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That's Not Fair! / No Es Justo!: Emma Tenayuca's Struggle for Justice/La lucha de Emma Tenayuca por la justicia (2008)

par Carmen Tafolla

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Biography of Emma Tenayuca, who, in 1938, led 12,000 poor Mexican-American workers in a strike for better wages and living conditions.
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Wonderful story for a little kid. Honestly, I teared up a little reading it too. As a little girl, Emma Tenayuca saw other kids who were poor, or who couldn't read; she said, "That's not fair!" and worked in her way to change things. "That's not fair!" is a refrain that little kids can understand, and it ties together her work as a little kid and her work as an adult. Little kids learn that when something's not fair, they can do something to fix it. ( )
  adaq | Dec 25, 2019 |
This bilingual book tells the story of the labor organizer Emma Tenayuca, who, through her work as an educator, speaker, and labor organizer, was known as “La Pasionaria.”

In the 1930s Texas pecans accounted for approximately 50 percent of the nation's production, with nearly 400 shelling factories in San Antonio alone! But it was one of the lowest-paid industries in the United States, with a typical wage ranging between two and three dollars a week. According to the Texas State Historican Association, "Working conditions were abysmal-illumination was poor, inside toilets and washbowls were nonexistent, and ventilation was inadequate. Fine brown dust from the pecans permeated the air, and the high tuberculosis rate of San Antonio-148 deaths for each 100,000 persons, compared to the national average of fifty-four-was blamed at least partially on the dust.”

In 1938, Tenayuca, only 21 years old, led 12,000 workers in a strike of pecan shellers (mostly Hispanic women) in San Antonio, Texas. Historians have described this as the first successful large-scale act in the Mexican-American struggle for civil rights and justice.

The workers who picketed during the strike were gassed, arrested, and jailed. It ended after thirty-seven days when the city's pecan operators agreed to arbitration. [Over the next three years, cracking machines replaced more than 10,000 shellers in San Antonio shops when the plant owners mechanized operations to avoid the higher labor costs.]

Tenayuca also founded two international ladies garment workers unions, and organized a protest of the beating of Mexican migrants by United States border patrol agents. She was arrested several times, and finally had to leave Texas to ensure her safety. She is now honored in Mexican-American history, but barely known in the United States.

The book depicts some of the injustices against Mexican-Americans that Emma encountered as a young girl in San Antonio. She felt angry: "She saw so many people go to work when it was still dark and not come home again until late at night. Many worked so many hours that they were coughing and sick, and still they did not earn enough to feed their children."

Emma refused to stand by and do nothing, and became an active advocate for justice in her early teens. Young readers will be inspired by how, with enough passion and commitment, even one young person can make a difference.

The illustrations by Ybáñez echo traditional Mexican mural art, using bold colors and stylized shapes.

At the back of the book, there are additional resources on Tenayuca, including pictures and a more detailed biography. ( )
1 voter nbmars | Mar 30, 2012 |
Wonderful story for a little kid. Honestly, I teared up a little reading it too. As a little girl, Emma Tenayuca saw other kids who were poor, or who couldn't read; she said, "That's not fair!" and worked in her way to change things. "That's not fair!" is a refrain that little kids can understand, and it ties together her work as a little kid and her work as an adult. Little kids learn that when something's not fair, they can do something to fix it. ( )
  lquilter | Nov 7, 2011 |
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