Who Was Rodolfo 'Corky' Gonzales? Today's Google Doodle Celebrates the Chicano Activist

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The Google Doodle for today, October 1, honors Rodolfo "Corky" Gonzales, the late Mexican American activist who was among the leading figures of the Chicano Civil Rights Movement.

On this day back in 1970, Gonzales and his family founded the Escuela Tlatelolco Centro de Estudios, becoming the first private school in the U.S. with a focus on Chicano/Mexican American cultural studies.

Nicknamed "Corky" for his vivacious personality, Gonzales was born on June 18, 1928, in Denver, Colorado, and grew up in a tough eastside barrio in the city during the Great Depression.

Despite working beet fields and other jobs during his early school years, he managed to graduate from high school early at the age of 16.

A strong supporter of Chicano nationalism, in the mid-1960s Gonzales founded the Crusade for Justice, an urban civil rights and cultural movement that provided the Chicago community with job training and other benefits and also protested against police brutality, racism and employment discrimination.

Throughout the late 1960s and early 1970s, he also organized high school walkouts and mass demonstrations against the Vietnam War.

In 1968, Gonzales led a Chicano contingent in the Poor People's March in Washington, D.C., calling for better housing, education, barrio-owned businesses and the restitution of pueblo lands under his "Plan of the Barrio." He also proposed forming a Congress of Aztlan to carry out these goals.

Rodolfo "Corky" Gonzales speaking in Colorado.
Rodolfo "Corky" Gonzales speaking at the Colorado State Penitentiary during a Chicano conference. Bettmann / Contributor via Getty Images

He also worked with Cesar Chavez, a fellow Mexican American activist who led the farm labor movement and co-founded the National Farm Workers Association (NFWA) in 1965.

In 1969, he organized the first National Chicano Youth Liberation Conference to promote greater unity among Chicano youths across the country and encourage them to take pride in their heritage and join the cultural revolution.

Gonzales was also a boxer and pursued a career in boxing before devoting his life to civil rights activism. After graduating from high school, he entered the University of Denver with a keen interest in engineering.

But after realizing the overwhelming cost of his studies, he pursued boxing instead. Having competed as a featherweight fighter 75 times, the amateur boxer was a World Boxing Conference champion and he was inducted into the Colorado Sports Hall of Fame in 1988.

Gonzales was also a poet and his activism was reflected in his writing. His most notable poem, "Yo Soy Joaquín,'' describes a man who travels through history to experience life as different Spanish leaders, indigenous leaders from the Aztec homeland of Aztlán, a Mexican revolutionary and as a Chicano in the U.S.

He was given the Humanitarian Award from the state of Colorado in 1990 and passed away on April 12, 2005.

Signage at a Google office in California.
Signage at a Google office in Irvine, California, seen on October 23, 2020. Getty Images

About the writer

Soo Kim is a Newsweek reporter based in London, U.K. She covers various lifestyle stories, specializing in travel, health, home/interior design and property/real estate. Soo covered the COVID-19 pandemic extensively from 2020 to 2022, including several interviews with the chief medical advisor to the president, Dr. Anthony Fauci. Soo has reported on various major news events, including the Black Lives Matter movement, the U.S. Capitol riots, the war in Afghanistan, the U.S. and Canadian elections, and the 2020 Tokyo Olympics. Soo is also a South Korea expert, covering the latest K-dramas—including the breakout hit Squid Game, which she has covered extensively, including from Seoul, the South Korean capital—as well as Korean films, such as the Golden Globe and Oscar-nominated Past Lives, and K-pop news, to interviews with the biggest Korean actors, such as Lee Jung-jae from Squid Game and Star Wars, and Korean directors, such as Golden Globe and Oscar nominee Celine Song. Soo is the author of the book How to Live Korean, which is available in 11 languages, and co-author of the book Hello, South Korea: Meet the Country Behind Hallyu. Before Newsweek, Soo was a travel reporter and commissioning editor for the award-winning travel section of The Daily Telegraph (a leading U.K. national newspaper) for nearly a decade from 2010, reporting on the latest in the travel industry, from travel news, consumer travel and aviation issues to major new openings and emerging destinations. Soo is a graduate of Binghamton University in New York and the journalism school of City University in London, where she earned a Masters in international journalism. You can get in touch with Soo by emailing s.kim@newsweek.com . Follow her on Instagram at @miss.soo.kim or X, formerly Twitter, at @MissSooKim .Languages spoken: English and Korean


Soo Kim is a Newsweek reporter based in London, U.K. She covers various lifestyle stories, specializing in Read more