In May of 1965, Itliong led a successful strike of Filipino farm workers in vineyards of Coachella, California. This victory empowered farm workers throughout California’s Central Valley to protest against low wages and miserable working and living conditions. Among their demands were basic necessities such as clean water and toilets.
A little over three months later, on September 8, 1965, thousands of Filipino American farm workers led by AWOC went on strike in Delano, California. Itliong then asked the National Farm Workers Association (NFWA), led by Cesar Chavez and Dolores Huerta, to join the Filipino American farm workers on strike. Chavez initially declined, believing that the Mexican American farm workers needed at least two more years to be ready.
“May I let you know that it was our [Filipino] people who started the strike. Then our Mexican brothers followed suit. Since then the cooperation between these two groups has been good. It looks to me that this is the real beginning of a closer relationship between our people” Itliong wrote in a 1967 letter to Jose M. Leonidas.
Eight days later, on September 16, 1965, the Mexican American farm workers walked out and joined the Filipinos on strike. AWOC and NFWA soon merged to form the United Farm Workers (UFW) movement with Itliong as assistant director. The Delano grape strike lasted for five years and became one of the most pivotal labor movements in the history of the United States.
Continuing the Fight for Workers’ Rights
Itliong resigned from the UFW in 1971, citing concerns that the union was veering away from its mandate to serve farm workers equally. His grievances leading to his resignation included a lack of support and recognition for the aging Filipino American farm workers.
Itliong continued his mission to fight against injustices and promote workers’ rights after leaving the UFW. This included traveling to defend and organize farm workers in Brazil and Chile, and becoming an elected delegate at the 1972 Democratic National Convention in Miami Beach, Florida. Back home in California, Itliong oversaw the completion of the Agbayani Village, a housing development for retired Filipino farm workers.
Larry Itliong passed away on February 8, 1977 at the age of 63. He was survived by his wife and seven children. In 2015 the Alvarado Middle School in Union City, California was officially renamed the Itliong-Vera Cruz Middle School, after Itliong and his friend and fellow Filipino American labor leader, Philip Vera Cruz. The State of California officially celebrates October 25 as “Larry Itliong Day” in honor of the labor leader’s legacy of fighting for social and economic justice.
Sources
“A Resolution of the City Council of the City of Carson, California, Establishing October 25, 2010 as Larry Itliong Day in Honor of his Life’s Work and Legacy to Promote and Fight for the Well Being of All of California’s Farm Workers" (City of Carson, California 2010).
Kirby Araullo, and Anthony Tayag. Know History: Who Were the First Filipinos in America? Davis, CA: Bulosan Center for Filipino Studies, 2018.
Cordova, Fred, Dorothy Laigo. Cordova, and Albert A. Acena. Filipinos, Forgotten Asian Americans: A Pictorial Essay, 1763-circa 1963. Place of Publication Not Identified: Demostration Project for Asian Americans, 1983.
Cruz, Adrián. "Racialized Fields: Asians, Mexicans, and the Farm Labor Struggle in California." PhD diss., University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2009.