Ruben Salazar: The making of the myth
In death, heâs been made more radical than in life.
On Sept. 16, 1970, during a celebration of the 160th anniversary of Mexicoâs independence from Spain, a group of young Chicanos lifted above their heads a massive, 70-pound plywood board of a smiling man in a suit and tie.
The marchers in East Los Angeles surrounded the painted image â clapping, cheering and chanting âViva Ruben!â and âRuben presente!â âRubenâ was the esteemed Mexican American journalist Ruben Salazar, who weeks earlier had been killed by an L.A. County Sheriffâs tear gas projectile while covering the Vietnam War protests known as the National Chicano Moratorium. His death on Aug. 29, 1970, was still an open wound.
It was âas if they were carrying an Inca god or Moctezuma,â says Salazarâs friend Alberto Juarez, who marched alongside the tens of thousands of other demonstrators on that hot September afternoon.
Sergio Hernandez was the artist behind the spray-painted Salazar portrait. He and other members of the Chicano group Con Safos carried the plywood panel for some 30 minutes before it started moving through the crowd. âEverybody wanted to march with it,â he recalls, âand it suddenly disappeared.â
The Times is taking a look back at the legacy of the Chicano Moratorium in 1970. See more stories
Years later the portrait was found in a storage shed in East Los Angeles College and is now on display at Cal State Channel Islands with Salazar firmly established as a beloved figure. But that September day in 1970 was the first time Juarez, then 28 years old, had seen his friend iconized. âRuben,â he says, âbecame a battle cry.â
âIt was a traumatic event,â Frank Cruz, a pioneering TV journalist at KABC and KNBC and co-creator of Telemundo, says of the killing of Salazar â on a day that also led to the deaths of two others, Angel Diaz and Lynn Ward.
In 1970, Cruz was chair and professor at Cal State Long Beachâs Chicano Studies department when he took to the streets to march with his students at the National Chicano Moratorium.
âYou had all the activists and demonstrations on the streets, but of all the people who couldâve died that day, having Salazar pass away conjures up the question: Did somebody really want to wipe him out?â says Cruz, now 80. âIt created sinister thoughts.â
It didnât help that days before his slaying, Salazar, an L.A. Times reporter who rose through the ranks to become a columnist for the paper and news director of the Spanish-language TV news station KMEX, revealed to close confidants that he believed he was in danger; he suspected that he was being followed by police.
On the day of the march, he had a premonition that something would happen. âThe last thing he said to me was, âBe careful.â... He kind of saw what was coming,â says Bob Navarro, a television reporter for KNXT (now KCBS), who was covering the march. Salazar gave his last televised interview on Navarroâs show, âThe Siesta Is Over,â three months before his death.
On that show, Navarro asked Salazar whether he was becoming more of an advocate than an objective journalist with his columns. âIâm only advocating the Mexican American community ... which by the way,â Salazar told Navarro, âthe general community has totally ignored.â
After his death, the Mexican American community â many of whom were suspicious of the Sheriffâs Department account of the killing â elevated Salazar to martyrdom, with a high school in Pico Rivera, an elementary school in Chicago, a library at Sonoma State, a building at Cal State L.A., an annual journalism prize, scholarships and a collection of papers at USC named in his honor. East L.Aâs Laguna Park, where thousands gathered for the Aug. 29 Chicano Moratorium, is now known as Ruben Salazar Park.
Across the country, paintings, murals and images of Salazar color buildingsâ walls and hang in galleries and museums, including the Smithsonianâs National Portrait Gallery and the Natural History Museum of L.A. County. The U.S Postal Service honored him with a commemorative stamp in 2008. And he has inspired documentaries and dissertations and songs. The late Lalo Guerrero, called âthe father of Chicano music,â wrote two songs about Salazar: âHomenaje a Ruben Salazarâ and âLa Tragedia del 29 de Agosto,â which expresses the rage of the Moratorium protesters at the disproportionate deaths of âyoung Mexican menâ in Vietnam and ends with a call for peace so that Salazar wonât have died in vain.
His death even captured the attention of Hunter S. Thompson, whose now-classic new journalism tale, âStrange Rumblings in Aztlan,â brought the story of Salazar and the Chicano movement to a young, largely white nationwide audience. Published in the April 1971 issue of Rolling Stone, itâs also the story that introduced readers to lawyer Oscar âZetaâ Acosta, who was fictionalized as the âSamoanâ attorney Dr. Gonzo in Thompsonâs book âFear and Loathing in Las Vegas.â
Songwriter and poet Jerry Giddens first learned about Salazar from Thompsonâs Rolling Stone story. Influenced by L.A.'s activism at the time, he often wove politics into his music. âIt was a very heavy time, and we were playing and writing music to speak to it,â says Giddens, now 67. His song âRemember Ruben Salazar,â which honors the fallen journalist and criticizes the injustices Salazar wrote about, includes the line, âHe still walks in East L.A., I thought I saw him yesterday.â
Yet even with songs, murals, paintings, schools, parks or postage stamps created or named in his honor, Salazar remains âmore iconic than realized,â says Giddens.
âHe was like a Virgen de Guadalupe.â
Man behind the martyr
Lisa Salazar Johnson was 9 when her father was killed. Within days of his death, she realized that the devastation extended beyond her family.
âWeâd been at my grandmotherâs house, and the day after he was killed, she brought us home. Thatâs when we saw reporters and cameramen on our front lawn,â she recalls. âOur house was filled with people and it became apparent that this was a big thing.â
The funeral days later further solidified that feeling. âWe could just see ... that a lot of people cared about him,â Salazar Johnson, the eldest of Salazarâs three children, says. âRight away it became very apparent that he was a big symbol.â
As one of the few prominent Latino journalists in a mainstream publication at the time, Salazar wrote about systemic issues affecting Mexicans, including racial profiling and police brutality.
âAs much as anything he wrote, the circumstances of Salazarâs death made him a martyr to the Chicano movimiento, a role no one would have found more ironic than Salazar himself,â wrote the late Frank del Olmo, the first Latino masthead-level editor at the L.A. Times and a friend of Salazarâs, in a 1995 piece. âFor above all, he was a principled journalist who saw his job as reporting the news, not making it.â
Those who knew him or studied his life believed that the mythology obscured the man.
One example is a lithograph from Mexican painter David Alfaro Siqueiros titled âHeroic Voice,â which depicts Salazar as pious and angelic. A religious symbol. Itâs a mythos that unsettled Del Olmo.
âThe likeness of Ruben that Siqueiros painted is saintlike, with a distant, long-suffering look to the eyes. It is not the earthly man I knew,â wrote Del Olmo in 1980.
Phillip Rodriguez tried to shatter that mythology with his 2014 documentary âRuben Salazar: Man in the Middle.â
âThe mythology of Salazar, I was tired of it,â says Rodriguez, 61. He sought to make a documentary âthe right way ... with factsâ in an effort to âtry to dig out a real man, not just a symbol of a vanquished mini revolution.â
But that proved to be harder than anticipated. For âthe OG Chicano generation ... Ruben had been a symbol of their suffering and broken-heartedness, quite understandably,â Rodriguez says. âHe was the only prominent person who got killed ⌠so they used him as their bloody flag.â
Yet few people knew who Salazar actually was. âHe always wanted to be considered a journalist who was interested in this particular community,â says JosĂŠ Luis Valenzuela, artistic director of the Latino Theater Company, which produced âAugust 29,â a historical fiction play about the day of the Chicano Moratorium. âAnd I think having been killed by deputies, the community made him into a hero, into a martyr, into an example of what was happening in the community.â
Others were killed in the community, but Salazar âwas more visual than anybody ⌠people knew of him much more.â
Salazar always wore a suit and tie, Valenzuela says, which painted an impressive and positive portrait to the poor and working-class Latinos he covered. âFor the community, the idea that there is an intellectual human being in their community â which always existed but they had no face because nobody knew who they were â that was very important to them.â
So was the fact that Salazar, who was born in Mexico, was âworking inside main institutions and was still progressive.â Salazar showed that it was possible to speak and write about your community in a truthful way within a major outlet.
Yvette Cabrera first learned about Ruben Salazar in the halls of the L.A. Times.
Now an environmental justice journalist for Grist, Cabrera was a young reporter in The Timesâ Metpro fellowship in 1994 when she began reading Salazarâs columns and stories. But she was disheartened to realize that many of the same issues of unequal treatment that Salazar had written about decades before were still affecting the community. âIt inspired me to dig deeper and work harder,â says Cabrera, who became active in the California Chicano News Media Assn. (now CCNMA: Latino Journalists of California), founded in 1972 in part to honor Salazarâs legacy.
Cabrera says that every park, school or postage stamp, anything named in his honor creates more dialogue about him and the work he did.
That includes the annual Ruben Salazar Journalism Awards from CCNMA. Itâs one of dozens of cultural markers that reminds people of how far weâve come and how far we have left to go, says Cabrera, who is CCNMAâs vice president. âEspecially now in this moment of reckoning around racial justice issues for Black and brown communities across the country, as we ask ourselves, âHow do we move forward? Who set the example?ââ
The Latino communityâs fascination with Salazar also stems from his dual lives: In 1960 he married Sally Robare, who was white and worked in The Timesâ classified ads department when they met. They lived in a middle-class neighborhood in Orange County with their three children and liked to host pool and dinner parties. But as a journalist and columnist, he challenged the status quo and was deeply embedded in Latino issues.
âPeople assumed that our home life was a Spanish-speaking, Mexican, culturally traditional upbringing,â says Salazar Johnson. âI think people just assumed because he was âSalazarâ and Mexican American, that we were.â
âHe led a completely Anglo life,â his daughter Stephanie Salazar Cook says in âMan in the Middle.â His wife, Sally, who died in 1993, never adapted to Latino culture, according to friends.
âThat was just our life. That was the way we were brought up, and that was fine,â says Salazar Johnson. âBut how the household mightâve been in the next few years or as we got older? Things could have changed.â
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Indeed Salazarâs absence has affected even family members who werenât yet born at the time of his death. In 2006, Salazarâs grandson Christopher Johnson wrote a letter to then-L.A. County Sheriff Lee Baca for a high school assignment that began, âDear Sheriff Baca: I have lived my whole life dealing with the pain and anguish your department has caused my family. It was an absurd act that has still gone unanswered for more than 30 years. There seemed to be no reason to kill him other than getting rid of a great voice in the Mexican community.â
What the public did get right about her father, says Salazar Johnson, was his evolution â âthis understanding that he was changing himselfâ the more he dove into issues affecting the Mexican American community.â
Salazarâs ability to straddle two worlds helped him find success as a journalist.
âHe was the bridge we had between the Chicano and the Mexican American community and the whiter community,â says Felix Gutierrez, 77, emeritus professor of journalism at USC who came to know Salazar professionally in the late 1960s.
âHe was the one person who could communicate with both audiences.â
Hear more from Times journalists. Watch our forum
The Times hosted a virtual forum on the Chicano Moratorium that featured authors of the series, including Daniel Hernandez, Carolina A. Miranda and Robert J. Lopez. Watch recordings via The Times Facebook page, YouTube or Twitter.