Last Friday, March 8, was
International Women’s Day. You might not have known that, since little notice
is given to this date in the US, even though American women initiated it. Here
in Berlin, one could not help but be aware of this special day, because the
city government had declared it a holiday, and everything was closed except
restaurants and museums.
A “National Women’s Day” was
first declared by women in the Socialist Party of America for February 28,
1909. It was proposed by Theresa
Serber Malkiel (1874-1949), whose story exemplifies the history of the
uneasy connection between leftist politics and women’s rights in Europe and
America, and the continued relevance of a “women’s day”.
As part of the emigration of
2 million Jews from the increasingly antisemitic Russian Empire between 1881
and the beginning of World War I, the Serber family moved from Ukraine to New
York in 1891. Theresa went to work in a garment factory. At age 18, she
organized the Woman’s Infant Cloak Maker’s Union of New York, mostly Jewish
women workers, and became its president. Like many trade unionists, she
gradually came to believe that socialism was the only path to liberation for
workers and for women. She led her union into the Socialist
Labor Party, the first socialist party in the US, the next year. Angered at
the authoritarian tendencies of the SLP leader, Daniel De Leon, she and others
joined with Midwestern socialists Eugene Debs and Victor Berger to form
the Socialist
Party of America in 1901.
At that time, both in the US
and in Europe, socialists were the only political group to openly advocate
women’s equality. In contrast
to suffragists, socialists argued that gaining the vote was only the first
step in creating an egalitarian society. But Theresa Serber almost immediately
attacked the tendency of socialist men to say they favored gender equality, but
to do nothing to bring it about, even within their own ranks. She formed
separate women’s organizations to reach out to women workers and discuss their
particular issues. She denounced the relegation of women in the Party to
traditional women’s roles: women were “tired of their positions as official
cake-bakers and money-collectors.” In 1909 she published an essay, “Where
Do We Stand on the Woman Question?” criticizing her socialist “brothers”
for their attitude toward female colleagues: “they discourage her activity and
are utterly listless towards the outcome of her struggle.”
That year, Serber was elected
to the new Women’s National Committee of the Socialist Party, and she promoted
the idea of a “National Women’s Day” on February 28. In 1910, she published “The
Diary of a Shirtwaist Worker”, a novel about the 3-month strike by about 20,000
mostly Jewish women factory workers in New York, the largest
strike by women to that point in American history, which won better pay and
shorter hours.
In 1910, German socialist
women at the International Socialist Women's Conference in Copenhagen proposed creating
an annual
Women’s Day to promote equal rights. By 1914, March 8 was established as
the day for demonstrations across Europe and America. The importance of this
event grew when a women’s strike on March 8, 1917, in St. Petersburg began the
Russian Revolution.
Women won the vote across
Europe and America over the next few
years: Russia 1917, Germany 1918, United States 1920, England 1928,
although many individual American states had already given women the vote. Some nations moved slowly
toward women’s suffrage: France and Italy only granted women voting rights in
1945.
But as socialist women had
argued for decades, neither one celebratory day a year nor the right to vote
brought equal rights. March 8 was declared a national holiday in many communist
countries, but women continued to occupy secondary social, economic and political
roles. Even after feminists in the US began in the 1960s to use the day to
protest their continued subordinate status and the United Nations declared
International Women’s Day in 1975, equality was still far away.
The socialist origins of a
day devoted to women’s rights exemplifies the long-lasting political
controversy over gender equality. The idea of equal rights was heretical for
conservatives: a German
poster calling for the vote for women on March 8, 1914, was banned by the
Emperor’s government. Issues of equal rights continue to be marked by partisan
political division in the US. The Lily
Ledbetter Fair Pay Act was passed in 2009, supported by Democrats in the
House 247-5 and in the Senate 56-0, and opposed by Republicans 172-3 in the
House and 36-5 in the Senate. Democrats support the #MeToo movement and Republicans
mock it. The Republican Party itself, as represented in Congress, is overwhelmingly
male: 93% in the House and 85% in the Senate. Democrats are represented by
a more equal, but not yet equal gender division: about 62-38 male in both
chambers.
The same differences exist in
Germany, but with more
women overall. From left to right, the percentages of women delegates in the
Bundestag, the federal legislature, are: Left 54%, Greens 58%, Social Democrats
43%, Free Democrats 24%, Christian Democrats 21%, and right-wing Alternative
for Germany 11%.
A major point of discussion
in German politics is the introduction of a gender quota system to insure equal
representation in legislative assemblies. The Left Party proposed in November a
law that would raise the proportion of women in the Bundestag, but it was voted
down by a majority led by the Christian Democrats and Free Democrats. The
far right Alternative for Germany was most
vehemently against any effort to raise the proportion of women.
In the state of Brandenburg,
ruled by a leftist coalition of Social Democrats, Greens and Left Party, the
first German law requiring all parties to put forward equal numbers of men and
women in their lists of candidates starting in 2020, the Parity
Law, was passed this January.
The Social Democrats in
Berlin proposed at the end of 2018 that March
8 should be a new holiday, and this was passed in January with the support
of the Left and Greens. A coalition of activists used the March 8 holiday as a Kampftag,
day of struggle, including a demonstration of about 10,000 people. Their
demands included that abortion be fully legalized, pay be equalized, and
more action be taken against sexism in daily life, especially violence against
women.
International Women’s Day
serves to highlight the remaining gender inequality in our society. The #MeToo
movement exemplifies the much more vigorous public discussion of how to keep
moving toward equality and the need for significant behavioral changes for both
men and women to make that possible.
The goal is to make
International Women’s Day superfluous.
Steve Hochstadt
Berlin
March 12, 2019
HI Steve please your email.
ReplyDeletemy email is kathyvaldivia68@gmail.com
International Women’s Day is coming up soon, when many of us look out for innovative women's day programs in our workplaces, to mark the day in a creative, positive and thoughtful manner. Here are some interesting Women's day fun activities in office!
ReplyDeleteThe purpose of celebrating International Women’s day is to celebrate women’s achievements, raise awareness about women’s rights, dignity, and equality. We have compiled a list of virtual women's day celebration ideas, to make your women's day office celebration memorable.
ReplyDelete