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Interview with Edgar James Olmos


Director Edgar James Olmos describes the events surrounding Walkout as a historical period, and an "education in America," saying, "The key issue for the 1968 walkouts was that there was a real lack of cultural history being taught in the East LA schools."



Director Edward James Olmos.
HBO: Tell us about the story behind the film.

Edward James Olmos: This story isn't really known by anyone except for the students that participated. In the schools that were walking out. During the sixties and even today, we still have a tremendous lack of understanding of what it takes to have a well-rounded diet that really makes people want to grow and be all that they can be. The key issue for the 1968 walkouts was that there was a real lack of cultural history being taught in the schools of East Los Angeles. About seventy to ninety per cent of the children that lived in East LA and were going to school at that time - especially in the schools that walked out - were of Mexican American descent. So they knew very little about themselves and even today they still know very little about themselves.

HBO: What exactly were some of the ways Chicanos teenagers were treated in East LA in 1968?

Edward James Olmos: During '68 throughout the southwest in the United States, in English speaking schools at that time, there was a lack of cultural history being taught. The contributions of say Asian Americans or Latinos or African Americans or indigenous people. They just taught a European based history. So the basic problems that we saw were things that would actually feed the self-esteem and self- respect of people. There was none of that going on. And that's why the kids walked out and tried to bring attention to their educational systems, and how lacking they were in giving self-esteem and self-respect to individuals. So a lot of the kids were dropping out in the ninth, tenth, eleventh grade and opted to go off and get a job doing blue collar work.

HBO: Tell us about the main character and what prompted her to take action.


Edward James Olmos: Well, she was one of many students that chose to move forward and become part of the leadership to bring changes to her community. And they seemed to come together around one teacher and one group of individuals that were trying desperately to bring a change in the educational system of young Latinos, especially Chicanos, Mexican Americans. During the 1960's, we were the largest grouping of people of Latin descent in the United States of America. We still are. And I would say now more than sixty per cent of that group was born here and raised here and are Americans of Mexican descent or Mexican Americans. And during that period of time we weren't really appreciated in the United States. Nor were we appreciated in Mexico. So it was pretty difficult to call yourself either an American or a Mexican. And to call yourself a Mexican American when neither side wanted you to be either was difficult too. So that's where the word Chicano came from. It was its own identity. We received our own identity during this period. So Chicanos started to become a force to be reckoned with. And Paula Crisostomo was one of a group of kids that got together and tried to make a difference in their community. And they forged these walkouts. They tried everything under the sun to bring attention to the problem.

You're talking about an event that really isn't known that well even though it's the largest high-school student demonstration that we've ever had in the United States of America. To date. At the height of the walkout there were over twenty two thousand kids that stood up and walked out of their classes in the LA County area. And that means that not only did the East Side try to bring awareness of it, but when the beatings started to happen, all the San Fernando Valley, the west side, schools from all over the Los Angeles County were in solidarity with the movement and stood up and walked out. So it became the largest single student walk out in the history of this country.

HBO: Now when you say beatings, tell us what that means exactly.


Edward James Olmos: Well up until 1995 none of us had really seen or knew too much about the beatings. We had only heard about them. And different people have different stories. But when you hear stories you don't really know whether or not they're factual or if they're just stories. In 1995, Hector Galan produced a documentary series called Chicano which was the first series to dig deeper into that period, looking at the history of Mexican Americans in the United States, especially in the Southwest. They went into the vaults at some of the local news companies here in Los Angeles, and since nobody really knew what they were looking for they just said well we're looking for some information that dealt with 1968 and the school walkouts from that period. So they went into that period and sure enough, all of a sudden they found the footage. And they used it in the documentary they made. Well it was the first time in the history of this country that that footage had been seen. Even though they filmed it in 1968, no one had ever had an opportunity to see it. So this was the first time we got to see it. Well when we saw it, it was blatant discrimination, blatant prejudices that were seen. And the discrimination and prejudices were so intense that it went from the seventh grade through the twelfth grade.

And this happened at quite a few of the schools. The majority of the kids were from eleven to eighteen years old, standing up and walking out. You see on the documentary incredible acts of violence against these children. Men and women, boys and girls were beaten, bludgeoned, many were sent to the hospital. Many were injured but never went to the hospital. And nothing was ever said. They never went to court. Nobody was ever prosecuted. So they got the footage. And they used it in the documentary and that was the first time anyone had ever seen any of it. And it was amazing footage which really inspired some of the people who had taken part in that to move forward and try to create this project. One of the participants, Moctesuma Esparza was one of the people who was in the forefoot of the entire Chicano movement, who is also a very distinguished producer. He decided to push for doing this film. And it's taken him over five years to complete it. And it's been quite an experience. It's a wonderful story which at the same time is very enlightening. I think people are going to discover a little bit about themselves inside of this story--who they are and where they come from. I don't care what culture they belong to.

HBO: What's it like having a lot of the original people from the original walk outs in 1968 on set participating in the film?

Edward James Olmos: It's fun having the the real people on board. It's also fun to hear the stories. Because it always enlightens us and makes us understand and go deeper into the situation that we're working on. Because we'll be sitting there shooting a scene and they'll say oh yeah when we did this, this and this and this happened. And gosh you know I don't know if you guys know but this and this and this happened. And all of a sudden a light bulb goes on and you say, Wow. Because I don't care how deep you go, I don't care how well the script is written, when you're doing it a certain process occurs in which you go deeper into the story. And that's what has has happened. We've gone deeper into the story.

HBO: Do you think teenagers today are capable of doing what these teenagers did then?

Edward James Olmos: I think the young are not only capable of doing it, but I think this story will inspire them to do more. And I think the idea of bringing about social change by way of non- violent behavior is the strongest single method that we have, of making ourselves understood and understanding ourselves better. Non-violent social change is to me the best kind of change for the communities at large. Because it really speaks from the core of our humanity rather than a political or a religious belief; it really comes from the core of the human being and it encompasses all religions, all cultures and all political types. And I think that we've had some wonderful examples of that in our lifetime. With Cesar Chavez, Ghandi and Martin Luther King. So basically I think it'd be quite interesting for the kids of today to see the kids in '68 and allow them to experience this situation. I think they're gonna find the movie not only entertaining but inspirational.


HBO: One of the main inspirations in the film is Sal Castro who's a real person. Tell us a little bit about his role in the walkouts.

Edward James Olmos: Sal Castro has become an integral part of the advancement of the Chicanos in the United States of America. He not only deals with Americans of Mexican descent, he deals with the African American experience, the Asian experience, the indigenous experience. He's was a very strong teacher who's now retired. He's in his seventies but he's still an active member of the community and still teaches kids leadership programs. And this man has literally changed the course of the future of this country by his love and commitment to helping the Mexican American youth become all that they can be. And that's really all we can do. It's just become the best that we can be.

HBO: In the film, why would Sal jeopardize Paula's future career by encouraging her to walkout?

Edward James Olmos: Well, I don't know if he encouraged her to walkout as much as he didn't discourage her. It was their choice. These kids were not manipulated by Sal Castro or by any adult. The movie really stands on that basis--this is really not so much of what adults manipulated the students to do but more of what adults did that created the situation where the youth then learned from their experiences. So this film is really a story about what the adults' impact and influence and behavior does to children.

HBO: What is the legacy of the walkouts?

Edward James Olmos: Well it's hard to see because basically no one really knows about them. The people who actually lived this have changed; they grew from the experience. For instance, at the time when the walkouts occurred, there were forty Chicano students, not counting the gardeners, that were at UCLA. Out of over twenty thousand students. In the years after the walk outs it went from 40 students to 1,250 students at UCLA. That was just one school. Enrollment in colleges after the walkouts went up approximately ten per cent throughout the United States. But the drop out rate right now in the Los Angeles city school district is higher than it was in '68. Sixty-three per cent of all the students of Mexican American descent who are in high school today will not graduate.

HBO: Do you think this film is going to inspire students?

Edward James Olmos: I think this film will help inspire students, to help students realize that their self- respect, self-esteem and self-worth is the single most important aspect of living. It's what gives you the ability to say to yourself, I want to move forward. I want to be all that I can be. That's the single most important thing that can be given to a young person. And I think this film is gonna open up that ability for them to see their future. Because they're gonna learn a little bit about their history. And I mean not only the kids that are represented or the culture that is represented, but also all the other cultures that live here as well. This country is a wonderful and beautiful place. It's one of the greatest countries on the planet if not the greatest. But I will say that we have a lot of problems understanding how to give water to the root. So that it can grow. And that water needs to be given. This movie shows what happens when kids try to take upon themselves the responsibility of trying to find the water and taking a drink as they're thirsty.


Edward James Olmos
Moctesuma Esparza

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