Last weekend I watched the documentary Food, Inc. and it left me inspired in a surprising way – for worker’s rights. (For an insightful review of the film posted previously on God’s Politics, click here).
I was horrified by the graphic depictions of major conglomerations mistreating their workers. In a system that values efficiency above all else, food companies often regard their employees similarly to their animals. The workers have become just as dispensable as the livestock being raised for meat, and people along with pigs unsurprisingly pass their days in squalor.
Our current food industry is the perfect storm of Upton Sinclair’s The Jungle colliding with George Orwell’s 1984. Not only do many in the food industry degrade their workers, but they take great steps to conceal this exploitation. These companies have used their power to pass laws preventing you from questioning where your food comes from.
I am infuriated that such extreme cruelty can happen right under our noses – food processing takes place in every state around our country. Yet, we as Christians know that the story does not end there. Evil is done in darkness, but those who live through Jesus live in the light (John 3:20-21). Since we know that Christ has already conquered sin in the world (1 Corinthians 15:55-58), we can be bold in professing God’s call to justice (Micah 6:8).
Groups such as the Coalition of Immokalee Workers (CIW) are already manifesting God’s call to justice by bringing human rights violations in the agricultural industry into the light of truth. The CIW represents agricultural workers in Florida who pick many of the tomatoes you find in your fast food restaurants and grocery stores.
Tomato pickers often work stifling, and hot, 10-hour days only to earn $10,000 a year—a salary below the cost of living in their home of southern Florida. Some pickers have even been held in modern-day slavery rings.
Sojourners has a long history of partnering with the CIW, and we are joining with them again as we approach major supermarket chains. As the second largest grocery chain in the country, The Kroger Company sells a lot of tomatoes.
Do you want fair working conditions for our agricultural workers? You can take the first step by sending a letter to Kroger Director of Corporate Communications Meghan Glynn, advocating for fair pay and work conditions for the workers who pick Kroger’s tomatoes.
Melanie Weldon-Soiset is a Beatitudes Society fellow at Sojourners.


