Singing Our Way To Freedom
- Description
- Reviews
- Citation
- Cataloging
- Transcript
SINGING OUR WAY TO FREEDOM chronicles the life and music of Ramon “Chunky” Sanchez from his humble beginnings as a farmworker in Blythe, California to the dramatic moment when he received one of his nation’s highest musical honors at the Library of Congress in Washington DC. As a young man in the 1970s, Chunky joined the picket lines in California and became Cesar Chavez’s favorite musician. His journey is a remarkable lens on a time when young Mexican Americans became Chicanos. Chunky learned how to employ humor, honesty and music to inspire folks to stand up and speak truth to power. His arc of transformation from marginalized farm kid to charismatic social activist shows how one person can mobilize people to change the world, reminding us that the battle for freedom has to be fought anew by every generation.
Educational Media Reviews Online | Reviewed by Elena Landry, George Mason Libraries, Fairfax, VA
Highly Recommended
"Espinosa’s story of Chunky Sanchez is possibly the most enjoyable documentary I’ve ever seen, as entertaining as it is inspiring, and I’d recommend it to anyone."
Western Washington University | James Loucky, Professor of Anthropology
"Rarely is a film as inspirational and informative as Singing our Way to Freedom by veteran filmmaker Paul Espinosa. Tracing the life of musician-activist Ramón 'Chunky' Sánchez, its visual retrospectives and remarkable soundtrack simultaneously illuminate the vision and vibrancy of the struggle for rights and legitimacy that became known as the Movimiento Chicano – the Chicanx movement in the region we today know as the border, and California, and the Southwest. It is invaluable for audiences and classes of history, anthropology, and community organizing."
Western Washington University | Francisco Rios, Dean and Professor, College of Education
"What I most appreciated about Singing Our Way to Freedom is that it provides viewers a chance to see how Latinx identity has changed, grown, and evolved over time, as experienced by this community cultural icon: Ramón 'Chunky' Sánchez. It reminds me that our cultural/ethnic identities are dynamic, contextual, and political. And there’s no better way to be reminded of these than this video filled with history and song."
University of California, Santa Cruz | Olga Nájera-Ramírez, Professor of Anthropology
"Singing Our Way to Freedom is a compelling documentary that vividly captures the life of the charismatic musician and activist Ramón 'Chunky' Sánchez. Highlighting the power of music, the film provides vivid vignettes that contextualize the cultural and political ambiance of the Chicano Movement in which this musical legend carved out his career. This remarkable documentary will prove invaluable to students of history, music, cultural studies, American Studies, and ethnic studies."
California State University San Marcos | Kristine Diekman, Professor, Art and Technology
"Singing Our Way to Freedom awoke student interest through the intersection of music, history and activism. The diverse student population today (in our border region) is eager to learn more about the culture around them. Music and storytelling appeal to students, and this film masterfully brings important historical knowledge to students using these strategies."
University of Arizona | Maurice Rafael Magaña, Associate Professor of Mexican American Studies
"Singing Our Way to Freedom captures the extraordinary beauty and power of Ramón 'Chunky' Sánchez - the human being and the musician. The filmmakers manage to simultaneously honor Chunky's unique legacy as a groundbreaking Chicano musician and community organizer, while also providing the important historical context that shaped, and was shaped by, Chunky's life, music, and activism. An essential film for understanding U.S. history, popular culture, and civil rights struggles, and a long overdue homage to the legendary Chunky Sánchez."
University of Maryland | Sharada Balachandran Orihuela, Associate Professor of English and Comparative Literature
"Singing Our Way to Freedom is an invaluable addition to any course examining Chicano art and its significance in the achievement of Chicano civil rights. By focusing on Ramón 'Chunky' Sánchez’s contribution to Chicano music, as well as his significant role as a community activist, Paul Espinosa tells a powerful story about Chicano resistance in the 1960s in ways that resonate with today’s immigrant rights movement. This film is both a delight to watch while also being extremely teachable and informative."
San Diego State University | María Ibarra, Associate Professor & Department Chair of Chicana & Chicano Studies
"Chunky Sánchez’s life represents that quest for freedom that just keeps starting over every day. He didn’t stop in 1970 but kept on teaching, inspiring, working and singing his way to freedom. Artists like Chunky became our storytellers and historians, telling the stories that were nowhere else to be found."
Arizona State University | Rudy P. Guevarra Jr., Associate Professor & Honors Faculty, School of Social Transformation
"Singing Our Way to Freedom is a powerful film that demonstrates the wide-ranging impact Ramón 'Chunky' Sánchez made over his life to issues of social and economic justice that remain with us today. His dedication to our communities and messages of love, cultural pride, and empowerment will live on through his music for generations to come. Rest in Power Chunky Sánchez!"
University of California, Santa Cruz | Russell C. Rodríguez, Assistant Professor of Music
"The film’s focus on the power of music and its impact on the Chicano civil rights movement frames and makes evident the significance of these artists. The integration of Sánchez’ music as a soundscape to the film also illuminates the diverse influences Chunky absorbed growing up Chicano in California. The film is a gem."
San José State University | Eduardo Muñoz, Assistant Professor, Department of Teacher Education
"The documentary flipped pocho and pochismo upside down, with a sense of dignity and joy of life that is inspirational to teachers of US-born Latinos. Chunky's life ignites a call for action in a time of deep divisions. Few times has a guitar and a voice done so much for so many. The film invites me to say: Sí se puede, sí se canta!"
San Diego State University | Coral MacFarland Thuet, Lecturer, Department of Chicana and Chicano Studies
"Singing Our Way to Freedom is an excellent film on the contributions of Ramón 'Chunky' Sánchez, the legendary musician and Chicano activist, and the history of the Chicano Movement. It is an invaluable source of information for students in the field of Mexican and Chicano music, and the Civil Rights Movements in the U.S. I highly recommend this film."
University of California, Santa Cruz | John Jota Leaños, Media Artist and Social-Art Practitioner
"A sonic journey through the California-Mexico borderlands, Singing Our Way to Freedom recalls the captivating life of a unique Chicano artist, Chunky Sánchez. From San Diego to Blythe, Tijuana to Mexico City, veteran documentary filmmaker Paul Espinosa reconstructs El Movimiento Chicano in a reflection of how art and music work to activate and empower communities of color."
Bellingham Human Rights Film Festival Jury
"Expertly presents a compelling narrative that brings to light a human rights issue needing more awareness. Effectively uses Chunky’s music, his recollections and interviews with people who knew him to create a vibrant biography of an activist who should not, and now cannot be forgotten."
Student, California State University San Marcos
"Utilizing the film medium that most people can relate to is a great way to explore Chicano culture. I really appreciated the way the cultural, social, and historical information was presented as a context for Chunky’s life struggles and triumphs. It was presented to explain things in the film that you may not understand, especially those of us not being of that culture. In that format, it really did help to open people’s minds to other cultures without being told how they should feel."
Citation
Main credits
Espinosa, Paul (film director)
Espinosa, Paul (film producer)
Espinosa, Paul (screenwriter)
Day, Mark (film producer)
Bovee, Michael (film producer)
Martinez, Alma (narrator)
Other credits
Editor: Maria Zeiss; cinematography: Vicente Franco, Simone Hogan; original score: Quetzal Flores.
Distributor subjects
Latinx Studies; American History; Ethnomusicology; Social Movements; Spanish; Chicana/o Studies; Border Studies; Sociology; Ethnic Studies; Anthropology; LaborKeywords
WEBVTT
00:00:50.183 --> 00:00:52.819
The scourge of history
00:00:53.153 --> 00:00:54.888
are on my face,
00:00:56.423 --> 00:00:58.892
and in the veins of my body that aches.
00:01:06.266 --> 00:01:08.602
I do not ask for freedom.
00:01:10.070 --> 00:01:11.805
We are freedom!
00:01:14.708 --> 00:01:19.045
♪ We are not afraid ♪
00:01:19.046 --> 00:01:22.315
A lot of people
didn’t understand, what is Chicano?
00:01:22.316 --> 00:01:27.421
Well to me, Chicano is not necessarily
someone that was born in a certain place
00:01:27.955 --> 00:01:31.558
but rather a state of mind
and a state of heart.
00:01:37.898 --> 00:01:40.299
And I look back
on pictures then, and I thought
00:01:40.300 --> 00:01:43.270
oh my God, we were poor,
but I didn\'t feel poor at the time.
00:01:46.039 --> 00:01:47.908
Things were very simple.
00:01:48.141 --> 00:01:51.411
It’s like the Wizard of Oz says,
“There’s no place like home.”
00:01:53.847 --> 00:01:56.450
You’re talking about Chunky Sanchez
00:01:56.783 --> 00:01:59.251
from this little small
California rural town, Blythe,
00:01:59.252 --> 00:02:02.422
where it\'s like a blip
on a radar screen, you know.
00:02:05.359 --> 00:02:07.727
Growing up,
Chunky and his siblings
00:02:07.728 --> 00:02:10.063
were virtually invisible
to the larger society.
00:02:13.767 --> 00:02:16.135
Chunky would escape
these rural beginnings
00:02:16.136 --> 00:02:17.536
and discover a special gift
00:02:17.537 --> 00:02:20.340
that would change the future
of his community forever.
00:02:26.747 --> 00:02:28.948
His journey is
a remarkable lens on a time
00:02:28.949 --> 00:02:31.618
when young Mexican Americans
became Chicanos.
00:02:32.953 --> 00:02:36.156
He was absolutely
Cesar Chavez’s favorite musician.
00:02:41.428 --> 00:02:43.095
They were ordinary young people
00:02:43.096 --> 00:02:46.500
who found the courage to fight
for self-determination and justice.
00:02:50.570 --> 00:02:53.340
- We went in there and did - two or
three songs and everybody was ready
00:02:53.343 --> 00:02:56.309
To go out and challenge the world.
00:02:58.011 --> 00:02:59.579
It was powerful,
00:02:59.913 --> 00:03:01.848
it was penetrating to the soul.
00:03:09.322 --> 00:03:10.790
How did this young kid
00:03:10.791 --> 00:03:13.392
from a small rural town
in the middle of nowhere
00:03:13.393 --> 00:03:16.963
become one of the leading musicians
of the Chicano civil rights movement
00:03:17.397 --> 00:03:21.168
and go on to receive one
of his nation’s highest musical honors?
00:03:25.639 --> 00:03:28.941
How did he and his generation
find the courage to fight
00:03:28.942 --> 00:03:32.579
for social justice in the face
of racism and discrimination?
00:03:37.317 --> 00:03:39.403
How did he learn to use music
00:03:39.404 --> 00:03:41.488
and imagination to take us on a journey,
00:03:41.855 --> 00:03:44.157
a journey towards freedom?
00:03:47.961 --> 00:03:50.730
Pocho, take three!
00:04:13.587 --> 00:04:17.090
♪ “Pocho”,
a name I was called as a kid ♪
00:04:17.457 --> 00:04:20.794
♪ With the intentions
of degrading and humiliating me ♪
00:04:22.395 --> 00:04:27.200
♪ “Pocho”, I wasn’t exactly sure
what it meant at first ♪
00:04:27.567 --> 00:04:32.405
♪ I felt emotional pain before I ever
comprehended its verbal meaning ♪
00:04:33.507 --> 00:04:34.875
♪ “Pocho” ♪
00:04:36.109 --> 00:04:38.845
♪ It promoted self-hatred
and confusion ♪
00:04:39.379 --> 00:04:42.616
♪ As to who I was
and what I was doing here ♪
00:04:44.484 --> 00:04:45.685
♪ “Pocho” ♪
00:04:46.153 --> 00:04:49.556
Chunky’s journey
began in Blythe, California.
00:04:50.490 --> 00:04:52.191
It’s a small rural community
00:04:52.192 --> 00:04:55.195
about 90 miles north
of the U.S.-Mexico border.
00:04:57.063 --> 00:05:02.334
It was a world, with two languages
and two cultures existing side by side,
00:05:02.335 --> 00:05:04.538
often in an uneasy relationship.
00:05:05.705 --> 00:05:09.175
When my mother took me
to kindergarten, I was scared.
00:05:09.176 --> 00:05:11.410
I didn’t know where I was going.
I walked in the classroom.
00:05:11.411 --> 00:05:13.812
She took me in the classroom,
everybody was speaking English.
00:05:13.813 --> 00:05:16.583
I didn’t speak any English at the time,
even though I was born here.
00:05:16.783 --> 00:05:19.685
I was scared. My teacher looked at me.
I looked at her.
00:05:19.686 --> 00:05:21.887
I thought I was like
in a foreign country or something.
00:05:21.888 --> 00:05:24.623
I started crying. I ran out after her.
00:05:24.624 --> 00:05:26.025
This went on like for two weeks,
00:05:26.026 --> 00:05:28.128
I went in and out
and finally I got used to it.
00:05:34.834 --> 00:05:36.735
Like many
of his Chicano classmates,
00:05:36.736 --> 00:05:40.473
Chunky spoke only Spanish
when he started elementary school.
00:05:40.840 --> 00:05:43.776
Many schools had little respect
for the language and culture
00:05:43.777 --> 00:05:46.111
that young Chicanos brought
to school with them.
00:05:46.112 --> 00:05:49.382
♪ My name was Ramon
when I started kindergarten ♪
00:05:49.916 --> 00:05:53.153
♪ But by the third grade
everybody called me Raymond ♪
00:05:53.653 --> 00:05:55.221
Raymond, Raymond, hey,
00:05:55.222 --> 00:05:57.289
I was trying to adjust to this,
you know what I mean,
00:05:57.290 --> 00:06:00.726
and if there was a girl named Maria,
her name became Mary
00:06:00.727 --> 00:06:02.494
and Juanita became Jane.
00:06:02.495 --> 00:06:06.599
Until one day we got a new student
by the name of Facundo Gonzales,
00:06:06.600 --> 00:06:08.601
Facundo Gonzales.
00:06:08.602 --> 00:06:09.768
When he came to school,
00:06:09.769 --> 00:06:12.739
we noticed they called
an emergency administrative meeting.
00:06:13.039 --> 00:06:14.540
We could kind of hear them
talking through the door.
00:06:14.541 --> 00:06:16.609
What are we going to do with this guy?
Man, you know what I mean.
00:06:16.610 --> 00:06:18.477
How are we going to change
his name, you know.
00:06:18.478 --> 00:06:20.079
One teacher goes, well, you know what,
00:06:20.080 --> 00:06:22.181
why don’t we try to shorten
the name a little bit.
00:06:22.182 --> 00:06:24.283
And they go, yeah,
but how do you spell it?
00:06:24.284 --> 00:06:27.052
F-A-C-U-N-D-O.
00:06:27.053 --> 00:06:29.789
Why don’t we just spell it FAC?
00:06:30.457 --> 00:06:33.793
Well one of the teacher says,
that means his name would be “Fac”
00:06:34.060 --> 00:06:35.661
and the other teacher
looked at him and said,
00:06:35.662 --> 00:06:38.564
“No that sounds too much
like a dirty word.
00:06:38.565 --> 00:06:40.866
You can’t be saying,
“Fac, where’s your homework?
00:06:40.867 --> 00:06:42.401
Where’s Fac at?”
you know what I mean.
00:06:42.402 --> 00:06:44.003
But that was a trip that
we always remembered
00:06:44.004 --> 00:06:45.437
going through elementary school
00:06:45.438 --> 00:06:48.675
because Facundo was the only guy
who never got his name changed.
00:06:50.510 --> 00:06:52.945
In changing your name
you lose identity,
00:06:52.946 --> 00:06:56.816
you lose who you really are,
who your parents named you.
00:06:57.450 --> 00:07:00.219
We became ashamed
of ourselves of who we were.
00:07:00.220 --> 00:07:02.688
You know, like I said
I was still bringing burritos
00:07:02.689 --> 00:07:04.290
but even so I was kind of ashamed,
00:07:04.291 --> 00:07:06.492
you know,
to bring the burrito out for lunch.
00:07:06.493 --> 00:07:09.462
I would go hide behind the building
to eat my burrito man, you know.
00:07:10.997 --> 00:07:13.767
But all that ashamedness, you know,
00:07:14.501 --> 00:07:18.070
came into play there
and it molded you as a person
00:07:18.071 --> 00:07:20.539
and it wasn’t good,
it wasn’t healthy for you,
00:07:20.540 --> 00:07:23.943
because you were trying
to be something you weren’t.
00:07:24.344 --> 00:07:26.845
My mother was a housewife,
stay at home.
00:07:26.846 --> 00:07:29.114
My dad was a foreman
00:07:29.115 --> 00:07:31.785
for one of the farming
companies here in the valley.
00:07:33.253 --> 00:07:36.488
Our home was situated
on a piece of land
00:07:36.489 --> 00:07:40.160
with a bunch of agricultural fields
behind us and to the side.
00:07:43.263 --> 00:07:45.932
My mom and father
came across that border
00:07:46.166 --> 00:07:48.634
with no papers back in the ‘30s.
00:07:48.635 --> 00:07:52.271
Back then, immigration really
wasn’t a big deal you know.
00:07:52.272 --> 00:07:56.176
And eventually,
they got naturalized here in Blythe.
00:07:57.344 --> 00:08:03.049
I believe my mother came
through Sonora and into Mexicali.
00:08:04.351 --> 00:08:08.121
They gathered enough money to,
one by one immigrate
00:08:08.521 --> 00:08:12.659
my grandmother and the rest
of the siblings from Mexico.
00:08:12.926 --> 00:08:15.595
And then they were all together
as a family again.
00:08:17.330 --> 00:08:21.233
I personally never felt deprived
00:08:21.234 --> 00:08:24.069
because my parents always
had a roof over our head,
00:08:24.070 --> 00:08:26.539
and it was a house
they were able to buy.
00:08:28.141 --> 00:08:29.775
We were never hungry.
00:08:29.776 --> 00:08:31.243
So for me I was like,
00:08:31.244 --> 00:08:34.481
“Hey, I’m living the American dream.
What\'s the problem here?”
00:08:41.988 --> 00:08:45.125
My mother liked
a lot of Louis Armstrong songs.
00:08:46.559 --> 00:08:48.862
And she liked the trumpet,
00:08:49.362 --> 00:08:52.798
so she decided Chunky
was going to get music lessons,
00:08:52.799 --> 00:08:54.801
and he was going to play the trumpet.
00:08:55.602 --> 00:08:59.271
So she rented a trumpet
from one of the only music store
00:08:59.272 --> 00:09:00.740
in Blythe at the time.
00:09:01.307 --> 00:09:07.279
Even though he was okay,
he was never fantastic on the trumpet,
00:09:07.280 --> 00:09:12.217
but he would basically use
the trumpet to torment us as kids,
00:09:12.218 --> 00:09:17.856
because, I remember, oh we might
have been about 9, 10 years old,
00:09:17.857 --> 00:09:21.093
and every morning Chunky
would wake up in the morning
00:09:21.094 --> 00:09:22.429
and play “Reveille”.
00:09:28.768 --> 00:09:30.937
And he\'d wake up
the whole neighborhood.
00:09:31.304 --> 00:09:35.107
And I was never a morning person,
so I really resented that
00:09:35.108 --> 00:09:38.710
and then of course every night,
as the sun was setting,
00:09:38.711 --> 00:09:40.613
he\'d go out and he’d play “Taps\".
00:09:42.315 --> 00:09:45.718
So that was the, first like,
musical moments that Chunky had.
00:09:47.754 --> 00:09:50.255
But as I was playing trumpet,
I was picking other things up.
00:09:50.256 --> 00:09:52.258
I started playing the drums.
00:09:54.427 --> 00:09:58.030
I got pretty good at it.
I got recruited into a band.
00:09:58.031 --> 00:10:01.768
So as a teenager I was playing
in a band there called Soul Patrol.
00:10:02.802 --> 00:10:06.806
We did a lot of, a lot of Motown
stuff like that, you know.
00:10:08.842 --> 00:10:11.977
My mother would teach
Chunky how to harmonize.
00:10:11.978 --> 00:10:16.515
And then of course he took an interest
in the guitar because of my uncles.
00:10:16.516 --> 00:10:17.749
They had the musical background.
00:10:17.750 --> 00:10:20.085
They played guitars, they sang,
my mother and her brothers.
00:10:20.086 --> 00:10:23.989
They did a lot of old classical stuff
like from Los Trios, from the thirties.
00:10:23.990 --> 00:10:26.326
That influenced us
as we were growing up.
00:10:32.365 --> 00:10:34.032
My dad was old school
00:10:34.033 --> 00:10:38.538
and had a very clear definition
of sexual roles.
00:10:38.738 --> 00:10:40.672
Girls were with their mothers.
00:10:40.673 --> 00:10:43.442
They were in the house.
They did housework. They cooked.
00:10:43.443 --> 00:10:46.612
They did your laundry.
That\'s where they functioned.
00:10:46.613 --> 00:10:50.048
Men and boys went out
to the fields and worked.
00:10:50.049 --> 00:10:54.186
And so, Chunky being
the oldest son he had,
00:10:54.187 --> 00:10:57.623
my dad would take Chunky
with him at a very early age.
00:10:57.624 --> 00:11:00.759
And he taught Chunky
how to drive a pickup truck
00:11:00.760 --> 00:11:02.762
when Chunky was 10 years old.
00:11:05.798 --> 00:11:07.599
He taught Chunky how to plant,
00:11:07.600 --> 00:11:11.604
so Chunky had that fieldwork
experience very early on in life.
00:11:53.246 --> 00:11:55.615
Working in the fields
with his father,
00:11:55.848 --> 00:11:58.585
Chunky wondered if this was his future.
00:12:01.321 --> 00:12:04.523
Chunky’s father and mother
were like a lot of Mexican workers
00:12:04.524 --> 00:12:07.460
who had been crossing
the border for generations.
00:12:09.228 --> 00:12:12.064
There was always
a huge demand for their labor
00:12:12.065 --> 00:12:14.099
in the mines, on the railroads
00:12:14.100 --> 00:12:17.337
and in the booming agricultural
fields of the southwest.
00:12:18.104 --> 00:12:21.507
Some were actively brought here
by U.S. labor recruiters.
00:12:22.208 --> 00:12:27.145
By the 1960s, a young community
organizer named Cesar Chavez
00:12:27.146 --> 00:12:30.916
had been remarkably successful
in organizing our country’s poorest
00:12:30.917 --> 00:12:33.085
and most forgotten workers –
00:12:33.086 --> 00:12:37.457
the farmworkers who were responsible
for the food on our tables.
00:12:38.091 --> 00:12:41.026
Chavez preached
a philosophy of non-violence
00:12:41.027 --> 00:12:43.829
and imagined a better world
for these workers.
00:12:43.830 --> 00:12:49.569
Tactically,
nonviolence is extremely effective.
00:12:49.802 --> 00:12:53.605
But we say even more,
we say that as a philosophy,
00:12:53.606 --> 00:12:56.976
as a way of life, perhaps,
00:12:57.543 --> 00:12:59.044
it’s even more important.
00:12:59.045 --> 00:13:03.115
Cesar Chavez came to Blythe
I remember one time
00:13:03.116 --> 00:13:05.484
because there was a field office
that was set up
00:13:05.485 --> 00:13:07.553
right there in Blythe
right on main street.
00:13:09.222 --> 00:13:11.156
I remember it created
a lot of controversy.
00:13:11.157 --> 00:13:14.493
He wasn’t there that long but he came
and gave a speech about organizing
00:13:14.494 --> 00:13:17.130
and he stirred up the town,
let me tell you.
00:13:18.731 --> 00:13:20.617
Chavez and Dolores Huerta
00:13:20.618 --> 00:13:22.502
co-founded the United Farmworkers Union.
00:13:22.769 --> 00:13:27.040
Before that, farmworkers had been
virtually abandoned by organized labor.
00:13:27.573 --> 00:13:31.277
Chavez and Huerta began
the difficult task of organizing them,
00:13:31.511 --> 00:13:34.613
emphasizing the importance
of self-determination
00:13:34.614 --> 00:13:36.549
and the dignity of their work.
00:13:41.220 --> 00:13:43.822
They seized upon a novel approach
against the growers
00:13:43.823 --> 00:13:46.359
in order to improve
the wages of farmworkers –
00:13:47.060 --> 00:13:50.163
a nationwide boycott
against eating grapes.
00:13:51.297 --> 00:13:54.633
In a surprising victory
beyond anyone’s expectations,
00:13:54.634 --> 00:13:57.603
the boycott garnered
the attention of Robert F. Kennedy
00:13:57.837 --> 00:14:00.806
and captured the imagination
of many Americans
00:14:00.807 --> 00:14:05.244
who knew very little about how our
got on to our nation\'s tables.
00:14:06.245 --> 00:14:08.514
When Chunky first saw Cesar Chavez,
00:14:08.715 --> 00:14:12.385
his horizons began
to expand far beyond Blythe.
00:14:14.020 --> 00:14:16.989
He was very dynamic,
he was calm,
00:14:17.256 --> 00:14:19.691
but yet he was powerful.
00:14:19.692 --> 00:14:22.527
The way that he delivered
the things that he was talking about,
00:14:22.528 --> 00:14:24.096
everything made sense.
00:14:24.097 --> 00:14:26.732
It was like he was opening
your eyes, you know,
00:14:26.733 --> 00:14:32.037
about very simple things that we
always took for granted, you know.
00:14:32.038 --> 00:14:33.706
Yeah, you know he’s right.
00:14:37.210 --> 00:14:39.077
We never had drinking water
on the fields.
00:14:39.078 --> 00:14:40.947
We always had to bring our own water.
00:14:41.848 --> 00:14:45.650
You know, we never had
toilet facilities out there,
00:14:45.651 --> 00:14:47.753
we always had to go
into the bushes, you know,
00:14:47.754 --> 00:14:51.523
and the ladies that worked
out there had to do the same thing,
00:14:51.524 --> 00:14:52.724
and that wasn’t right.
00:14:52.725 --> 00:14:55.728
And maybe a little higher wage
wouldn’t be too bad either.
00:14:58.331 --> 00:15:00.832
One day I was working
during the weekends
00:15:00.833 --> 00:15:03.668
at a ranch right there
in Blythe for a rancher.
00:15:03.669 --> 00:15:07.439
And the rancher was down there
watching along with my dad.
00:15:07.440 --> 00:15:10.242
And he told my father,
he said “You know, Ramon,
00:15:10.243 --> 00:15:12.778
some day when you’re not here anymore,
00:15:12.779 --> 00:15:15.882
your son is going to make
a very good foreman on this ranch.”
00:15:18.718 --> 00:15:21.419
So I said this guy has already got
plans for me, man.
00:15:21.420 --> 00:15:25.792
You know what I mean? He’s already
got my whole life planned out.
00:15:26.192 --> 00:15:28.194
And I said I need to get out of here.
00:15:35.001 --> 00:15:37.770
The world around Chunky
was changing dramatically.
00:15:38.371 --> 00:15:41.607
Fidel Castro had consolidated
the Cuban revolution.
00:15:41.974 --> 00:15:45.812
The Vietnam War provoked anti-war
protests around the country.
00:15:46.712 --> 00:15:50.817
An expanding civil rights movement
spurred waves of demonstrations.
00:15:51.717 --> 00:15:55.720
African Americans and others
without access to power and privilege
00:15:55.721 --> 00:15:57.957
demanded a place at the table.
00:15:58.891 --> 00:16:00.792
Mexican Americans were marching
00:16:00.793 --> 00:16:03.796
and demonstrating in cities
across the southwest.
00:16:05.631 --> 00:16:07.999
The movimiento,
as it came to be called,
00:16:08.000 --> 00:16:11.170
put us on the national stage
for the first time.
00:16:12.738 --> 00:16:16.308
We came here to build
the new Chicano movement,
00:16:16.309 --> 00:16:17.810
that’s what we came here for.
00:16:19.846 --> 00:16:24.416
You cannot close your eyes
and your ears to us any longer.
00:16:24.417 --> 00:16:27.086
You cannot pretend that we do not exist.
00:16:29.722 --> 00:16:34.125
They announced that they
will not recognize the association
00:16:34.126 --> 00:16:37.362
and they will not bargain with us
so, let the strike continue.
00:16:37.363 --> 00:16:40.066
Let the strike continue!
00:16:40.333 --> 00:16:41.766
In our nation’s capitol,
00:16:41.767 --> 00:16:44.769
President Lyndon Johnson
backed landmark legislation
00:16:44.770 --> 00:16:47.939
aimed at securing
and guaranteeing the civil rights
00:16:47.940 --> 00:16:50.610
and voting rights
of powerless communities.
00:16:52.812 --> 00:16:55.080
In order to level the playing field,
00:16:55.081 --> 00:16:57.850
the federal government
created affirmative action -
00:16:58.251 --> 00:17:01.319
a national program
to help historically excluded
00:17:01.320 --> 00:17:03.923
and disadvantaged
students attend college.
00:17:05.057 --> 00:17:07.460
Chunky was a perfect candidate
for the program.
00:17:08.761 --> 00:17:12.230
A local activist and friend
of the family, Miguel Figueroa,
00:17:12.231 --> 00:17:15.101
was instrumental in helping
Chunky apply to college.
00:17:17.036 --> 00:17:19.804
Chunky wasn’t
very impressive back in those days.
00:17:19.805 --> 00:17:21.539
He wasn’t a great football player,
00:17:21.540 --> 00:17:23.808
or basketball player
or anything like that.
00:17:23.809 --> 00:17:26.312
He was just Chunky,
and he wanted to go to college.
00:17:26.879 --> 00:17:30.548
The original plan through the Mexican
American Political Association
00:17:30.549 --> 00:17:32.918
was that we were going
to educate our youth,
00:17:32.919 --> 00:17:34.653
and they were going to come back
00:17:34.654 --> 00:17:37.956
to their respective communities
and build community there.
00:17:37.957 --> 00:17:41.059
They were going to become
the chief of police, the postmasters,
00:17:41.060 --> 00:17:42.761
the superintendent
of schools, the principals.
00:17:42.762 --> 00:17:45.398
They were going
to build our community
00:17:46.198 --> 00:17:48.500
and enjoy the American dream.
00:17:48.501 --> 00:17:50.101
They were going to be
like everybody else,
00:17:50.102 --> 00:17:53.538
only when they became
the leaders, we thought,
00:17:53.539 --> 00:17:55.441
we would end discrimination.
00:17:57.343 --> 00:17:58.710
Not too long after that
00:17:58.711 --> 00:18:01.680
I went to check the mail right there
in front of my house in Blythe
00:18:01.681 --> 00:18:04.550
and there was a letter there
from San Diego State College.
00:18:06.118 --> 00:18:07.919
It had my name on it, so I opened it up.
00:18:07.920 --> 00:18:11.756
And it said “Congratulations; you have
been accepted to San Diego State.”
00:18:11.757 --> 00:18:16.561
You know I didn’t know
whether to jump for joy or,
00:18:16.562 --> 00:18:17.897
you know or get scared.
00:18:19.332 --> 00:18:21.367
It was a culture shock.
00:18:21.634 --> 00:18:24.303
The town I came from
had like 9,000 people.
00:18:24.770 --> 00:18:27.238
And then we came to San Diego
State and come to find
00:18:27.239 --> 00:18:30.076
that San Diego State had
a population of 20,000 at that time.
00:18:30.343 --> 00:18:33.012
The school was twice as big
as the town I came from.
00:18:34.947 --> 00:18:38.416
There was 68 Spanish surnames,
00:18:38.417 --> 00:18:41.086
not necessarily Mexicans.
It could have been Filipinos.
00:18:41.087 --> 00:18:43.388
It could have been persons
from South America.
00:18:43.389 --> 00:18:45.156
It could have been
people from Mexico,
00:18:45.157 --> 00:18:48.493
but 68 out of a student
enrollment of 20,000.
00:18:48.494 --> 00:18:49.995
He was wandering around campus.
00:18:49.996 --> 00:18:52.198
A little short, well rounded kid.
00:18:52.531 --> 00:18:54.667
He’s still well rounded,
as a matter of fact.
00:18:55.134 --> 00:18:57.570
But it seemed like he was lost.
00:18:57.903 --> 00:19:01.406
Had it not been
for the Chicano Studies Department
00:19:01.407 --> 00:19:04.110
and a professor by the name
of Jose Villarino
00:19:04.643 --> 00:19:08.581
who kind of took me under his wing,
you know, and kept me focused.
00:19:08.881 --> 00:19:11.850
Because you can get frightened
to a certain extent,
00:19:11.851 --> 00:19:13.585
where you just say,
well, forget all this.
00:19:13.586 --> 00:19:17.356
I’m going back home
and be a farmer all my life you know.
00:19:18.057 --> 00:19:20.892
The teachers show up you know
with ties and white shirts,
00:19:20.893 --> 00:19:24.429
and you know long sleeved
shirts and teach a class.
00:19:24.430 --> 00:19:27.365
We took a class called
Aztec thought and culture.
00:19:27.366 --> 00:19:29.702
And here comes Alurista,
a little short guy,
00:19:30.069 --> 00:19:34.406
small, beads around his neck
and talking broken English,
00:19:34.407 --> 00:19:37.243
and Spanish, and slang,
and everything else.
00:19:38.444 --> 00:19:42.547
Dust turns with time and space
remains occupied
00:19:42.548 --> 00:19:46.651
Flesh merely passes
and huesos waited to pulverize
00:19:46.652 --> 00:19:49.754
And be the wind to caress mariposas
00:19:49.755 --> 00:19:54.926
Into papaloteados across
the fleeting light of dusk
00:19:54.927 --> 00:19:56.961
You know it was
a whole different dimension.
00:19:56.962 --> 00:19:59.397
People would look at him,
“Man, this is the teacher?”
00:19:59.398 --> 00:20:03.334
You know we asked ourselves,
“This is the teacher?” OK.
00:20:03.335 --> 00:20:05.804
What it is is what it does
00:20:05.805 --> 00:20:07.439
What it’s done is what it was
00:20:07.440 --> 00:20:09.441
What it will be is what it’ll do
00:20:09.442 --> 00:20:11.176
What it’ll do will someday be
00:20:11.177 --> 00:20:13.712
When what does is what it is
00:20:18.818 --> 00:20:21.820
But lo and behold, man,
the guy, he opened our eyes
00:20:21.821 --> 00:20:24.122
to a lot of things
that we were not aware of,
00:20:24.123 --> 00:20:29.227
growing up as Chicanos that put
a lot of the puzzle together for us.
00:20:29.228 --> 00:20:32.464
And in putting that puzzle together,
we also put our,
00:20:32.465 --> 00:20:35.166
we put our conscience together,
our minds together,
00:20:35.167 --> 00:20:36.836
our souls, our spirits.
00:20:43.709 --> 00:20:45.443
As Chunky’s eyes were opened,
00:20:45.444 --> 00:20:48.146
he learned more
about our community’s history.
00:20:48.147 --> 00:20:51.250
He connected more directly
with his indigenous background.
00:20:51.984 --> 00:20:55.420
His mother’s family
was Yaqui Indian from Sonora
00:20:55.421 --> 00:20:58.757
and he found strength
in his indigenous identity.
00:21:00.459 --> 00:21:02.311
I think we learned
00:21:02.312 --> 00:21:04.163
from the indigenous brothers and sisters.
00:21:04.497 --> 00:21:06.098
We don’t own anything.
00:21:06.966 --> 00:21:10.669
When we die,
we don’t take nothing with us.
00:21:11.604 --> 00:21:13.606
This land is here for everybody.
00:21:18.410 --> 00:21:20.845
Chunky began
to understand the many ways
00:21:20.846 --> 00:21:24.183
in which our community had been
silenced and kept powerless.
00:21:28.954 --> 00:21:30.989
But the next chapter in his education
00:21:30.990 --> 00:21:33.926
would come from a park
which didn’t even exist yet.
00:21:36.996 --> 00:21:39.364
Many cities around the country
were undergoing
00:21:39.365 --> 00:21:42.168
a redevelopment process
called urban renewal.
00:21:42.668 --> 00:21:47.072
It sounded positive but it devastated
many inner city communities.
00:21:47.940 --> 00:21:51.110
In San Diego,
under the guise of urban renewal,
00:21:51.544 --> 00:21:55.581
a new interstate highway divided
the Chicano community in two.
00:21:58.284 --> 00:22:00.151
To make amends,
the state of California
00:22:00.152 --> 00:22:02.555
promised to build
a community park in the barrio.
00:22:03.222 --> 00:22:05.224
Instead, without warning,
00:22:05.558 --> 00:22:09.827
the city abandoned that plan and began
building a highway patrol station
00:22:09.828 --> 00:22:12.698
on the land designated
for the community park.
00:22:15.601 --> 00:22:19.938
The City of San Diego had promised
this land to the Logan Heights community
00:22:19.939 --> 00:22:23.007
and then they reneged,
saying you know “Chale,”
00:22:23.008 --> 00:22:25.944
we are going to build
a Highway Patrol substation here.
00:22:25.945 --> 00:22:29.847
I remember we got a call,
and so they asked for help.
00:22:29.848 --> 00:22:32.550
We talked about it, and I remember
him saying \"Are you going to go?\"
00:22:32.551 --> 00:22:37.589
And I said \"Absolutely.\"
And a lot of students went.
00:22:37.590 --> 00:22:40.625
He was in a Chicano Studies class
and they alerted us
00:22:40.626 --> 00:22:43.362
and we all stopped our classes
and marched over to the park.
00:22:44.063 --> 00:22:46.966
I said to myself,
you know, I want to be part of this.
00:22:47.700 --> 00:22:50.069
I want to be part of this whole -
00:22:50.536 --> 00:22:53.705
I didn’t call it a movement
at the time - but whatever it was,
00:22:53.706 --> 00:22:55.207
I wanted to be a part of it.
00:22:55.641 --> 00:23:00.745
You know here I was, a farm kid
fresh in the city, you know,
00:23:00.746 --> 00:23:02.080
big university, like that.
00:23:02.081 --> 00:23:04.083
I wasn’t sure what
we were going up against.
00:23:04.483 --> 00:23:07.686
People were saying that the police
might be there, we may get in trouble,
00:23:07.886 --> 00:23:10.555
you know, I had never really been
in any serious trouble with the police.
00:23:10.556 --> 00:23:12.457
They would say, “We might go to jail.”
00:23:12.458 --> 00:23:15.627
Well you know we’re already
on our way, I can’t turn back now.
00:23:15.628 --> 00:23:17.328
A lot of things
were going through my mind.
00:23:17.329 --> 00:23:19.331
What are we going to do
when we get there?
00:23:20.366 --> 00:23:24.336
You know being on strike is very boring
because all you do is walk in circles.
00:23:25.204 --> 00:23:28.072
So one day we thought,
“What can we do to liven it up.
00:23:28.073 --> 00:23:30.743
Hey, bring your guitar or something.”
So we brought a guitar.
00:23:37.850 --> 00:23:40.018
And then we realize,
“Hey, there’s things happening,
00:23:40.019 --> 00:23:41.719
let’s write a verse about this.”
00:23:41.720 --> 00:23:43.755
So we began to write verses
about things that were happening,
00:23:43.756 --> 00:23:46.724
next thing you know we got two verses,
then we got three, then we got four,
00:23:46.725 --> 00:23:49.895
hey we got a song now,
La Guitara Campesina.
00:24:30.202 --> 00:24:33.472
When I was there, I looked around
00:24:34.606 --> 00:24:38.010
and I saw the seriousness
of the people, you know.
00:24:38.243 --> 00:24:41.079
It’s something I had never
really seen in people struggling,
00:24:41.080 --> 00:24:44.482
you know,
the kids digging the ground,
00:24:44.483 --> 00:24:48.086
the grandmothers yelling at people
and telling them, “Hey, do this, do that.”
00:24:48.087 --> 00:24:50.955
And yet at the same time,
they were making food for everybody.
00:24:50.956 --> 00:24:53.024
It was unbelievable.
00:24:53.025 --> 00:24:56.028
I said, “Wow,
these people are for real!
00:24:57.129 --> 00:25:00.265
And I began to see
the power that was in music.
00:25:21.520 --> 00:25:24.757
I think for the first time
in my life I saw some people
00:25:25.090 --> 00:25:29.161
that were very, you could see it
in them that were dedicated, committed,
00:25:29.828 --> 00:25:31.362
believing in something.
00:25:31.363 --> 00:25:34.365
And that really inspired me
and made me say to myself inside,
00:25:34.366 --> 00:25:36.234
you know, “I want to be part of this.
00:25:36.235 --> 00:25:38.369
I want to be like these people.
00:25:38.370 --> 00:25:41.406
I want to be able to feel dedicated
and committed to something,
00:25:41.407 --> 00:25:46.545
to a good cause and to me the issue
of Chicano Park was that cause.
00:25:47.379 --> 00:25:51.350
I felt an energy, something that just,
boom, went right through me.
00:25:57.423 --> 00:25:59.458
♪ In the year 1970 ♪
00:25:59.658 --> 00:26:02.193
♪ In the city of San Diego
under the Coronado Bridge ♪
00:26:02.194 --> 00:26:03.996
♪ Lied a little piece of land ♪
00:26:04.463 --> 00:26:05.763
♪ A little piece of land that ♪
00:26:05.764 --> 00:26:07.198
♪ The Chicano community
of Logan Heights ♪
00:26:07.199 --> 00:26:08.567
♪ Wanted to make into a park ♪
00:26:09.701 --> 00:26:13.237
♪ A park where all the chavalitos
could come and play in ♪
00:26:13.238 --> 00:26:14.806
♪ So they wouldn\'t have
to play in the street ♪
00:26:14.807 --> 00:26:16.508
♪ And get run over by a car ♪
00:26:18.177 --> 00:26:21.779
♪ A park, where all the viejitos
could come en la tarde ♪
00:26:21.780 --> 00:26:23.982
♪ And just sit down
and watch the sun go down ♪
00:26:27.186 --> 00:26:30.588
♪ A park where
all the familias could come ♪
00:26:30.589 --> 00:26:32.523
♪ And just get together
on a Sunday afternoon ♪
00:26:32.524 --> 00:26:34.927
♪ And celebrate
the spirit of life itself ♪
00:26:36.628 --> 00:26:39.164
♪ But the city of San Diego
said “chale” ♪
00:26:39.631 --> 00:26:41.867
♪ We’re going to make
a highway patrol substation here ♪
00:26:42.468 --> 00:26:45.169
♪ So on April 22nd, 1970 ♪
00:26:45.170 --> 00:26:47.205
♪ La Raza of Logan Heights
and other Chicano communities ♪
00:26:47.206 --> 00:26:49.207
♪ Got together
and they walked on the land ♪
00:26:49.208 --> 00:26:50.608
♪ And they took it over
with their picks and their shovels ♪
00:26:50.609 --> 00:26:52.743
♪ And they began
to build their own park ♪
00:26:52.744 --> 00:26:55.514
- We think of a park as a park,
- but when you really stop and look at it,
00:26:55.517 --> 00:26:57.850
A park is a very sacred part
of our community.
00:26:58.317 --> 00:27:00.652
A park is where you take
your children to go play.
00:27:00.886 --> 00:27:05.324
A park is where you go talk to people
and exchange ideas, you know.
00:27:06.992 --> 00:27:09.428
It’s a sacred place.
It’s almost like going to church.
00:27:09.962 --> 00:27:12.331
You’re going to go there
to interact with the community.
00:27:13.899 --> 00:27:16.701
Chicano Park was very important
because it taught us that
00:27:16.702 --> 00:27:19.304
if you want something in life,
you have to work for it.
00:27:19.738 --> 00:27:21.272
You have to struggle for it.
00:27:21.273 --> 00:27:24.076
Nothing is going to be handed
to you on a silver platter.
00:27:26.879 --> 00:27:30.883
♪ Under the bridge ♪
00:27:31.283 --> 00:27:35.120
♪ Under the bridge ♪
00:27:40.959 --> 00:27:44.196
Chunky had arrived
in San Diego at a crucial moment.
00:27:44.396 --> 00:27:48.767
The city’s Chicano community was fighting
for self-determination on many fronts.
00:27:49.668 --> 00:27:53.404
The takeover of Chicano Park led
the park to become a permanent
00:27:53.405 --> 00:27:56.241
artistic and cultural monument
for the community.
00:28:00.445 --> 00:28:04.181
Activists also created
a cultural center in Balboa Park,
00:28:04.182 --> 00:28:06.618
a social service agency in the barrio
00:28:06.818 --> 00:28:11.690
and the nation’s first Mexican American
Studies Department at San Diego State.
00:28:12.391 --> 00:28:16.862
These victories gave the Chicano
community a new sense of empowerment.
00:28:17.529 --> 00:28:21.199
For Chunky, music would be
at the center of his journey.
00:28:25.237 --> 00:28:27.538
In San Diego you had,
00:28:27.539 --> 00:28:32.443
groups like La Rondalla Amerindia
de Aztlan, formed as a group of students
00:28:32.444 --> 00:28:35.646
at San Diego State University
in the Chicano Studies department,
00:28:35.647 --> 00:28:38.749
who were coming together,
learning songs under the direction
00:28:38.750 --> 00:28:40.851
of one of the professors, Jose Villarino.
00:28:40.852 --> 00:28:43.321
And they would go out
to marches and rallies,
00:28:43.322 --> 00:28:45.324
here locally and up and down
the state.
00:29:03.141 --> 00:29:07.980
Dr. Villarino got us
involved with La Rondalla Amerindia.
00:29:08.280 --> 00:29:11.383
We took it, in a very sacred way.
00:29:11.883 --> 00:29:14.552
It began to open our eyes,
and we began to see music
00:29:14.553 --> 00:29:18.990
as a teaching methodology,
00:29:18.991 --> 00:29:21.258
as an inspirational methodology.
00:29:21.259 --> 00:29:23.528
You know especially
when we played for the farm workers.
00:29:24.563 --> 00:29:26.397
We started
getting more and more involved
00:29:26.398 --> 00:29:30.334
with the farm workers,
to the point that we participated
00:29:30.335 --> 00:29:33.171
at the farm workers
convention in Fresno.
00:29:33.805 --> 00:29:36.774
La Rondalla was invited
by Cesar Chavez to go
00:29:36.775 --> 00:29:39.577
and perform at the farm
workers convention,
00:29:39.578 --> 00:29:42.347
every year for I think
about four or five years.
00:29:43.548 --> 00:29:45.282
We began to follow Cesar
00:29:45.283 --> 00:29:47.919
through the State of California
on his campaign
00:29:48.553 --> 00:29:50.889
you know and just opening up
the rallies for him.
00:29:51.256 --> 00:29:54.292
And this was very enlightening as well,
because you learned a lot.
00:29:59.965 --> 00:30:01.766
When Chunky
came into the picture
00:30:01.767 --> 00:30:05.369
and applied the guitar
and the music, you know,
00:30:05.370 --> 00:30:07.739
it just changed the... all of the dynamics
00:30:07.740 --> 00:30:10.107
of the student movement.
00:30:10.108 --> 00:30:11.343
Because they were it!
00:30:12.911 --> 00:30:18.750
In addition to that, it was the anti-war
movement at the same time.
00:30:19.184 --> 00:30:20.651
And he started incorporating...
00:30:20.652 --> 00:30:23.655
Some of the language
of the anti-war into his songs,
00:30:23.922 --> 00:30:26.158
and pushing for education over war.
00:30:27.125 --> 00:30:29.493
And again,
it just kind of captured the spirit
00:30:29.494 --> 00:30:31.329
of what the whole struggle was about.
00:30:31.863 --> 00:30:35.800
So the musical aspect just
gave a whole different twist
00:30:35.801 --> 00:30:39.171
to the emotional side
of the struggle.
00:30:39.905 --> 00:30:41.739
There was no hesitation.
00:30:41.740 --> 00:30:45.410
He was totally committed to blending
his music into the struggle.
00:30:46.912 --> 00:30:49.747
We’d be out
in the back of a pickup truck
00:30:49.748 --> 00:30:51.082
and the strikes.
00:30:51.083 --> 00:30:54.885
And we’d be with the picketers
in front of the fields,
00:30:54.886 --> 00:30:58.190
out there like in the Bakersfield
area, out in the country.
00:30:59.057 --> 00:31:01.325
And a lot of esquiroles were there.
00:31:01.326 --> 00:31:02.693
So we’d be singing to them.
00:31:02.694 --> 00:31:06.864
We’d be holding a couple of, people would
be holding a couple of the loud speakers.
00:31:06.865 --> 00:31:09.667
And we’d be jamming
and singing to them.
00:31:09.668 --> 00:31:12.470
And then I’d start talking to them.
00:31:12.471 --> 00:31:15.106
I’d say, “OK, If you want
another song, throw a peach.”
00:31:15.107 --> 00:31:17.308
So they’d throw a peach up you know.
They wanted another song.
00:31:17.309 --> 00:31:20.178
Almost all Mexicanos, right?
So we knew they would love the music.
00:31:20.645 --> 00:31:24.849
So we’d sing them another song and that
we just, that was kind of the catch
00:31:24.850 --> 00:31:26.517
that that we,
the members of La Rondalla,
00:31:26.518 --> 00:31:28.452
were helping pull esquiroles
out of the fields.
00:31:28.453 --> 00:31:33.090
Pretty soon we’d ask them to come out
and join the other brothers and the union.
00:31:33.091 --> 00:31:35.426
Pretty soon, you’d see them
coming out of the fields.
00:31:35.427 --> 00:31:38.096
It was pretty cool, the music
you know carries a heavy message.
00:31:53.845 --> 00:31:57.481
Music was a,
was very big tool for Cesar.
00:31:57.482 --> 00:31:59.316
He wouldn’t let people
talk for too long
00:31:59.317 --> 00:32:01.286
without bringing in
somebody to sing a song.
00:32:03.455 --> 00:32:05.756
We started learning more songs
00:32:05.757 --> 00:32:08.425
about anything that was anti-imperialist
00:32:08.426 --> 00:32:14.199
or talked about the farm worker
or the oppressed,
00:32:14.633 --> 00:32:15.833
and so forth.
00:32:15.834 --> 00:32:18.335
It was something
that we were attracted to
00:32:18.336 --> 00:32:23.008
and we wanted to share,
you know, with our listeners.
00:32:26.178 --> 00:32:29.213
There was always
a possibility of violence.
00:32:29.214 --> 00:32:32.818
And we knew about,
about what had happened to,
00:32:33.185 --> 00:32:35.820
to farm workers before
you know, that were beaten up
00:32:35.821 --> 00:32:37.823
in that same type of demonstration.
00:32:39.124 --> 00:32:42.159
We had eggs thrown at us.
We had tomatoes thrown at us.
00:32:42.160 --> 00:32:43.994
People would even spit on us sometimes.
00:32:43.995 --> 00:32:46.698
I had people that would
actually shove me, push me,
00:32:47.232 --> 00:32:50.201
tear my, and the first thing I thought,
you know I was like 22,
00:32:50.202 --> 00:32:52.403
23 years old,
I wanted to crack their heads,
00:32:52.404 --> 00:32:55.139
but I knew that wasn’t
the best way to do it.
00:32:55.140 --> 00:32:57.741
So we would walk.
We would, we would just walk away
00:32:57.742 --> 00:33:00.077
and go set up somewhere else
and start playing somewhere else.
00:33:00.078 --> 00:33:04.215
It was just very inspiring to see
grown men turning the other cheek
00:33:04.216 --> 00:33:06.517
and walking away, because they
knew that was a strong thing to do.
00:33:06.518 --> 00:33:10.721
Cesar always said that music
was always part of a movement.
00:33:10.722 --> 00:33:15.125
And that musicians always had a place
00:33:15.126 --> 00:33:16.694
in the Farm Worker Movement.
00:33:16.695 --> 00:33:21.366
And he was very, very appreciative
of our music and our contribution.
00:33:25.403 --> 00:33:27.438
Whenever there was
any kind of an event
00:33:27.439 --> 00:33:29.073
that the farmworkers were having,
00:33:29.074 --> 00:33:31.642
Cesar would always call
or he’d have someone call and say,
00:33:31.643 --> 00:33:34.211
“Can you get Chunky to come up
and play for us?”
00:33:34.212 --> 00:33:36.814
I mean, he just loved Chunky,
so it wasn’t just me,
00:33:36.815 --> 00:33:39.450
I mean, other people just
loved the kind of magic
00:33:39.451 --> 00:33:41.586
that Chunky brought
when he played his music.
00:33:45.090 --> 00:33:48.426
Chunky was absolutely
Cesar Chavez’s favorite musician.
00:33:49.427 --> 00:33:52.597
He starts to become an icon
in the southwest.
00:34:03.208 --> 00:34:06.944
What I really liked about the music
is how it brought people together.
00:34:06.945 --> 00:34:09.246
It was a great way
to bring people together,
00:34:09.247 --> 00:34:11.282
when you think about just that
00:34:11.283 --> 00:34:14.285
and other historical
movements if you will,
00:34:14.286 --> 00:34:16.288
music is a big part of it.
00:34:20.025 --> 00:34:22.559
Touring up and down
with this group, playing everywhere,
00:34:22.560 --> 00:34:25.596
broadened my views
and my visions on life itself,
00:34:25.597 --> 00:34:28.265
on people,
on dealing with people, you know.
00:34:28.266 --> 00:34:33.103
Coming from the small farm town,
I began to realize
00:34:33.104 --> 00:34:35.673
that there was a lot more
to life and to the world
00:34:35.674 --> 00:34:37.575
than what was back in that small town.
00:34:38.109 --> 00:34:41.712
We started
to go to places like UCLA,
00:34:41.713 --> 00:34:45.717
Santa Barbara, Berkeley,
San Francisco State.
00:34:49.354 --> 00:34:52.856
We met Joan Baez at the Farm
Workers conventions in Fresno,
00:34:52.857 --> 00:34:57.061
because she was also invited
to play for the farm workers
00:34:57.062 --> 00:34:58.530
at the convention,
00:34:59.698 --> 00:35:03.401
at least on four occasions
that I can remember.
00:35:03.768 --> 00:35:08.305
And she heard us play
at the convention and then invited us
00:35:08.306 --> 00:35:12.209
to participate in recording a song,
No Nos Moveran,
00:35:12.210 --> 00:35:15.580
a record that she was producing
at the time in Spanish.
00:35:37.936 --> 00:35:41.705
It was kind of incredible
that such an artist like Joan Baez
00:35:41.706 --> 00:35:44.743
would invite us to sing
in one of her records.
00:35:46.011 --> 00:35:50.347
And that was also
a very rewarding experience,
00:35:50.348 --> 00:35:53.917
a very touching experience for all of us.
00:35:53.918 --> 00:35:57.555
I think it brought the group
a little more, more together.
00:35:58.623 --> 00:36:03.661
♪ We shall not be moved ♪
00:36:12.370 --> 00:36:14.706
Young people all over the world
00:36:14.707 --> 00:36:17.042
were demonstrating and demanding change.
00:36:17.542 --> 00:36:19.810
In Mexico and Latin America,
00:36:19.811 --> 00:36:23.581
artists and musicians were taking
up the call for social revolution.
00:36:24.416 --> 00:36:29.253
In 1973, Chunky decided to visit
Mexico City for the first time
00:36:29.254 --> 00:36:32.023
to learn more about the country
where his parents were born.
00:36:32.657 --> 00:36:35.325
He was joining many Chicanos
who were traveling to Mexico
00:36:35.326 --> 00:36:36.795
with the same curiosity,
00:36:37.228 --> 00:36:39.097
eager to visit their homeland.
00:36:39.531 --> 00:36:41.533
It was like a pilgrimage.
00:36:44.169 --> 00:36:47.171
In Mexico, Chicanos were meeting
other young Mexicans
00:36:47.172 --> 00:36:49.706
who shared a commitment
to the proposition
00:36:49.707 --> 00:36:53.978
that the Americas didn’t begin
or end at the US-Mexico border.
00:36:56.881 --> 00:37:01.186
For Chunky, Mexico City
was a stunning revelation.
00:37:08.393 --> 00:37:10.929
I was flabbergasted
by the Pyramids,
00:37:12.397 --> 00:37:14.032
the mercados.
00:37:15.900 --> 00:37:17.535
Everything was Mexican.
00:37:19.637 --> 00:37:20.972
This was my roots.
00:37:23.842 --> 00:37:25.977
Where have you been all my life,
you know what I mean.
00:37:33.051 --> 00:37:35.686
You climb the Pyramid of the Sun
and you stand up there,
00:37:35.687 --> 00:37:38.590
open your arms up to the gods, man.
00:37:39.190 --> 00:37:42.560
It was like a whole reincarnation
of you as a person.
00:37:46.431 --> 00:37:48.533
This is what moms was talking about.
00:37:50.935 --> 00:37:52.937
This is where pops came from.
00:37:58.209 --> 00:38:01.378
It was like a little kid
finding a new candy store man,
00:38:01.379 --> 00:38:02.914
you know that he didn’t know existed.
00:38:04.782 --> 00:38:07.018
A few years
before Chunky arrived,
00:38:07.318 --> 00:38:11.456
Mexico City had hosted the first Olympics
to be held in a developing country.
00:38:12.557 --> 00:38:16.561
The exorbitant cost of the games
led to many social protests.
00:38:17.428 --> 00:38:20.130
But the government
was determined to prevent anyone
00:38:20.131 --> 00:38:22.867
from staining Mexico’s moment
in the global spotlight.
00:38:24.602 --> 00:38:26.905
On October 2, 1968,
00:38:27.438 --> 00:38:31.008
the police and military
crushed a student demonstration
00:38:31.009 --> 00:38:33.011
in the Plaza de las Tres Culturas.
00:38:34.345 --> 00:38:38.549
Before it was over,
an estimated 300-400 protestors
00:38:38.550 --> 00:38:41.352
were killed in the Tlatelolco
section of the city.
00:38:44.022 --> 00:38:45.422
Throughout Latin America,
00:38:45.423 --> 00:38:47.991
musicians were putting
their lives at risk,
00:38:47.992 --> 00:38:50.160
protesting oppressive
and abusive actions
00:38:50.161 --> 00:38:52.163
on the part of their political leaders.
00:38:52.530 --> 00:38:56.701
It was during these turbulent times
that Chunky arrived in Mexico.
00:38:58.603 --> 00:39:02.239
That was \'73, it was only a few years
after the massacre in Tlatelolco
00:39:02.240 --> 00:39:06.878
with the students and everything,
and lot of these issues were still hot.
00:39:09.647 --> 00:39:12.649
During this visit he had
the opportunity to attend
00:39:12.650 --> 00:39:15.519
a festival of protest songs...
Of Latin American protest song.
00:39:15.520 --> 00:39:17.287
There was a big concert being held.
00:39:17.288 --> 00:39:18.655
It was a great opportunity
00:39:18.656 --> 00:39:21.658
to take the Chicano struggle
to an international stage.
00:39:21.659 --> 00:39:23.994
And lo and behold
I got there on the day
00:39:23.995 --> 00:39:25.797
that they were having
00:39:25.798 --> 00:39:27.598
this big musical festival in Mexico City.
00:39:27.599 --> 00:39:30.467
The protest music of Latin America.
00:39:30.468 --> 00:39:33.070
And there was all these people.
The whole place was packed.
00:39:33.071 --> 00:39:35.573
It was a political, musical event.
00:40:11.943 --> 00:40:15.613
Mercedes Sosa, Gabino Palomares.
00:40:50.381 --> 00:40:52.482
Los Folkloristas.
00:40:52.483 --> 00:40:57.155
Everybody and anybody that was anything
in protest music at the time was there.
00:41:23.448 --> 00:41:27.150
I got there and one
of the organizers said
00:41:27.151 --> 00:41:29.986
“You know what,
we have all kinds of representation
00:41:29.987 --> 00:41:33.224
here but we don’t have
anybody representing Chicanos.
00:41:33.791 --> 00:41:35.659
Would you like to represent Chicanos?”
00:41:35.660 --> 00:41:39.029
I said “OK.” And I did some huelga
songs and talked about Cesar Chavez
00:41:39.030 --> 00:41:41.710
and how that was all related
to everything that was happening there.
00:42:10.828 --> 00:42:14.231
I realized how serious
protest music was
00:42:14.232 --> 00:42:16.700
and the importance
that it played in their movement
00:42:16.701 --> 00:42:19.303
and it was just as necessary
00:42:20.571 --> 00:42:22.572
to their movement, the protest music,
00:42:22.573 --> 00:42:24.775
as it was for a guerillero
in the mountains
00:42:24.776 --> 00:42:27.512
to have a weapon.
00:42:28.613 --> 00:42:32.916
When I came back to San Diego
after that I was fired up.
00:42:32.917 --> 00:42:36.887
I produced a cancionero,
a song book of protest songs
00:42:36.888 --> 00:42:39.590
called Cantos Rebeldes de las Americas
00:42:40.525 --> 00:42:42.292
and if you looked at the guitar,
00:42:42.293 --> 00:42:45.096
as it goes out,
it transforms into a rifle barrel.
00:42:46.597 --> 00:42:51.501
I began to realize the songs could
be used not just to entertain people
00:42:51.502 --> 00:42:54.838
and get them drunk and get them
happy and hung over,
00:42:54.839 --> 00:43:00.377
but rather also to educate them
and put a consciousness in their minds,
00:43:00.378 --> 00:43:03.947
in their hearts, in their souls,
that they are worth something,
00:43:03.948 --> 00:43:08.452
that they do have value in this life, that
they can struggle for something better,
00:43:08.453 --> 00:43:10.455
and they don’t have
to be put down all the time.
00:43:11.022 --> 00:43:14.559
And that’s why I came back
with all that energy
00:43:16.394 --> 00:43:21.665
That’s when I began to realize…that…
I couldn’t really go back to the Rondalla
00:43:21.666 --> 00:43:26.203
and implement that…it would be better
for me to begin to develop another group
00:43:26.204 --> 00:43:28.038
and the only guy that was
really listening to me
00:43:28.039 --> 00:43:30.006
and learning the songs
with me was my brother Rick…
00:43:30.007 --> 00:43:31.676
so hey there’s two of us.
00:44:02.373 --> 00:44:04.441
I was influenced
by a variety of different things,
00:44:04.442 --> 00:44:08.411
my mother’s music,
Los Trios, the sixties music,
00:44:08.412 --> 00:44:12.382
it was just like a whole capirotada,
a whole mixture of different things
00:44:12.383 --> 00:44:14.051
that began to influence me.
00:44:21.259 --> 00:44:23.228
Chunky was joining a larger
00:44:23.229 --> 00:44:25.195
artistic movement of singers and artists
00:44:25.196 --> 00:44:28.599
emerging out of the movimiento
of the Chicano Civil Rights Movement.
00:44:29.100 --> 00:44:33.236
This included Los Lobos,
Luis Valdez and El Teatro Campesino
00:44:33.237 --> 00:44:37.341
along with talented singers
like Daniel Valdez, Agustin Lira,
00:44:37.875 --> 00:44:42.146
Delia Moreno,
Jesus \"Chuy\" Negrete, and Veto Ruiz.
00:44:43.681 --> 00:44:45.383
They sang about Aztlan
00:44:45.384 --> 00:44:47.083
and the ancestral rights that Chicanos had
00:44:47.084 --> 00:44:48.853
to this legendary homeland.
00:44:50.521 --> 00:44:53.223
Musical groups included
Flor del Pueblo,
00:44:53.224 --> 00:44:57.828
Conjunto Aztlan,
Los Perros del Pueblo and Los Peludos.
00:45:11.142 --> 00:45:13.076
You know things that
we went through kind of led up
00:45:13.077 --> 00:45:15.178
to this corrido right here
that we’re going to do for you
00:45:15.179 --> 00:45:16.479
called the Trilingual Corrido
00:45:16.480 --> 00:45:18.816
because it’s in English,
Spanish and barrio dialect.
00:46:05.563 --> 00:46:08.498
I began to realize
that we had no borders,
00:46:08.499 --> 00:46:12.869
that there were no borders to,
to wanting to appreciate and to play
00:46:12.870 --> 00:46:17.608
different types of music
and later on, as I began to develop,
00:46:17.842 --> 00:46:22.545
I realized that you could take
from both sides of the border,
00:46:22.546 --> 00:46:27.717
and combine them and come up
with a new style of music -
00:46:27.718 --> 00:46:29.887
bilingualism, biculturalism.
00:46:48.239 --> 00:46:53.576
Mexican, Spanish and Spanglish,
the whole song goes back and forth.
00:46:53.577 --> 00:46:56.846
Even though you speak Spanglish,
you understand what’s happening.
00:46:56.847 --> 00:47:02.019
And it was funny, it was
entertaining but it was very heavy.
00:47:17.635 --> 00:47:20.738
Somebody called us to go do a peña
in LA we didn’t have a name yet.
00:47:21.138 --> 00:47:22.706
They asked him the name of the group.
00:47:22.707 --> 00:47:25.642
We’re the \"Los Alacranes Mojados,”
being silly
00:47:25.643 --> 00:47:28.978
and they took it for real and they put
that on the chart over there
00:47:28.979 --> 00:47:32.316
in concert you know in La Peña
in LA in the Haymarket,
00:47:32.650 --> 00:47:34.852
“Los Alacranes Mojados.”
(The Wetback Scorpions)
00:47:35.052 --> 00:47:37.488
They asked Chunky, “Why the scorpion?
00:47:37.788 --> 00:47:41.292
You know why not a dog,
or a, I don’t know a cat, or...”
00:47:42.993 --> 00:47:47.831
and he said, “Well, at that time
like our music was kind of like relevant
00:47:47.832 --> 00:47:50.201
to what the scorpion does,
00:47:51.235 --> 00:47:55.139
where with his tail,
the scorpion injects his venom
00:47:55.573 --> 00:47:56.941
into its prey.
00:47:57.675 --> 00:48:00.411
And with our music,
00:48:00.845 --> 00:48:05.783
we inject consciousness
into the audience with the songs.”
00:48:06.083 --> 00:48:07.817
People would say
why do you use mojados?
00:48:07.818 --> 00:48:11.955
Because we took a negative word
that’s always used in our neighborhood,
00:48:11.956 --> 00:48:15.058
even by our own people, you know
like against our own people.
00:48:15.059 --> 00:48:18.061
You know the undocumented
worker you know, el mojado,
00:48:18.062 --> 00:48:19.797
you know the “illegal alien”
00:48:20.531 --> 00:48:23.833
We would joke about it.
We would joke about being a wetback,
00:48:23.834 --> 00:48:26.303
you know, and do this thing.
00:48:27.505 --> 00:48:29.272
I’m a wetback, you know?
00:48:29.273 --> 00:48:32.242
Because that\'s... that was
what we were thought of.
00:48:32.243 --> 00:48:34.410
We wanted to take that word mojado
00:48:34.411 --> 00:48:37.748
…to give it a positive connotation
and to give it some pride.
00:48:48.425 --> 00:48:50.744
In San Diego there really
00:48:50.745 --> 00:48:53.062
wasn’t a group like Los Alacranes Mojados…
00:48:53.063 --> 00:48:57.734
because at that time, many groups
didn’t create music, Chicano music.
00:48:57.735 --> 00:49:01.004
Music you can dance to,
you can sing to, you can drink to,
00:49:01.005 --> 00:49:05.074
but it had a lot of profound meaning
behind the melodies and the words
00:49:05.075 --> 00:49:07.978
because it talked about
our reality as Chicanos.
00:49:18.989 --> 00:49:21.491
Chicanos created their own space,
00:49:21.492 --> 00:49:22.692
our own identity.
00:49:22.693 --> 00:49:26.129
And the third space,
as it’s referred to,
00:49:26.130 --> 00:49:28.632
is primarily because
we didn’t fit anywhere.
00:49:28.833 --> 00:49:30.518
You know you don’t quite fit
00:49:30.519 --> 00:49:32.202
in Mexico, you don’t quite fit over here.
00:49:32.203 --> 00:49:35.773
We go to Mexico,
we’re pochos or gringos.
00:49:36.006 --> 00:49:39.610
In the United States, we can be here
ten generations, we’re still Mexicans,
00:49:39.844 --> 00:49:41.711
you know,
go back from where you came from.
00:49:41.712 --> 00:49:45.615
So we said OK what do we do now?
We create our own space.
00:49:45.616 --> 00:49:48.619
So that’s where Chunky fits,
you know.
00:49:52.456 --> 00:49:55.860
Chicanos were experiencing
discrimination on many fronts.
00:49:56.927 --> 00:50:00.331
Besides being denied basic
human rights in the United States,
00:50:00.631 --> 00:50:03.834
some Mexicans saw us
as traitors to their country.
00:50:04.835 --> 00:50:08.638
We found ourselves caught
in the middle between two societies
00:50:08.639 --> 00:50:10.774
that simultaneously rejected us.
00:50:11.609 --> 00:50:14.611
Because some of us no longer
spoke fluent Spanish,
00:50:14.612 --> 00:50:17.781
some Mexicans saw us
as “not Mexican enough.”
00:50:18.983 --> 00:50:20.717
They called us “pochos”.
00:50:20.718 --> 00:50:22.186
♪ “Pocho” ♪
00:50:22.987 --> 00:50:26.991
♪ I knew I was Mexican
I looked Mexican ♪
00:50:27.858 --> 00:50:30.527
♪ But why did I have trouble
speaking Spanish? ♪
00:50:32.696 --> 00:50:34.064
♪ “Pocho” ♪
00:50:35.432 --> 00:50:38.736
♪ All the confusion aroused
the curiosity in me ♪
00:50:39.270 --> 00:50:42.339
♪ I began to question
the implications of the word ♪
00:50:43.274 --> 00:50:44.708
♪ “Pocho” ♪
00:50:45.376 --> 00:50:47.511
♪ Does the label really fit me? ♪
00:50:48.312 --> 00:50:49.979
♪ Maybe it does ♪
00:50:49.980 --> 00:50:53.217
♪ And if it does, is it my fault? ♪
00:50:53.584 --> 00:50:58.254
Pochismo, the culture
of pochismo was very prevalent in you.
00:50:58.255 --> 00:51:01.824
I remember my mother correcting
me many times, “Don\'t talk like that,”
00:51:01.825 --> 00:51:03.760
You’re talking like a gang member.
00:51:03.761 --> 00:51:05.996
When I would say the word
“ese, orale” or something.
00:51:06.730 --> 00:51:09.032
You were always being
corrected about the way speak,
00:51:09.033 --> 00:51:11.100
you weren’t speaking properly,
you weren’t speaking right.
00:51:11.101 --> 00:51:13.941
What the hell, but what is the right
language man, you know what I mean?
00:51:14.104 --> 00:51:15.472
♪ “Pocho” ♪
00:51:16.273 --> 00:51:18.041
♪ I began to realize ♪
00:51:18.042 --> 00:51:21.879
♪ That I had absorbed the strengths
of two cultures and lifestyles ♪
00:51:22.680 --> 00:51:24.982
♪ Was that good or bad? ♪
00:51:25.616 --> 00:51:26.984
♪ “Pocho” ♪
00:51:27.551 --> 00:51:28.986
♪ Good, ¿qué no? ♪
00:51:29.787 --> 00:51:32.690
♪ I have an innovative way
of expressing myself ♪
00:51:33.023 --> 00:51:35.292
♪ That relates to both sides
of the border ♪
00:51:36.627 --> 00:51:37.994
♪ “Pocho” ♪
00:51:37.995 --> 00:51:39.562
♪ What’ll it be today? ♪
00:51:39.563 --> 00:51:41.297
♪ Tacos or hamburgers? ♪
00:51:41.298 --> 00:51:43.534
♪ Pedro Infante or the Rolling Stones? ♪
00:51:45.102 --> 00:51:47.570
I got tears in my eyes
the first time that I heard that,
00:51:47.571 --> 00:51:50.741
it was tough. I didn’t speak
English until I started school
00:51:51.141 --> 00:51:53.609
and I didn’t realize that
anybody else understood
00:51:53.610 --> 00:51:56.245
what I went through as much
as, obviously, Chunky did
00:51:56.246 --> 00:52:00.483
and a whole shit load of us did.
But that song brings it out.
00:52:00.484 --> 00:52:04.020
And in our third space, right here
in the middle, we are Chicanos,
00:52:04.021 --> 00:52:07.457
and here’s a place where we’re safe,
where we know who we are,
00:52:07.458 --> 00:52:10.193
we know where we come from,
we know where we want to go,
00:52:10.194 --> 00:52:13.563
and it doesn’t matter what
the other two spaces think of us
00:52:13.564 --> 00:52:15.965
because this is our place,
this is our land.
00:52:15.966 --> 00:52:17.401
♪ You know what? ♪
00:52:18.068 --> 00:52:21.772
♪ I am a pocho. A proud pocho ♪
00:52:22.172 --> 00:52:25.908
♪ Proud because
I have survived cultural denials ♪
00:52:25.909 --> 00:52:28.679
♪ And attacks on my soul ♪
00:52:30.180 --> 00:52:31.748
♪ “Pocho” ♪
00:52:31.749 --> 00:52:35.918
♪ Si mon que yes,
soy Ramón Sanchez ♪
00:52:35.919 --> 00:52:38.121
♪ But better known as Chunky ♪
00:52:38.122 --> 00:52:41.190
♪ A little bit of that
and a little bit of this ♪
00:52:41.191 --> 00:52:44.561
♪ That’s who I am
one bad ass pocho ♪
00:52:44.928 --> 00:52:47.798
♪ Quítate before I get mad, ese ♪
00:53:32.276 --> 00:53:34.944
Chunky told me, you know,
we’re going to record an album.
00:53:34.945 --> 00:53:37.580
We wanted to see if you would play
violin on a couple of tracks.
00:53:37.581 --> 00:53:39.415
And I said sure,
that’d be awesome, you know.
00:53:39.416 --> 00:53:44.587
We did our first album as a group here
in San Diego called Rolas de Aztlan.
00:53:44.588 --> 00:53:47.256
We were thinking about what are we
going to put in the front cover.
00:53:47.257 --> 00:53:49.926
We didn’t want to be just
standing there, you know,
00:53:49.927 --> 00:53:52.296
holding our guitars,
you know, looking pretty.
00:53:52.529 --> 00:53:54.764
So what we said you know
what would be a good picture,
00:53:54.765 --> 00:53:57.767
is Los Alacranes Mojados,
is jumping a fence, right.
00:53:57.768 --> 00:53:59.487
So we start thinking, so where’s
00:53:59.488 --> 00:54:01.204
a good fence around the neighborhood here,
00:54:01.205 --> 00:54:03.540
and we thought you know what,
that’s not right
00:54:03.907 --> 00:54:07.376
because we’d be lying
to the people, if we just jumped over
00:54:07.377 --> 00:54:10.880
a fence right here in the neighborhood,
if we’re going to jump a fence
00:54:10.881 --> 00:54:12.549
let’s jump the real fence.
00:54:16.520 --> 00:54:19.255
So here we go the next day
with our instruments and stuff
00:54:19.256 --> 00:54:21.057
and we found the fence
and we saw an area
00:54:21.058 --> 00:54:22.893
that didn’t have
a whole lot of barb wires.
00:54:24.128 --> 00:54:26.462
It’s on that road
that goes right by the border.
00:54:26.463 --> 00:54:29.866
So people are driving by, they’re slowing
down, like what are these locos doing?
00:54:29.867 --> 00:54:32.935
They’re crossing the border
into Mexico this way?
00:54:32.936 --> 00:54:34.103
That’s crazy.
00:54:34.104 --> 00:54:36.272
Back then I could still
climb a fence, man,
00:54:36.273 --> 00:54:40.343
so here I go up the fence
I’m on top and I throw one leg over
00:54:40.344 --> 00:54:43.446
and I’m holding myself up
and then my arms start getting tired
00:54:43.447 --> 00:54:46.315
and I start going down the fence
against the little jagged thing.
00:54:46.316 --> 00:54:49.519
So I asked them they gave me a towel
then they handed me one instrument
00:54:49.520 --> 00:54:52.021
and the other two posed
on the bottom like we were handing them
00:54:52.022 --> 00:54:54.090
the instruments as we were coming over.
00:54:54.091 --> 00:54:56.025
And so before we know it,
00:54:56.026 --> 00:54:59.363
there’s a bunch of people
on the Mexican side, watching us.
00:54:59.796 --> 00:55:01.631
Right in the middle of doing all this
00:55:01.632 --> 00:55:04.333
we see the immigration
helicopter, the migra coming.
00:55:04.334 --> 00:55:08.437
There’s a jeep hauling ass
right towards us too, immigration.
00:55:08.438 --> 00:55:11.440
A Patrol Officer jumps out
in his green uniform
00:55:11.441 --> 00:55:14.143
with a radio in his hand, and he says,
00:55:14.144 --> 00:55:15.312
“Chunky, is that you?”
00:55:17.447 --> 00:55:19.582
It was a friend of mine
from Blythe, California
00:55:19.583 --> 00:55:21.918
that I went to school
with named Romero Garcia.
00:55:21.919 --> 00:55:25.188
So before we know it, the immigration
guy’s there drinking beers with us,
00:55:25.189 --> 00:55:28.792
and the people in Mexico are sitting
there applauding, and we’re singing,
00:55:29.193 --> 00:55:32.161
and then when we’re done
we look at our ice chest
00:55:32.162 --> 00:55:33.963
and all our beers are gone.
00:55:33.964 --> 00:55:37.166
So, it was, quite a, like I said,
a once in a lifetime experience,
00:55:37.167 --> 00:55:40.571
to be there for the Alacránes
first international concert.
00:55:42.139 --> 00:55:44.674
We started getting a lot of gigs
in the universities,
00:55:44.675 --> 00:55:47.410
the colleges, the junior colleges,
00:55:47.411 --> 00:55:49.345
you know a lot of MECHAs.
00:55:49.346 --> 00:55:51.881
And we stayed pretty busy.
We stayed real busy.
00:55:51.882 --> 00:55:56.185
So it was exciting.
It was a really fun time,
00:55:56.186 --> 00:56:01.557
it was a time where we got to see
things that we may have never seen
00:56:01.558 --> 00:56:05.228
if we just lived in our own areas.
00:56:05.229 --> 00:56:07.129
We experienced different people.
00:56:07.130 --> 00:56:10.800
We experienced what it means to be
Chicano in Denver, versus El Paso,
00:56:10.801 --> 00:56:14.671
versus Phoenix, versus San Diego,
versus Central Valley.
00:56:14.938 --> 00:56:17.373
So it was an eye opener,
00:56:17.374 --> 00:56:20.777
it was an eye opener in terms
of who we are as Chicanos.
00:56:38.328 --> 00:56:40.196
On the national stage,
00:56:40.197 --> 00:56:43.833
the civil rights movements of African
Americans, women, and Chicanos
00:56:43.834 --> 00:56:47.571
led to many victories for these
historically excluded communities.
00:56:48.071 --> 00:56:52.309
Many Americans celebrated these
achievements but not everyone did.
00:56:53.076 --> 00:56:56.345
After Ronald Reagan was elected
President in 1980,
00:56:56.346 --> 00:57:00.016
he and his supporters passed
legislation which scaled back
00:57:00.017 --> 00:57:04.120
federal civil rights protections,
weakened the social safety net
00:57:04.121 --> 00:57:07.591
and redistributed wealth
from the bottom to the top.
00:57:09.559 --> 00:57:11.927
As Chicanos and other
communities of color
00:57:11.928 --> 00:57:13.897
experienced ongoing discrimination,
00:57:14.264 --> 00:57:17.601
Chunky looked for ways to continue
getting his message across.
00:57:17.801 --> 00:57:20.036
We had people that were
against Huelga songs, you know.
00:57:20.037 --> 00:57:22.906
They didn’t want to hear anything
that had to do with Cesar Chavez.
00:57:28.111 --> 00:57:32.214
Some of the schools didn’t want us
to do anything to do with Chavez.
00:57:32.215 --> 00:57:36.119
So we said,
“Okay we won’t do El Picket Sign,
00:57:36.787 --> 00:57:38.455
but we’ll do De Colores.”
00:57:59.943 --> 00:58:02.578
De Colores speaks of many colors,
many colors put together
00:58:02.579 --> 00:58:04.046
to make one beautiful thing,
00:58:04.047 --> 00:58:05.881
like a sarape, you know,
00:58:05.882 --> 00:58:09.386
and the Union was comprised
of many different people, you know,
00:58:09.953 --> 00:58:14.290
Arab farm workers, Filipino farm
workers, Mexican farm workers,
00:58:14.291 --> 00:58:15.758
Anglo farm workers.
00:58:15.759 --> 00:58:18.095
So that was like the sarape
that we were talking about.
00:58:19.196 --> 00:58:22.365
You don\'t feel locked in
or left out of Chunky\'s music.
00:58:22.366 --> 00:58:23.766
You feel included.
00:58:23.767 --> 00:58:26.102
There’s something about
his style of songwriting,
00:58:26.103 --> 00:58:27.803
his style of music-making
00:58:27.804 --> 00:58:30.240
that opens up all the possibilities.
00:58:30.907 --> 00:58:34.944
I think the inclusiveness
that\'s part of Chunky\'s music
00:58:34.945 --> 00:58:38.882
has manifested itself
within the ensemble,
00:58:39.249 --> 00:58:42.485
right, Don Knapp being
the best example.
00:58:42.486 --> 00:58:47.156
When I actually asked if I could join
the group, and we started playing,
00:58:47.157 --> 00:58:49.393
I knew that that\'s
where I wanted to be.
00:59:04.374 --> 00:59:07.076
And Chunky will say
Don Knapp may not be Mexican,
00:59:07.077 --> 00:59:09.780
but he\'s as much Chicano
as anybody he knows,
00:59:11.014 --> 00:59:15.484
understanding the struggles
of the community,
00:59:15.485 --> 00:59:18.355
empathizing with them,
being one with them.
00:59:48.919 --> 00:59:51.320
I knew nothing
but Mexican music my whole life.
00:59:51.321 --> 00:59:53.657
Although I\'m Anglo by blood,
00:59:54.958 --> 00:59:59.929
I was raised as a Mexican
from the age of four years old.
00:59:59.930 --> 01:00:04.134
So everything I did,
I breathe and I spoke,
01:00:05.836 --> 01:00:10.507
everything I did was from my heart
and was from a Mexican background.
01:00:11.007 --> 01:00:15.579
He’s Anglo you know,
from… looking at him.
01:00:16.346 --> 01:00:19.915
But his heart and his soul
and his inspiration,
01:00:19.916 --> 01:00:23.219
the guy carried the Chicanismo
with him all the way,
01:00:23.220 --> 01:00:24.888
especially in music.
01:00:25.255 --> 01:00:27.423
People would listen to the music
01:00:27.424 --> 01:00:30.426
and they could see
this big tall white guy,
01:00:30.427 --> 01:00:32.228
and he\'d say,
\"Okay, Guero, sing a song.”
01:00:32.229 --> 01:00:33.797
And I would sing a song in Spanish.\"
01:00:48.211 --> 01:00:49.612
It was awesome.
01:00:49.613 --> 01:00:53.215
Not only did we play music that
people maybe wanted to hear
01:00:53.216 --> 01:00:58.387
but the message was,
“It was okay to be white.
01:00:58.388 --> 01:01:01.657
It was okay to be Mexican.
It\'s okay to play the music together.”
01:01:01.658 --> 01:01:03.360
Chunky played the crowd.
01:01:03.727 --> 01:01:05.794
It was kind of one
of the things we did.
01:01:05.795 --> 01:01:07.497
We were breaking down those barriers.
01:01:44.200 --> 01:01:46.802
Well, we began to experience
a whole bunch of things, man.
01:01:46.803 --> 01:01:50.040
Number one was that a lot
of people were not really ready to,
01:01:50.874 --> 01:01:53.976
to listen to a whole lot
of protest music man.
01:01:53.977 --> 01:01:58.113
So we began to realize that we had
to have a balance somewhere in there
01:01:58.114 --> 01:02:00.516
if we didn’t want to lose
our crowds and our audiences,
01:02:00.517 --> 01:02:02.685
because people didn’t want
to come to hear you lecture,
01:02:02.686 --> 01:02:04.019
they wanted to hear some music.
01:02:04.020 --> 01:02:06.722
So we had to make them laugh
in between the songs
01:02:06.723 --> 01:02:08.791
because we found that
when people are laughing
01:02:08.792 --> 01:02:10.492
they will swallow things a lot better.
01:02:10.493 --> 01:02:13.095
To a lot of us, in the history
books in this country, Pancho Villa
01:02:13.096 --> 01:02:15.431
is just another fat Mexican
with a mustache.
01:02:15.432 --> 01:02:18.101
Man, there’s a whole bunch
of those, ¿verdad? ¿Qué no?
01:02:18.969 --> 01:02:20.569
They always stereotype
us as looking that way.
01:02:20.570 --> 01:02:22.205
But we know that
we’re not that way, man.
01:02:24.240 --> 01:02:26.442
But one of the greatest generals
in the history of Mexico’s armies,
01:02:26.443 --> 01:02:29.746
Don Francisco “Pancho” Villa and
we dedicate this corrido on his behalf.
01:03:14.090 --> 01:03:16.893
We began to learn to master
01:03:18.328 --> 01:03:22.332
capturing the attention spell
of the audiences, you know.
01:03:24.501 --> 01:03:27.569
It was a learning experience
in many ways with Los Alacranes.
01:03:27.570 --> 01:03:31.373
That was one, music was another,
learning constantly, learning songs,
01:03:31.374 --> 01:03:34.410
learning songs, writing songs,
we began to write songs
01:03:34.411 --> 01:03:36.779
about things that were
happening around us.
01:03:36.780 --> 01:03:38.982
“Chicano Park”, you know,
01:03:39.916 --> 01:03:42.752
“El Corrido del Fil,
“El Trilingual Corrido”,
01:03:43.953 --> 01:03:47.956
even got silly at times, you know,
put love in a different perspective
01:03:47.957 --> 01:03:49.459
with “Chorizo Sandwich”.
01:03:57.767 --> 01:04:00.770
♪ You cheated, you lied ♪
01:04:01.304 --> 01:04:04.307
♪ You said that you loved me ♪
01:04:04.841 --> 01:04:07.744
♪ You cheated, you lied ♪
01:04:08.278 --> 01:04:11.214
♪ You said that you need me ♪
01:04:12.048 --> 01:04:14.616
♪ Oooh ♪
01:04:14.617 --> 01:04:17.921
♪ What can I do ♪
01:04:26.196 --> 01:04:27.964
I remember the night
01:04:28.331 --> 01:04:31.334
I remember the night when I told you
I was hungry for you love, Chata.
01:04:33.169 --> 01:04:35.204
Yes I was hungry for your love, man,
01:04:35.205 --> 01:04:38.308
but what did you do,
what did you do?
01:04:38.541 --> 01:04:40.343
You went in to the kitchen
01:04:41.177 --> 01:04:44.681
you went in to the kitchen and you
fixed me a chorizo sandwich, man.
01:04:46.015 --> 01:04:51.855
♪ Chorizo, chorizo, chorizo… ♪
01:04:52.021 --> 01:04:53.790
♪ Whoa, oh, oh, oh ♪
01:04:54.257 --> 01:04:58.561
♪ Chorizo, chorizo, chorizo… ♪
01:04:59.229 --> 01:05:03.365
We began to understand
performing tactics and techniques
01:05:03.366 --> 01:05:07.370
of how to get across to an audience
and how not to lose an audience.
01:05:07.904 --> 01:05:13.076
♪ Chorizo, chorizo, chorizo… ♪
01:05:13.376 --> 01:05:15.377
♪ Chorizo… ♪
01:05:15.378 --> 01:05:20.850
♪ I’m not a thousand huevos away ♪
01:05:25.021 --> 01:05:29.626
I remember one moment
we were performing somewhere,
01:05:30.460 --> 01:05:32.345
it was around Christmas time,
01:05:32.346 --> 01:05:34.230
my son was maybe four or five months old
01:05:34.531 --> 01:05:37.766
and we were performing
and everybody was outside,
01:05:37.767 --> 01:05:39.903
they were a Caucasian community.
01:05:40.236 --> 01:05:42.237
And so we said, well,
they’re paying for us to play,
01:05:42.238 --> 01:05:43.672
let’s go outside and play for them.
01:05:43.673 --> 01:05:45.273
So we went outside and they all went in.
01:05:45.642 --> 01:05:47.776
So then we said well let’s go in,
and then they all went outside
01:05:47.777 --> 01:05:49.077
and finally the lady comes up and says,
01:05:49.078 --> 01:05:52.549
“You guys stand over there
and don’t move.”
01:05:52.849 --> 01:05:57.920
And it was like really obvious
that we were just background music.
01:05:57.921 --> 01:06:03.560
I believe that Chunky,
in choosing this path for his life,
01:06:03.927 --> 01:06:07.897
I\'m sure that there was sacrifice
and has been sacrifice for him.
01:06:08.598 --> 01:06:12.901
Because it\'s not a career
01:06:12.902 --> 01:06:15.405
that provides...
01:06:17.874 --> 01:06:19.174
Provides well.
01:06:19.175 --> 01:06:23.779
Besides many of the values
of Cesar Chavez that Chunky possesses,
01:06:23.780 --> 01:06:28.585
I think the one is sacrifice
that really personifies Chunky.
01:06:29.285 --> 01:06:31.521
He could\'ve gone on
and done something else.
01:06:32.121 --> 01:06:34.724
Sometimes I wonder, you know,
01:06:36.259 --> 01:06:37.626
why I didn’t do something else.
01:06:37.627 --> 01:06:41.998
Where I could be right now pretty
well off, real rich, you know,
01:06:42.799 --> 01:06:44.801
basking in the sun somewhere.
01:06:46.469 --> 01:06:49.372
I’m not dirt poor.
01:06:51.374 --> 01:06:54.310
I could be better off financially,
01:06:57.213 --> 01:07:00.049
but something just kept me going
in the things that I was doing,
01:07:00.516 --> 01:07:03.253
in the cultural work that I was doing,
01:07:03.586 --> 01:07:05.988
that later on I realized, you know what,
01:07:05.989 --> 01:07:08.790
because there were times
when I doubted myself.
01:07:08.791 --> 01:07:11.461
What am I doing wrong?
Am I doing the wrong thing?
01:07:20.270 --> 01:07:23.805
Chunky was still wondering
if he had made the right choice
01:07:23.806 --> 01:07:26.809
in committing to a life
of service to his community.
01:07:36.986 --> 01:07:39.655
Like many artists inspired
by the Chicano movement,
01:07:39.656 --> 01:07:41.657
Chunky struggled to find a balance
01:07:41.658 --> 01:07:44.861
between his professional career
and his personal life.
01:07:47.196 --> 01:07:50.499
He married Isabel Enrique
and within 10 years,
01:07:50.500 --> 01:07:52.669
the family had grown to six children.
01:07:53.536 --> 01:07:56.138
As Chunky struggled
to provide for his family,
01:07:56.139 --> 01:07:57.807
he took a variety of jobs.
01:08:03.579 --> 01:08:06.915
Assisting every year with the annual
celebration of Chicano Park
01:08:06.916 --> 01:08:09.017
as a member of the Steering Committee,
01:08:09.018 --> 01:08:11.454
being a community liaison
with the schools,
01:08:12.555 --> 01:08:14.424
working on gang prevention,
01:08:14.624 --> 01:08:17.060
teaching music
and coaching little league.
01:08:18.161 --> 01:08:20.829
He scored music
for several documentary films
01:08:20.830 --> 01:08:22.899
including The Lemon Grove Incident.
01:08:25.101 --> 01:08:29.071
His band continued to perform
at rallys, fundraisers, quinceañeras,
01:08:29.072 --> 01:08:30.640
weddings, and prisons.
01:08:30.940 --> 01:08:35.044
Through it all he used art
to build community.
01:08:35.511 --> 01:08:38.448
Many local schools invited
Chunky to come and perform.
01:08:39.382 --> 01:08:43.051
There he saw young people struggling
with many of the same issues
01:08:43.052 --> 01:08:47.557
of identity and racism which he had
confronted a generation earlier.
01:08:51.294 --> 01:08:53.830
And, you know,
all of this is based on one thing, man.
01:08:54.197 --> 01:08:56.265
Orgullo. Pride.
01:08:57.200 --> 01:09:00.737
What everybody here in this room
has right here, man. Pride. Orgullo.
01:09:01.738 --> 01:09:04.172
A lot of times you\'re down
and out, you\'re on the streets,
01:09:04.173 --> 01:09:05.507
you got no money,
your girlfriend left you,
01:09:05.508 --> 01:09:06.976
your boyfriend left you, whatever,
01:09:07.477 --> 01:09:11.380
you know – all bummed out, you want
to cry, you know, feel sorry for yourself.
01:09:11.381 --> 01:09:12.715
You know.
01:09:13.750 --> 01:09:15.851
\"Chale\". But you know what?
01:09:15.852 --> 01:09:17.886
Something keeps you hanging on, man.
01:09:17.887 --> 01:09:20.456
Something pulls you through it.
And what\'s that?
01:09:21.124 --> 01:09:24.159
Pride, ¿qué no? Orgullo. Orgullo.
01:09:24.160 --> 01:09:26.495
They asked me to go do
a presentation at Hoover High
01:09:26.496 --> 01:09:30.232
and I figured I’m gonna talk
to these Mexican American kids.
01:09:30.233 --> 01:09:31.867
I just don’t want to walk in there
01:09:31.868 --> 01:09:34.403
and start singing a whole bunch
of ranchera songs,
01:09:34.404 --> 01:09:36.438
borracho songs,
just like another mariachi.
01:09:36.439 --> 01:09:38.707
What can I go in there
and talk to them about
01:09:38.708 --> 01:09:42.110
and perform to them that will
motivate them to find themselves.
01:09:42.111 --> 01:09:44.180
He was just this, this presence
01:09:44.181 --> 01:09:46.249
of energy, right, that just was amazing.
01:09:47.250 --> 01:09:49.451
And you know he would come
with his guitar,
01:09:49.452 --> 01:09:52.554
and you know as soon as he walked in,
everybody was going you know wild.
01:09:52.555 --> 01:09:54.923
I remember hearing them and thinking wow.
01:09:54.924 --> 01:09:57.292
Wow, this is great… great music,
01:09:57.293 --> 01:10:01.497
because part of the, again,
academic experience was learning…
01:10:02.298 --> 01:10:06.501
learning some, you know,
literature around history of…
01:10:06.502 --> 01:10:08.770
of oppressed peoples in the U.S.
01:10:08.771 --> 01:10:12.340
If you want to learn history,
learn the real history,
01:10:12.341 --> 01:10:15.410
not the history that was
fabricated about something
01:10:15.411 --> 01:10:17.313
because of political reasons.
01:10:17.613 --> 01:10:21.650
And that’s why I got the idea to do
that little chronological history,
01:10:21.651 --> 01:10:25.822
all the way from the pre-Hispanic era
to the present.
01:11:10.366 --> 01:11:15.003
That was the magic, the moment
that I saw him and the group
01:11:15.004 --> 01:11:17.507
as a 17-year-old young woman.
01:11:17.807 --> 01:11:19.474
I think one of the earliest influences
01:11:19.475 --> 01:11:21.743
and one of the greatest
because it was so early on,
01:11:21.744 --> 01:11:25.313
was how he imparted
that example to me
01:11:25.314 --> 01:11:27.983
as a student watching him
perform, and impart this,
01:11:27.984 --> 01:11:32.522
this history, and this culture,
and this pride,
01:11:32.722 --> 01:11:36.458
and feeling that, you know, our people
did something, that we do matter.
01:11:36.459 --> 01:11:40.195
It’s party music.
It’s festive music, celebratory.
01:11:40.196 --> 01:11:43.031
But it’s also consciousness
raising music.
01:11:43.032 --> 01:11:47.770
And so I think it really
stuck with me for, forever.
01:11:54.443 --> 01:11:56.712
The scourge of history
01:11:57.380 --> 01:11:59.148
are on my face
01:12:00.683 --> 01:12:03.019
and in the veins of my body that aches
01:12:10.493 --> 01:12:12.862
I do not ask for freedom.
01:12:14.230 --> 01:12:16.232
We are freedom!
01:12:19.669 --> 01:12:21.469
In 2006,
01:12:21.470 --> 01:12:26.409
Chunky participated in the biggest public
demonstration in San Diego history.
01:12:26.842 --> 01:12:31.180
As the Latino community became the largest
ethnic minority group in the country,
01:12:31.480 --> 01:12:34.884
shrill voices fanned the flames
of bigotry and discrimination.
01:12:35.518 --> 01:12:37.537
We saw a growing chorus of anti-immigrant
01:12:37.538 --> 01:12:39.554
rhetoric across the nation,
01:12:39.555 --> 01:12:42.959
afraid of the increasingly
diverse country we had become.
01:12:43.960 --> 01:12:47.395
Chunky joined over 2 million people
around the United States
01:12:47.396 --> 01:12:50.265
protesting a bill in Congress
which would make felons
01:12:50.266 --> 01:12:52.435
out of all undocumented immigrants.
01:12:52.969 --> 01:12:54.869
Some people can say, you know, that
01:12:54.870 --> 01:12:58.807
“Some of this music that has
social justice lyrics,
01:12:58.808 --> 01:13:00.709
and social justice meaning.
01:13:00.710 --> 01:13:03.778
It’s so passé.
It\'s so ‘60s, it’s so ‘70s.”
01:13:03.779 --> 01:13:07.016
I would say that\'s kind
of a cynical attitude.
01:13:07.483 --> 01:13:11.687
A lot of these social justice songs
are just as meaningful today
01:13:11.887 --> 01:13:15.056
as they were, 20, 30 years ago.
01:13:15.057 --> 01:13:17.226
It\'s never going to go out of style.
01:13:17.994 --> 01:13:21.896
Unfortunately,
injustice will always be around,
01:13:21.897 --> 01:13:24.567
and it will always be in style
in different ways.
01:13:25.534 --> 01:13:29.137
The reason I call myself a “Chunkista”
is because I want to be
01:13:29.138 --> 01:13:32.574
an artist like Chunky that stays active
01:13:32.575 --> 01:13:35.310
and in the movement over
the course of their lifetimes.
01:13:35.311 --> 01:13:38.346
When you bring the people
out to the streets, like today,
01:13:38.347 --> 01:13:43.718
people get a visual idea of how
many people are really upset
01:13:43.719 --> 01:13:45.620
with what\'s going on.
And that\'s great.
01:13:45.621 --> 01:13:48.924
If we could mobilize people
like this all the time,
01:13:49.892 --> 01:13:51.627
we could change the world.
01:13:53.229 --> 01:13:56.365
He’s still doing what he did back then.
01:13:56.632 --> 01:14:00.502
Many individuals have forgotten that.
01:14:00.503 --> 01:14:03.171
Many people don\'t want
to look back, right.
01:14:03.172 --> 01:14:06.675
I think Chunky looks back
with great pride,
01:14:06.676 --> 01:14:08.811
knowing what he\'s been
able to do with himself.
01:14:09.545 --> 01:14:11.781
♪ The picket sign, the picket sign ♪
01:14:12.181 --> 01:14:14.150
♪ I carry it all day with me ♪
01:14:21.424 --> 01:14:23.992
Chunky still plays
these inspirational songs
01:14:23.993 --> 01:14:25.794
from the civil rights movement
01:14:25.795 --> 01:14:29.198
but he finds a way to make them
relevant to current struggles.
01:14:30.066 --> 01:14:32.268
Many young Latinos no longer use
01:14:32.269 --> 01:14:34.469
the term “Chicano” to identify themselves.
01:14:34.470 --> 01:14:37.472
And they know very little about
the Chicano civil rights movement.
01:14:37.473 --> 01:14:39.174
Strike! Strike!
01:14:39.175 --> 01:14:44.180
But Chunky’s music still speaks
to the hearts and souls of so many.
01:14:46.749 --> 01:14:48.550
It may be hard to see at times
01:14:48.551 --> 01:14:51.419
but those earlier movements
achieved many victories,
01:14:51.420 --> 01:14:55.590
using art and imagination to create
community in the battle for justice.
01:14:55.591 --> 01:14:59.327
♪ Strike! Strike! ♪
01:14:59.328 --> 01:15:01.864
♪ Strike! Strike! ♪
01:15:12.475 --> 01:15:14.909
Chunky is much more than a musician.
01:15:14.910 --> 01:15:18.947
So music, I... I think, to him,
was always a tool that he used,
01:15:18.948 --> 01:15:21.884
that he knew strengthened
the people around him.
01:15:37.333 --> 01:15:38.666
He’s the real deal.
01:15:38.667 --> 01:15:43.004
And it’s obvious that he
really is compassionate about
01:15:43.005 --> 01:15:45.440
whatever he’s singing about.
01:15:45.441 --> 01:15:49.644
While he’s singing it, he’s acting it,
and you’re feeling it so you believe it.
01:15:49.645 --> 01:15:53.983
♪ Strike! Strike! ♪
01:15:55.251 --> 01:15:57.051
♪ I carry it all day with me ♪
01:15:57.052 --> 01:15:59.755
♪ The picket sign, the picket sign ♪
01:16:00.089 --> 01:16:03.325
♪ With me throughout my life ♪
01:16:09.498 --> 01:16:12.834
He’s always had three, four,
five balls up in the air,
01:16:12.835 --> 01:16:15.336
and he\'s been tossing ‘em around
and he’s been juggling them.
01:16:15.337 --> 01:16:20.108
That, in and of itself,
takes a toll on people\'s body.
01:16:20.109 --> 01:16:22.377
I haven’t figured out
to what extent but I do think
01:16:22.378 --> 01:16:24.580
there is a certain amount
of denial in his health.
01:16:26.782 --> 01:16:31.019
Because of his sense of social justice
I think he has a tendency to say
01:16:31.020 --> 01:16:33.087
“Hey, it doesn\'t matter.
01:16:33.088 --> 01:16:36.691
This is important enough for me
to make a personal sacrifice
01:16:36.692 --> 01:16:41.764
with my body regardless of how tired
I am or if my voice is going.
01:16:42.031 --> 01:16:45.066
I\'ll go where I can do the most good.”
01:16:45.067 --> 01:16:48.403
Basically when the band started,
when Los Lobos started, we…
01:16:48.404 --> 01:16:50.972
we decided to put
all our electric instruments away
01:16:50.973 --> 01:16:53.708
and concentrate on learning
how to play Mexican folk music.
01:16:53.709 --> 01:16:57.912
And we thought wow, we’re the first
Chicanos to do this you know.
01:16:57.913 --> 01:17:00.448
And then, all along we didn’t realize
that there was a band
01:17:00.449 --> 01:17:02.183
in San Diego doing the same thing.
01:17:02.184 --> 01:17:04.453
♪ Guantanamera ♪
01:17:05.287 --> 01:17:08.123
♪ Guajira Guantanamera ♪
01:17:09.658 --> 01:17:11.994
♪ Guantanamera ♪
01:17:12.695 --> 01:17:15.764
♪ Guajira Guantanamera ♪
01:17:17.266 --> 01:17:21.936
We came down to San Diego
and we met this…
01:17:21.937 --> 01:17:24.339
these wild and crazy guys
that were kind of doing something
01:17:24.340 --> 01:17:26.041
that was kinda close
to what we were doing.
01:17:51.967 --> 01:17:54.068
You know I was watching him
when he was singing today
01:17:54.069 --> 01:17:55.603
and there was that look in his eyes.
01:17:55.604 --> 01:17:58.339
You know when he’s singing it,
he’s believing every word he’s saying.
01:17:58.340 --> 01:18:00.309
You know he’s just incredible.
01:18:12.321 --> 01:18:14.355
The community really loves him,
01:18:14.356 --> 01:18:15.836
and they really cherish what he does.
01:18:17.059 --> 01:18:20.496
You know, I’m proud of the guy.
01:18:20.863 --> 01:18:21.896
I’m proud of him.
01:18:21.897 --> 01:18:23.364
I mean we don’t have
that kind of a connection
01:18:23.365 --> 01:18:24.733
with our community like he does.
01:18:25.601 --> 01:18:27.036
That’s really special.
01:18:35.911 --> 01:18:37.979
In the fall of 2013,
01:18:37.980 --> 01:18:39.948
Chunky was invited to be recognized
01:18:39.949 --> 01:18:42.484
at the Library of Congress
in Washington DC.
01:18:43.552 --> 01:18:45.853
Every year the National
Endowment for the Arts
01:18:45.854 --> 01:18:48.656
honors our nation’s folk
and traditional artists
01:18:48.657 --> 01:18:52.361
for their efforts to conserve America’s
culture for future generations.
01:18:53.395 --> 01:18:55.697
When he first received the invitation,
01:18:55.698 --> 01:18:57.833
it didn’t look like
he would be able to travel.
01:18:58.567 --> 01:19:01.503
But at the last moment,
his doctors gave him the okay to come.
01:19:04.740 --> 01:19:07.076
Chunky had never been
to our nation’s capital.
01:19:07.343 --> 01:19:11.379
Previous honorees include B.B.King,
Flaco Jimenez, Doc Watson,
01:19:11.380 --> 01:19:13.549
Lydia Mendoza, and Bill Monroe.
01:19:14.750 --> 01:19:17.685
So from San Diego, California,
01:19:17.686 --> 01:19:21.789
an artist committed to both
community and conscience,
01:19:21.790 --> 01:19:26.561
a teacher who mentors local youth
and educates students
01:19:26.562 --> 01:19:31.133
through a rich mix of storytelling,
humor and song.
01:19:31.700 --> 01:19:35.370
For his contributions
to the excellence of Chicano music
01:19:35.371 --> 01:19:38.973
and culture,
the National Endowment for the Arts
01:19:38.974 --> 01:19:41.777
honors Ramon “Chunky” Sanchez.
01:19:55.457 --> 01:19:58.360
I want to thank
my wife who\'s here, Isabel.
01:19:58.927 --> 01:20:04.299
I have two sons that are here,
Mauricio and Ramon,
01:20:04.733 --> 01:20:07.268
two daughters, Izcalli, Esmi,
01:20:07.269 --> 01:20:09.672
and my grandson Trey, right there.
01:20:17.513 --> 01:20:20.481
A lot of people didn’t understand,
what is Chicano?
01:20:20.482 --> 01:20:25.386
Well to me, Chicano is not necessarily
someone that was born in a certain place
01:20:25.387 --> 01:20:30.059
but rather a state of mind and
a state of heart and understanding.
01:20:40.769 --> 01:20:43.439
Will you be alright
if I put the guitar in Chunky’s hands?
01:20:52.014 --> 01:20:53.282
Here we go.
01:20:54.983 --> 01:20:56.085
Ready?
01:20:56.485 --> 01:20:57.653
Vamos.
01:20:59.154 --> 01:21:01.622
♪ Well it’s time to shine the light ♪
01:21:01.623 --> 01:21:04.693
♪ On the young souls of the Earth ♪
01:21:04.960 --> 01:21:07.863
♪ Let it shine and illuminate ♪
01:21:08.063 --> 01:21:10.699
♪ The beauty of their worth ♪
01:21:11.033 --> 01:21:13.802
♪ Well it’s time to shine the light ♪
01:21:14.103 --> 01:21:17.138
♪ On the young souls of the Earth ♪
01:21:17.139 --> 01:21:19.908
♪ Let it shine and illuminate ♪
01:21:20.509 --> 01:21:23.144
♪ The beauty of their worth ♪
01:21:23.145 --> 01:21:25.714
♪ We got to educate, yeah ♪
01:21:26.315 --> 01:21:28.117
♪ Not incarcerate ♪
01:21:30.385 --> 01:21:34.990
♪ So the humanity will shine ♪
01:21:35.791 --> 01:21:37.359
♪ Educate ♪
01:21:38.427 --> 01:21:40.596
♪ Not incarcerate ♪
01:21:41.897 --> 01:21:43.766
This was my mission.
01:21:45.434 --> 01:21:47.602
If God put me on earth to do something,
01:21:47.603 --> 01:21:50.205
this is what he put me here to do,
01:21:50.639 --> 01:21:55.010
and I have no other obligation
but to fulfill this mission,
01:21:55.377 --> 01:21:56.979
to the end of my time.
01:21:58.280 --> 01:22:00.047
My mission was not to work in Hollywood.
01:22:00.048 --> 01:22:03.718
My mission was to work
in the barrios, in the fields,
01:22:03.719 --> 01:22:06.088
in the prisons, in the schools.
01:22:06.688 --> 01:22:10.092
Anywhere there was people that needed
to hear something inspirational,
01:22:11.426 --> 01:22:13.662
that’s where my mission was,
and still is.
01:22:14.329 --> 01:22:16.431
And that’s the way I look at it.
01:22:16.732 --> 01:22:19.401
It’s been a mission,
continues to be a mission,
01:22:19.802 --> 01:22:25.374
and I’m still on duty as you say…
still on duty.
01:22:27.042 --> 01:22:29.978
♪ Let it shine and illuminate ♪
01:22:30.379 --> 01:22:32.980
♪ The beauty of their worth ♪
01:22:32.981 --> 01:22:35.484
♪ Well it’s time to shine the light ♪
01:22:35.918 --> 01:22:38.620
♪ On the young souls of the Earth ♪
01:22:38.921 --> 01:22:40.188
♪ Let it shine... ♪
01:22:40.189 --> 01:22:43.325
We lost Chunky
on October 28, 2016.
01:22:43.926 --> 01:22:47.963
He is survived by his wife and five
children and 16 grandchildren.
01:22:48.997 --> 01:22:52.834
Hundreds of friends and family
attended his services in San Diego,
01:22:52.835 --> 01:22:56.371
celebrating his life and work
through three days of ceremonies.
01:22:57.472 --> 01:22:59.842
Chunky was a master storyteller
01:23:00.042 --> 01:23:03.878
whose battle for dignity and justice
is more relevant than ever.
01:23:03.879 --> 01:23:06.247
♪ No need to kill another ♪
01:23:06.248 --> 01:23:08.984
♪ Over a neighborhood ♪
01:23:09.685 --> 01:23:12.220
♪ Vamos mis amigos ♪
01:23:12.221 --> 01:23:14.956
♪ Let’s try some brotherhood ♪
01:23:14.957 --> 01:23:18.260
♪ No need to kill another ♪
01:23:18.660 --> 01:23:20.929
♪ Over a neighborhood ♪
01:23:21.163 --> 01:23:26.168
♪ We got to educate, not incarcerate ♪
01:23:28.237 --> 01:23:33.242
♪ So the humanity will shine ♪
01:23:34.076 --> 01:23:38.080
♪ Educate, not incarcerate ♪
01:23:40.616 --> 01:23:45.354
♪ So the humanity will shine ♪
01:23:45.587 --> 01:23:48.789
♪ Nothing really glamorous ♪
01:23:48.790 --> 01:23:51.360
♪ About living in a cell ♪
01:23:52.361 --> 01:23:54.962
♪ Sometimes you got to wonder ♪
01:23:54.963 --> 01:23:57.832
♪ If you\'re really not in Hell ♪
01:23:57.833 --> 01:24:02.771
♪ We got to educate, not incarcerate ♪
01:24:04.873 --> 01:24:09.678
♪ So the humanity will shine ♪
01:24:09.945 --> 01:24:15.017
♪ We got to educate, not incarcerate ♪
01:24:16.952 --> 01:24:21.790
♪ So the humanity will shine ♪
01:24:22.591 --> 01:24:24.593
♪ The will to want to learn ♪
01:24:25.327 --> 01:24:27.696
♪ In all our hearts we hold ♪
01:24:28.297 --> 01:24:31.332
♪ Like brother Cesar Chavez ♪
01:24:31.333 --> 01:24:34.036
♪ And Dr. King have told ♪
01:24:34.403 --> 01:24:39.207
♪ We got to educate, not incarcerate ♪
01:24:41.276 --> 01:24:45.614
♪ So the humanity ♪
01:24:46.081 --> 01:24:51.186
♪ Will shine ♪