[NIFL-WOMENLIT:3151] Women's History Month

From: Daphne Greenberg (alcdgg@langate.gsu.edu)
Date: Tue Mar 01 2005 - 23:17:26 EST


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From: "Daphne Greenberg" <alcdgg@langate.gsu.edu>
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Subject: [NIFL-WOMENLIT:3151] Women's History Month
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The Birth of Women's History Month 

Run Date: 03/01/05 

By Louise Bernikow
WeNews historian 

How March came to be women's history month . . .


(WOMENSENEWS)--The evolution of March as Women's History Month is a
story with many points of origin, non-linear narratives, competing
calendars and claims and a denouement of some irony.

It begins, most likely in 1908 with the Socialist Party of the United
States organizing a Women's Committee to campaign for women's suffrage.
A year later, in March 1909, women devoted to both the cause of labor
and the cause of women led an uprising of thousands of garment industry
workers in New York City.

The alliance of militant working women and women's rights advocates
inspired a German Socialist named Clara Zetkin and a Russian textile
worker named Alexandra Kollontai to declare an International Women's Day
in 1911. By 1913, the date was fixed as March 8th. On that date in 1917,
another uprising led by women, this one in the Russian city of St.
Petersburg forced the Czar to abdicate. March 8th became a holiday to
honor not only women's labor, but women's role in the Revolution.

Over the years and around the world, March 8th took on different
meanings. In some years, it was an occasion for organizing against
militarism and war. In the late 1950s, it was often the date of
female-led anti-nuclear protests. At the same time, March 8th was a
rallying point for the demands of workers. By the late 1960s, as women's
liberation was spreading in the United States, many radical feminist
discovered, re-discovered or decided to honor the revolutionary women
and called for an American revival of International Women's Day. An
activist calling herself Laura X, who had started a Women's History
Library, organized a march in Berkeley, Calif., on March 8, 1969. The
marchers dressed as historical characters; she was a cross between
Alexandra Kollontai and the dancer Isadora Duncan.

By the 1970s, pressured by women's groups, International Women's Day
became broader in scope and official in nature. The United Nations began
sponsoring it in 1975. In 1981, the new National Women's History Project
in Northern California, among other groups, successfully lobbied
Congress to declare a national Women's History Week in the days around
March 8th. By 1987, the week became a month.

Along the way, the working class, socialist, grass-roots underpinnings
of the holiday fell away and the focus in the United States largely
became the achievements of individual women. Somehow, the 2004
presidential statement for International Women's Day heralded "the
advent of democracy in Iraq and Afghanistan" and even the Department of
Defense joins in, honoring women in the military on its Web site in
March.

Louise Bernikow is the author of seven books and numerous magazine
articles. She travels to campuses and community groups with a lecture
and slide show about activism called "The Shoulders We Stand On: Women
as Agents of Change." She can be reached at weezieman@aol.com 



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