Still a Long Struggle Ahead for Women  and the Oppressed
Published on March 9, 2010
  
By BENJIE OLIVEROS
Analysis
 Bulatlat.com
MANILA — It has been a century since over 100 women from 17 countries  representing unions,  socialist and communist parties, working women’s  clubs, and the first women elected to the Finnish parliament gathered in  Copenhagen for the second International Conference of Working Women and  declared  International Women’s Day.  Next year would mark the 100th  year of the first International Women’s Day commemoration when more than  a million women and men held simultaneous rallies in Austria, Denmark,  Germany, and Switzerland to campaign for women’s right to work, vote, be  trained, and to hold public office, and for an end to discrimination.  
Likewise, it has been 93 years since Russian women went on strike to  demand for “bread and peace”. Four days into the strike, the Czar was  forced to abdicate and the provisional government granted Russian women  the right to vote. 
Since the emergence of the working women’s movement and the  commemoration of International Women’s Day, women all over the world  have won their right to vote and to hold public office. Women have,  since then, been organizing themselves in unions, political parties,  mass organizations, and associations. The women’s movement, which was  started by women workers, has now branched out to other sectors and  classes as well such as peasant women, youth and students,  professionals, among others.  Feminist movements that focus on the  oppression of women by men have emerged from among the middle class. 
It is no longer a rarity to see women heads of state and those  holding key positions in parliaments and governments.  Laws and policies  to protect women from rape, sexual harassment, domestic violence, and  other forms of violence against women have been passed.  Likewise, there  are already laws and policies aimed at ending discrimination against  women.         
But why is it that cases of rape and other forms of sexual violence  against women are still being committed? Why is it that despite laws and  policies addressing discrimination against women, working women are  still being paid less than their male counterparts? Why does the work of  women from some sectors such as agriculture remain unpaid and  unrecognized? Why is it that the problem of multiple burden —  juggling  between jobs, household chores, and taking care of the children — is  still being shouldered by women?     
Why are we still witness to women political prisoners being raped and  sexually harassed?  Why do we still see women migrants being made to  work in slave-like conditions, being raped and sent home worse off than  when they left to work abroad? Why do we hear of women workers being  sexually harassed and attacked? 
It is because while the formal rights of women such as the right to  vote and hold office as well as the right to equal protection before the  law have been institutionalized, the most basic rights of women such as  the right to work and a decent living, and freedom from all forms of  oppression and exploitation have not yet been realized.    
Women suffer most during crisis and in backward, agricultural  countries.  They are forced to accept the most menial and drudging jobs  in factories and are made to replace men to effect a cut in wages.    Their labor in farms are considered as part of family labor  so as to  lessen the share that is supposed to accrue to the peasant family.  They  are made to perform domestic work for families of landlords for free  and for other members of the elite for a pittance.  They are being  exposed to the most vulnerable jobs and work conditions. 
Women are being commodified in capitalist countries and made as  slaves in backward, agricultural countries.  Women are the ones being  pimped by governments of backward, agricultural countries to serve as  slaves of more affluent countries.  
To perpetuate their subjugation, culture and violence are being used  against them.  Women are being made to believe that they should submit  to the authority of the ruling elite, the family and to their husband.   To break their will and fighting spirit, women are subjected to rape and  sexual violence by landlords and their private armies, capitalists and  their security forces, the state and its agents.  All of these are being  committed to perpetuate an oppressive and exploitative system that  victimizes not only women but all oppressed classes, sectors, peoples,  and groups as well.   
International Women’s Day and the women’s movement was begun and  underpinned by working women from all over the world.  It is also this  movement of working women  fighting for social emancipation in unity  with all oppressed classes, sectors, peoples and groups who would  finally bring down the structures and system of oppression and  exploitation in the national and international levels. It is still a  long, hard, struggle ahead.
(Reprinted with permission from Bulatlat.com)
Source: Bulatlat.com 
29. Alam n'yo kaya na ngayon ang ika-115 na pagdiriwang ng pinakaunang 
labanan ng Himagsikan bago pa man ang pangkalahataang pag-aaklas? Ngayon 
unang lum...
14 years ago

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

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