Picking through history
- Share via
Danette Goulet
With beads of sweat dripping from their small foreheads, the students
looked for water after only an hour of picking string beans in Irvine
early Wednesday.
Just a taste of the labors and conditions endured by migrant workers
in the fields each day was enough for students from Newport Coast
Elementary School to gain a healthy respect for what they do.
“It would get really tiring for a whole day,” said Jess Peterson, 10.
“And I don’t think [migrant workers] could afford sunscreen every day.”
After less than an hour of gleaning the crops for the Second Harvest
Food Bank, Peterson knew he wouldn’t want the job even for a day.
The fourth-grade students were out in Orange County farmer A.G.
Kawamura’s bean fields in Irvine as part of a service learning project
created by the Volunteer Center of Orange County.
Funded by a state grant, the program allowed the center to bring 1,000
fourth-grade students from all over Orange County to the fields this
year.
The program focuses on Cesar Chavez’s life, his values and his
movement, said Shaun Hirschl, director of the youth connection for the
volunteer center.
Chavez, who died in 1993, was the longtime leader of the United Farm
Workers of America, which helped change numerous California laws and
raise wages for the workers.
Hirschl sends a package out to teachers before the day in the fields
with a biography of Chavez’s life and activities for the class to do.
“We learned about Cesar Chavez, a person who helped the workers to get
their rights,” said Mao Takada, 10.
But their work in the fields Wednesday meant more to students than
simply understanding migrant workers’ plight.
“It’s interesting because you get to pick the food to feed people,”
Mao said.
Sam Caruthers, from Second Harvest, was there picking alongside
students, and he explained that the field had already been harvested and
picked over at least twice by farm workers.
Second Harvest gleans off of Kawamura’s harvested crops for its food.
All the crops they gather are cleaned and distributed to the hungry.
“And 4,000 people still go hungry in Orange County every year,”
Caruthers said. Students “are helping. They’re doing some good. All this
would have been plowed.”
The 55 Newport Coast students, along with about 150 others, picked
about 700 pounds of beans, which Caruthers said would feed about 3,000
people.
After they picked for an hour and 15 minutes, a group of high school
students from Santa Ana’s Cesar Chavez High School reflected on the work
in the fields, what life was like for migrant workers and what Chavez did
to help them.
Today, migrant workers are scheduled to make a visit to the children’s
classrooms to share their own experiences.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.