Lenten fast to protest mistreatment of workers

Church leaders in the U.S. will join farmers and consumers in a fast from March 5 to 10 to urge better treatment for tomato harvesters. Photo: Wollertz
Church leaders in the U.S. will join farmers and consumers in a fast from March 5 to 10 to urge better treatment for tomato harvesters. Photo: Wollertz
Published March 5, 2012

Washington  – The tomato retailer Publix insists on underpaying workers and forcing them to work in conditions “most of us do not and would not tolerate,” said Rev. Michael Livingston, director of the National Council of Churches Poverty Initiative. 

Livingston, a former president of the National Council of Churches (NCC), called on churches to express their disapproval of Publix’s policies by joining farm workers and the Presbyterian Hunger Program in a public fast on March 5 to urge the company to change its ways, according to an NCC news release.

“I do not regard this fast as a hardship on my part,” Livingston is quoted as saying in a message to NCC communions and congregations. “By God’s grace I can offer the luxury of my time to brothers and sisters whose humanity I value as much as my own. I count it a privilege, as the season of Lent begins, to, as Paul asks of us in Romans 12:1: ‘present your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God, which is your spiritual worship.'”

According to the release, church leaders in the U.S. will join farmers and consumers in a fast from March 5 to 10 to protest Publix’s rejection of the Food Fair Program in Florida, which would have addressed many of the problems faced by laborers.

Religious leaders will appeal to Publix “to recognize the humanity of the workers who pick its tomatoes,” Livingston said. The fasters will ask Publix to join the Coalition of Immokalee Workers’ Fair Food Program, a community-based organization of mainly Latino, Mayan Indian, and Haitian immigrants working in low-wage jobs in Florida.

The movement has wide support among religious leaders and public figures including Kerry Kennedy, daughter of the late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy; the actor Martin Sheen; and Brian D. McLaren, a nationally known author, speaker, activist, and public theologian.

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