Service Learning Journal from October 16, 2011
Activism:
This week we (Lindsey, Carmen, and I) went to Seville for the first time to work with NFWM and AMA. We were very excited to begin our project, and quickly began work on the set for the play AMA is producing. In the play there are two “sets,” one location is a kitchen and another is in a field. To make sure we had a professional looking set, we traced a projected kitchen image and a field image onto two separate drop cloths and began painting them. The hours flew by, and by the end of our time we had completed the field backdrop and most of the kitchen backdrop. Our goal for the following week was to finish our backdrops and make more posters for the play and also for things such as the Poison Hotline and other information.
Reflection:
In our first week of class, we learned, “Knowledge is not neutral” (Women's Rights, Women's Liberation, Women's Studies). Knowledge comes from experience and in turn is turned into an action, proving that one way or another people are not neutral. I think this statement accurately sums up AMA and our group’s goal while we are working with them. AMA has crafted a play to explain the dangers of pesticides, not only for the men who work in the fields that have been sprayed with them, but for the women and children living in the surrounding area. The women of AMA have made it their goal to educate others in Seville, and hopefully all over Florida about the harm pesticides cause, something most people working and living near the fields do not know. The women of AMA are very strong and think very highly of working to create awareness of issues such as this one, to protect the farm workers and their families. I think these women are very brave to take up this fight to ensure safety, and perhaps influence change.
Reciprocity:
I grew up in a conservative and sometimes racist town here in Florida that thrived on the work of lower-class “Mexican orange pickers.” I had not really ever thought much on the issue of farm worker’s safety or on the laws and mandates that are required of companies to keep their workers safe, but I accepted it for what it was and never objected to anyone’s (usually rude) opinions of the farm/plant workers. After interacting with and learning more about their struggles through AMA and NFWM, my mentality has been greatly altered. AMA and NFWM have given me a broader sense of these farm workers and their situations in America. I have been shown through this first hand experience of how hard working these farm workers are and how they are worthy of more respect and deserving of rights than they are often given.
Work Cited
Kirk, Gwyn and Margo Okazawa-Rey. Women's Live: Multicultural Perspectives. Fifth ed. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill, 2010.
Word Count: 473