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Labor Day -- Unions Must Reflect on Interests of Latino Workers

Author Rev. Dr. George Schultze, SJ -- Available for Interviews

Contact: Justyna Krukowska, Catholics for the Common Good, 415-651-4171

MEDIA ADVISORY, Aug. 30 /Christian Newswire/ -- In his new book, Strangers in a Foreign Land, Catholics for the Common Good Advisor, Rev. Dr. George E. Schultze, SJ discusses the organizing of Catholic Latinos who are a source of low-cost labor in the United States. 

"Today's labor leaders risk alienating Latinos and jeopardizing Catholic support if they accept and promote abortion and take anti-family and anti-marriage positions aligned with the radical homosexual and feminist movements," said Father George Schultze, SJ.  "This would be a shame because Latinos can benefit from union organizing and the growing population of Latino workers offers opportunities for significant growth in the sagging labor movement."

The Catholic Church in the United States has traditionally supported the organizing of low-income workers and immigrants.

"It is now the unions rather than Latino workers that are becoming strangers in a foreign land."

Father Schultze suggests, "Labor leaders and their intellectual advisors should reassess their support of public policies that are inimical to life at all of its stages and to the inviolability of marriage between a man and a woman. Labor leaders, union organizers, and labor supporters should at the minimum remain neutral on these issues -- as they have in the past." 

For more information go to: http://ccgaction.org/family/feature/unionsandlatinoworkers

Strangers in A Foreign Land: The Organizing of Catholic Latinos in the United States, by Rev. Dr. George E. Schultze, SJ, Rowman and Littlefield Publishing Group, Lexington Press, 2007
 
Father Schultze is the Director of Field Education and a lecturer of Catholic social doctrine at St. Patrick's Seminary and University in Menlo Park, California and serves on the Catholics for the Common Good Advisory Board. He holds a degree in Industrial and Labor Relations from Cornell University, an MBA from the University of California at Berkeley, and a PhD. in social ethics from the University of Southern California.  Prior to becoming a Jesuit priest, he worked for the National Labor Relations Board and the Hewlett-Packard Company in the early 1980s. 

Catholics for the Common Good is a national non-partisan and independent organization of lay Catholics dedicated to promoting the common good, especially in regard to the dignity of life, the primacy of the family, human rights and freedom, and solicitude for the poor and vulnerable.