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Public Employee Press
Media Beat Video
Review Latina immigrants battle L.A. sweatshops The
DVD Made in L.A. is the story of three Latina immigrants working in
Los Angeles garment sweatshops. Fed up with poverty wages, being cheated out of
pay, forced overtime and even taking work home, they joined the L.A. Garment Workers
Center.
They devised a novel strategy for confronting Forever 21, an upscale
clothing retailer whose low prices forced them to pay low wages. This video is
about not just the campaign but also the women themselves.
Who can ignore
Lupe Hernandez, a 5-foot-tall dynamo who left Mexico City at 17 and is transformed
by her struggles? Or Maura Colorado, who works here to support her three children
in El Salvador. Or María Pineda, who battles exploitation on the job and
suffers domestic abuse at home as she tries to give her children a better future.
The
film follows Maria, Lupe and Maura as they boycott Forever 21 and file a lawsuit.
The workers held protests in L.A., nationwide and around the world. As they visited
the Statue of Liberty and the Lower East Side Tenement Museum, they saw their
own story in the work and struggles of the immigrant garment workers of the early
1900s. Lupe cried when she realized how little had changed in the lives of immigrants.
As
the legal case and the workers negotiations began to succeed, the garment
plants started to move overseas for lower wages. Lupe, Maria and Maura had to
move on to other jobs.
But the battles had made the women stronger. Lupe
got a job as an organizer at the Los Angeles Garment Workers Center. And
Maria left her abusive husband.
Made in L.A. was featured on
many PBS stations. You can order it at www.
madeinla.com or borrow a copy at the Education Fund Library in Room 211,
which also has more videos and books on this and many other subjects. Ken
Nash, DC 37 Education Fund Librarian | |