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From the January 2007 issue of the $100 Plus Club News #104

In Memoriam: Henry Zeiger, Former AUD staffer
Ex-NYC taxi driver, staunch workers advocate

We regret to inform our readership that Henry Zeiger, former AUD staff person and coordinator of our Workers Rights Project for several years, passed away late last year. The following observations and remembrances are a testimonial to his dedication to AUD and to workers rights in general.

Herman Benson:

Henry came to work for AUD in early 1995 at a difficult moment in our history which has always been a kind of roller coaster business. But this was an especially low point; and he came just when we needed him. Our staff had just been totally decimated by success. The new Carey administration had finally got rolling and it stole away all our people. Selma Marks, who had run our Teamsters Fair Election Project was hired away as a Teamster organizer. Eileen Sullivan, director of our Women's Project, became assistant trustee for one Teamster local. And finally, the coup de grace, Susan Jennik, then AUD executive director, got her dream job as attorney for a reformed Teamster local. That left me all alone as acting -- and reluctant--- executive director. Some months before ---perhaps as long before as a year and a half --- our old fashioned hot-type linotype printer had given up, leaving us dependent upon the new-fangled desktop, home cooking, newsletter publishing, which Susan could handle, but not me.

Along comes Henry. We didn't have much money at the time which hasn't changed that much since those days. He was already on a fixed income and so he seemed perfectly happy to start working on a minimal salary to supplement his social security. His job was amorphously defined as office manager, a general factotum that included bookkeeper, mailing list coordinator, counselor to clients. Anyone who knows Henry can instantly assess how perfectly his personality corresponded to those requirements. Above all, he was good at desktop publishing, which was our most critical need at the time, and he did a wonderful job.

Henry was on the phone at long stretches consoling the victims of injustices for whom, I must admit, we often had no solution. But Henry found that inability hard to bear. He consoled himself, and sometimes his caller, by vigorous unrestrained verbal denunciations of the persecutors. On the other hand he was a fine writer, scrupulously careful with the facts and restrained in characterizations. It was as though writing transformed his explosive personality. As editor of Union Democracy Review, I always felt comfortable with everything he wrote. Whatever editing was advisable, and it was a minimum, he accepted graciously.

Organized organization was not his thing. He didn't believe that anyone should have the authority to direct anyone else to do anything, but rather that each should voluntarily do what had to be done. It never bothered me, but others found it hard to adjust to.

Meanwhile, after Henry had been working for AUD for some weeks, Carl Biers came to work as AUD Assistant Director, on the way to becoming Executive Director. Carl, then in his 20s and unsubsidized by Uncle Sam, had to earn at least a near-subsistence salary. Henry obviously felt hurt by the difference in pay levels. But since funds were running low, we compromised by agreeing to shorten his hours and lessen his responsibilities. For the rest of his career with AUD, Henry ran a workshop for individual complainants several times a week; when funds ran low he conducted sessions by phone from his home in Hoboken. Some months later he retired.

Jane LaTour (former AUD Women's Project Director):

New York City's labor movement lost a stalwart advocate for working people towards the end of 2006. Henry Zeiger lived alone in Hoboken and his death was discovered by his long-time friend and colleague, Yvone Maitin. For many years, the two labored together on Saturdays at the offices of the Association for Union Democracy, at the Workers Rights Project for union members who were having problems and needed some assistance.

"Henry liked to tell me of his days as a taxi driver," said Maitin, a member of Local 30, IUOE. "He had been a shop steward and held some kind of office within the taxi drivers union. This was an exciting time in his life and seemed to be dear to his heart. He was a fierce fighter and fought hard for his co-workers."

Dozens of rank-and-file reformers from many different unions had the opportunity to work with Henry as he lent his journalistic, editorial, and computer skills to their efforts. Tom Moran, now retired from Local 1-2 of the Utility Workers union, recalled that, "Henry worked with us on the leaflets before we brought them to the printer. He did an awful lot of volunteer work for groups in the labor movement and he didn't make a dime off it. If he thought it was the righteous thing to do, he did it."

"Henry Zeiger had the gravel in his guts to fight the bosses, the corrupt union officials, and anyone else whom he saw hurting workers. The same quality sometimes made it tough to work with him - bending and compromising did not come easily to him," said Frank McMurray, of Carpenters for a Stronger Union. "But I never had any doubt, even in the midst of the most intense late night argument with him in the back of some New York bar, that Henry's intentions were totally honest and motivated by his sincere concern for workers," he said.

In addition to working on others' campaigns, Zeiger had his own passionate causes that he championed. AUD Research Director James McNamara pointed to the role Henry played in the attempt by Local 3 to sponsor a taxi union. Zeiger penned many articles and leaflets to call attention to the atrocious conditions of taxi cab drivers and other workers who labored under Third World conditions in New York City. "We at AUD knew him as a dedicated and selfless person who was committed to a strong, honest, and democratic labor movement," said McNamara. "We will all miss him."

Former AUD staffer Andy Piascik also worked closely with Zeiger. "He waged the fight against both employers and the trade union bureaucracy. Selflessly, he remained in the background," said Piascik. "I especially appreciated his keen eye for detecting self-anointed 'leaders' and blowhards of all persuasions. Were there more people like Henry, we would have the kind of workers movement we need. It was my privilege to have worked with Henry and been his friend. I'm going to miss him."

Robert Fitch, author of Solidarity for Sale, worked with Henry on the New York Hard Hat News. "He lived a life of principle," said Fitch. "He was as authentic and radical as anyone could imagine. He said what he thought was right without fear or favor. He didn't try for success or popularity, but he was a very talented guy."

Yvone Maitin (Workers Rights Project):

Here is my memory of Henry. Henry was a tall man whose hair stuck out in tufts from under his signature baseball cap; it also came out of his nose. He had teeth that could scare a ghost. He wore his pants high up on his waist and his shirt was often stained with what ever. You could tell what he had had for breakfast just by looking at the stains and crumbs. He didn't care. I would often bring a scone for him when we worked together and he did something, that I'm sure he didn't realize made me laugh to myself, Henry would wet the tip of his finger and dab up every last morsel. He was a funny kind of curmudgeon to me.

His style made me laugh, not at him but in amusement. I liked his I don't give a shit and straight shooing ways. I admired his personhood.

He once brought me a modest present, he lived on a fixed income, a bag of poblano peppers. He told me, "Soak them before you use them and use them sparingly. They're hot." They were indeed hot and delicious. Henry loved Mexican food and was a good cook.

Henry was also a jazz aficionado and spoke fondly of his days in bars drinking, listening to music with the fellas and women. He was always respectful to me but those were his good old days. He once made a copy of some of his music collection for me. Some of it is no longer available now and political in nature.

He liked to tell me of his days as a taxi driver. He had been a shop steward and held some kind of office within the taxi drivers union. This was an exciting time in his life and seemed to be dear to his heart. He fought hard on behalf of his co-workers and often won what others might have turned away from. Henry was also a playwright, having attended Yale Drama school and graduating from Kenyon College. Several of his works have been published.

There is so much I can say about Henry. He was a great story teller. The thing I can say the most about him is that he was a lover of the working people, a fountain of knowledge and reference point and a fierce fighter on our behalf. I helped Henry run AUD's Workers Rights Project, and we had people coming from as far away as Pennsylvania to get help on their problems. I believe that the project was one of AUD's most successful endeavors.

A week before his death I had made a plan with him to record his experiences and make a list, perhaps even a booklet of the contacts and references he had in his head, for the purposes of sharing it with other workers. He was very excited about this, but it was not meant to be. Henry was a bit of a curmudgeon, but he also was a humble man, and many will miss him. I surely will.

Your Job Your Rights

One of Henry's last projects for AUD was the creation of an introductory guide to the grievance procedure, intended for rank-and-file members, especially new immigrants unfamiliar with US unions. The guide was the product of a collaboration between the Workers Rights Project and the Latino Workers Center and is now on our website where it is always among the ten most popular items. The guide lacks Henry's distinctive voice, but it distills some of his wisdom and puts it in the hands of the people he most liked to help.

Give to AUD in Henry's memory

You can make a gift to AUD in memory of Henry Zeiger's life and work. Find out how.

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