its
in 1988.
41
lev-
innovative Justice for Janitors campaign in
Hong and
Park had also assisted
HERE Lo-
Los Angeles when Korean owners bought the Hilton Hotel
tried to fire
its
worker
leaders. After
workers succeeded in keeping
their jobs
an 11 -month campaign,
and winning a
collective
bargaining agreement.
Los Angeles has been been repeatedly rocked and resegregated through race and nizing
all
bellion
the
class conflicts,
making KIWA's cross-race orga-
more important and noteworthy. The 1965 Watts
was followed by
deindustrialization
re-
and massive labor
migration from Latin America and Asia. Ongoing racial and class
Rodney King
tensions were manifested in the 1992 first
"multi-racial riot."
Through
its
many
civil
victories,
unrest, the
KIWA
has
served as a cutting-edge example of cross-racial worker organizing, building coalitions between
Korean workers and other communities
of color, including fighting to
raise the state
bus rates for the poor, maintain the
minimum wage, lower
state's affirmative action
pro-
grams, and in solidarity with hotel workers and janitors fighting for jobs and dignity.
KIWA is also known for its role in co-organizing a campaign in defense of 78 Thai and 55 Latino workers from the El
shop" where workers
One of its
Monte
"slave
a $4 million settlement with retailers.
successes was in organizing 45 workers displaced by
first
the April 1992
won
civil unrest,
demanding inclusion of workers
in relief
fund distribution and winning $109,000 from conservative business owners. tion
and
KIWA
members
to join the California
participate in creating a
to resolve
Owners AssociaWorkers Compensation Fund
pressured the Korean Restaurant
community mediation-arbitration board
workers disputes with employers.
$30,000 for North Korean famine
relief;
KIWA also raised over
supported the independent
Movement Roots
211
workers' movements in South Korea and Mexico; and organized
Korean immigrant voters color to impact
to collaborate with other
communities of
electoral politics.
In sum, the women's struggles and workers' centers are rooted
both
in resistance to
sweatshop industry exploitation and in the ac-
cumulated experience of prior labor and community movements.
The workers'
centers represent a fusion of the different generations
of workers and
their
expanded family members. The
women in this
book described how they were often compelled by the sheer force of anger and crisis to join or help create such organizations and take on leadership roles with the help of extended family members, often the descendants of prior generations of immigrant workers. In these positions, they took
developed
skills
on powerful, well-entrenched
they never dreamed they could.
institutions,
and
They have won
thousands of dollars in back wages, slowed the pace of layoffs,
se-
cured better settlement packages, strengthened legislation demanding
greater
corporate
communities, increased
programmatic
accountability visibility
alternatives
to
to
risk-takers
and
anti-corporate spectives
how nities
for.
largely
that
change
is
in the age
and experiences constitute
just society.
edge of
of globalization. Their per-
a treasure trove
most disenfranchised
chest of organizing lessons and
possible
unsung heroines, these
their organizations constitute the bleeding
and create a more
their
about industry abuses, and offered
Although
movements
to organize the
chapter.
and
employer greed. By example, the
women showed their peers and communities and worth fighting
workers
of lessons on
sectors of their
We will unpack more
movement
commufrom
this
building in the next
Sweatshop Warriors
212
Dominguez Glen,
1
Interview with GuiUermo
2
Saxton, 1971 and Douglass, 1892 (1962 revised edition).
3
Gomez-Quinones, 1994:105
4
In terms of European ethnic immigrant workers see Cohen,
April
3,
2001.
1990:324-25
and Friendlander, 1975 both cited in Milkman, 2000:4-5. For more on Mexican, Asian, and Black workers organizing linked to CIO unions see
Gomez-Quinones, 1994; Ruiz, Vicki
L.,
1984; Vargas, 1997; Acufia, 1988;
Yu, Renqiu, 1992; Kwong, Peter, 1979; Scharlin and Villanueva, 1994; Yoneda, 1983; and Kelley, 1990 and 1994.
5
6
CIO and
Kelley, 1990
and 1994. Kelley analyzes
among Black
sharecroppers and steelworkers.
left-related organizing
Vega, 1984; Yoneda, 1983; Scharlin and Villanueva, 1994; and Kelley, 1990
and 1994. 7
Gomez-Quinones, 1994:333.
8
Yu, Renqiu, 1992:51-52. In the case of the Chinese Hand Laundry Alliance of New York, the workers hired progressive lawyer, Julius Louis Bezozo, the son of Polish-Jewish immigrants, to represent the workers' in legal cases. He was assisted by CHLA's English Language Secretary, the only CHLA official to receive a regular salary ($40/month in the 1930s). Yu says that the function of the English Secretary was to deal with city authorities and serve as spokesman of the CHLA to the English-speaking world. He also translated the regulations and ordinances related to the business and their lawyer's explanations of these documents to members, served as the lawyer's interpreter, and accompanied members to court. The CHLA's Chinese Language Secretary coordinated the CHLA's intervention in the fractious class politics within the Chinese community. Many immigrant workers' centers still carry out the dual functions of the CHLA's English and Chinese Secretaries, though with a broader infrastructure of support than did these early male pioneers. 7
9
Vargas, 1997:553-580. See also Ruiz, Vicki
L.,
1987; and Calderon and
Zamora, 1990.
10 11
Acuna, 1988:278-279. unionism addresses both the connections between workers and their as part of the broader fight for social and economic justice. In contrast, business unions often engage in winnable fights to improve the terms of the deal workers get from bosses, build up the financial assets of the union, and lobby, finance, and influence politicians and other institutions, without regard to the interests of their mass members, unorganized workers, and the broader community. In alliances between labor and community organizations, social unionism and social justice community organizing builds relations on the basis of mutual respect and solidarity to advance the overlapping interests of Social
broader communities, and the process of labor organizing
all
partners within the
movement
against corporate control, etc.
business unionism and narrow self-interest party organizes
on the
basis
of
its
own
community
direct self-interest
with others in order to use the other party to advance
its
Under
organizing, each
and only
own
links
up
agenda.
With the suppression of the left within the labor and other movements and fragmentation between movements, an elite form of professionalization
.
.
.
Notes to Movement Roots
213
come to dominate many sections of the movement. The distinctions between the terms "organizer," "leader," and "activist" represent this type of has
professionalization:
"organizer"
come
has
to
mean
middle-class, professional organizer; "leader" signifies a
college-educated,
worker or grassroots
person being cultivated and trained by organizers; and "activist" applies to other random people who volunteer their time in these movements. In another indication of the purge of the
left in
the resistance
movements, the
terms "ally" and "supporter" have replaced what used to be called "sisters
and brothers
in the struggle."
someone who acted it
is
Where
in the past
as
now
who can be used to leverage single-issue and "support" sometimes mean nothing more
often reduced to those
tit-for-tat.
Now
"solidarity"
than "charity" to help "victims" somewhere
12
an "ally" was seen
in "solidarity" in shared battles against oppression,
else.
The concept of "serve the people" was advocated by revolutionaries in China. Young radicals of color identified with Third World national liberation movements in the 1960s and 70s, such as the Black Panther Party, Young Lords, I Wor Kuen, Wei Min Sei, Katipunan Ng Demokratic, and others developed
US
inner city versions of serve-the-people-style free
breakfast, health clinics, low-cost housing,
and other programs. For example,
see Louie, Steve.
13
Gomez-Quifiones,
1994:47-59;
Yu,
Renqiu,
Kwong,
1992;
Peter,
1979:116-130; Scharlin and Villanueva, 1992:27-42; and Acuna, 1988.
14
15 16 17
hope that more Asian and Latina/o AFL-CIO union organizers will document the history in that section of the labor movement, including the stories of low-waged immigrant union members. I
Bureau of Labor
Statistics,
2000, cited in Moberg, 2001
Chinese Staff and Workers Association,
Kwong,
Peter, 1987:137-173;
1
999a: 1
Ho, Fred, 2000; and Louie,
Steve, et al., 2001
(forthcoming)
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28
Kwong,
Peter, 1987:137-159.
Chinese Staff and Workers Association, 1999a.
La Mujer Obrera, 1996a:3. La Mujer Obrera, 1996a:2-3. Acuna, 1988:339 and 387, Gutierrez, 1998.
La Mujer Obrera, 1991:1 and
7;
and Marquez, 1995: 68-78.
La Mujer Obrera, 1996a; author interviews with Maria Antonia Flores and Cindy Arnold, December 9, 1997 and Guillermo Dominguez Glenn, May 5, 2000; presentation by Jena Camp and Yrene Espinoza, June 4, 2000; White Polk, 2000; La Mujer Obrera, 2001. Interview with Lora Jo Foo, April 11, 1997. Wells, 2000:109-129. Interview with Lora Jo Foo, April 11, 1997. Toribio, Helen, 2000; and Habal, Stella, 2000.
Interview with Bea Tarn and Harvey Dong,
Coop's
first
May
4,
1997. Ironically, the
contract was with garment manufacturer Jessica McClintock; in
.
Sweatshop Warriors
214
English classes,
Coop members
during negotiations over piece
29 30 31 32 33 34
practiced
how
Interview with Bea Tarn and Harvey Dong,
Asian Immigrant
to say, "You're too cheap!"
rates.
Women Advocates,
May
4,
1997.
1993.
Shin, 1995:48-50; and Louie, Miriam, 1992.
AIWA,
1998:5-6; see also Shin, 1997.
Canadian Tribune, 1991.
CASA sought to develop a general bermanidad [brotherhood] of Mexican workers sin jronteras [without borders]. CASA combined two demographic pools: immigrant workers and young Chicana/o radical students, activists, and professionals
who
used their newly acquired
organization's service programs.
skills
to
manage
the
CASA was particularly strong in California,
Illinois, and Washington, i.e., states with large Mexican immigrant worker populations during that period. See Garcia, Mario, 1994:286-320. Interviews with Arnoldo Garcia, April 21, 1997 and May 6, 1997; and Ruben Solis, October 8, 1997. See also Ruiz, 1998:99-126 about Chicanas' roles in the movement and struggles against sexism, particularly within CASA and La Raza Unida Party.
Texas,
35 36 37 38 39
40 41
Interview with Antonio Diaz,
December
7,
1999. See also Guerra, 1990.
Fuerza Unida, 1998:5-6. Guerra, Luz. 1997:2. Interview with Petra Mata, March 20, 2001
Choi Soo Lee was on San Quentin's death row, convicted of a Chinatown murder he did not commit, and a killing while in prison. With the help of Korean community elders lawyer Jay Kun Yoo and newspaper man Kyung Won Lee, his case served as a rallying point for the Korean-American community during the late 1970s and early 80s. See Jay Kun Yoo's story in Kim and Yu, 1996:282-293. Sim, 2000. Acuria, 1996:184-188; and Fisk, Mitchell, and Erickson. 2000.
Chapter Six
"Just-in-Time" Guerrilla Warriors Immigrant Workers' Centers Rojana "Na" Cheunchujit delivered an impassioned speech to
some 20,000 workers who jammed the Los Angeles Sports Arena at an AFL-CIO rally on June 10, 2000, demanding the end of employer sanctions and unconditional amnesty for undocumented workers. In March 1999, she testified before the California Assembly Committee on Labor and Employment in support of a bill to crack down on sweatshop abuses in California's 530 billion garment industry. The sports stadium and state legislature halls are a long way from the El Monte sweatshop where Cheunchujit and her Thai co-workers were imprisoned behind razor wire
—
a
long way,
also,
from the Immigration and Naturalization Service [INS] detention center where the workers were reincarcerated after their "liberation"
by government agents. They are half
kok garment the village
factories
a
world away from the Bang-
where Cheunchujit sewed
where she was born and planted
as a teenager
rice seedlings
and
with her
parents as a child.
Cheunchujit was one of the 72 Thai workers impnsoned ing slaves in a sweatshop in El Monte, California which had in 1988. 2,
1
rr
\\
hen government agents stormed
1995, the workers' terrified faces
prime-time
TV
news across the
made
the factor}-
sew-
on August
front-page headlines and
nation. Their case
215
as
opened
shocked many
Sweatshop Warriors
216
who seas
thought that sweatshops were something that existed over-
—not
US
within
borders.
The workers' subsequent campaign
provoked scrutiny of brand name
retailers
and manufacturers and
helped spur the creadon, in August 1996, of a presidential task force to
reform the garment industry. 2
When
asked whether workers feared demonstrating against
re-
tailers after their release,
Cheunchujit laughed. "Participating in the
campaign was not
not after what we'd been through!.
scary,
campaign might help
to redistribute the wealth."
participated in a strike as a
young garment worker
found her bearings amidst the confusion
at the
INS
.
This
.
Cheunchujit had in Thailand.
She
detention center
and threw in her lot with the Thai Community Development Center, 7
American Legal Center, and
the Asian Pacific
get the workers out of
jail.
KIWA who
She says the groups
"really
came
to
helped us to
we went through. We felt like we were part of a larger family of people who really cared for us, people who loved us, whom we could trust." 3 The ethnic-based workers' centers reach, organize, and defend the immigrant, low-waged, ethnic minority women workers who are not protected by the trade union movement. During moments of criovercome the
sis,
workers
slaveshop,
terrible things
like
the
Cheunchujit and her co-workers
Korean and Latino
restaurant workers
Koreatown, the Mexicana garment workers nio,
at the
in El
El
Monte
in
LA's
Paso and San Anto-
and the Chinese garment and restaurant workers
in
New York,
Oakland, and San Francisco reached out to these centers.
"Justin-Time" Methods
The transformation
that the
women make from
dustry workers to sweatshop warriors
ment and maturation of their batdes. Like the
is
sweatshop
in-
expressed in the develop-
the organizations they build to carry out
women's
lives, their
organizations are shaped
by the contradictions and tensions unfolding within the sweatshop industries
where they
tom of
where the live
women work
with their families.
and the ethnic communities
The women's
the sweatshop pyramid frames the
culture, look,
and
feel
position at the bot-
demands, methodology,
of their organizations and movements. Even
217
"Just in Time" Guerrilla Warriors
the
modest storefronts and community centers
ters often
women In
that
house
their cen-
resemble the hole-in-the-wall garment shops where the
toil
or the shuttered factories where they used to work.
many ways,
nizations are the
the low- waged immigrant
flip side
women workers' orga-
of the "just-in-time" production methods
pursued by corporate management. Based on the successes of Japan's auto industry since the 1980s, just-in-time production meth-
ods reduce inventory and workforce
on
"small batches" of goods, based tion of
consumer
tastes as "special
and
subcontracting out
and categoriza-
niche" or "micro markets," and
The
quick response to customers trends. ucts
size via
closer tracking
successfully tested prod-
services of small business innovators are often copied or
absorbed by big businesses,
who may buy
out-compete the small
Employers extol these methods with
such code words as versification
ods
of
and "right
risks,"
spell increased
fry.
"flexibility," "lean
out, subcontract to, or
and mean production,"
sizing."
"di-
For workers, these meth-
competition with and between subcontracted
workers, plummeting wages, shrinking benefits, runaway shops, offs, ries,
temporary work, loss of job
and heightened discrimination. 4 In
workers act
as on-call
lay-
security, speed-ups, increased inju-
short,
subcontracted
shock absorbers for the just-in-time system.
Mirroring and intersecting with
this restructuring
of produc-
tion within the sweatshop pyramid, the workers' centers respond
with just-in-time methods to organize "small batches" and "micro
markets" of immigrant, women, and ethnic minority workers segregated at the bottom of the
"new economy." These workers
are
fragmented and divided through the subcontracting system, by ethnicity, gender,
and immigrant
globalization of their industries. are joined by workers
restructuring
where they
from
who end up
status,
manage
at times, also
larger facilities
by the
industry workers
"downsized" through
scrambling for sweatshop-type jobs
invariably get paid lower
they can even
and
The sweatshop
to land a job.
wages with
The women
less benefits live in
—
if
poor com-
munities with other people of color. These "niche markets" of
low-waged immigrant
women
over by the broader labor
workers have often been passed
movement
— but not by
the
"brown
Sweatshop Warriors
218
bomber"
who recognize these women as
barrio organizations
fam-
ily.
management
Just as corporate
extols "lean
and mean" busi-
nesses with the "flexibility" to quickly adapt to changing "market
conditions" and "environments," so do the sweatshop industry
workers' organizations learn to maximize scarce resources and "use
what they got zations
to get
what they need." 5 Low-waged workers' organi-
do not have much room
for error or to squander resources.
Like small business innovators within the corporate setting, the workers' centers within the broader labor to understand their
and
movement have
to hustle
anticipate changing conditions, while developing
long-term perspective, strategy, and infrastructure to ride out
the bust and
on the In
boom of capitalist business
cycles
and "keep
their eyes
prize." this respect
riors fighting a
workers' centers are a
more
small, lack resources,
heavily
and
bit like small guerrilla
armed opponent. They
fight class forces
firepower to both punish those
who
who
are relatively
with considerably more
challenge the status
ward the "good Hispanics," "Asian model "team players"
quo and
minorities,"
move
quickly,
maximize limited
resources, organize "outside of the box," and utilize tactics
based on their ethnic backgrounds
tai chijujitsu, habkido,
Zaptistas
—
—
like
"war of the
and
flea,"
and the ideas of Gandhi, Cesar Chavez, and the
more powerful opthem. Sometimes Korean and Chinese
techniques that deflect and toss their
ponents' weight back at
groups have also been tics
re-
and other
rush to the bosses' defense. These sweatshop
warrior organizations are flexible,
strategies
war-
known
where both opponents
to use tae
just
kwon do and gung-fu-X&jz
kick and punch each other
until
tac-
one
goes down. 6
From
inside the ethnic enclaves, the centers "give props" to
workers to take on large
US
their co-ethnic bosses as well as the
corporations.
that enables
them
The
to take advantage
of the experiences and expertise
accumulated in prior struggles, develop leadership, connect with other workers
part of a broader
hegemony of
centers offer workers an infrastructure
movement, and begin
their
consciousness and
and organizations,
to alter the
power
act as
relations
219
"Just in Time" Guerrilla Warriors
work and live. 7 swimming in the sea,"
within the industries and communities where they
The women's sharing the
organizations operate like "fish
common
language, culture, history, and interests of the
broader base of workers and
The
their
communities.
just-in-time organizations defend workers' rights through
different stages of industrial restructuring while simultaneously pur-
suing independent strategies and alternatives that enable workers to stabilize their lives
and movements through the
vicissitudes
of the
market and profit-oriented economy. Because the centers are based within particular ethnic communities, they stick with the workers
through thick and
panding
They follow immigrant workers
thin.
labor organizing
runaway shops, and
demands
them
accompany
and
industries
deindustrialization,
through
Community-based
layoffs.
commitment
a long-term
into ex-
to the
workers
and community, an accurate grasp of shifting conditions, and devel-
opment of independent
strategies
build their organizations and
and
enable workers to
tactics that
power not
defensive/ reactive,
just in
but also in offensive/proactive ways. Successfully organizing the growing proportion of female
workers requires bringing gender consciousness to labor organiz-
Gender oppression
ing.
plays a
huge
role in shaping the lives
of
low- waged immigrant women workers, and the problems they face as
women are compounded by their class, race,
tus.
Immigrant workers' organizations are
and nationality
either
sta-
women's groups
or have gender-specific initiatives within a mixed-gender organiza-
Thrust into positions of major responsibility the
tion. this
7
,
book fought
velop their
skills
uphill battles individually
and
difficult decisions, racist, classist,
Like
women
assert their leadership.
and male chauvinist
assaults
to providing child care
ment,
among
these
struggles
They learned
to
on
their
in
make
personhood.
movements, they often encountered
practices that devalued their opinions
sponsibilities that
women
collectively to de-
run their organizations, and not be stymied by
in other
commitment
and
impact
and contributions, a lack of and negotiating family
their participation,
other challenges. Those often
had
to
deal
sexist
and sexual harass-
women who
with
re-
shouldered
defensiveness,
guilt,
Sweatshop Warriors
220
and charges of divisiveness for outing sup-
trivialization, backlash,
posedly taboo topics. Nevertheless, through their centers and com-
women's more of their sisters can
mittees, these battle-scarred working-class pioneers for liberation
have knocked
down doors
so that
movements. 8
enter and stay in these
Cross-Fertilization within the Labor
Movement
The concurrent reemergence of ethnic-based mutualistas and of sweatshops is happening during a stage when some of the labor movement's "standing army battalions" in the process rilla
large trade unions
—
are
When the guercommon perspective and strat-
of massive rethinking and retooling.
and standing army
egy, they
—
units share a
can compliment and increase each others' effectiveness in
organizing workers across race, gender, industry, and nationality divisions. In today's tion,
world of subcontracting, labor market re-segrega-
and global economic restructuring, workers
will
continue to
need community-based workers' centers and independent unions. 9 Today's workers' centers represent an updated version of the com-
munity labor linkages and
social
unionism that characterized the
waves of immigrant workers and the birth of
struggles of the earlier
industrial unionism. Just as the
more diverse ethnicities,
AFL-CIO
eventually incorporated
the innovations of ethnic workers are often
adopted by industry unions, which are always on the lookout for
new dues-paying members. The global economic restructuring composition of the
US
process and shifts in the
workforce since the mid-1960s
built
up un-
derground, geyser-like pressures that sporadically erupted on the surface of the broader labor
movement. Labor radicals have debated
and written thoughtfully and persuasively about the need and for
change
in the trade
innovative organizing ers,
basis
union movement and provided examples of
among
including immigrants. 10
particular sectors
They analyzed
of unionized work-
the significance of the
1995 victory of John Sweeney, Richard Trumka, and Linda
Chavez-Thompson;
the dismantling of the cold
can Institute for Free Labor Development; the radical labor activists into the
AFL-CIO's
war vintage Ameri-
movement of many
national organizing, edu-
221
"Just in Time" Guerrilla Warriors
and women's departments;
cation,
defeat of
NAFTA
World Trade Organization
Seattle protests against the spite
in
1999 de-
tremendous pressure from the Democratic Party not to embar-
rass the
2000
labor's role in the Congressional
fast tracking in 1997; labor's participation in the
moderate presidential candidate Al Gore; and the February
AFL-CIO
oppose employer sanctions and
shift to
conditional amnesty for
undocumented workers.
call for
Immigrants make up a growing proportion of the force and
movement,
un-
11
US
especially in states like California, Texas,
labor
New
York, and Florida. According to the 2000 Census, Latinos have
grown
12
California
is
population, and 32 percent of Cali-
make up 4 percent and 12 percent
fornia's, while Asians tively.
US
to 12 percent of the
returning to
its
respec-
pre-Mexico annexation, and
pre-anti-Asian exclusion acts demographic mix. 13 According to the
New York labor
Times labor reporter Steven Greenhouse, the Los Angeles
movement, by focusing on organizing immigrant workers,
bringing in
new members
country. In 1999, 74,000
were Latina/os, voted
faster
LA home
The
care workers,
most of
to unionize in the largest successful
nizing drive since the 1930s.
whom
US
orga-
14
just-in-time guerrilla groups have influenced segments
the trade union
movement,
is
than unions anywhere else in the
especially in those industries
and
of
cities
where the workers' centers operate. The relationship between the centers and unions depends principally lar
union, including
fight for the rights
cation, training
on
the politics of the particu-
stance towards employers;
of workers; the weight
it
its
willingness to
gives to organizing, edu-
and promotion of rank-and-file leadership; and
relationship with
many of
its
community and other
social
its
movements. Since
the unions themselves are highly fractured internally, at
times the relationship between the workers' centers and unions also
depends on the stance of key leaders and organizers representing different political perspectives
some cases the relationship more cooperative. 16
In
and constituencies within the unions. is
more
contentious, 15 but in others,
Collective bargaining agreements, workers' centers, and unions,
whether independent or AFL-CIO, are
all
tools that workers
Sweatshop Warriors
222
must hone
to sharpness.
ronment or
When a tool grows dull, or when the envi-
task changes, tools can cease to be useful.
AFL-CIO
veterans inside and outside of the
Many
labor
critique organized la-
women, and
bor's stagnation; indifference toward immigrants,
people of color; and degeneration into profit-making institutions investing and managing workers' pensions, benefit funds, and fixed assets.
Like
AFL-CIO
unions, workers' centers can also
tious, service-oriented, toothless
groups
if
they do not develop
workers' leadership, link up with other campaigns for
power
ter
centers tures
justice,
and
al-
sweatshop pyramid. The workers'
relations within the
must
into cau-
fall
also struggle against accepting the premises
and
struc-
of ghettoization and segregation imposed on immigrant,
women, and racial minority workers from the bosses ten, accommodated by other institutions inside and
and,
all
too of-
outside the
la-
bor movement. In an effort to define the methodology that would enable workers'
groups to maintain a
acter,
CSWA
La
and
militant, worker-oriented,
Mujer
Consortium of Workers' Centers build a
"new
labor
Obrera in 1994,
bottom-up char-
initiated
National
the
which invited workers
movement." The consortium
principles called
for organizing workers across trade lines; bringing together nity
and workplace
struggles; building leadership
up; raising workers' capacities,
communication through the service agencies;
The
skills,
commu-
from the bottom
consciousness, leadership, and
fight for basic necessities;
not being
and fighting sexism, racism, and discrimination. 17
following campaigns highlight
tions of these
to
some of the organizing innova-
immigrant workers' groups.
Anti-Corporate Campaigns
Much
of the day-to-day work of the centers
in fighting disputes
is
assisting
workers
with employers around violation of their wage,
hour, and safety rights. But
when
large corporations
have shrugged
off responsibility, the centers have launched anti-corporate campaigns to force to
many
them
to the bargaining table.
corporate "hired guns"
Employers have access
—management
consultants, finan-
223
"Just in Time" Guerrilla Warriors
government agencies, elected
officials,
academic
and mainstream media advocates
to assist
them
cial institutions,
sociations,
ning their businesses, including "handling labor problems." fectively deal with employers,
own
set
common
as bridges
and other sections of the
workers
at the
ing to treat their employees facturers
and
US
whom
between the sweatshop war-
population, as well as other
bottom of the sweatshop pyramid. In some
workers' campaigns have even
ef-
Often, immigrants' children and
interests.
subsequent generations act riors
To
workers also need to develop their
of relations with other groups and institutions with
they share
as-
in run-
won
fairly
over employers
and
also felt
cases,
who were
try-
squeezed by manu-
retailers.
The use of boycotts,
sit-ins,
freedom
rides,
obedience, and mass mobilization by the
non- violent
civil rights
civil dis-
movement
in
the 1960s provided valuable lessons for immigrant workers of color.
The United Farm Workers Union (UFW) launched grape boycott in the
1
its
national
960s to broaden the front pressuring the grow-
Mexican and
ers to negotiate with the
Filipino
farm workers. The
campaign trained farmworkers and youth "on-the-job" by dispatching
them
to cities
around the nation to seed and grow boycott com-
mittees in diverse communities to support
la
causa}*
A
young
generation of Chicana/o and Filipina/o activists cut their teeth on this struggle.
During the 1970s, Chicana/o and Chinese
activists also
developed anti-corporate campaigns in support of striking Farah
and Jung
Sai workers.
In 1990, Fuerza Unida was the tured in this
book
of the workers' centers
to launch a nationwide boycott.
the Jessica McClintock boycott and
paign in 1992;
first
fea-
AIWA launched
Garment Workers Justice Cam-
KIWA and their Sweatshop Watch partners launched Campaign in 1995; and CSWA and
the Retailers Accountability
NMASS merits
its
Levi's,
initiated the
own
DKNY
book, but
Button Your
will
Fly:
"girl"cott in 1999.
Each campaign
be briefly spotlighted below.
Your Greed
Is
Showing
Fuerza Unida's campaign against Levi's represented one of the
major fightbacks by laid-off workers against deindustrialization and
Sweatshop Warriors
224
runaway shops during the 1990s. This campaign was organized and led
by
non-unionized,
Mexicana and Chicana garment workers, with
help from a small, local independent union, the Southwest Public
Workers Union. Hundreds of thousands of electronics, plasties,
auto, garment, shoe,
and other manufacturing workers had
lost their
jobs by the time of the 1990 San Antonio layoffs. Fuerza
Unida
movement of the anti-corporate movement
helped create a bridge linking the plant closures 1970s and 1980s with the anti-sweatshop, it
helped bring into prominence in the 1990s.
Beginning with emergency mass meetings
at
Our Lady of
the
Angels Church in San Antonio's Southside barrio, Fuerza Unida
went on
to launch a national boycott that garnered solidarity
community,
labor,
economic
religious,
justice, student,
organizations around the country and overseas. porters sent sheared off Levi's labels to
Haas.
19
Thousands of sup-
CEO
company
Robert
Workers organized community tribunals in San Antonio and
San Francisco and the to bring the
campaign
cluded the
first
Heights
hunger
from
and youth
women took turns
traveling to
San Francisco
to Levi's corporate headquarters. Actions in-
protest at the exclusive San Francisco Pacific
home of Levi's strikes in front
corporate family patriarch and protests and
of Levi's outlets in
cities
across the nation.
While the company continued to stonewall San Antonio workers, its
second round of layoffs in 1997-1999 revealed
how many
"goodies" Fuerza Unida's "pinata-busters" had knocked loose from
When Levi's announced plans to lay-off some 6,400 workers at 1 1 US plants in 1997, the supposed generosity of its
corporate coffers.
severance package was heralded by
UNITE
"by
as
far the best sev-
erance settlement apparel workers have ever gotten." 20 Levi's
acknowledged
no denying
that "There's
had something
to
do with the development
1997," and that Levi's had failed to anticipate
would
San Antonio
that
in
1990
of these benefits in
how much
criticism
it
21 receive from the San Antonio community.
Fuerza Unida's struggle may have also delayed the layoff of thousands of workers by several years. Levi's had
US workers—in
1
982,
San Antonio workers
1
984,
1
in 1990.
985, 1986,1 988,
1
fired
thousands of
989, before
it
hit the
A seven-year lull followed before the
225
"Just in Time" Guerrilla Warriors
company resumed its
US
layoffs in 1997, 1998,
and 1999, dumping half of
and Canadian workers and 20 percent of its European
Simultaneously,
management announced
staff.
plans to expand produc-
and the Caribbean. 22
tion in China, Mexico,
Fuerza Unida's campaign also caused the image-conscious cor-
more money Change diversity
community organizations
poration to dole out
to
through
initiative, ironically
its
Project
located in
communities where Levi's plant closures disproportionately ple
of
color.
23
may
Unida
Fuerza
have
ACTWU /UNITE get into Levi's plants, since "team
it
was
hit
peo-
also
helped
likely
seen as a
union that would cooperate with
player," business-oriented
ACTUW
the company. In 1994 during the merger between
and
ILGWU, and the negotiations with Levi's to gain the company's voluntary recognition of the union's card check agreement, cut a deal with the
management
supporting Fuerza Unida. 24
hunger
to get other local unions' to stop
Two
days into Fuerza Unida's 21 -day
strike at corporate headquarters, Levi's
nounced
their joint partnership.
ILGWU
25
and
ACTWU
an-
Yet the company soon dumped
many UNITE members during its 1997-1999
layoffs.
According
to
Labor Notes, a progressive labor magazine:
UNITE
The new
closings
ACTWU)
entered a labor-management partnership with Levi
come
just three years
Strauss in 1994 to prevent plant closings. that while
it
after
UNITE,
(then
however, says
agreed to the partnership as a job-saving measure, the
current plant closings are a different issue.
"We
don't think that
ship," said
UNITE
it
has anything to do with the partner-
spokesperson Jo-Ann Mort.
nership started, she said, the union
would have
to
when
Levi Strauss'
compared
is
saying
little
beyond
that.
the layoffs were announced,
"commitment
the
When
the part-
that business decisions
be made."
But the union issued
"knew
company
to a high road
favorably to
its
In [the] statement
UNITE
highlighted
of management" and
competitors
in its treat-
ment of workers. 26 Fuerza Unida continues to serve
as
an information and counsel-
ing center for injured and laid-off workers from Texas to Tennessee,
Sweatshop Warriors
226
including workers in the remaining San Antonio Levi's plant, as well as
El Paso workers
into a job re-entry
who
successfully sued Levi's for forcing
program
exposed them to
that
them
ridicule, humilia-
and harassment from managers and other factory workers. 27
tion
Sharing their experiences as "early vicdms of
NAFTA"
Fuerza
Unida co-coordinators Petra Mata and Viola Casares joined protesters in the tear gas filled streets
the
Summit of
of Quebec, Canada in April 2001 for
The Summit's
the Americas.
goal, the Free
Trade
Area of the Americas agreement (FTAA), would extend the North
American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) sphere.
Like
other
hemi-
against the bosses, Fuerza
development
sustainability as
Antonio's
Unida struggled
work with
the distinct
necessary
to balance their anti-cor-
membership and organiza-
for
barrios.
This
long-term
group's
the
an organization rooted among the
working-class
campaigns
spearheading intense
organizations
porate campaign tional
to the entire
28
women
Mexicana
of San
mutualista
"multi-tasked" as an independent union, a displaced and injured
workers' organization, an education and leadership training center, a cooperative, and a grassroots
women's support group.
Garment Workers Justice Campaign Predating the Nike, Gap, El Monte, Kathie Lee Gifford, Guess,
and other anti-sweatshop campaigns, AIWA's 1992-1996 Garment
Workers Justice Campaign (GWJC) served as a watershed not only for Asian immigrant women workers, but also for the broader anti-corporate
—
movement
especially the
youth and student sectors
of the movement. While Fuerza Unida's campaign targeted a run-
away industry Goliath, AIWA's structure of the for domestic
sweatshop abuses
El Paso, 29 San Antonio, 30 and large
GWJC
spotlighted the pyramid
garment industry and manufacturers' responsibility in
subcontracted shops. Similar to
New York City,
San Francisco-based manufacturers
31
by the
like Levi's, Esprit,
Gap, and Banana Republic had already sent much of tion overseas.
Koret,
Fritzi,
Medium-sized companies
and Byer subcontracted out
early 1990s,
like Jessica
their
the
produc-
McClintock,
to local sweatshops,
and
227
"Just in Time" Guerrilla Warriors
some began
AIWA
work
to send
launched the
who approached
to overseas contractors as well. 32
GWJC
in support
back wages. The sweatshop they worked closed
down
cade of base-building work seamstresses
ese
for, the
after the manufacturer, Jessica
contract. Prior to initiating the
and
Lucky Sewing Co.,
McClintock, pulled
GWJC, AIWA had conducted
among Chinese and
Korean
its
a de-
Chinese- Vietnam-
and
maids
hotel
Campaign opponents included
assemblers.
women
of 12 Chinese
the organization after being stiffed out of their
electronics
the manufacturer and
its
various agents: the manufacturers' association, the contractor that violated the
women workers'
from sweatshop
rights,
and
retailers that also profited
labor. Institutions that stood
between the employer
and workers during the campaign and played contradictory
roles in-
cluded the Chinese subcontractors' association, the Department of Labor, and
ILGWU. The
campaign's core included the former
Lucky workers; AIWA's Worker Board, membership, and the national campaign committees in several principally
US
cities
of Asian labor, community, and student
staff;
and
composed
activists,
with
support from community, women's, labor, religious, and student organizations inside and outside the Asian community.
The campaign used a consumer boycott,
pickets, public actions,
supporter mobilization, media coverage, work with elected and gov-
ernment
officials,
and other
tactics to
bring the
company
to the ne-
gotiating table. Similar to the anti-sweatshop campaigns of other
workers' centers, the
ods reflecting the
These
GWJC evolved through several different peri-
level
of contention between the principal
stages can be delineated:
talk to the
players.
from McClintock's 1992 refusal to
women and the launching of the GWJC
"charitable donations" to workers if they
would
until her offer
of
sign papers saying
the manufacturer was not responsible; from a declaration of partial victory for the "charitable donations" until McClintock escalated attacks
on the GWJC, AIWA, and KIWA; from McClintock's
tion of attacks until the manufacturer closed
down
escala-
the flagship San
Francisco boutique; from broadening the campaign to include ers'
retail-
accountability for sweatshop conditions and pickets at Macy's
until the
Department of Labor blunder of including McClintock
Sweatshop Warriors
228
(and Levi's) on ufacturers;
its
"Fashion Trendsetter" holiday season
list
and from the Department of Labor's mistake
of man-
to negotia-
and wrap-up of the boycott and campaign
tions, settlement,
in
1996. 33
Immigrant
women
workers
won
an undisclosed cash setde-
ment, an education fund for garment workers to learn about their rights, a scholarship
fund for workers and
their children, a bilingual
hotline for workers to report any violations of their rights in shops
contracted with McClintock, and an agreement from both sides to
work to improve conditions within the industry. 34 The campaign developed workers' leadership, broke the facade of manufacturers' lack of responsibility- for sweatshop abuses,
and support
for
won
greater visibility
7
immigrant workers, consolidated AIWA's base
among low-income
workers, and, together with Fuerza Unida,
helped kick-start the broader anti-sweatshop movement.
The
GWJC
enabled
AIWA to
refine
its
educational, leadership
development, and organizing methodology and brought another generation of Asian youth and students into community-based struggles for corporate
transformed
its
and governmental accountability.
and other low-waged immigrant 1990s the ing
AIWA
youth project to one led by the children of garment
women
workers. During the early
GWJC served as a cutting-edge nationwide campaign link-
many activists and organizations within the Asian and other eco-
nomic and environmental and infrastructure
built
justice
movements. 33
through the
Monte workers. Eventually
the
GWJC
in
KIWA used lessons its
work with
ILGWU/UNITE,
the El
the National La-
bor Committee, and Global Exchange used what they observed of
AIWA's campaign
in their anti-corporate
campaigns against Gap,
Nike, and Guess, and in organizing students through Union
mer and United Students Against Sweatshops. Retailers Accountability
Sum-
36
Campaign
Just as the Jessica McClintock campaign threw a spotlight
on
the role of manufacturers in the garment industry, so did the El
Monte
case
on
the increasingly powerful role of retailers in setting
wages and working conditions. The case marked
a
major turning
229
"Just in Time" Guerrilla Warriors
point in the development and
visibility
of immigrant sweatshop
in-
dustry workers struggles, with ripple effects within the industry,
government enforcement
agencies,
and the broader anti-sweatshop
movement. In August 1995, Chanchanit "Chancee" Martorell, director of the Thai Community Development Center (Thai CDC) in Los Angeles, got to
a call
accompany and
Monte,
California,
from the
raid,
Labor Commissioner's
translate for agents raiding a
gates. Martorell
would not be
office
sweatshop in El
where Thai and other immigrant workers
behind razor wire and locked tion that workers
State
toiled
agreed on the condi-
sent to the INS. After the
August 2
however, the INS re-incarcerated the El Monte workers in de-
tention centers for interrogation and possible deportation.
KIWA, which
shares office space with Thai
had accumulated some
Pilipino Workers' Center,
CDC
and the
guerrilla tactics
GWJC that proved very helpful KIWA organizer Paul Lee said when the
and infrastructure from the AIWA's to the El
INS
Monte workers.
when the roller coaster CDC, KIWA, and other groups quickly cobbled to-
re-incarcerated the workers, "That's
started." 37
Thai
gether the Sweatshop hectic
Watch
coalition to respond.
months of the campaign, Thai
ers' survival,
social service,
CDC
and translation needs; Asian
American Legal Center (APALC), the workers'
KIWA,
Throughout the
took on the Thai workPacific
legal issues;
and
the campaign organizing for retailers' accountability.
According
to Lee, the
days after the raid
when
enormity of the case came to
the
light five
government made public the major
brand name manufacturers and
retailers
the shop over the previous five years.
who had
contracted with
KIWA launched the Retailers
Accountability Campaign (RAC) after retailers denied responsibility for the abuses.
KIWA
organized holiday shopping season actions
such as Sears, Robinson's May, Bull-
against targeted retailers
Neiman Marcus, Target/Dayton HudMontgomery Ward, pressuring some to the negotiating
ocks/Macy's, Nordstrom, son, and table.
38
Twenty-four Latina/o workers approached ber 1995, describing
owners.
KIWA
how
KIWA
in
Decem-
they had also been exploited by the same
ultimately represented 55 Latina/os in a lawsuit
Sweatshop Warriors
230
employed the sweatshop subcontractor,
against the retailers that
APALC
while
Thai workers. Thai
filed the lawsuit for the
KIWA, and APALC
CDC,
organized monthly general meetings of the
Thai and Latino workers to exchange information, analyze developments,
map
out
strategies,
and plan
actions. 39
The El Monte campaign demonstrates how solidarity between different ethnic workers can be built and how community organizations with relatively more developed infrastructures (like the 1.5 genKorean-American organizers
eration
newer emergent communities Activist Training
and works
gins
program
(like
for
in
KIWA)
the Thai).
can help support
KIWA runs a Summer
young Asians of diverse national
in partnership with Central
ori-
American and Mexican
immigrant worker organizers of the Coalition for
Humane Immi-
grant Rights of Los Angeles. In January 2001, various Asian, Chi-
cano, and ethnically mixed groups jointly opened the
Workers Center
in the heart
of LA's fashion
Garment
district.
In July 1999, nearly four years after the government raid on the
El Monte sweatshop, the workers
companies post,
—
including
won
over $4 million from major
Montgomery Ward, Mervyn's,
B.U.M. Equipment, and Tomato,
Inc.
—
all
of
Miller's
whom
Out-
initially
denied responsibility for the sweatshop conditions of their subcontractor.
40
The campaigns of
the Thai and Latina/o workers in Los
Angeles and the Chinese workers in Oakland spurred passage of a California state legislative
bill,
AB 633, which imposed a "wage guar-
antee" in the garment industry so that manufacturers and retailers
who manufacture their own private label clothing must pay workers their minimum wage and overtime compensation when the contractors they use
fail
to
do
so, as well as other
measures. 41
National Mobilization to End Sweatshops and the "Ain't
I
a
Woman?!" Campaign
While organizing Jing Fong restaurant workers and garment workers in different shops in 1995, CSWA experienced a big influx of Chinese high school and college students.
work
in
CSWA's Youth Group and
in a
in the organization, creating a process
Many
stayed
number of other
on
to
capacities
of fusion between genera-
231
"Just in Time" Guerrilla Warriors
tions
and the launching of the National Mobilization Against Sweat-
As CSWA's positive assertion of how to mass anti-sweatshop movement from the bottom up, seeks to build a "new civil rights movement" among all
(NMASS)
shops
build a
NMASS
who
those
in 1996.
are hit
NMASS calls
by the spread of sweatshop-like conditions.
for class, race,
and gender
solidarity
between
all
those
oppressed by the corporate system, instead of asking for consumers'
sympathy for sweatshop victims. ingly attracted
NMASS
campaigns have increas-
immigrant workers from the Caribbean and Eastern
Europe in other industries seeking support in disputes with employers
and government agencies. 42
NMASS workers
at a
took on the defense of Chinese and Latina garment
Donna Karan subcontracted, unionized shop and I a Woman?!" Campaign in 1999. That organiz-
launched the "Ain't
ing effort propelled workers from other shops to step forward and led to a class action lawsuit against the manufacturer filed
by the
Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund on behalf of all
Donna Karan garment workers
DKNY workers
had
in
toiled 70- to
New York
City. Since
1992 the
80-hour work weeks and were
never paid overtime wages; some did not even earn
minimum
wage. 43 The women's campaign has also drawn endorsements and solidarity
from workers' groups
DKNY's
goods have been outsourced and marketed, and from
in Asia
and Mexico, regions where
where the immigrant women workers who grated.
44
Karan
to correct the
Through
toil in
her shops have mi-
campaign, the workers are pressuring
this
problem of sweatshop labor
City rather than simply shutting
inside
Donna
New York
down, dumping workers, and run-
ning away to other domestic and overseas sweatshops as manufacturers
have done many times in the
past.
Innovator Impacts on Anti-Corporate
Movements
These workers' centers influenced the development of the broader anti-sweatshop and anti-corporate movements. Globalization of the sweatshop
pyramid spurred anti-corporate campaigns
that stressed corporate abuses of immigrant
Ladn America, and
women workers in Asia,
the Caribbean. Small, innovative, guerrilla,
Sweatshop Warriors
232
workers' centers helped play a spark-plug role by reviving the anti-corporate campaign and boycott as a tool to broaden con-
sciousness and support for the struggles of immigrant women workers against deindustrialization
and the spread of sweatshops
inner city stations of the global assembly
line.
US
in
Workers' center cam-
paigns served multiple functions: making sweatshop industry workers inside the
United States
visible to the public, including within
their own communities; opening up the base for workers' support among other sectors, especially young people; training workers and
their organizations
and supporters; winning key concessions from
employers and spurring greater consciousness and organizing
among
the growing
numbers of people grossed out by corporate
greed.
The
giant protests that followed
ganization in 1999, the
—
against the
World Bank and IMF
naled mounting opposition
FTAA
in
Quebec
among youth,
World Trade OrWashington, DC,
convendons
the national Democratic and Republican
Philadelphia in 2000, and the
in
City in
international financial institutions.
new opportunities fronts,
Such
and
workers, environmental-
and other diverse sectors to global corporate
ists,
LA
in
2001— sig-
political
capital
and
its
moments provided
for building cross-class, cross-sector, multi-racial
and episodes of fusion between youth,
fessionals with those sections
intellectuals,
and pro-
of the labor movement most
critical
of free trade and the brutalization of workers, communities, and the planet.
At
the
same
time, the anti- corporate
mained highly segregated along
movement
and national
class, race,
has re-
lines.
Far too often white, middle-class, and First World organizations
have demonstrated
communities hardest
hit
little
accountability to the workers and
by global economic restructuring and cor-
porate greed. 45 Anti-corporate groups that insert themselves into the sweatshop pyramid structure as middle ate
with corporations, governments, and
stitutions
—without
grassroots people cate the
change.
respecting
men in order to
negoti-
international financial in-
the
self-determination
on the bottom of the pyramid
top-down approaches of the very
—
of
invariably repli-
institutions they seek to
233
"Just in Time" Guerrilla Warriors
To
be
effective, anti-corporate
campaigns must be linked to
worker and grassroots community organizing. 46 Regarding the
strat-
egy of boycotts, Sweatshop Watch, a coalition of legal advocates,
workers centers, unions, and anti-sweatshop groups has declared that
in California,
it:
only supports boycotts that are led by workers themselves. Boycotts that are not well organized less
demand
may harm workers by
creating
for products, thus forcing workers out of jobs.
believe that boycotts are effective
have decided that that
is
when
what they need
it is
.
.We
the workers
who
have
their
in order to
voices heard. 47
Taking the lead from those on the bottom of the power pyra-
mid upholds
the finest traditions of solidarity.
anti-apartheid
movement helped reduce
to pariah status at the behest of a liberation
clared
its
The
movement
that de-
willingness to weather a global boycott and sanctions in
order to force
its jailers
to
sit
down at the negotiating table. The
ber challenge staring the labor and anti-corporate the face
international
the South African regime
is
so-
movements
in
the protracted, painful struggle of organizing workers
and grassroots people "glocally"
(globally
^W locally) to force their
oppressors to change their ways, to build people and earth-centered alternatives, and to develop cooperative relations of mutual
respect and solidarity.
In sum, ethnic-based organizing
among sweatshop
industry
workers provided an early warning signal both of the deleterious fects
ers
and the means through which these
women
could organize to
defend themselves. The workers' centers are breathing new labor and
community
characteristics of the ers navigate
new
into
life
organizing. Their guerrilla tactics are tailored
to the specific gender, ethnic, cultural, workplace, national,
and
local
workers they are organizing. They help work-
territory
and negotiate the borders where the
ferent languages, cultures, and institutions of
dif-
women's home and
adopted countries meet. They promote a strong sense of nic,
ef-
of global economic restructuring on the most vulnerable work-
class, eth-
and gender consciousness among women workers by using a va-
riety
of methods to develop their leadership
and organizing
Sweatshop Warriors
234
capacities.
As
the
women
communities where they out and raised waves
have begun to rock the industries and
live
and work,
—and hopes—
their struggles
in the
have rippled
broader labor, anti-sweat-
shop, and and-corporate movements.
Jay
Mendoza of
Cheunchujit, El
the Pilipino
Workers Center; Paul Lee,
Monte workers
Community Development Center
struggle;
at their joint offices.
Photo by Miriam Ching Yoon Louie
(1
997)
KIWA;
Rojana "Na"
and Chancee Martorell of the Thai
Interview— El Monte
235
Rojana "Na" Cheunchujit Former garment worker
in El Monte, California Veteran Leader
The Thai workers got
1993
in the
CDC,
Thai
help from the
wake of two major
which was launched in
1992 Los Angeles
events: the
civil
unrest in
which Thai shops mistaken for Korean businesses were destroyed and the earth-
quake
in Northridge, California that left
Thai
cording to living in
and
CDC's
Chancee Martorell, some 50,000 Thai immigrants
Los Angeles came in
early
many Thai immigrants homeless. Ac-
Thefirst wave came in
three waves.
1960s as students and professionals
get education
to
The second wave came
bring back to Thailand.
Monte
slave-shop workers,
many migratedfrom
Thailand due
ers.
While somefoundjobs working
to industrial
many working
land and mainland China. Thai comers gain survival language
Bangkok,
and
Workers
two
the
others migrated to
United States.
went
who paid
CDC offers a number ofprograms to help new-
Thai
CDC shares
Filipina/o diaspora.
immigration, housing^ job
office
services;
and workers'
space with
K1WA
and
and national liberation
struggles in the
49
26, 1970, in Thailand in the village
My parents worked in the
have one brother and two
children; I
4 defense. *
was born January
I
and north-
Center, which organises Filipino workers in the health indus-
and the
Petchaboon. ing up.
El
and prostituted women from Thai-
skills; access to legal,
solidarity with labor, migrant,
Philippines
I
the
andplacement. Chinese and Vietnamese crime
community economic development, and family
rights training
and in
Like
in indentured servitude to employers
"horses" to arrange theirpassage
try
Thai government.
ruralparts of north
in factories in
rings also operate brothels of sex trafficked
Pilipino
re-
CDC estimates that some 50 percent of the immigrants are undocu-
mented, with
support,
the
to the present.
Middle Last, Malaysia, Hong Kong, Taiwan, and
Thai
training to
and golf course displacement of subsistencefarm-
east
the
1970s
the
and
1950s
1965 immigration
after the
forms and included entrepreneurs and studentsfunded by
The third and largest wave has comefrom
the late
my daughter is
rice fields
sisters
six years
I am the oldest. I have now and my son is five.
and
old
to school in Thailand, but only for nine years,
ished middle school.
I
of
when I was grow-
sewed eight or nine years
and
fin-
in Thailand, starting
Sweatshop Warriors
236
when I was
15 but sometimes would do other things.
introduced
me
Paughs] but
married
I
and
didn't
when I was
my
husband.
want 19.
my
want
didn't
I
A village elder
to get married,
me
parents to worry about
My husband got a job working as
so
an
got
I
electri-
and got paid pretty good wages.
cian
After
got married sometimes
I
I
my
continued to help
parents
work on the farm, but I [also] got sewing jobs to support them. I worked in a big factory in Bangkok, and in many sewing factories before coming to the US. But one place was kind of big and special. My friends told me about the job there. During the two years at work right before coming to the US the pay was pretty good, it was better than
my
other jobs. Before that, the pay and working conditions
were pretty bad. I
came
to the
son came to the
Monte.
He
wanted
to
told
come
US in
1994.
When I was
I
came
would
people to work
at the
me
was very good.
He
that the pay
to the
to the
stay
in Thailand this per-
village to recruit
US, he would be able to arrange
125,000 baht [US$5,000] which
I
still
shop in El
said that if I it
me
for
US with my friends, not with my family. I thought in the US for three years. What happened to
and work
me after I came?
long
[laughs] Well, that's a
the sewing shop by the owners.
They
me in a second jail. As me directly to El Monte
story! I
was locked up
fed us poorly.
Then
ernment put
soon
[where] they basically told
from time been told
to
work
in
as I arrived in this country,
continually, non-stop
to time. This
in
the gov-
they took
would have
for
paid him.
I
and only have
a
me
I
day off
was completely the opposite of what
I
had
Thailand before coming here. In Thailand they told us
we would work from 8am to 6pm every day, five days a week, and that we would have two days off every week. After they told us that
the situation in El
Monte,
I
realized
Before arriving here they said pleased,
go shopping for our own
money we made. But of lowed
to
go
in
course
I
had been duped.
we
could
groceries,
when we
and out of the factory
at
There were over 70 Thai workers
all;
come and go
as
we
and do things with the
got here
we were
at the
shop.
we
weren't
al-
imprisoned.
We
hours a day for the whole one year and four months
worked 20 I
was there
Interview— El Monte
—
day
until the
was
I
liberated.
237
cooked for myself.
I
food from the owners, but they charged us
We
ordered
high prices,
really
at least
twice the amount.
After paying the $5,000 to get here, they told
me I had to pay an
They said they would keep me as long as it took to It didn't matter to them how long they kept
additional $4,800.
pay off the $4,800 debt.
amount of time was calculated. owned the business ran different places, and two of the family members supervised us. The factory was a set of duplex apartments, lettered from A to G. The units are basically on one side and on the other side was the driveway and a little grass area. Each unit had two stories. Some of the owners' family mem-
you; no specific
The
family that
A
bers lived in Unit
and Unit
F,
were spread out between Units
The owners
we
ends, while
we workers
homes of our families on fire if knew where all of us were from, Thailand. Some people actually got pun-
threatened to set the
dared to escape because they
about our ished.
villages
One
him up
back in
person
tried to escape
pretty badly.
the other workers, to It
on both
B and D.
was unbearable
but was unsuccessful; they beat
They took a picture of him and showed it to all tell us what would happen if we tried to escape.
to look at the
worker
who was
beaten; they really
messed him up completely. After the beating you couldn't even ognize him
at
The day
all.
the
on
the door; they
woke
do.
We had been
went
us up and
unsure.
free or if we
this to intimidate us.
government raided the
ing
felt really
They did
to each unit
we were
told
rec-
and banged
so scared that
we
by the owners never to
We didn't know if we were
were going to get
in
more
we
factory,
heard knocking
real hard.
The bang-
know what to open the door so we didn't
finally
going to be
So no one dared
trouble.
set
to
open the door. The doors were locked from the outside
to keep us
we
could have
in.
If there
gotten out;
fact
had ever been
a fire there
we would have been
was no way
that
trapped.
One of the policemen broke down the door and shoved it in. In he hit one of the workers on the forehead my friend Kanit.
—
Her head got swollen where she was hit [causing] a huge knot [to swell up] on her forehead, [shakes her head] We were all told to
Sweatshop Warriors
238
come
out,
sent the
sit
down
INS bus
in the driveway,
to take us
away
and
just wait.
Then
later
they
to the detention center.
Oh, my God! We were all so confused. We were interviewed by everyone, by the Department of Labor, by the INS, by lots and lots of people [including the
office, State
Labor Commis-
and Employment Development Department]. Then
sioner's office,
about two or three days folks
US Attorney's after
CDC
from the Thai
we had been in
detention,
KIWA. But
was
and
that
Counsel General had already come and spoken with
When
the Consul General
came
to see us,
we met
after the
the
Thai
us.
he told us to go back
home to Thailand, that there was no need for us to be here. He said we were here illegally and what we did was wrong. He said it was our fault that we put ourselves in this situation. He said that we were just fighting against a brick wall by staying here, and we were being a burden on the
US
government!
Everybody was confused.
We didn't know what to do. Me too, I CDC Di-
was confused. But I got one idea after I met Chancee [Thai
American Legal Center
rector], Julie [Asian Pacific
Paul
attorney],
and
[KIWA organizer]. I thought, "Okay I need these people." So I
signed up with them.
The INS ing. It
was hard
was nice and
who was in charge of our case was very confusknow what his real intentions were. Although he
agent to
friendly to us, he
was not against the idea of depordng
when the INS tricked us. Chancee, Julie, and come to see us at the INS Terminal Island Detendon Center where we were kept to eat and sleep. But when the INS found out they were coming [again] at seven in the morning, the INS took us to the downtown detention center at five. When Chancee, Julie, and Paul showed up, we weren't there. That's when I began to doubt the
us.
This became clear
Paul had
INS' intentions towards us and whether they were
really trying to
help us. Julie, Paul,
dme
they
numbers
and Chancee gave us
came
to see us.
A
[alien registration
tainee] so that they
asked each of us
lot
their
phone numbers
the
first
of us decided to give them our
number
that
would be allowed
INS
to
A
assigns to every de-
meet with
us.
The INS
who we had called and a lot of people were afraid to
Interview— El Monte
When
say anything so they didn't.
town
office while Julie,
place.
were waiting to meet us.
It
told this
I
INS and asked them
turns out that at the
realized that
I
to
all
tell
to the
the
and threatened
to bring us back.
same dme, Chancee, Julie, and Paul had
finally
how the INS would an-
took us back to Terminal Island.
When we
saw Chancee, Paul, and Julie waiting
so happy.
My
gosh!
They kept
most ten days before they
downtown
When we
let
us
for us there,
on Terminal
us out.
at the stars, to the
buses
all
got
Island for nine,
We kept going back and
got out, Oh! Oh! [laughs] as
our guide.
It
al-
forth
was
being a
like
We could see so many
new things. Wow! We got a big smile. They took us
We
we
center to be processed.
finally
group of tourists with Chancee
land.
and Paul
Thai interpreter working
INS
to call the press to see
swer their questions. They
to the
Julie,
INS. Steve Nutter from the garment workers union also
called the called
at the
us in a cell at the
Terminal Island because that was where Chancee,
for the
down-
to the
we were in the downtown center. Then I door and telling the INS to take us all back to
They put
kept pounding on the
down
they took us
Chancee, and Paul were waiting for us
Terminal Island Detendon Center,
wrong
239
to a place to look
park for a barbecue, to the beach, and to Disney-
got free tickets to Disneyland.
given for
was
free. It
a lot of
We
went there
in three
fun.
we got out, Chancee, Julie, and Paul found us three different shelters to live in for over a month and a half. They had asked the After
Thai temples to take us
in,
but they had
all
refused. That's another
The day that we were liberated from the detendon center, bad some people from the Thai community invited us to a recepdon at a story.
Thai temple to celebrate our freedom, but saster.
They had promised
recepdon
was
filled
at the temple.
us they
it
would not
turned into a media invite the
media
to the
with press people from everywhere with their cameras.
It
we
couldn't
TV cameras was
shelters.
to the
But when our bus arrived the whole place
couldn't get into the temple to worship and pay respects to at the shrine;
eat.
The
and pushing
really terrible!
Then we could
di-
reporters kept pulling us to speak
their
microphones into our
We asked Thai CDC to take us eat
and
We
Buddha
rest. Aiiii!
At
faces.
back to the
that time
we were
Sweatshop Warriors
240
afraid the
owners would punish us and our
my
mother saw
face
on
TV
come out of it and recover
families. In fact
for
when my
She did not
in Thailand, she fainted.
two days because she was
sick
and
worried.
The Thai press did we left on
us an injustice. After the big disaster at the
Thai temple,
from the
shelter.
was taking
the school bus that took us back and forth
Because the Thai press did not know where the bus
us, they reported in the
Thai papers, which also reached
we had disappeared and that no one knew where we we boarded the school bus. So they scared everyone [in-
Thailand, that
went
after
cluding]
A
our family members back home.
all
over a week after being liberated from El Monte, the
little
telephone
company donated phone
cards to so
we
could
call
our
back home; we each got three minutes. After that we made
families
collect calls.
My
mother was
she couldn't stop crying.
I
really sick after
told her
hearing the news, and
what had happened
to
me, every-
thing, everything.
Now my mother is watching my children at home in Thailand. How long will I stay here? Wow! stay until I am no longer afraid I'll
of being punished family and
me
Because
when
I
return
home,
as
long as the safety of my
can be assured.
we had
only been locked up in the factory,
know anything or where
anything was.
thing or that thing, [laughs]
I
didn't
The
first
shop close to
[garment] shop here.
I
is
worked
it's
I
got out was a Thai
for another Thai
are small.
At my
first
first place. It's
much better. At the
first
place
I
day and got paid about $180 a week after taxes. eight or nine hours a day,
shop with
job there were
clean. I think the
worked ten hours
Now I
its
half and
a
work about
sometimes half day on Saturday
about one or two o'clock. Sometimes ican
and Paul took us
Now it's almost 20 people where I work. It's
shop and better than the
okay,
for after
Now I'm working
about 12 or 15 people.
salary
this
shop for food,
and helped us look for work.
Mexican workers. The shops a different
didn't
know how to do
We had to learn how to
find housing, get work, everything. Chancee, Julie, to job interviews
we
half Thai
until
and Mex-
and sometimes there are more Latino workers than Thais. The
241
Interview— El Monte
we sewed in the El Monte shop were Clio, BUM, Tomato, and others. Paul has the whole list. I haven't come across any of the same labels I sewed in El Monte since I've been out. labels
Because of the oppression rect
be
and
assertive. It
less tolerant
of wrongs,
all
of my
Sometimes
life.
Of course,
feeling.
went through
me
[laughs]
whole experience and ordeal rest
I
kind of forced
can
What
I've learned
Thai
CDC and KIWA,
it
from
and this
me for the so much that I get numb and lose
meeting so many caring people
folks involved in this case, like Chancee, Julie, Paul, at
now be very di-
a lesson that will stay with
hurts
it
after
is
I
to express myself more,
really
like the
and the people
helped us to overcome the terrible
we went through. We felt like we were part of a larger family who really cared for us, people who loved us whom we
things
of people could
trust.
For example,
all
of them were very sensitive to our needs,
and concerns. They would always ask us
do anything. They
let
us
first
make our own
and never forced us to
decisions.
believe
I
stronger. In the very beginning, throughout the first year
every time questions
like this
came up from
fears,
and
I
got
a half
reporters or anyone else,
what happened always touched us emotionally and
talking about
made us break down. We were always crying. We've cried so much. The fact that we're able to sit through this and not cry and have to break down kind of shows that we have become stronger. Yes, it's very rare to
through
sit
this
translate for eight or nine
one person would
without crying, [laughs] Chancee would
of us,
start to cry,
like
Kanit and
then
all
all
of our
of us would
friends. First
start to cry
and
everybody would end up crying! Chancee and Julie would be crying too.
We
still
see each other
Chancee keeps always
a
list
and some of the people
live together.
of our addresses and numbers, but everyone
is
moving around.
I like
the Retailers Accountability
and Sweatshop Watch] because
shows we
it's
are not willing to tolerate
conditions.
It
beyond laws
makes
that
Campaign like
[initiated
really
KIWA
an act of resistance that
and accept these poor working
the workers' voices heard and
might not
by
have
much of an
people can hear direcdy from the workers.
known.
It
goes
impact, because
Sweatshop Warriors
242
We have picketed, leafleted, and visited different department stores. We try to go into the department store, meet with the management, and educate the consumers to support the boycott for accountability.
We
get promises
from consumers not
department store again unless they change ing us
some consumers
told us they felt
shop
at the
their policy. After
meet-
to
bad about what happened to
us and promised they wouldn't go back and shop there anymore.
The garment factory owners threaten to go to Mexico to get the work done. But when they do, they have problems. When the clothes are delivered back here, there's repair work that needs to be done. They expect the local factories here to do the repair work because
it
wastes too
much
time sending
it
back
down
to Mexico.
So
this is just a threat.
Participating in the
campaign was not
been through! Maybe others think that cause problems. But
paign makes us ing
among
really, all
feel like
we
where
a
troublemaker out to
are helping develop a better understand-
conditions in the garment industry.
clothing,
am
not after what we'd
of the workers being part of this cam-
the general public about
know about what happens
I
scary,
to the
that clothing
who we
We
are
and about working
are finally letting the people
money
they spend on a piece of
came from, who made it, and how little
they got paid. This campaign might help redistribute the wealth;
might help people understand that workers are not getting share.
it
their fair
We want people to know that the clothes they wear are being
produced by the same kind of people slaves in El
Monte.
as us, the
—Los Angeles,
workers
California,
who were
March
25, 1997
243
Notes to Justin-Time" Guerrilla Warriors '
1
From amended complaint in US District Court Central District of California number 95-5958-ABC (BQRx), October 25, 1995:19, cited in Liebhold
case
and Rubenstein, 1999:63.
2
The
UNITE,
task force, the Apparel Industry Partnership, included
the
National Consumers League, the Retail, Wholesale Department Store Union, the
Center on
Interfaith
Committee
Human
for
manufacturers,
like Liz
Corporate
Rights,
as
Responsibility,
well
as
Claiborne, Nike, Reebok, and L.L. Bean. See Ross,
1997:293. For a critique of the task force and
Kwong,
and the Lawyers from large
representatives
UNITE's
role within
it,
see
Peter, 1997:194-196.
"Na" Cheunchujit, March
3
Interview with Rojana
4 5
See Parker and Slaughter, 1994.
25, 1997.
This was the Black Panther Party's rough translation of North Korea's "juche" ideology of self-reliance. See Cumings, 1997:394-433 for
more on juche.
6
For example, Charles J. Kim, executive director of the Korean American Coalition in Los Angeles says that the stance some Korean restaurant owners have taken towards KIWA's organizing is "nuhjuk-ko, najuk-ja" (You die and I die)." See Kang, Connie, 1998c:A26.
7
Thus,
CSWA exposes how employer appeals for Chinese ethnic unity against
"lofan [outsiders]
who
really
don't understand us"
often nothing but a
is
fig
At the same time the group does not let the manufacturers and retailers who benefit from the whole set up laugh themselves all the way to the bank while "Asians fight Asians" in the enclave. Similarly, the clashes between Koreatown bosses and workers have unfolded "Korean style," i.e., "in your face," "up close and personal," with both sides issuing strong moral appeals and using whatever leverage they could to bolster their positions. The emergence of first-generation immigrant workers as an organized force, supported by "20- and 30-something" Korean-American organizers with ties to outside labor and grassroots movements in other racial communities, is shaking up the class, gender, age, and racial status quo and knocking open a space for workers voices in Koreatown. See also Chinese Staff and Workers Association, 1999:5; Chinese Staff and Workers Association, 1997; Interview with JoAnn Lum, March 1, 2000; Kang, 1998c; Interview with Paul Lee, March 21, 1997; and Korean Immigrant Workers Advocates, 1999:4. leaf for shafting workers.
8
See
API
Force,
1
997; Center for Political Education,
1
999;
Korean American
End Domestic Abuse, 1999; and the Labor Institute, 1994. Committee for Asian Women, 1991; and Martens, Margaret Hosmer and Coalition to
9
Swasti Mitter
10
For example,
SEIU
(ed.),
1994.
in addition to
launching
its
innovative Justice for Janitors drive,
also played the lead role in initiating the
Campaign
for Justice, a
low-waged subcontracted manufacturing jobs, and service jobs in Silicon Valley, San Jose, California. The effort was spearheaded by SEIU Local 1877, and joined by HERE, Communication Workers of America, ACTWU, and the Teamsters. The multi-union
offensive
targeting
janitors,
Sweatshop Warriors
244
campaign provided the inspiration for the formation of the Los Action Project (LAMAP), a multi-union, multi-employer, industry-wide, community-based organizing project that sought to organize workers in the Alameda Corridor in Los Angeles. According to immigrant labor sociologist Hector L. Delgado, this project ran aground because "Few unions were prepared to put aside self-interest, pool resources, and act in concert with one another to develop deeper and broader ties with workers in the communities where they lived and worked." For an excellent summation of LAMAP, see Delgado, 2000: 237. short-lived
Angeles
11
Manufacturing
See for example, Morey, 2001; Bacon, 2000; Moody, 1996; Milkman, 2000; Acuria, 1996; and Labor Notes, 1998.
12 13
14 15
Martinez,
Anne and Edwin
Garcia, 2001.
According to state librarian Kevin Starr, "The Hispanic nature of California has been there all along, and it was temporarily swamped between the 1880's and the 1960's, but that was an aberration. This is a reassertion of the intrinsic demographic D.N.A. of the longer pattern, which is part of the California-Mexico continuum." (Purdum, 2001.) Greenhouse, 2001b.
For example,
work of
ILGWU, ACTWU,
and
later
UNITE observed
the organizing
what the union saw as their most successful organizing tactics. Lifting from the CSWA, La Mujer Obrera, Fuerza Unida, and AIWA models, ILGWU opened its own immigrant garment workers' centers and experimented with offering English classes and associate membership in New York, San Francisco, and Los Angeles. ILGWU, ACTWU, and eventually UNITE, also utilized AIWA, Fuerza Unida, and KIWA's successful anti-corporate campaigns, national boycotts, and organizing among a newly awakened generation of students and youth.
The
the centers and replicated
rub, however,
comes when
UNITE
prioritizes
working with the
manufacturers over fighting for the rights of its members. (See the chapter on
Chinese garment workers.) UNITE's stance as a business union shapes relationship with the workers centers.
The union
workers centers where expedient, but taken
its
has borrowed from the
a hostile stance
toward them
when it feels like the workers' disputes will jeopardize its relationship with the As labor historian Peter Kwong has shown, in New York's Chinatown this problem stems from the top-down manner in which the union works in partnership manufacturers to get jurisdiction over subcontractors and the workers. Kwong says that this top-down method does not require that workers also be organized from the bottom-up, it gives the union divided loyalties, and the highly centralized union "does not appreciate activism from its members." See Kwong, 1987:149-150; and Center for Economic and Social Rights, 1999:3. For coverage of UNITE's controversial use of "liquidated damages" see Henriques, 1998:B3, 1999 and 2000; and Fitch, 1998a, 1998b, 1998c & 2000. When some manufacturers pull work from union shops to send production overseas, they pay the union employers.
penalties called "liquidated damages."
16
For example, the immigrant workers centers in California built mutual SEIU and HERE locals during organizing campaigns among homecare, hotel, garment, healthcare, janitorial, and restaurant workers. Additionally, other union and labor movement affiliated institutions that solidarity with
245
Notes to "Just-in-Time" Guerrilla Warriors
specifically organize
low-waged
women and
Asian, Pacific Islander, and
some of the workers'
Latino workers have shared cooperative relations with centers. 9 to 5, the National Association
of Working
Women,
has been very
number of the women workers' centers. 9 to 5 is the nation's non-profit membership organization of working women which has
supportive of a largest
organized
low-waged workers
in
sex-segregated
jobs
to
end
sexual
harassment and discrimination, and to win better wages, working conditions, and family- friendly policies. Some of the centers have also received solidarity
from the AFL-CIO women's department, the Asian Pacific American Labor and the Labor Council for Latin American Advancement. Additionally a number of the workers' centers belong to the Southwest Environmental and Economic Justice Network together with workers' centers and independent unions from the northern Mexico border region. Alliance,
17
"Presentacion de los Centros de Trabaj adores en Chicago" provided by
Maria Carmen Dominguez, February 24, 1997.
18
See
Scharlin
and Villanueva,
1994;
Acuna,
1988:324-330;
Martinez,
Elizabeth, 1998:91-99; Rose, Margaret, 1990 and 1995.
19
CEO Bob Haas, who is the great-great-grandnephew of the company's founder, started out life with an inheritance of some $10 million. Haas emerged as the company's chief executive in 1984, presiding over the closure of Levi's plants across the United States, outsourcing of production overseas, and massive layoffs, including in San Antonio where workers were dumped just as the company scored record-making profits. During Haas' tenure stock prices rose from $2.53 to $265 a share, a 105-fold increase, by 1995. In 1996, after a leveraged buyout of $4.3 billion, the company added $3.3 billion to the corporate debt, for which the Levi's workers paid dearly, despite record sales that year of $7.1 billion. With the buyout, Haas transferred and further concentrated control and wealth to a 4-man voting trust: himself, his uncle Peter Haas, Sr., cousin Peter Haas Jr., and a distant relative, Warren Hellman, who is a partner in Hellmann & Friedman, a San Francisco investment banking firm. Haas family members owned 95 percent of the company stock and Bob Haas' personal stake in the company was estimated to be worth more than $900 million in 1997, the year that the company began once again to downsize thousands of its U.S. workers. See Sherman, 1997 and Stehle, 1998.
20 21 22
Johnston, 1997.
Levi's
Baca, 1997.
18,500 jobs were lost
at
28
US and one
Canadian
plant.
The company
also
closed one French and three Belgian plants. Emert, 1999; Colliver, 2000;
Schoenberger, 2000; Associated Press, 1998b; Frost, 1998.
23 24
ZoD, 1998.
Ruben Solis, April 5, 2000 and Pamela Chiang, April 14, members were pressured to break off support for Fuerza Unida
Interviews with
2001. Union
in 1994, but they le-joined the
during the 1997-1999 layoffs.
25
San
Francisco Examiner, 1994.
women
in protesting Levi's firings
of workers
246
26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39
Sweatshop Warriors
Labor Notes, 1998:2. Tanaka, 1997a and 1997b; King, 1998; Associated Press, 1998a. Interview with Viola Casares,
3,
2001. Sweatshop Watch, 2001.
Kever, 1990.
Blumenberg and Ong,
1
994:3 13-316.
Testimony of Domingo Gonzalez, Texas Center Immigrant Women Advocates, 1995a: 18-1 9.
for Policy Studies, in
Asian
Louie, Miriam, 1996.
US Department
of Labor, 1996: 96-108.
See Delloro, 2000. See note 15 above. Interview with Paul Lee, March 21, 1997.
Sweatshop Watch and Korean Immigrant Worker Advocates, 1996.
March 21, 1997, Rojana "Na" Cheunchujit, March and Chanchanit Martorell, March 25, 1997. See also Su, 1997.
Interviews with Paul Lee, 25, 1997,
40 41 42
May
La Mujer Obrera, 1990, 1991, 1996b; and Marquez, 1995.
See Sweatshop Watch, 1999:2; Su, 1997; Liebhold and Rubenstein, 1999. See Sweatshop Watch, 1999:1-2.
National Mobilization Against Sweatshops,
1
999. Interview with
Nancy Eng,
April 13, 2001.
43 44
45
Interview with
Nancy Eng,
April 13, 2001.
Although some 60 percent of its annual revenues are earned through sales in the United States, Donna Karan contracted close to 60 percent of its production to Asian facilities, 20 percent to European, and about 20 to 22 percent to US contractors, using between 440 to 500 contractors worldwide. See Donna Karan International, Annual Reports, 1997-1998, cited in Center for Economic and Social Rights, 1999:11. For more on the race and
class blinders within sections
of the anti-corporate
movement see Elizabeth Martinez's much-read and discussed piece, "Where Was the Color in Seattle? Looking for reasons why the Great Battle was so white." 2000. See also how a large proportion of company layoffs takes place overseas, Leonhardt, 2001. For critical views from movements in the global South about proposals from those in the North, see Raghavan, no date; and Khor, 2000. For a critique of corporate codes of conduct by workers' organizations in Asia and Latin America, see Shepherd, no date; and Jeffcott
andYanz, 1998.
46
For examples of worker- and community-based codes of accountability see principles developed at the First National People of Color Environmental Leadership Summit, 1991; Working Group Meeting on Trade and Globalization, 1996. the
47 48 49
See Sweatshop Watch, "Frequently Asked Questions." Interview with Chanchanit Martorell,
March
Interview with Jay Mendoza, March 27,
1
25, 1997; Martorell, 1994.
997.
Conclusion
Returning to the Source Korea designates those musicians, dancers, ists
who
ries
the collective heritage of the
dramatists,
carry within their bodies, minds, hearts, souls,
jae [Living Cultural Treasures].
Korean people
The pieces
to
and
and
art-
memo-
be inkan munhwa
that they create are recog-
nized as muhyo'ng munhwa jae [Intangible Cultural Assets], a kind of
shared intellectual and spiritual property of the Korean people.
These
living treasures drink from, then pass along, the
cup of what
they have learned from the oppression and resilience of their people
—
to rejuvenate the
has noted,
many have
community, young and
old.
As Ku Hee-Seo
struggled not to be crushed by bitter hardship,
but to maintain their self-respect and dignity. They celebrate the zest
of life, the
human
spirit, earth, sky,
wind, waves, and
all
that lies be-
tween and beyond.
The women who weather
the transformation
from sweatshop
industry workers to sweatshop warriors could be designated the
Living Cultural Treasures of our communities, and their campaigns and creations, Intangible Cultural Assets. In fighting to
maintain their sense of dignity and self worth, they are learning and teaching the fine art of how the people can win justice and release
pent-up
their
—
book
grant workers lessons.
human
suffering and potential. In the heart of this
the stories of Chinese, Mexican, Korean, (and Thai) immi-
They
—
the sweatshop
movement
to
women shared so many precious, hard-learned how they had suffered at the hands of industries, and how they are building a successful the
told us both
change those industries and develop new ways of
247
Sweatshop Warriors
248
working, thinking, and that these First,
women
living. Let's
examine
a
few of the nuggets
unearthed.
many of
women's defensive
the
through the heart of the
dons of workers' most
US
shot straight
battles
sweatshop system and its multiple viola-
basic, legally
guaranteed
rights.
For example,
"Lisa" and the other Streetbeat garment workers incurred the bosses' wrath
no longer
when they protested that their bodies and spirits
tolerate the killing
100-hour work weeks. Getting cheated
out of their hard-earned back pay was the
women like Wu Wan Mei and Bo Yee to Jenny Chen
could
straw that drove
last
stand up and fight for what
"our sweat and blood money." Maria del Carmen
called
Dominguez of La Mujer Obrera went around for a long time angry that she had not known about the law and what women workers could do to defend their rights. Lee Jung Hee was shocked when she first
learned about her rights during a labor law seminar offered by
KIWA
at
her job
frustrated
then
site,
later
and miserable when
about the law that they went to ally said
to
about workers'
rights.
when
sought out the organization
Kim Chong Ok and
she suffered injuries.
her co-workers got so
their boss cheated
and berated them
KIWA to find out what the law actuKim Seung Min cried when she went
KIWA for help and saw the picture of Chun Tae
II,
the
ment worker martyr who had self-immolated holding Korean labor code book in his hand.
a
young gar-
copy of the
The women in the sweatshop segments of the US workforce are fighting defensive battles just to get the
more The laws
most
basic rights that
work-
protected sectors of the working class often take for
ers in
granted.
codify a set of workers' rights
won
through
pitched battles against bosses in previous periods of US history: the right to a exits,
minimum wage,
for the current stage
the
a
40-hour week, overtime pay, no blocked
and other basic standards. Labor laws
ments.
living
wages,
The sweatshop
mally guaranteed rights
manufacturers and
ground
rules
of contention and balance of power between
owning and working
workers
reflect the
classes.
humane
They
fall
far short
hours, and safe working environ-
industries' violation is
of guaranteeing
of the women's mini-
not an aberration, but business as usual, as
retailers are fully aware.
But the law is of little use
249
Returning to the Source
to
workers unless they
ployers to
know
their rights
comply and respect them
as
and organize
human
to force
beings.
em-
The women
stood up to fight when they could no longer tolerate bosses' abuses. As they fought and learned more about what their rights were from their organizations, they got even more angry and energized to fight
and win. Second, in the course of fighting for their most basic
women
also
rights, the
began to challenge the fundamental premises of the
Bo Yee and
sweatshop pyramid. For example,
Company workers
started out fighting for their
the Lucky Sewing
back wages, but
after
learning about the sweatshop industry pyramid and the minuscule
cut that
went
their legally
to their wages, they quickly
guaranteed
rights.
in capitalist relations, the
went beyond demanding
Asserting a higher standard of ethics
women demanded that manufacturers take
responsibility for violations
of workers'
rights inside
subcontracted
shops. Annie Lai both challenged her immediate boss for unjustly firing
her and demanded accountability from
the door for other
women
DKNY,
thus opening
DKNY subcontractors
working for
to
come forward with evidence of violations of their rights. The women of La Mujer Obrera and Fuerza Unida organized
who ran away with their jobs, often US government free trade policies at taxpay-
against irresponsible employers
encouraged to do so by ers
expense, leaving behind a
ternational bridge ers'
jobs through
on
of
trail
Antonia Flores joined her companeras
Mata argued
that the relationship
profits.
in-
"employer mindset" and Jin declared that
between
Kyung Park, Lee Jung
Kim Chong Ok warned that the bosses had start treating
change
their
workers with respect.
Han
to
Korean restaurant workers would no longer
by the bosses,
as
"you waitress bitch." Pathbreakers
Mi Hee stood up
Maria
on an
be 50/50, instead of the bosses
to
hogging 100 percent of the power and
tolerate hate crimes
tears.
and demand government accountability
companies and workers needed
Hee
and
the border to interrupt the trafficking of work-
NAFTA
to the displaced. Petra
Hee, and
injuries
in civil disobedience
when
like
they would
call
women,
Paek Young Hee and Chu
for their rights despite industry blacklisting,
munity censorship, and family members'
fears.
com-
Sweatshop Warriors
250
These poor into question
Through
yet tenacious sweatshop industry workers called
some of the
their
central lynchpins of the
campaigns, the
women
started to
"new economy."
bump up
against
the limits of their legally guaranteed rights and scale the walls that
and
shield manufacturers
retailers
from
responsibility for
sweatshop
abuses and for the injury and dumping of hundreds of thousands of
women demanded
workers in the United States and abroad. The
some of the famous name darlings in the industries and ethnic worked and the ambitious politicians who foisted their pet policies on their backs, start to remember who had made them rich and powerful and upon whose lives and communithat
enclaves where they
they were trampling.
ties
The women's campaigns revealed the need to put caps on corporate greed and institute a more equitable redistribution of wealth within industry pyramids. They demanded that bosses start to modify their behavior, change their master-class ways, and become better human beings by first respecting the human rights of the workers. And when they talked back to their bosses, the women
—
challenged old patterns of control, domination, censorship,
and internalized oppression within and
their industries,
not only what they were fighting
fighting^r. sis
communities,
families.
Third, as they carried out their battles the fine
fear,
against,
women
started to de-
but also what they were
For example, Maria Antonia Flores talked about the
cri-
down
engulfing El Paso workers, even as her organization laid
the building blocks for workers to independently secure their basic
work, housing, nutrition, health, and freedom of
rights to dignified
expression and ated their
own
affiliation.
The former
Levi's
Docker workers
cre-
sewing and food coops, and surrounded by newly
sewn bedding and
The Koreatown
bags, they
dreamed of once again making
pants.
restaurant workers began fashioning their
health, check-cashing,
and child-care systems,
as they
own
organized
around the marriage of labor and community needs. Maria del 7
Carmen Dominguez
reveled in
all
the
skills
she had learned, feats
she had accomplished, and great friends she had ing the
made through
join-
movement. Lee Jung Hee, Lin Cai Fen, Kyung Park, and
251
Returning to the Source
Rojana "Na" Cheunchujit struggled to learn English, declare
own
victories,
and aspire
to
be
fuller
human
their
beings beyond the
sti-
Carmen Ibarra, Maria del Carmen Dominguez, Yu Sau Kwan, Kyung Park, and others testified in word and deed about how their transformation included a revolufling confines
of
their jobs.
tion in gender relations within their families ters
and sons have grown up
Even
as they
women
who
their
daugh-
began to switch to the offense,
experimenting with and creating their
own independent
alternative
and programs. Outside the crushing environment of the
sweatshop, the to
in
continued to fight in defense of their rights within
the sweatshop pyramid, the
visions
and
to be.
women started to envision the basic rights and needs
which every human being should be
these rights, they began brainstorming
co-workers, neighbors, and family
entitled.
how
members
As they
visualized
they could help their
get access to such sim-
ple pleasures as creative labor, a full stomach, education for their kids, a
warm place to
and the company of one's had learned through
freedom
sleep,
friends.
a lifetime
to express oneself without fear,
They
started using the skills they
of labor to hatch their projects, pro-
grams, and mutual support systems. They learned to build a
world through
trial
and
error.
Sometimes they stopped
to laugh
new and
console themselves that they couldn't do any worse than the bosses
and
politicians
had done
in
and then they stood back
running their communities. Evenin
workswomanship of what they
new
amazement and admired
now
the fine
created, the skills they learned, the
consciousness and energy that coursed through their veins, the
sister spirits
they befriended, the communities they harvested.
Fourth, as the battles, as
sions
and
women
conducted
their defensive
and offensive
they dreamed and experimented with their alternative structures, they
began to fashion a
vi-
collective, sharing, bot-
tom-up, group-oriented methodology that enabled them to magnify their consciousness,
wisdom, and
condensed volumes of
strength.
lifetime experience
For example, Bo Yee
and years of grassroots
organizing methodology into two deceptively simple sentences:
"Let the people talk about their broad experiences. Let them pinpoint where the problems are, and from there
how
to organize
Sweatshop Warriors
252
When recounting the
fight for
back wages and against factory closure thrust upon workers
at a sub-
themselves to solve these problems."
contracted shop producing for Kathy Lee Gifford, Jaclyn Smith and
Tracy Evans, Lee Yin
Wah declared with obvious pride, "The work-
how "we stress that problems how immigrant women have to deal with disempowering messages from both their home and adopted lands. Jenny Chu, Annie Lai, and Bo Yee insisted that they ers
were so smart." She talked about
can't just be solved
by oneself," and
were tough enough to stand up for
their rights
translation help in carrying out their battles.
Seung Min described the
struggle for
pressive family and work systems.
—
they could get
if
Wu Wan Mei and Kim
women's autonomy from
re-
Annie Lai talked about the mutual
interdependence between the development of each woman's capacity to fight
and
that
of her organization to back and link her to the
broader workers' movement.
Fuerza Unida members spoke of retraining themselves to work cooperatively, breaking the competitive patterns they
and helping working-class
Levi's
had learned
at
women cross the deep valley of de-
Carmen Ibarra and Viola Casares on how their faith in God steadied their participation in the movement, while the Korean women survivors of domestic abuse drew on shared cultural and spiritual sources to release their sufferpression to get to the other side. reflected
ing and build sisterhood.
Through ers,
their trust
and
these sweatshop warriors are
to share
They
and analyze
wisdom of women workcalling on the power of the people
belief in the
their life experiences
are reaching out to each other
and map the road ahead.
and linking arms to break
through the walls of silence and censorship that matter
who
isolate
erected these barriers. Especially as poor
them, no
women on the
bottom of multiple pyramids of oppression, they recognize their
strength depends on working together and pooling
that their
knowledge and resources. They are fine-tuning the tension between the music they the
make and
risks they take as individuals
combined harmonies of
comadres
when
their
many hued,
with that of
ethnically diverse
they sing, dance, picket, and perform together as fu-
sion artists to rejuvenate their communities.
They
are struggling
253
Returning to the Source
hard to overcome the individualism, competition, and narrow
from
self-interest they learned
tem through
identifying with
their bosses
and the sweatshop
and taking responsibility for
sys-
their
grassroots sisters locally and globally. These Living Cultural Treasures are both channeling ture,
and
spirit
Through
and enriching the
collective
wisdom,
cul-
of the people.
Dear Reader, have
the pages of this book, you,
partici-
pated in a kind of written word "workers' exchange" and "study tour" that poor peoples' groups have organized across the decades for their friends in labor,
human
rights
women's, church, student, community, and
movements. You have accompanied the workers dur-
ing their peripatetic wanderings cities
of
their
homelands
— from
the villages and sprawling
to the factories, sweatshops, restaurants,
hospitals, hotels,
and inner-city barrios of
The women who
clothe, feed,
lead resistance
and care for
on our behalf, have shared
their us,
adopted country.
who
take risks
and
their stories with us so
we
can better understand their movements and join them in their strug-
And they are not alone. They are joined by workers of other industries, races, cultures, communities, and nations. And they have
gles.
you and me. Listening to the
them
ism. Seeing
Listening to the
women
women means
of what today's struggles for the
women
speak cannot be an act of consumer-
fight for their rights
cannot be an act of voyeurism.
returning to the source, to the heart
justice
and dignity are
all
about. Just as
have stepped forward, pushed themselves harder, and
on new challenges with oh-so-scarce resources, so each of us is called upon to do the same, wherever we may work and live, with whomever we consider our sisters and brothers, co-workers, and community. We must ask ourselves individually and collectively what we are doing to challenge the pyramids of oppression we face. Turning down the volume of the elite's chatter, we must train struggled to take
our ears to
listen
harder to hear the vibrant voices and
ship of grassroots folk
on
movements. As we embrace our labors of urgency and ways remember
to
make
lyrical leader-
the bottom, the foundation rock of
mass
love, let us al-
the time to walk those picket lines, send in
Sweatshop Warriors
254
those protest
letters,
mail in those labels, organize those actions, and
extend our unstinting solidarity to grassroots
women
everywhere.
Sewing Sisterhood In sewingfastening trimmingfinal threads of this book Colors textures woof weave of women s stories
Come humming back Viola Casares confides
to
her comadre Petra
Mata
Levi's treats us like we're stupid
Like
only thing we're good enough to do
Ad nauseum Devalue
big shot corporate execs
disrespect
But when we ask
We can
slice
is
sew for them
media moguls policy wonks
immigrants women workers
listen learn cry belly-laugh
with
women
chop cleaver clean through such simplistic stereotypes
Yes, you 'd better believe these
hard working women are "goodfor sewing"
The)' are lightning speed sewers cutters knitters weavers assemblers solderers
Cookers cleaners
cultivators caretakers healers harvesters agronomists
miracle workers
Whose work
spins this world 'round
Kyung Park
declares they go deep
Sweat breathe black dust into
Know how To
it really feels to
down
inside
mines
their lungs
work at pit bottom
tell the story right strike the
pay load rich
Wu Wan Mei insists they make up half the world hold up half the sky Do
double triple shift duty birthing babies families communities movements.
Corporate
As
elites
are dead wrong treating
These dear
Mothers
women
Like
From
—
our very own grandmothers
sisters cousins girlfriends wives lovers
Are smart savvy
—
strong survivors "good"for so
much and more
leading movements to liberate us all sins of runaway corporate greed/globalisation gone
Women who
shelter gently cradled in palms ofgolden
Tough tender tiny
Of homegrown To
women
"stupid" "only good enough" to sew service slave
amuck
brown hands
seeds shoots roots bulbs buds
healing herbs remedies treatments solutions
stop corporate trampling on lives workers communities
Our Pacha Mzma./ Mother Earth/Uri Tang/Huang Tudi
Women
are not powerless victims to be pitied
255
Returning to the Source
Usedfor some fly-by-night sweatshop expose Trod upon
like "this bridge called
my back"
In hot panting pursuit ofprofits positioning careers
Nor are Sky
they
superwomen
to be placed
on pedestal
high above pain pimples of rest of us
We who
have been
known
to
—
suddenly burp fart sob bleed
Break out break down fallflat on ourfaces Sometimes step-by-step
Sometimes flying by the seat of their
Double knit
stretch
pantalones/ba-ji/cheuhngfu
Women
learn on-the-job through school-ofhard-knocks
How to
organise grassroots people
To weave own webs networks demands
visions
Na Cheunchujit says women are finally letting people know What happens
Who made
to
money
they spend on clothing
that clothing
How little workers got paid How women kick-butt campaigns 's
Mightjust help
But witnessing
redistribute the wealth.
these mighty pinata-busters
Swinging away at sweatshop system
Must not
be mere spectator sport
Women
well-aimed blows must kindle ignite activism solidarity
From
's
extendedfamilies
sister
communities
In increasingly multi-colored sweatshop nation/plantation/ reservation
Women's family
Of indigenous
tree roots / branches reach ancestors / descendants
mestizo mulatto peoples ofAmericas
Of coolie/ bitter strength nodongja-nongmin/'worker-peasants
ofAsia
African survivors of Middle Passage
Migrants
Eager
From IJke
refugees
shackles of our colonisers the
women, we each bring our own
Experiences
Like
workers of all colors
to free ourselves
the
interests strengths
women, we must
weaknesses talents challenges
struggle individually collectively
To
recognise confront conquer our oppression
To
decide to focus principally on immediate family survival
Or shoulder added responsibility for community movement society planet
Sweatshop Warriors
256
To determine how high a price we
are willing to pay for speaking out
Orfor our silence To
toil
and sweat together with people
Our own
race gender generation
To both give and
receive
inside outside
sexual orientation
energy/&nimo/chi/ki
class
to
community
our sistahs and bruddahs
i
struggle
To
let
our
shout chant graffiti-tag
spirits sing
drum
beat create
New corridos/minyo/mahngo/jwzgj- of labor love life For this movement Grassroots
Our very
be at its core
—
heartbeat head hands breath soul
Yjet usjoin
Wrap
to survive succeed
women must
our
sister
sweatshop warriors design trace cut
stitch
hem press weave
each other in rainbow banner of our liberation.
Thai garment workers from the El Monte "slaveshop" attending and performing the National Coalition for Redress and Reparations
Japanese Community and Cultural Center,
Annual Fundraiser
Littie Tokyo, Los Angeles. Photo courtesy of Thai Community Development Center.
in
at the
Bibliography Abate,
Tom.
1993.
Chronicle,
May
"Heavy Load
for Silicon Valley
Workers." San
Francisco
23, p. E-l.
Abeles, Schwartz, Haeckel, Silverblatt, Inc. 1983. The Chinatown Garment Industry Study.
New York: ILGWU
Local 23-25 and
New York
Skirt
&
Sportswear Association.
Abelmann, Nancy. 1996. Echoes ofthe Vast, Epics ofDissent: cial Movement.
Los Angeles:
Abelmann, Nancy and John Los Angeles
Riots.
UC
Lie. 1995. Blue
Cambridge,
—
Dreams: Korean Americans and the
MA: Harvard UP.
Acuria, Rodolfo F. 1988. Occupied America:
Harper
A South Korean So-
Press.
A History ofChicanos. New York:
& Row.
1996. Anything But Mexican: Chicanos in Contemporary Los Angeles. London:
Verso.
Alvarado, Sylvia. 1997-98. "Closing
down
plants, closing
Vov^ de Esperanto. 10:10 (Dec. -J an.), p.
Peace
9.
down
lives.
"La
San Antonio: Esperanza
& Justice Center.
Amott, Teresa and Julie Matthaei. 1996.
and Work:
Race, Gender,
tural Economic History of Women in the United States.
A Multicul-
Boston: South End.
Anderson, Sarah, John Cavanagh, Chuck Collins, Chris Hartman, and Felice Yeskel. 2000. Executive Excess 2000: Seventh Annual sation Survey, pp. 3-4.
Boston: United for a Fair
CEO Compen-
Economy and Wash-
ington, D.C.: Institute for Policy Studies.
Angwin, Julia. 1996. "Garment Industry Blues: Price wars unraveling clothing makers." San Francisco Chronicle, Mar. 20,
APEC
p.
local
CI.
Labour Rights Monitor (ALARM). 1996. "Workers' Primer on
APEC. "ALARM Update 4 &
5 (July
257
and Aug.).
Hong Kong: ALARM.
5
.
Sweatshop Warriors
258
API
Force. 1997.
"An Open
Letter to Progressive Activists." Statement
on
sexism and sexual harassment endorsed by different organizations, June, www.api-force.org. Arizpe, Lourdes. 1981.
"The Comparative Advantage of Women's Disad-
vantages." Signs 7:2 (Winter), pp. 453-473.
Arnold, Cindy. 1995.
"PRRAC Researchers Report: NAFTA's Impact on
El Paso Garment Workers." Poverty