Nabisco workers’ campaign against outsourcing has generated a lot of community support. From university students and trade justice activists to veterans and big box store shoppers. Now, Nabisco workers and their families are receiving widespread support from the faith community, both inside their own local churches and on the global scale.

The campaign has grown particularly strong within the faith community, as leaders and activists have rallied behind Nabisco workers, embracing their fight for justice on both a local and global scale. It is the faith community that has helped shine the light on how the company has broken faith with its workers, and by extension, broken faith within communities.

In the last half of 2017, a coalition of faith and labor representatives led by the Interfaith Worker Justice (IWJ) conducted a six- city investigation of Nabisco bakeries across the United States and Mexico. The group studied the impact of the company’s business practices in cities where BCTGM members produce Nabisco products in Mondélez-Nabisco bakeries.

In late November, the IWJ coalition traveled to Monterrey and Salinas, Mexico to learn more about workers and the working conditions at the Mondélez plants. While in Mexico, the Nabisco workers were met by a Priest from the Catholic Archdiocese of Monterrey to detail the harmful impact of Mondélez-Nabisco’s outsourcing in the U.S.

At the conclusion of the five-month investigation in December 2017, IWJ released a detailed report, “Breaking Faith: Outsourcing and the Damage Done to our Communities”  that reveals the impact of Mondélez

Click to read the IUF letter to Cardinal Turkson at the Vatican

-Nabisco’s outsourcing and exploitation of workers in both the U.S. and Mexico.

The report has gained the attention of the global faith community. The General Secretary of the International Union of Food Workers (IUF), Sue Longley, has sent a letter to Cardinal Turkson at the Vatican requesting support from the highest levels of the Catholic Church. The IUF represents 2.5 million workers in 130 countries.

The International scope of this campaign continues to escalate as the chorus of voices from the faith community grows in opposition to the devastation caused by Mondélez-Nabisco.