Record #: R2021-554   
Type: Resolution Status: Adopted
Intro date: 5/26/2021 Current Controlling Legislative Body:
Final action: 5/26/2021
Title: Tribute to late Marcos Muñoz
Sponsors: Rodriguez, Michael D.
Attachments: 1. R2021-554.pdf
MEMORIAL RESOLUTION HONORING THE LIFE OF MARCOS MUNOZ
WHEREAS, Marcos Munoz, activist, husband, father, mentor, and friend, peacefully passed into heaven on May 15, 2021, at the age of 80; and
WHEREAS, The Chicago City Council has been informed of Marcos' passing by the Honorable Michael D. Rodriguez, Alderman of the 22nd Ward; and

WHEREAS, Marcos was born in Cuidad Acuna, Coahuila, Mexico on April 25, 1941; at the age of 13, he crossed the border to the United States to look for work to help feed his family, and was hired to feed farm animals on a ranch, where he slept in a barn and made $3.00 a day; and

WHEREAS, After working on the ranch for six months, Marcos decided he wanted to return home, and asked for his pay; the rancher he was working for said he would pay Marcos in the morning, but that next morning at 4:00 a.m., immigration authorities woke Marcos and handcuffed him; Marcos asked the immigration authorities to allow him to collect his pay, and they let him walk to the rancher's home, but the rancher never opened the door; Marcos was deported penniless, and came back to the United States seeking revenge; and

WHEREAS, Marcos worked the migrant trail from Texas to Colorado, Arizona, California, and Washington State; in 1965, Marcos met Cesar Chavez and went on strike with the United Farm Workers (UFW), thinking the union was like him, seeking revenge, before coming to understand the importance of non-violent, peaceful protest; and

WHEREAS, Taking the lessons he learned from striking with the UFW, Marcos successfully led the grape boycott in Boston from 1968 to 1971, helped establish the ranch committees in Arvin and Lemont after the first contracts were signed in 1970, and became the first East Coast Boycott Coordinator in 1971 to 1972; he was then sent to Chicago as the Midwest Boycott Coordinator from 1972 to 1975; and
WHEREAS, After working with the UFW, he went on to become a Steel Worker for 11 years before taking a job at Cook County Hospital as ...

Click here for full text