Join us for the march and rally this August 28th, Saturday, assemble at 
Belvedere Park, East Los Angeles, at 9 am, 1st street and Mednick for march to 
Salazar Park for rally.
 
It is important to commemorate the Chicano Moratorium because it is part of our 
history of resistance that is not always taught in history classes. This event 
is also part of the long struggle of Chicanos for self-determination and 
liberation. Today it is important to continue the fight against the wars in 
Afghanistan and Iraq and to protest the military recruitment targeting Chicanos 
and especially immigrant youth.



Carlos Montes 
August 29th  Chicano Moratorium Organizing  Committee






40th Anniversary of the Chicano Moratorium Against the Vietnam War
A Long History of Struggle against War and Racism

By Carlos Montes

August 29, 2010, marks the 40th anniversary of the historic Chicano Moratorium 
protest against the Vietnam War. On Aug. 29, 1970 over 30,000 Chicanos marched 
down Whittier Boulevard in the heart of East Los Angeles protesting the Vietnam 
War, the high casualty rate of Chicano soldiers and racist conditions in the 
barrios. The participants included youth and families of a mainly working class 
community with delegations from throughout the Southwest. The marchers chanted 
“¡Raza Si, Guerra No!” inspired by the call for Chicano self-determination and 
opposition to the imperialist U.S. war in Vietnam. Many Chicano youth had been 
drafted into the military after being pushed out of high school. The Chicano 
Movement was on the rise after several years of mass actions like the East Los 
Angeles high-school walkouts of 1968, land struggles in New Mexico, strikes by 
the United Farm Workers union, and the growth of new Chicano groups like the 
Brown Berets and MEChA (Movemiento Estudiantil Chicano de Atzlan, a Chicano 
Student Movement of the Southwest).
The mass rally held at Laguna Park by the Chicano Moratorium was brutally 
attacked by the combined forces of the Los Angeles city police and the Los 
Angeles county sheriffs. Whole families were beaten and tear gassed. Youth 
responded by defending the rally with their bare hands against the police. A 
rebellion followed for the entire day, where later Ruben Salazar, a Los Angeles 
Times journalist and Spanish TV news director, was killed by a sheriff at the 
Silver Dollar. He was shot in the head with a tear gas missile projectile 
normally used for barricaded situations.
It is important to commemorate the Chicano Moratorium because it is part of our 
history of resistance that is not always taught in history classes. This event 
is also part of the long struggle of Chicanos for self-determination and 
liberation. Today it is important to continue the fight against the wars in 
Afghanistan and Iraq and to protest the military recruitment targeting Chicanos 
and especially immigrant youth.
Jose Gutierrez was the first U.S. Marine killed in Iraq. He came from Guatemala 
to Los Angeles and then joined the Marines at age 17 even though he had no 
papers. Gutierrez is an example of how U.S. intervention and support for 
Central American militaries trained at the School of the Americas that 
massacred over 200,000 Guatemalans has driven people to the United States. 
U.S.-sponsored counter-insurgency and counter-revolutions in El Salvador and 
Nicaragua are other examples. The U.S. supports U.S. business interests and 
brutal military regimes that attack popular movements and democratic or 
socialist governments. This causes war, poverty, displacement and mass 
migration to the United States.
NAFTA is an example of how U.S. policy has caused mass unemployment and poverty 
in Mexico, forcing millions to come to work in the U.S. and live in horrible 
conditions. Today these immigrants are facing growing numbers of deportations, 
expanded use of local police to track down the undocumented and racist laws 
such as Arizona’s SB1070. The mass migration of Mexicans and Central Americans 
to the U.S. has led to the strengthening of the Chicano/Mexican communities and 
to the growth of a strong mass movement for immigrant rights. Our fight for 
legalization and is part of our historical struggle for equality and 
self-determination and liberation of Chicanos/Mexicans.
This is why we continue our struggle today against U.S. wars and interventions 
like in Colombia, and Plan Merida in Mexico. Also we must support movements and 
governments that are independent and oppose U.S. power, like those in Bolivia 
and Venezuela.
We make a call for principled unity to the community and all the organizations 
organizing for the Chicano Moratorium, to continue the struggle for Chicano 
self-determination. In addition to the the 1970 slogan of “¡Raza si, guerra 
no!” we now add “¡Raza si, Migra no!” and “¡Aquí estamos, y no nos vamos!”
This year’s march and rally is organized by several groups and will take place 
on Saturday, Aug. 28. The march will start at 10:00 am at Belvedere Park (1st 
Street and Mednick) and go to Salazar Park (3864 Whittier Boulevard) for a 
rally. For more information call 213-712-0370.


Read more News and Views from the Peoples Struggle at 
http://www.fightbacknews.org. You can write to us at i...@fightbacknews.org






 




[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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