A Labor Day tradition
Suzie Harrison
Why do workers get time off to honor Labor Day?
That’s a question the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship in Laguna
Beach will try to answer during its 10:30 a.m to noon service on
Sunday.
During the Labor Day service and celebration, the fellowship will
delve into the history of the labor movement in the U.S. that dates
back to the mid-1800s. Started 10 years ago by the church’s social
committee chair, Jean Raun, the event has become a holiday tradition.
“The idea is that we really want to remember the sacrifices of
people so many years ago that got us where we are today,” Raun said.
Raun pointed out that givens such as a 40-hour work week,
vacation, overtime, retirement and health benefits were unheard of a
century ago and are now sometimes taken for granted.
“The main thing is to remind us once a year that there were people
who gave their lives for the labor movement,” Raun said.
Some of the conditions workers had to endure seem unfathomable
today, even though they do not date back terribly far. At the turn of
the century, according to one story Raun tells, women working at a
sweatshop in the garment industry were locked in under horrible
conditions. When the building caught on fire, they had no way of
getting out and all 140 of them died in the fire.
This Sunday the church will have as its guest speaker Reina
Schmitz, who is an organizer for the Service Employees International
Union, responsible for the successful Justice for Janitors campaign.
“These people are the most vulnerable and we tend to want to
support those groups,” Raun said.
Now, Raun added, conditions have improved in a lot of areas.
“There are people in this fellowship who are really pretty active
in the Labor Movement who remember those times and want to keep them
alive,” Raun said.
During the service the church honors people who have been
significant in helping further the movement.
“People don’t know the history; an example is the unions in the
1940s feather bedding -- they were so afraid of technology that with
advancement people would lose jobs. We want people to understand it
was a big fight,” Raun said.
Events such as the 1894 Pullman strike, the Taft Hartley Act and
people like Joe Hill helped fight the exploitation of labor, she
said.
“We advocate a sincere and honest look at what we can do to
change. We’re not afraid to take on issues a lot of other churches
avoid,” church President Daga Krackowizer said.
The Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Laguna Beach is at 429
Cypress. To contact the church, call 497-4568.
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