A book review by Daniel
A. Olivas
Historian and El Paso
native Mario T.
García has edited the absorbing and essential The Gospel of César Chávez: My Faith in Action
(Sheed & Ward). The book collects quotations from the late labor leader to
help elucidate the undeniable connection between Chávez's religious beliefs and
his political activism.
Chávez realized that
pacifism was a difficult form of protest. He once said: "To be nonviolent
in a monastery is one thing, but being nonviolent in a struggle for justice is
another."
But Chávez's faith kept
him from wavering, García said, citing his favorite quotation: "Today, I
don't think I could base my will to struggle on cold economics or on some
political doctrine. I don't think there would be enough to sustain me. For me,
the base must be faith."
García told me that he was
"surprised and amazed" by Chávez's "deep and thoughtful
reflections on such a large range of spiritual topics," including social
justice, the power of faith, pilgrimage, fasting, truth, love and death.
In the book, García's
introduction offers an enlightening narrative of Chávez's spiritual,
intellectual and political development. He then divides the quotations into 17
chapters, each with a mini-introduction on a particular theme—among them,
"Abuelita or Grandmother Theology," "On Gandhi," "On
Love" and "On Our Lady of Guadalupe."
Mario T. García
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García heavily annotates
each chapter and ends the book with a bibliography. The book also includes a
foreword by Virgil Elizondo, a professor of pastoral and Hispanic theology at
the University of Notre Dame.
The book dispels any
misconception that Chávez's beliefs were simple or unsophisticated. "You
would think that these are the thoughts of a professional theologian,"
García said, "and yet they are the thoughts of a farmworker with no more
than an eighth-grade education."
Response to the book has
been positive and diverse: "Some recognize the historical and academic
value of bringing attention to César's spirituality," García said.
"Still others, including many of my Catholic friends (and) clergy,
recognize that the book can also be seen as a spiritual book of
meditations."
García was born and raised
in El Paso, the son of a Mexican immigrant and an El Paso native. He earned
undergraduate and graduate degrees in history from the University of Texas at
El Paso, and then a doctorate from the University of California at San Diego.
He is a professor of history and Chicano studies at the University of
California at Santa Barbara, where he has taught since 1975. García is also the author
of almost 20 books, including two on El Paso history. His most recent book is Literature
as History: Autobiography, Testimonio, and the Novel in the Chicano and Latino
Experience published by the University of Arizona Press.
[A slightly different
version of this review first appeared in the El Paso Times.]
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