miércoles, 18 de septiembre de 2019

Discussion about respect G 2

The movie
 Respect
 Instructions:
 Work in pairs.
 Read the description and the introduction to the movie. The click on the link
Watch the movie and answer the questions in pairs. Choose 8 in total.
 Only one student must upload the answers you discussed in pairs.
Description: Cesar Chavez (1927 - 1993) is the United States' best-known Latino-American leader. He is remembered as the head of the United Farm Workers ("UFW") which sought higher pay and better working conditions in an industry that traditionally paid less than a living wage and made its employees work long days outside in the heat or cold, without breaks, without adequate water, and with no toilet facilities. 

However, Cesar Chavez was not a one-dimensional man. In fact, he was a moral pioneer, adopting progressive positions in the second half of the 20th century long before they became popular. He did this by relentlessly extending the ethical principle of "respect" that he first demanded for farmworkers
Introduction to the Movie 
At the beginning of the second half of the 20th century, America and its allies had recently defeated Nazi Germany, Fascist Italy, and Imperial Japan. The U.S. was one of two great superpowers. While it was locked in a Cold War with the Soviet Union, the U.S. had never been more powerful or more preeminent in the world. 

This was a time of great economic expansion in the U.S. Household income increased dramatically from 1940 - 1970 and moderately for the rest of the century. As of 1950, it was clear that the economic hardships of the Great Depression were finally over. 

However, not everyone participated in the new prosperity. Racism, sexism, and homophobia prevented millions from reaching their full potential. In 1950 America was a different place than it is today. Back then, most people accepted the status quo as inevitable and even beneficial. 
Thus:

  • Racist laws targeting Americans of African descent existed throughout the Southeastern U.S.; racist customs and social conventions were adhered to throughout the country;

  • Other minorities, including Latinos, Americans of Asian descent, and Jews, also suffered from discrimination;

  • There was endemic poverty in many parts of the country, especially in rural areas and particularly among migrant farmworkers;
  • Women in the workforce were paid less than men for the same work, were denied advancement, and were subject to sexual harassment; "a woman's place was in the home;"

  • Gays and lesbians were given harsh treatment and were often subjected to physical violence; most gays and lesbians hid their sexual orientation;

  • Migrant farmworkers (of every race and national origin: white, black, Hispanic, Filipino, Yemeni) toiled in the fields for little pay and in miserable conditions; and

  • Children of migrant farmworkers worked in the fields with their parents for much of the year.
Now go to:

Respect for All: Respect is an important value in Hispanic culture — and Cesar Chavez was all about respect. He realized that the farmworkers could not demand respect from their bosses without giving respect to other disadvantaged groups. He applied the ethical principles of reciprocity taught by all major religions. In the Judeo/Christian religions it is expressed as the Golden Rule: "Do unto others as you would have others do unto you" and "Love they neighbor as thyself." Chavez, as an observant Catholic, applied the ethical principles of the Christian religion in his relations with other groups of people and with other sentient beings. This led him to take his progressive positions on women in the workplace as well as on gay gay rights. 
After Watching the Film 

  • Read the following quote from a speech Cesar Chavez gave in 1984.
I'm not very different from anyone else who has ever tried to accomplish something with his life. My motivation comes from my personal life, from watching what my mother and father went through when I was growing up, from what we experienced as migrant workers in California. That dream, that vision grew from my own experience with racism, with hope, with a desire to be treated fairly, and to see my people treated as human beings and not as chattel. It grew from anger and rage, emotions I felt 40 years ago when people of my color were denied the right to see a movie or eat at a restaurant in many parts of California. It grew from the frustration and humiliation I felt as a boy who couldn't understand how the growers could abuse and exploit farmworkers when there were so many of us and so few of them. (Speech to the Commonwealth Club of San Francisco, November 9, 1984)

Discussion Questions: 
Select questions:

1.   What does respect mean? .
Another way to start this discussion is to ask "Does respect have to be earned or is it a given to all?"
2.   What role does respect play in your family? Do your parents or siblings demand respect?
3.   What does an oppressed group have to do to gain respect? 
 (1) Respect is the underlying ethical basis of all rights movements; and

(2) We can't demand equality for our own people while tolerating discrimination against anyone else. 
4.   When an industry insists that its workers perform exhausting mind-numbing repetitive work for 12 hours a day in the heat and the cold, without providing sanitary facilities and without providing adequate water, what does this show about the attitudes of the employers toward the workers? .

5.   What is the problem with sexism? 

6.   What was the relationship between Cesar Chavez' advocacy for farm workers and his advocacy for [ask each one separately: (1) gay rights; (2) women in the workplace; (3) a plant-based diet and animal rights]. 

7.   We've been speaking of people by classifying them into broad groups such as "women," "gays," "farm workers," "Hispanics." Is there a problem with this, and if so, what is it? 


8.   When Cesar Chavez said, "I became a vegetarian after realizing that animals feel afraid, cold, hungry and unhappy like we do" what ethical priciple was he applying to animals? 
 9.   What is the unifying concept among the various ethical stances of Cesar Chavez? Suggested Response: The ethical principle of respect for all sentient beings.

10.   Before he was murdered in 1968, a national leader wrote a telegram to Cesar Chavez referring to Chavez' efforts to help farm workers. 
Who was this man? Do you agree or disagree with what he wrote? Does this also apply to Cesar Chavez' other causes, gay rights, respect for women in the workplace, prohibition of child labor in the fields, and respect for animals?


































Bridges to Reading:

Sal Si Puedes by Peter Matthiessen. 
Links to the Internet:

2 comentarios:

  1. In these times the new generations are not aware of the importance of forming on the basis of the values that maintain a calm and balanced coexistence. The respect is one of the most important values, because when you respect someone you start a good way to socialize, doesn’t matter the occasion you always have to respect if you want the people to respect you, also respect is a feeling of deep admiration for someone or something elicited by their abilities, qualities, or achievements.
    You must respect everybody until they don’t deserve it. Historically, the most affected groups are the minorities. Using a word to refer to a minority or group in general does not represent a problem, as long as no derogatory term is used as a label. The problem would be to start treating someone differently just because they belong to one of these groups and begin to discriminate in some way.
    In families respect is the most important value, we always have to respect each other because for us respect is like support so when we respect also we are helping us, so the respect is always there, in our family we don’t demand the respect because is needless, we always respect without someone asking for it, sometimes there are cases when we are not agree but that’s not an excuse for stop the respect between us, so anyways we always respect each other no matter what, but the true it’s that it was not like this all the time.
    In the past and even in some places today, workers are exposed to really inhuman conditions to work, the attitudes of the employers toward the workers shows a clear lack of awareness and respect for workers, who do not understand how difficult it is for a worker to have to deal with such inhumane working conditions, in addition to poorly paid and receiving abuse, or they understand what are they doing, but they don't feel guilty for the evil they do. Also one of the most remarkable problems that is difficult to change in the mind of people is the sexism or gender discrimination.
    The problem with sexism is that it labels both sexes as good or bad in certain jobs or daily activities without relying on the aptitudes of each one. Sexism does not see how well a specific person could do something, but based on stereotypes formed throughout history, it judges whether this activity should be carried out by a man or a woman. Because of sexism, the world has let great scientists, sportsmen, artists, rulers and other people with great talent go by because of the rejection they received when they wanted to dedicate themselves to something that is not commonly accepted for people of their gender. The unifying concept of the ethical positions of César Chávez is the ethical principle for the respect for each sentient being, including women, children, youth and adults and without forgetting the animals that have been exploited in the name of science, the Sport, fashion and in the name of food, everyone has the right to have a decent life. César applied the ethical principles of the Christian religion in his relations with other groups of people and with other sentient beings, since he put himself in the place of the animals, and realized all the suffering they were going through.
    When you are oppressed it is necessary to raise your voice to gain respect, you must protest but in a peaceful and informed manner. Respect is a right that is reciprocal, we cannot demand it if we ourselves are not the ones who practice it first, if we want to make a movement in favor of rights, we must start by first comply the ethical base: respect. Now we can make the change, the life it’s a God gift and no one can quit us it. The change is independent to the age, children, youth people, adults, we all can make this earth better every day, but it depends on you and the opportunity you take to make the difference.
    Questions answered: 1,2,3,4,5,7,8,9.

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