By Louis Sahagun
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
[Originally publish September 25, 2007, of the Los Angeles
Times California Section, Page B-1. Reprinted here by the California Disability
Community Action Network (CDCAN) at www.cdcan.us]
In honor of trailblazing newsman Ruben Salazar's relentless efforts to
chronicle the complexity of race relations in Los Angeles, the U.S. Postal
Service in 2008 will issue a commemorative stamp of the former Los Angeles Times
reporter and columnist.
"He
was a groundbreaker for Latinos in this country, but his work spoke to all
Americans," Postmaster Gen. John E. Potter said Monday. "By giving
voice to those who didn't have one, Ruben Salazar worked to improve life for
everybody. His reporting of the Latino experience in this country set a standard
that's rarely met even today."
It was the way Salazar died that made him a martyr to many in the Mexican
American community. His head was shattered by a heavy, torpedo-shaped tear gas
projectile fired by a sheriff's deputy during a riot Salazar was covering in
East Los Angeles on Aug. 29, 1970.
Salazar was 42.
"Ruben Salazar put an indelible stamp on the profession of journalism in
Los Angeles," said Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa. "From the
battlefields of Vietnam to the streets of East L.A., he reported the news with a
rare combination of toughness and humanity. It's great to finally see his legacy
honored on a national level with the issuance of this postage stamp."
Tens of millions of the first-class 41-cent stamps will be issued some time next
year, Postal Service officials said. It will be among five stamps honoring U.S.
journalists to be officially unveiled in Washington on Oct. 5.
"Ruben Salazar was a courageous and pioneering journalist, and we were
honored to have him as a colleague at The Times," said Los Angeles Times
Publisher David Hiller. "This commemorative stamp is a fine tribute to his
legacy that lives on in the communities he served so resolutely."
Parks, schools, libraries and highways have been named after Salazar, and books,
murals, plays and films have been inspired by his life.
Media and corporate foundations each year donate millions of dollars to honor
Salazar through scholarships and awards.
Some Mexican Americans called him la voz de la Raza, the voice of the people,
and his often blunt columns spoke to the desires and frustrations of a
community. The year he died, he wrote:
"Chicanos feel cheated. They want to effect change. . . .
"That is why Mexican American activists flaunt the barrio word Chicano --
as an act of defiance and a badge of honor. Mexican Americans, though large in
numbers, are so politically impotent that in Los Angeles, where the country's
largest single concentration of Spanish-speaking live, they have no one of their
own on the City Council."
When told that Salazar was to be honored with a stamp, Ray Reyes, principal of
Ruben Salazar High School, a continuation campus of 260 students in Pico Rivera,
said, "Awesome! I always wear my Ruben Salazar staff shirt on Fridays, and
it's amazing how many people know who he was -- and I'm talking about students
who weren't even born when he was writing his columns."
Postal Service officials said it was supporters like Olga Briseņo, director of
the University of Arizona's Media, Democracy & Policy Initiative, who made
the idea of a commemorative stamp a reality.
Over the past two years, Briseņo and a small army of Latino studies students,
elected officials, organizations and entertainers, including members of the band
Los Lobos, collected 10 pounds worth of petitions and resolutions, which were
dispatched to the Postal Service.
"We never gave up," Briseņo said. "We anticipated every possible
way they could turn us down, then filled in those gaps."
Salazar was 8 months old when his parents moved from Juarez to El Paso, where he
became a naturalized citizen. He attended the University of Texas at El Paso and
earned a journalism degree.
He got his start in 1955 at the El Paso Herald-Post. In 1963, four years after
he stepped into the Los Angeles Times newsroom, Salazar won awards for a
hard-fisted series examining problems and issues that still plague the Latino
community today: substandard education, disproportionate high school dropout
rates, immigration and the search for identity in U.S. society.
As a Times correspondent in the 1960s, Salazar covered the Dominican Republic,
the Vietnam War and Mexico.
In 1969 he returned to Los Angeles to report on the Mexican American community.
In January 1970, he left The Times to become news director for the
Spanish-language television station KMEX. He was labeled a left-leaning Latino
agitator by police, but that was an unlikely description of the man who had
married a white woman, lived in an Orange County home with a swimming pool and
called himself "middle class Establishment."
On a sweltering, smog-shrouded Saturday afternoon, about 20,000 marchers who had
gathered in East Los Angeles to protest the Vietnam War clashed with sheriff's
deputies. When the smoke cleared, millions of dollars worth of property had been
damaged, 60 people were injured and three people were dead, including Salazar.
His death jolted those who admired him. Among them was Frank Sotomayor, a
reporter with Army Stars and Stripes, who had arranged to meet Salazar for a job
interview.
"On the day I was discharged from the Army, I opened the San Francisco
Examiner and saw a story on the bottom of the front page saying Salazar had been
killed," recalled Sotomayor, associate director of USC Annenberg's
Institute for Justice and Journalism.
"As Mexican Americans," Sotomayor said, "we felt he spoke for us
-- that he reflected what was in our heads and in our hearts, even if we didn't
necessarily agree with every one of his opinions. I think this stamp will give
him the wider recognition he deserves as a pioneer of journalism."
Inspired by Salazar's legacy, Sotomayor and the dozen Latino journalists working
in Los Angeles at the time formed a professional organization, the California
Chicano News Media Assn., to encourage other ethnic minorities to pursue careers
in journalism. Over the years, the group, which has since changed it name to
CCNMA Latino Journalists of California, has awarded nearly $700,000 in
scholarships to 680 students and sponsored 29 journalism opportunity
conferences.
Briseņo, the Arizona journalism professor, had worked closely on the stamp
project with the Salazar family, which gave the Postal Service permission to use
Salazar's image.
In an interview, Lisa Salazar Johnson, 46, one of Salazar's three children,
said, "When the Postal Service sent me a copy of the color image they
planned to use, I cried. To see the '41 cents' on a real live U.S. stamp with
Dad's picture on it made me utterly proud of his accomplishments.
"However, I think he would have laughed at this honor as ridiculous,"
she said. "Then he would have been deeply humbled by it."
louis.sahagun@latimes.com