"I feel we are just as good as any of them. I feel we have the same rights as any of them,” Itliong said in a 1976 speech. “Because in that Constitution, it said that everybody has equal rights and justice.”
Early Life and Migration to the United States
Modesto “Larry” Dulay Itliong was born on October 25, 1913 in the bucolic town of San Nicolas, Pangasinan Province, Philippines. He was among the six children of Francesca Dulay-Itliong and Aretemio Itliong. At an early age, Larry knew he wanted to become a lawyer to fight for the rights of the common people.
Itliong belonged to the “Manong” (Ilocano for “elder brother”) generation or the first major wave of Filipino immigrants in the United States between the 1900s to the 1930s. The Manongs were mostly young Filipino men who were recruited as a source of cheap labor when the Philippines was still a U.S. colony. They were enticed with the promises of the American Dream only to confront hardships and racial discrimination. As Itliong remarked in his 1976 speech to students at the University of California, Santa Cruz, “You go to the United States where they pick money on trees. Did that happen? Hell, no!”
At the age of 14, Itliong migrated to the United States with hopes of earning his law degree. He first arrived in Alaska in 1929 and later found work in the different states, from the canneries of Alaska to the railroads of Montana and the agricultural fields of California. He later earned the nickname “seven fingers” after losing three of his fingers due to a work-related accident.
Activism, Military Service in World War II
Despite only finishing 6th grade back in the Philippines and not being able to pursue his dream of becoming a lawyer in the United States, Itliong remained passionately committed to defending the rights of the poor. In 1930, he joined his first strike and within the same year he co-founded the Alaska Canneries Workers Union. Larry soon earned his reputation as a young fiery activist and a leading figure in labor organizing throughout the West Coast.
Apart from Ilocano, Pangasinense, Tagalog (Filipino), and six other Philippine languages, he also became fluent in English, Japanese, Cantonese and Spanish. Itliong honed his oratory skills to galvanize workers. He was often heard saying “Let’s go, don’t be scared! I’ll be in the front— just follow me” to embolden his fellow Manongs.
Itliong served in the U.S. Army from 1936 to 1943. He later gained U.S. citizenship in 1944 for his service in World War II. After returning from the war, he wasted no time in resuming his fight for worker’s rights. Itliong moved to Stockton, California and founded the Filipino Farm Labor Union in 1956, and the multi-ethnic Agricultural Workers Organizing Committee (AWOC) in 1959.