“Make us hungry for justice!”

150 Farmworkers and people of faith gather in Naples to celebrate the breaking of a month-long rolling fast by Florida faith leaders, follow service with action at nearby Wendy’s…

This past Sunday — nearly twenty years after the late Bishop John Nevins of the Diocese of Venice administered the host to six farmworkers from the CIW as they broke their historic month-long fast in an unforgettable service in Naples — 150 farmworkers and people of faith from around Southwest Florida gathered to break a thirty-day rolling fast undertaken by nearly 40 Florida religious leaders throughout the month of July.  The Interfaith Service and Action for Farmworker Justice was a living embodiment of the shoulder-to-shoulder, decades-long commitment between people of faith here in Southwest Florida and their farmworker neighbors to fundamentally transform poverty and abuse in the fields.  It also served to forge a collective commitment to the hard work ahead that will be needed to bring Wendy’s into the Fair Food Program, the necessary next step towards an agricultural industry in which all women work free from violence, and where all workers are treated with dignity.

The day’s events were organized by the Alliance for Fair Food, so we turn to the AFF for a report from the moving afternoon of faith in action:

The service, held at Naples UCC in partnership with the Coalition of Immokalee Workers, the Alliance for Fair Food, Temple Shalom, the Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Greater Naples, and St. Mark’s Episcopal Church reminded all present that true faith must be put into action.  The service began with Julia de la Cruz of the CIW and Rev. Beverly Duncan of Naples UCC grounding the gathering in the reality of farmworkers in nearby Immokalee: Wendy’s, the third-largest hamburger chain in the world, has moved their purchasing from Florida farms implementing the Fair Food Program to farms in Mexico where human rights violations are rampant and go unchecked; in so doing, they are profiting from the desecration of the humanity of farmworker families from Immokalee to Mexico which has long plagued the industry.

With the remembrance of the reality of farmworker neighbors fixed firmly in the minds of all congregated, evangelical pastor and author Brian McLaren offered a prayer that God would “make us hungry and thirsty for justice,” speaking to the heart of fasting’s spiritual significance and lifting up the vision of all religions for a world in which justice is realized.

Invoking a long history of people of faith acting for justice, Cantor Donna Azu of Temple Shalom read from Isaiah 58:6-11: “Is this not the fast I have chosen, to undo the bonds of wickedness?”  Wesley Snedeker, student pastor at Naples UCC and seminarian at Chicago Theological Seminary, followed with a reading from Matthew 25:31-40, in which Jesus tells his disciples, “Whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you did for me.”  Rev. Roger Grugel of the UU Congregation of Greater Naples then illustrated the profound connections between the work of abolitionist Frederick Douglass – enslaved ‘til he was twenty years old, he went on to lead struggles for abolition, women’s rights, and economic justice throughout his entire life – and that of farmworkers fighting for their own dignity today.  

The Rev. Roger Grugel of the UU Congregation of Greater Naples speaks at Sunday’s service, quoting Frederick Douglass: ‘Those who profess to favor freedom, and yet deprecate agitation, are people who want crops without plowing up the ground.”

The hundreds-year-long struggle for justice, the call of faith to act, the reality farmworkers are facing –  all was brought home in a potent sermon by Lupe Gonzalo of the CIW.  Here we offer just a small excerpt (you can read the entire sermon here):

Lupe Gonzalo of the CIW delivers the sermon at Sunday’s Interfaith Service and Action for Farmworker Justice.

“Together, we are showing Wendy’s that we are not alone, that we are not going to permit Wendy’s to support violence against women … Let your hearts reach out and call upon them, human being to human being, to become part of this new world of justice we are creating together. 

Now our voices sing the melody of hope, our tears have risen as strength. Violence against women must stop: Let us keep fighting for justice and let God guide our path.”

With her words lingering in their minds, over two dozen members of the Coalition of Immokalee Workers and nearly one hundred members of over a dozen United Church of Christ, Lutheran, Catholic, Presbyterian, Jewish, Episcopal, and Quaker congregations from Cape Coral to Marco Island processed forward to leave on the altar flowers tied to messages they’d written to Wendy’s representing farmworkers’ dream of ‘shalom’ – wholeness, restoration, and peace for all people. 

In closing, Wesley Snedeker echoed the vision of Lupe’s sermon with these words:

“We recognize and celebrate and bless the progress that has been made [in the agricultural industry due to the FFP], but God knows we don’t stop there. This is about a cultural change, a national change. This is about rearranging and overcoming the structures that keep so much from many so that it can be retained for a few. May we build in our nation a just system of labor that guarantees the rights and fair compensation for all involved. That mission continues here with us … To do the work of God as God intends us to do it, we have to go outside.”

And so, propelled by the energy of the service, the group went en masse to a local Wendy’s in public witness to deliver the flowers and messages created.  As attendees prayed, sang, and marched, nearly 50 additional local supporters joined the crowd. 

Thunder rumbled overhead, and the ánimo of the action became even more joyful and insistent. 

Buoyed and determined to communicate the reason for such action to Wendy’s, Silvia Perez of the CIW led a delegation of Marilé Franco of Florida Gulf Coast University and Josh Baudin of St. Mark’s Episcopal Church to speak with the store manager. 

They were barred from entry by men guarding the door who refused to accept the letter or even discuss its contents, reminiscent of Wendy’s executives’ refusal to even speak with farmworkers. 

Undeterred, the delegation returned to join the crowd, reminding those gathered that though managers may have cowered today, Wendy’s will surely hear the group’s message as all the written messages would be sent to Wendy’s headquarters in Dublin, OH and someday soon, as we continue to put faith in action, Wendy’s will join the Fair Food Program.  With commitment by the Southwest Florida faith community to sustain this struggle reaffirmed through the day of prayer and action, those gathered dispersed.

As Lupe Gonzalo of the CIW exhorts us in her sermon:

The gospel of Matthew reminds us that it is about what we do when we see another of us imprisoned, hungry, suffering.  It is about what we are doing to build a new kind of economy, a structural solution to the immoral operations of supply chains that chew up human beings.  And your witness as the religious community, your willingness to unite together with us, demonstrates the kind of world God longs for.

Strengthened by this month of fasting undertaken by the Florida Faith network of the Alliance for Fair Food, let us continue unfailing in the struggle for justice, dignity, and a new economy that is built upon our morals rather than on the backs of our brothers and sisters.  “Amen, and may it be so!”

On a final note, here is a bonus photo album of even more beautiful photos from Sunday’s service and action!