http://www.huffingtonpost.com/bruce-raynor/upcoming-hbo-documentary_b_323252.htmlBruce Raynor
President, Workers United
Posted: October 15, 2009 11:44 PM
In New York City, the garment industry has long been known as the "schmatta" trade. Schmatta is Yiddish for "rag", and that little piece of jargon speaks volumes about the history and traditions of the industry, New York City and working class people in this country. Even after 35 years of helping workers in the garment industry, I never could have imagined that a documentary would be made with the title "Schmatta." But award-winning director Marc Levin and the folks at HBO have done just that. In doing so, they tell the story of the New York City Garment District.2009-10-16-
Work in the garment industry once constituted the largest job sector in the city. You couldn't walk down the sidewalk in the Garment District without risking getting run over by a rolling rack of dresses or suits. The garment jobs - union jobs - lifted people up, put a decent wage in their pockets, and created tremendous wealth for New York City. The strong garment worker unions fought to reform a system that was unjust and dangerous. The unions built housing for workers and even formed a bank.
Schmatta: From Rags to Riches to Rags (debuting on HBO on October 19th at 9:00), looks at the Garment District as a microcosm of the larger economic crisis impacting the U.S. and the world. It includes interviews with pattern makers, designers, fashion executives - as well as Joe Raico, a garment cutter and President of Workers United Local 10, and me.
Trailer on YouTube:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CGfp7ZZ92sc&feature=player_embeddedSchmatta details the tragic Triangle Shirtwaist Fire of 1911 and the massive response by working people to form unions and to make their factories safe. The fire, and the horrific working conditions across the industry, created a movement among people who were new to this country, but profoundly familiar with the power Americans have to create change. The film pulls back the curtain on the glamorous and decadent world of fashion and reveals the stories of workers. It talks about the immigrants, initially Jewish and Italian, and later Latin American and Chinese, who beat a path into the middle-class through the Garment District. They fought to make their lives and the lives of their children better. And now so many of our country's leaders in science, law, education, politics and other fields are just one generation out of the garment shops.
FULL story at link.