Cesar Chavez was an American farm worker labor who was a leader and civil rights activist. Later, in 1962, Chávez founded the National Farm Workers Association (NFWA), later renamed the United Farm Workers (UFW), which became the voice of migrant farm workers throughout the United States. Cesar Chavez tactics were successful because his childhood experiences with discrimination made him get the courage to fight for their rights; besides he became passionate about improving the way of life for farm workers and for his people; additionally he also used nonviolence tactics, for example boycotts and strikes, nevertheless when the California Senate considered a bill to memorialize Chavez by making his birthday, March 31, a state holiday, the masks came off. The Senate approved the bill, 23-0, and sent it to the Assembly. But 16 senators abstained. The dissenters, Republicans, who opposed the bill, didn't even have the guts to make a counter-argument for fear of appearing anti-Latino, given the affection that many, but not all, Latinos feel for Chavez. This fear is not unfounded; Latino voters make for a high percentage in California today.
In relation to Chavez childhood, he was the victim of discrimination in his early childhood education in fact; he and his classmates were not allowed to speak Spanish while at school. In the integrated schools Chávez attended, minority students were treated like foreigners and constantly encountered racism - from "whites only" signs to being hit with rulers for speaking Spanish. As the son of a migrant farm worker, he had attended thirty-seven different schools by the time he graduated from eighth grade. Chávez did not attend high school. When his father had an accident that made him unable to work in the fields, Chávez quit school to help support his family. However, education continued to be important to him, and, as an adult, Chávez became an advocate