This articleneeds additional citations forverification. Please helpimprove this article byadding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Find sources: "José Jiménez" activist – news ·newspapers ·books ·scholar ·JSTOR(January 2025) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
José Jiménez | |
|---|---|
Jiménez in 1969 | |
| Born | (1948-08-08)August 8, 1948 |
| Died | January 10, 2025(2025-01-10) (aged 76) |
| Other names |
|
| Organization | Young Lords |
José Jiménez (August 8, 1948 – January 10, 2025), nicknamedCha Cha, was a Puerto Rican political activist and the founder of theYoung Lords, aChicago-basedstreet gang that became a civil and human rights organization.[1][2] Started on September 23, 1968, it was most active in the late 1960s and 1970s.
Born inCaguas, Puerto Rico, Jiménez was taken as an infant by his mother to the United States in 1949. They lived for a time with his father nearBoston, Massachusetts, but within two years the family moved toChicago to join relatives. As a youth, he ran with a street gang, but made a turn-around in 1968 after being influenced by civil rights activists at the time likeFred Hampton of theBlack Panther Party[3] and devoted himself to reviving the Young Lords to work on issues of human rights, beginning in Chicago. Issues included redlining, displacement of the poor, welfare rights and dignity, police relations, and community needs. In addition to establishing breakfast, education and health programs, they organized politically to negotiate with city officials. They also set up chapters in other cities with Puerto Rican and Latino populations, to work on social justice.
Nicknamed "Cha Cha", José Jiménez was born inCaguas, Puerto Rico, to parents Eugenia Rodríguez Flores (1929–2013), ofSan Lorenzo, and Antonio Jiménez Rodríguez (1924–1973) ofSan Salvador, Caguas. In 1949, when Jiménez was an infant, his mother Eugenia moved with him from Puerto Rico toNew York City. They traveled to a migrant worker camp nearBoston, where they were reunited with his father Antonio. They rented a work cabin from theItalian family-owners of the migrant camp.
In fewer than two years, the Jiménez family moved to Chicago to be near relatives. His mother worked in a candy factory and did piece-work in several TV factories. She also volunteered and contributed to organizing the Catholic Daughters of Mary (Damas de María) in Chicago'sLincoln Park neighborhood.[4]
The Jiménez family lived nearHoly Name Cathedral, on theNear North Side, in what became one of the first two Puerto Rican neighborhoods in Chicago; it was known asLa Clark by Puerto Ricans.[5] It had previously been predominately ethnic German.
Orlando Dávila, who later founded theYoung Lords street gang, graduated from one of Jiménez's mother's neighborhoodcatechism classes and became one of José's best friends. Originally, the Young Lords developed for mutual protection, recognition and reputation, in a city where their members were a mostly poor minority.[6] White gangs considered them a disruption to the Lincoln Park neighborhood and confrontations became frequent.[7] Most of the new Latino children in Lincoln Park joined some form of street gang or neighborhood "club" to make their way.[8]
Jiménez died in Chicago on January 10, 2025, at age 76.[9][10]
During the 1960s, the city continued itsurban renewal program. Puerto Ricans had been displaced into Lincoln Park from other developing areas, but the city began to eye that neighborhood for redevelopment.[11] City planners argued that Lincoln Park should be renovated as an inner-citysuburb, in order to attract professionals and increase tax revenues, and to profit from housing turnover as lower standard properties were redeveloped.
Lincoln Park was next toLake Michigan and near downtown; it became a successful showcase for urban living for upper classes. It is now ranked as one of the richest neighborhoods in the world. Neighborhood associations, such as the Lincoln Park Conservation Association, never consulted with the poor residents.[12][13] These neighborhood associations assisted Mayor Richard J. Daley by changing zoning laws, calling for building inspectors to pressure small owners into selling, and assisting real-estate agents and bankers with neighborhood housing group tours.[14]
The bankers, building inspectors, and real-estate agents who supported Daley's master plan for Chicago were caught illegallyredlining. They were still successful in keepingAfrican Americans largely in housing south of North Avenue.[15] Latinos needing less expensive housing moved north to Lakeview or west to Wicker Park and Humboldt Park. Whites moved further northwest and north. Court rulings that overturned some of the redlining came too late for most poorer families, who sometimes had to leave their homes in the Lakeview, Wicker Park andHumboldt Park neighborhoods. Jiménez and his family were forced to move often, and he attended four different elementary schools during this period.[1]
When the Young Lords was astreet gang, they respected and looked for guidance from major African American gangs such as the Egyptian Cobras and theAlmighty Vice Lord Nation, as well as theBlack P. Stones. The latter was a large, new group from the urban-renewal-designated area of 63rd Street.[16]
By 1967, most of the formerly white areas of Lincoln Park had been occupied by Latino residents, many of them ethnic Puerto Ricans. The original Young Lords had reached their late teens and lacked gang wars and organized meetings at theYMCA, so they ceased to exist as an organized gang. They still hung around together in certain locations, but without structure. Many then chose a chaotic, drug-filled, purposeless life. Many got married and moved away without any contact. Many were serving on active duty inVietnam. Others, including Jiménez, were still on street corners, or jailed for different gang and drug-related crimes. The youth of Lincoln Park became involved in property crimes such as car thefts, purse-snatchings, and burglaries, but also violent armed robberies, stabbings, shootings, and disorderly conduct, much associated with the damages of drugs. Jiménez and a few Young Lords turned to hard drugs likeheroin andcocaine.
In the summer of 1968, Jiménez was picked up for possession of heroin and was given a 60-day sentence atCook County Jail, then called the Bridewell or House of Correction. During this period, Jiménez decided to change and to devote his life to the cause of human rights. He read a book by American Catholic monkThomas Merton while in jail, and it had a strong influence on him. He was moved by the other man's account of his spiritual journey, as Jiménez had once contemplated becoming apriest. After reflection, Jiménez asked for a priest and knelt down, and confessed his sins. He was determined to change.
Immigration officials regularly detained undocumented Mexican workers taken in yearly raids. They passed through the north maximum-security cell-house for processing. Some white and African American guards mistreated the Mexicans. Jiménez gained permission to translate for such Mexican detainees, but he was not allowed to leave his third-floor cell. This made him more determined to fight for human rights. He planned to model theBlack Panther Party and to create self-defense within the Puerto Rican and larger Latino communities.[17] He intended to devote himself to this new people's movement.
Under the leadership of Jiménez, the Young Lords was transformed into the Young Lords Organization. They began by staging a series ofgrassroots actions on behalf of the poor people of Lincoln Park. They disrupted Lincoln Park Conservation Association meetings there, confronted real-estate brokers and landlords, created the Peoples Church and the Peoples Park, and occupied and forced theMcCormick Theological Seminary to provide resources for the community.[18] On May 15, 1969, a group of 20 Young Lords members entered the administration building ofMcCormick Theological Seminary, demanding $601,001 from the institution to support their work.[1]
In response to the police killing of Manuel Ramos, an unarmed 20-year-old shot and killed by an off-duty officer while trying to break up a fight, the Young Lords held several marches against police brutality. They raised and contributed the seed money to establish thePeople's Law Office in Chicago.[19] The Young Lords Organization also developed plans forlow-income housing in Lincoln Park in an effort to prevent the displacement of Latinos.
With the sloganTengo Puerto Rico en mi Corazón (I have Puerto Rico in my heart),[20] the Young Lords worked for Puerto Rican nationalism and independence. They also sought support from Black Power groups.
The original Chicago Young Lords became the national headquarters for a movement with chapters in other cities with significant Puerto Rican populations, such as New York, Philadelphia, and Milwaukee.[21]
The Young Lords also cooperated with other Latinos working for change elsewhere in Chicago. InWicker Park, they connected with theLatin American Defense Organization (LADO) and supported their demonstrations for a welfare-caseworkers union and for dignified recipient rights. The Lakeview Citizen's Council, with Hilda Frontany as its leader, became proactive, well-organized and supportive of the Young Lords. David Hernández and his La Gente Organization, also in Lakeview, was an ally in their fight againstgentrification. InHumboldt Park, Mecca Sorrentini and the Puerto Rican Socialist Party (PSP), the Spanish Action Committee (SACC), Puerto Rican Organization for Political Action (PROPA), West Town Concerned Citizens Coalition, and Allies for a Better Community (ABC) became allies. They all cooperated with the Young Lords and were proactive in downtown marches against MayorRichard J. Daley.[22]
The Young Lords were already allied withBlack Panther Party in Oakland. In Chicago, they were recruited by ChairmanFred Hampton into the originalRainbow Coalition, which included theYoung Patriots and Illinois chapter of the Black Panther Party.[22][23]
The Young Lords initiated what they called "survival programs" at the Chicago People's Church and in other cities, modelled after projects by the Black Panthers. These included a free breakfast for children program, the Emeterio Betances Free Health Clinic, a free dental clinic, and the first free community daycare center in Chicago.[24] The day care center was established in 1969 to support women's involvement in the Young Lords' organizing activities. It operated as a co-op, with male and female parents taking turns baby-sitting the children of the members. The Young Lords conducted demonstrations for welfare dignity and women's rights, againstpolice brutality and racism, and forself-determination for Puerto Rico and other Latin American nations.