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You are here: Home / LATINOPIA HERO JORGE BUSTAMANTE

LATINOPIA HERO JORGE BUSTAMANTE

April 3, 2021 by Tia Tenopia

En Paz Descanses Jorge

He introduced himself to me in most modest terms.

He walked into the huge cafeteria at John Kennedy High School in San Antonio’s southwest side off General McMullen Drive looking for the “Lideres de MAYO” he said.  Someone brought him to me as I was one of the 5 “lideres” of the Mexican American Youth Organization (MAYO). He introduced himself to me in most modest terms, “Soy Jorge Bustamante. Vengo de Notre Dame. Quiero saber del Movimiento Chicano.”  At that moment we were well underway with our Raza Unida Summit for that Saturday in the spring of 1968. MAYO did these one-day sessions as an organizing tool. People would come to discuss by topic of their choice in the morning sessions some problem we faced in the barrios of the town we were in for that event, this time San Antonio. In the afternoon, the same people in each session would then have to discuss solutions to the problems and report back to us, los lideres de MAYO, in writing what we should do about them. With these reports by topic, we drafted a plan of action by our choice of priority which was read out loud to everyone. We then said, this is what we are going to do beginning next weekend. The number one problem were the terrible schools attended by Chicano kids in San Antonio. The number one solution was to organize boycotts by students at these schools. This priority item led to the school walkouts in Lanier, Fox Tech, and Edgewood High schools. Little did we know that about the same time across the country in Los Angeles Chicano kids in five high-schools were also making plans to walkout of schools.

Bustamante wrote his dissertation at Notre Dame on his experiences while crossing into the US from Mexico without papers.

Jorge Bustamante asked how many of these Raza Unida Summits we held and why we used the terms Raza and Chicano. By then we only had done two other summits in Kingsville Texas and Laredo, Texas.  In Kingsville, the result was a boycott of Humble Oil Company, now known as Exxon, for job discrimination against Chicanos, and in Laredo it was about the racist and cruel treatment by Border Patrol agents toward Mexican immigrants. We blocked the bridge at the middle so the Mexicans couldn’t arrest us, and neither could the US police; we just moved one direction or the other depending which police were coming toward us. We never got around to defining the words he wanted. Instead, he explained to me that little was known about Chicanos in Mexico, but he also pointed out that Chicanos knew little about Mexico. Bustamante was writing his thesis and later his dissertation at Notre Dame on his experiences while crossing into the US from Mexico without papers.  For now, he wanted to know what support we could give him because he wanted to start a class on Chicanos in the United States at the National University of Mexico in Mexico City. I said, Nada, because we were trying to do that at the University of Texas at Austin and not having much luck. And just like we eventually did begin a Mexican American Studies program at UT Austin so did Bustamante at the UNAM as he called it in the DF. That is how I met Jorge Bustamante Fernandez and continued the relationship for the next 52 years. Our last project was to create a university in Baja California with a focus on Mexicans in the United States and Canada; the other Mexico and he and I called it. In 1982 he founded another university located south of Tijuana, Baja California Mexico, El Colegio de la Frontera Norte. (COLEF)

In 1982 he founded another university located south of Tijuana, Baja California Mexico, El Colegio de la Frontera Norte. (COLEF).

Bustamante was a remarkable man. He was a lawyer before he became an academic. Like me he preferred being a scholar than a lawyer, an activist more so than a bureaucrat, a human rights advocate more than a theorist. He was a very able do’er.  When Luis Echevarria became President of Mexico, he personally made it his priority to get us access to the president. That is how I was able to get the Becas Para Aztlan program, full scholarships at Mexican universities for Chicanos to study and become medical doctors, and a few PhDs.  That is how I got funding to have two movies done on Chicanos, the one Jesus Trevino made, Raices de Sangre, about the deaths of Mexican immigrants left locked in a U Haul truck near Del Rio, Texas, and the other movie about Reies Lopez Tijerina, El Chicano. That is howI got the Enciclopedia de Mexico to include a section on us living in the United States. That is how I got hundreds of books in Spanish for Mexican prisoners held in US penitentiaries and into public schools with bilingual programs. That is why the Aguila Azteca awards have been granted to dozens of Chicanos, the highest honor Mexico can give a non-Mexican national. During the years, Bustamante helped us get access to the Mexican President in Los Pinos, we met with him and other high ranking Mexican officials more than any Chicanos had ever been to the White House or met with the U.S. President.

Bustamante helped get funding for the feature film Raices de Sangre about border trafficking of immigrants.

A major contribution Bustamante made, among many, was on human rights and immigrant labor reform.  He opened the door to several Mexican presidents for us, particularly Ernesto Galarza, to lobby against re-introducing Bracero Labor contracting. He started the monitoring of immigrant labor crossings along the US-Mexico border and that information is now the official Mexican data on Mexican migratory labor. The United Nations Human Rights Commission named him a Special Rapporteur on Mexicans in detention in the United States.   The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), a non-governmental entity named him official Correspondent on international migratory issues given his expertise of Mexican labor.

For many years he taught at Notre Dame University, his alma mater, and at mine, the University of Texas at Austin. He wrote hundreds of Opinion Editorials, dozens of articles, and books, and was honored with Professor Emeritus status by both the COLEF and Notre Dame. He was dedicated to his family and his students. The day he died he was to teach his seminar on International Migrations and Human Rights. Now, several of us are going to finish the graduate course for him. My topic will be on the Flores v. Reno case about minors in detention, family separations, and the Settlement Agreement repeatedly violated by the US government. So much for the rule of law the US reminds the world, Jorge probably would have said.

______________________________________

Copyright by José Angel Gutiérrez. Photo of Jorge Bustamante meeting with Rodolfo Echevrria courtesy of Jesús Treviño. All other photos courtesy of photo archivist Alfonso Caraveo, El Colef and used with his permission.

 

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