Viva La Huelga Emiliano Zapata

Category
Additional Images
Sub Categories
Text on Button VIVA LA HUELGA
Image Description

White button with black text around a black and white photo of Emiliano Zapata with bandoleers over his shoulders

Curl Text Emiliano Zapata
Back Style
The Shape
The Size
Year / Decade Made
Additional Information

This button was made by the United Farm Workers, a union of Filipino and Mexican American farm workers, in the 1970s. The United Farm Workers were led by Cesar Chavez and Dolores Huerta and won the right to organize farm workers after the Delano grape boycott in 1965-1970. The words Viva La Huelga, meaning long live the strike, are the rallying cry of the United Farm Workers. 

The picture is of Emiliano Zapata, a leader of the 1910 Mexican Revolution. Zapata called for a redistribution of land and is remembered in Mexico today as a supporter of peasants and Native Americans. He became a central symbol of the United Farm Workers and the Delano Grape Boycott.

Sources

Brunk, S. (2008) The Posthumous Career of Emiliano Zapata: Myth, Memory, and Mexico's Twentieth Century. Austin: University of Texas Press.

Catalog ID CA0479