Showing posts with label The Harvest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Harvest. Show all posts

Monday, October 10, 2011

Desperate Children Are Eva Longoria's New Passion in 'The Harvest'


Twenty-five percent of the food we eat in the United States is harvested by children, Eva Longoria said in a phone interview from the set of "Desperate Housewives," now shooting its final season.

Every year, more than 400,000 children work in U.S. fields, according to a new documentary she lent her support to called "The Harvest."

Longoria is supporting the documentary about child migrant laborers not just because of her Latin American roots but also because she wants to know where her food comes from and take responsibility for it.

In the United States, harvesting work tends to be done by migrants of Latin American origin, but Longoria's interest in the subject didn't spring from that, but from the children who are growing up in the fields, the "Desperate Housewives" star says.

"I'm ninth-generation Mexican-American. We have ranches in Texas but you don't have to have that to have compassion," Longoria said. "I eat food and I'm a responsible human being and if you are responsible, you have to know where your food comes from."

"You have to be aware of the practices that are used to get the food we are eating," said the actress, who as executive producer of "The Harvest," raised nearly $1 million for the film, which will be released on DVD Tuesday.

"I've been involved with farm workers advocacy for a long time," she said, "but I recently found out, I didn't know there were so many children working legally in the fields."

"The Harvest" tells the story of three children who work as field laborers in Florida, Michigan and Texas to help their parents.

In the film, one of them, 12-year-old Zulema López, notes that she started working at such a young age, she doesn't even remember her first day. She adds that picking onions in Texas from 5 a.m. to 5 p.m., she made $64 a week.

The child field workers work under an unforgiving sun and in paralyzing cold and run the same risks and suffer the same deprivations as adult laborers, the film shows. López, for example, recounts how she had to throw dirt on a wound to stop it from bleeding. The film also explains how migratory work makes it difficult for children to receive a proper education.

The film has been shown to members of Congress to put a face on a bill sponsored by Rep. Lucille Roybal-Allard, D-Calif., that would raise the minimum age for field work in the U.S. from 12 to 14 years. It also seeks to create penalties for labor infractions against young field workers and reduce their exposure to pesticides.

"We want to use the film to change policy," Longoria said. "Children shouldn't have to choose between school and work."

Longoria says the most touching scene of the film for her is one in which López fears she'll have to work in the fields her entire life, remarking, "I don't even think about having dreams."

"That was heartbreaking," Longoria said. "Her grandmother works in the fields, her mother works in the fields, and she feels stuck and does not see herself leaving the fields."

Based on reporting by the Associated Press.


Monday, June 20, 2011

Eva Longoria lobbies against child labor in the U.S.


Something we love about Eva Longoria is her call to duty by way of activism. The woman appears to be a tireless champion of noble causes that seek the well-being and equality of her fellow human beings. On her most recent call to action, the actress lobbied at our nation's capitol to fight for the rights of children laboring in work camps.

Unfortunately, the agricultural industry is one of the few in which child labor for minors age 12 and older is tolerated. Even more surprising is that there are no limits set on hours worked.

"What occurs in work camps in this country is a tragedy. We can't let this continue in the United States," Longoria said.

In September 2009, the CARE (Children's Act for Responsible Employment) bill was introduced to Congress. The law would establish harsh penalties for employers not complying with child labor laws and impose a five-year prison term for those who willfully and repeatedly violate child labor laws that would result in the serious injury or death of a child.

The law would also raise the standards regulating the level of pesticides child laborers are exposed to. "Children laboring in the fields do so at a young age and for longer hours than their peers working in other industries. We have to end this unacceptable double standard," said California Democratic Congresswoman Lucille Roybal-Allard, the main proponent of the bill.

The film 'The Harvest,' produced by Longoria, focuses precisely on the subject. 'The Harvest' examines the daily lives of migrant children working under such conditions, focusing on three Latino children ages 12, 14 and 16. The children are among an estimated 400,000 toiling in the United States.

The film shows how the three travel thousands of miles with their families, dealing with extreme weather conditions, apart from the dangers involved in their odysseys and the pain and emotional disconnection brought on from the children's separation from family and loved ones.

See some of the footage from 'The Harvest.'


The Harvest/La Cosecha from Shine Global on Vimeo.

Source Rafael Abreu


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