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Posts tagged International Women’s day

Molly’sBlog 2010-03-08 22:36:00


INTERNATIONAL POLITICS:
A SHORT HISTORY OF INTERNATIONAL WOMEN'S DAY:
International Women's Day is drawing to a close, and I'd better do my duty and reprint (with editing) the comment that I have published for the last two years here at Molly's Blog. What follows is a short history of the day and its significance.
♀♀♀♀♀♀♀♀♀♀♀♀♀♀♀♀♀
HOLIDAYS (OR IT SHOULD BE)
INTERNATIONAL WOMEN'S DAY:
Today, March 8, is celebrated as 'International Women's Day'. Way back when, on March 8 1908, 15,000 women marched through the streets of New York City demanding shorter hours, better pay and voting rights. In 1910 the first international women's conference was held in Copenhagen, Denmark, under the aegis of the Second Socialist International. The German socialist Clara Zetkin was the originator of the proposal. No fixed date was set at this event. The conference called for the establishment of an international women's day. This had been preceded by a declaration of the Socialist Party of America in 1909 calling for such an event on the last Sunday of February.

The date of March 8 gradually became an accepted time because it commemorated an 1857 protest in NYC by garment workers who later went on to establish the first labour union in the USA two years later. (Molly Note-Since I first wrote these words there have been further entries at the Wikipedia site on this day, claiming that this 1857 demonstration never took place. I am unable to say whether this is true or not, but I urge the reader to consult the Wikipedia site for details on the controversy )March 8 was also the day when women in Europe held peace rallies in 1913 as the clouds of WW1 gathered. IWD also gathered force from the Commemoration of the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire on March 25, 1911 when 140 garment workers were killed in a factory fire because the owners had locked the doors, barring any escape.

On the persuasion of Alexandra Kollontai IWD was declared a holiday in the USSR shortly after the Revolution. But.....this "holiday" remained a regular working day until May 8, 1965. Wags might remark that this is the usual stuff of communist pronouncements, with the name and the reality usually at significant variance. Nonetheless IWD remains an official holiday in many countries today. Most are members of the ex-Soviet bloc or other communist countries. By 1975, International Women's Year, the United nations began to sponsor the day. Today there is pressure in many countries to declare it an official holiday. In 2005, for instance, the British Trade Union Congress passed a resolution calling on the United Kingdom to issue such a declaration.

Nowadays celebrations are held across the world on this day. The global women's group Aurora hosts a semi-official list of events and resources. For an anarchist take on the day and its significance see THIS and THIS from the Anarkismo.Net news site. Also 'Feminism, Class and Anarchism' by Deidre Hogan (also available as a downloadable pdf).

Molly’sBlog 2010-03-03 23:35:00

LOCAL EVENTS-WINNIPEG:INTERNATIONAL WOMEN’S DAY MARCH:International Women’s Day is, of course, on March 8th, but because this falls on a Monday many locations are holding their events during the weekend before. Here in Winnipeg the traditional march wi…

Continue reading at Molly'sBlog …

Molly’sBlog 2010-03-03 20:08:00


CANADIAN POLITICS-TORONTO:
UPCOMING EVENTS THIS WEEK IN TORONTO:
Here,from the Ontario Coalition Against Poverty (OCAP) is a run down of upcoming events this week in Toronto.
TTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
Important Events this Week: International Women's Day, IAW, and Health for All!‏
Important Events in the City This Week:
1) ISRAELI APARTHEID WEEK: March 1 - 7th @ U of T and Ryerson
2) Health for All Event: Fixing a Broken Health Care System for Immigrants and Refugees: Thursday, March 4th 6:30 @ U of T (Details Below)
3) JOIN OCAP at International Women's Day:
Saturday, March 6th, 2010
Meeting: 12:30 at the corner of Bedford and Bloor St (outside of OISE)
More Details are Below!
______________________________
1) Israeli Apartheid Week:
Solidarity in action:
Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions
March 1 - 7, 2010
http://www.apartheidweek.org/
--------------------
We are very proud to announce our preliminary list of confirmed speakers along with the specific themes of each evening for IAW 2010.
Mark your calendars with the different topics for each evening and speakers:
To check out video footage from previous events held in Toronto and the official trailer of IAW 2010 see:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y7Af7WwDi0whttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w2vBvjcovd0&feature=player_embedded
A complete list of speakers and events is available at http://www.apartheidweek.org/
MONDAY, March 1
Five Years Since the BDS Call - Celebrating Our Success
7:00 - 9:00 PM
Location: Ted Rogers School of Management, Auditorium, 7th Floor,
Room TRS-1-067,
55 Dundas Street West,
Ryerson University
Hosted by the CAW
-Sam Gindin Chair in Social Justice and Democracy
Na'eem Jeena: is an academic, author, journalist, community leader and post-graduate student. He is currently the Director of the Afro-Middle East Centre, a research institute dealing with the Middle East, and a PhD candidate in Political Studies. Na'eem has a history of activism in the anti-apartheid struggle, and is a well-known activist in South Africa. He has been a leading figure in the Palestine solidarity and anti-war movements in South Africa. Na’eem also served for many years on the Board of the Freedom of Expression Institute, including as its Deputy Chairperson. He also worked for the FXI as Head of the Anti-Censorship Programme, Head of its Access to Information Programme, and as Director of Operations.
TUESDAY, March 2
Fighting Racism, Fighting Apartheid
7:00 - 9:00 PM
Location: OISE Auditorium, 252 Bloor St. West,
University of Toronto
Hosted by Students Against Israeli Apartheid – a working group of OPIRG-Toronto
Nadia Elia is a faculty member at Antioch University, Seattle, where she teaches Gender and Global Studies. She is co-founder of RAWAN (the Radical Arab Women's Activist Network), chairs the Anti-Militarism and Occupation taskforce of Incite! Women of Color Against Violence, and serves on the Organizing Committee of the US Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel. A scholar-activist, Elia is the author of Trances, Dances, and Vociferations: Agency and Resistance in Africana Women's Narratives, co-editor of The Color of Violence: the INCITE anthology, and has published numerous articles on the sociopolitical factors impacting gender and national identity in societies at war and/or under occupation.
Gabriel Ash is an activist and writer. Since 2000, Gabriel has been engaged in work in support of Palestinian liberation, including with Stop U.S.Tax-funded Aid to Israel Now!, Palestine Activist Forum New York, and the International Solidarity Movement. Gabriel wrote numerous articles about related topics, in particular Israeli politics, in many movement publications, including Left Turn, Electronic Intifada, Numb Magazine, Dissident Voice and others. He was born in Romania and grew up in Israel, where he translated Michel Foucault and J.-F. Lyotard into Hebrew. He contributes regularly to the blog, "Jews Sans Frontieres" and is active in the International Jewish Anti-Zionist Network and in lachaine.ch, a web TV collective.
7th Generation Indigenous Visionaries (7th GIV) founding members met while attending Haskell Indian Nations University, our purpose is to build solidarity and bridge the gaps with tribes/nations in the U.S. and other Indigenous people around the world. 7th GIV is dedicated to the preservation of our culture by promoting educational experiences to increase awareness through reflexive interaction with other Indigenous peoples. Members of 7thGIV took part in a delegation to Palestine this past summer.
WEDNESDAY, March 3
‘Planning’ Apartheid: Environment, Architecture,and Colonialism
7:00 - 9:00 PM
Location: Medical Sciences Building, Auditorium, 1 King’s College Circle,
University of Toronto
Hosted by Students Against Israeli Apartheid – a working group of OPIRG-Toronto
Ilaria Giglioli has recently completed a Masters degree in Geography from the University of Toronto, where her research focused on water politics and territory in Palestine. She has worked on water vulnerability mapping for the Palestinian research institute ARIJ, and is a long-time Palestine solidarity activist in Canada and abroad.
Atif Kubursi is emeritus professor of economics and also teaches in the Arts and Science Programme at McMaster University. Dr. Kubursi also taught economics at Purdue University in Indiana, USA, was senior academic visitor at Cambridge University, UK in 1974/75, and lectured and consulted at Harvard between 1989-1998. Dr. Kubursi also served as the Acting Executive Secretary, at the Undersecretary General level, of the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia in 2006, 2007 and 2008. He is the recipient of the Canadian Centennial Medal.
THURSDAY, March 4:
Coming Out Against Apartheid: Queer Solidarity Activism
7:00 - 9:00 PM
Location: OISE Auditorium, 252 Bloor St. West,
University of Toronto
Hosted by Students Against Israeli Apartheid – a working group of OPIRG-Toronto
Trish Salah is a Montreal-based writer, activist and teacher at Concordia’s Simone de Beauvoir Institute. She has been politically active organizing around a wide range of issues, including Palestinian solidarity, sex workers' rights, anti-racism and anti-capitalism, employment security and healthcare for transsexual and transgender people. Her first book of poetry, Wanting in Arabic, was published by TSAR Books and her recent writing appears in the journals Open Letter, No More Potlucks, and Aufgabe. Her new manuscript is titled “Lyric Sexology.”
John Greyson is a Toronto video artist/filmmaker whose features, shorts and installations include Fig Trees (Best Documentary Teddy, Berlin Film Festival, 2009), Proteus (Diversity Award, Barcelona Gay Lesbian Film Festival, 2004), and Lilies (Best Film 'Genie', 1996). An associate professor in Film at York University, he was awarded the 2007 Bell Canada Award in Video Art.
Jenny Peto is an activist with the Coalition Against Israeli Apartheid and a student in Sociology and Equity Studies at OISE. Her research on Israeli Apartheid has focused on the co-optation of human rights, including queer and feminist issues, by the Israeli State and its supporters.
FRIDAY, March 5
National Liberation: From Turtle Island to Palestine
7:00 - 9:00 PM
Rabab Abdulhadi
Location TBA - please consult http://www.apartheidweek.org/ - Show quoted text -
SATURDAY, March 6:
ISRAELI APARTHEID WEEK (Toronto) PRESENTS HIP HOPFOR PALESTINE WONT STOP ‘TIL DA WALL DROPS FEATURING SABREENA DAWITCH, THE NARCICYST AND LOCAL DJS
@ The Blue Moon Pub
725 Queen St. E. (at Broadview)
Doors Open: 9 pm
Tickets $10 in advance, $12 at the door (tickets will be available during IAW events)
* This event is a fundraiser for Israeli Apartheid Week 2010 Israeli Apartheid Week is proud to present Palestinian hip hop artist, Abeer Alzinaty’s (aka Sabreena Da Witch) debut performance in Canada. The event will also feature Montreal based Iraqi MC Narcycist as well as local DJs. All are invited to this night of music and dance that will conclude the 6th annual Israeli Apartheid Week.
Abeer Alzinaty (aka Sabreena Da Witch) is a Palestinian hip hop artist. Born in 1984 in Lydd, she started performing R&B in Arabic and English in her teens and released her first original Mix-tape. Witch's intifada, in 2008. Abeer has been featured in a number of documentaries about Palestinian music including Jackie Salloum's award winning documentary Slingshot Hip-Hop. Abeer's music speaks to her experiences as a Palestinian woman living in Israel. Critiquing multiple injustices resulting from or supported by the occupation, while celebrating freedom, equality and enlightenment.
The Narcicyst is an Iraqi MC/Media Master. His musical career was spawned through the collaborative work of the Euphrates family; A growing collective of Muslim visual artists, musicians, painters, filmographers and photographers. Releasing two albums with Euphrates, the crew garnered worldwide attention from Time Magazine to publications out of the Middle East and Europe. With a book being released under the title “Fear of An Arab Planet”, and a brand new self-titled album and acting in feature length film"City of Life", The Narcicyst is sure to make you see yourself through the proverbial mirror that is the current state of the world.
________________________
About IAW 2010
First launched in Toronto in 2005, IAW has grown to become one of the most important global events in the Palestine solidarity calendar. Last year, more than 35 cities around the world participated in the week's activities,which took place in the wake of Israel's brutal assault against the people of Gaza. In Toronto, IAW 2009 featured a full week of events kicked off by Palestinian activist and writer Omar Barghouti. IAW 2010 takes place following a year of incredible successes for the Boycott,Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) movement on the global level. Lectures, films,and actions will highlight some of these successes along with the many injustices that continue to make BDS so crucial inthe battle to end Israeli Apartheid.
Visit: http://www.apartheidweek.org/ for more Info and for the list of endorsers
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
2) *Health for All:Fixing a Broken Healthcare System for Immigrants and Refugees*
*March 4th, 2010
6:30 PM
Location: Bahen Centre, Room 1180
Address: 40 St. George Street*
*SPEAKERS:
Dr. Meb Rashid, Family Physician
Jackie Esmonde, Immigration Lawyer
Manavi Handa, Registered Midwife, WestEnd Midwifery Collective
* The cost of healthcare has been established as a barrier for under and uninsured migrant communities in accessing healthcare for decades. Despite the talk, few affordable healthcare options have been made available to these communities. In recent years, the midwifery model of care in Ontario has proved to be a cost effective, accessible option for uninsured populations in Ontario to access maternity care. Payment structures that resulted from collaboration between the Ministry of Health and Long Term Care and professional midwives have served as an innovative way for persons without status living in Ontario to access maternity care.
Community Health Centres are another point of access to primary healthcare for underinsured populations in Ontario. Interdisciplinary staffing and coordination of care, with alternative payment structure arrangements from the Ministry of Health, seek to ensure that uninsured populations have access to primary care.
This evening will look at the opportunities and barriers to ensuring health for all! The panelists will discuss the successes of these two models of care, and the victories won by various professionals and communities in providing healthcare for the uninsured. As the momentum and pressure to recognize the fundamental human rights of those residing in our cities and communities grows, so must our organizing efforts within the health sector and beyond.
Join "Health for All" for an evening where we re-envision what a just healthcare system looks like and show how we are working to make it areality! http://toronto.nooneisillegal.org/node/423http://www.facebook.com/home.php?ref=home#!/event.php?eid=310034783049&ref=mfhttp://www.facebook.com/home.php?ref=home#%21/event.php?eid=310034783049&ref=mf>
For more information, please email *healthforalltoronto@gmail.com
* ‘Health For All’ is a group of healthcare professionals, students, and activists. We believe health is a fundamental human right. Health requires not only access to medical, mental health and dental care, but also full economic, social, environmental and political rights for all people. We call for universal health coverage and full regularization for all people to ensure health for all! Endorsers:
Canadian Doctors for Medicare,
University of Toronto
Health Is Political
Health Providers Against Poverty
Law Union of Ontario
Medical Reform Group
No One Is Illegal - Toronto
Ontario Coalition Against Poverty
Ontario Public Interest Research Group, University of Toronto
Public Health Interest Group, University of Toronto
Residents Without Borders,
University of Toronto Right to Health Coalition
Students for Medicare
__________________________________
3) *JOIN the Ontario Coalition Against Poverty at International Women's Day*
*Joining with The Migrant Women’s Coordinating Body*
*Poverty is a Feminist Issue: Raise the Rates Contingent*
Joining up with - 'Working Class Women Unite Against Imperialism'
Saturday, March 6th, 2010
Meeting: 12:30 @ Bedford and Bloor (outside of OISE)
Approximately 100 000 people in Toronto are on Social Assistance - the vast majority are Women and Children. People are forced to live on Welfare and Disability rates that are shamefully inadequate. After welfare rates were cut by the Harris Tories in 1995 by 21.6%, and Disability rates were frozen, people's income levels have continued to fall for 15 straight years.
Today,with inflation and the cost of living increase since 1995, people are living on Social Assistance rates that are at least 40% below where they should be for an adequate living standard. As the fall-out of the economic recession deepens after billions of dollars in bail-outs were given to failing banks and corporations, governments are now scrambling to reduce deficits at our expense. The worst impact is yet to be felt, and will surely be felt hardest by Toronto's poorest communities.
Already we are seeing an increased criminalization of people on Social Assistance and massive cuts in access to the much needed Special Diet benefit. All three levels of Government are set to release their yearly Budgets by the beginning of April and it is clear that cuts to the Public Sector are on the agenda.
We won’t pay for their crisis or their deficit.
We demand the right to decent income and a future free of poverty.
We believe that Poverty is a Feminist issue - and on March 6th we plan to join with International Women's Day under the banner of 'End Poverty and Violence Against Women, Raise Social Assistance Rates by 40% Now!'
Join with OCAP Women, trans folks and allies on March 6th.
Join with OCAP again on April 15th for a large mobilization against the the McGuinty Government.
*For more information about IWD visit: http://www.iwdtoronto.org/
Contact OCAP: ocap@tao.ca , 416-925-6939*

Molly’sBlog 2010-03-02 10:26:00


INTERNATIONAL LABOUR-BANGLADESH:
21 DIE IN BANGLADESH FACTORY FIRE:
The following, from the Clean Clothes Campaign, is somewhat ironic, coming as close as it does to International Womens' Day on March 8. One of the events that led to the establishment of IWD was the March 25, 1911 'Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire' in which 140 workers were killed. In that case exits were also locked. La Plus Ça Change I guess.
ILILILILILILILIL
21 Workers Die at Bangladeshi Factory Fire
Bangladesh unions and international labour rights organisations are calling for immediate action from brands and the government of Bangladesh following a fatal factory fire which killed at least 21 workers and injured a further 50.

The Garib & Garib Sweater Factory in Gazipur, Bangladesh has been producing knitwear for Swedish retailer H&M, reportedly a main buyer from the factory. The company's own website cites Otto, 3Suisses International, Pimkie, Provera, Lindex, Littlewoods, Wal-Mart and JC Penny as other current and previous buyers. The CCC is currently trying to verify this and other sourcing information provided by workers.The fire, seemingly caused by an electrical short circuit, started on the first floor of the seven story building at 9.30pm on Thursday February 25. As the fire spread, workers became trapped on the floors above. It appears, from witness statements and press reports, that emergency exits were blocked, the front gate was locked and fire extinguishing equipment was either missing or inappropriate. According to one survivor, rescue efforts were further hampered by the fact that firemen had to cut the window grills to access the building and rescue the trapped workers. No-one on the scene could tell fire fighters how many workers were in the factory at the time the fire began.

The National Garment Workers Federation and other organisations supporting the workers and their families call for:

1)the immediate arrest of the factory owner,
2)immediate payment of 500.000 Taka for the families of the dead workers;
3)provision of medical treatment and necessary compensation for the injured workers;
4)effective and immediate measures for compensation of the victims on the longer term, and
a credible investigation into the circumstances under which this tragedy could have happened.

The Bangladesh garment industry has a horrendous safety history. Since the start of this millennium, the Clean Clothes Campaign has highlighted 9 other similar cases with a total of 273 deaths (see for more info: http://www.cleanclothes.org/news/international-action-day-bangladesh).

We are angry and saddened that once again workers have paid the price for the failure of international brands, the Bangladesh government and the Bangladesh industry to take adequate steps to prevent such incidents from happening. A culture of impunity still exists that allows such incidents to be written of as simply tragic accidents, allowing everyone involved to deny responsibility for the consequences. A recent inquiry into one of these cases, KTS Sweater, found that the owners were cleared of criminal convictions, despite admitting to locking workers into the factory, after the police involved changed the charge sheet. (see http://www.thedailystar.net/newDesign/news-details.php?nid=128183)
The Garib & Garib Sweater Factory case once again proves that company audits are failing to pick up serious violations of international labour rights and corporate codes of conduct, and that the labour inspectorate and government monitoring of labour laws is woefully inadequate. At the same time the constant repression of trade union organisation within workplaces and the failure of brands to work with trade union representatives means that workers themselves are unable to report and challenge health and safety violations. If the industry is really serious about preventing future deaths they must start involving workers directly in monitoring health and safety standards. This can only be done through supporting the right to organise and working directly with trade unions.

Molly’sBlog 2009-03-09 05:32:00


INTERNATIONAL WOMEN'S DAY:
ONE FINAL NOTE:
Before I shut it down for the night here's one more item on International Women's Day, this one a reprint of a post here at Molly's Blog from this time last year.
,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
HOLIDAYS (OR IT SHOULD BE)
INTERNATIONAL WOMEN'S DAY:
Today, March 8, is celebrated as 'International Women's Day'. Way back when, on March 8 1908, 15,000 women marched through the streets of New York City demanding shorter hours, better pay and voting rights. In 1910 the first international women's conference was held in Copenhagen, Denmark, under the aegis of the Second Socialist International. The German socialist Clara Zetkin was the originator of the proposal. No fixed date was set at this event. The conference called for the establishment of an international women's day. This had been preceded by a declaration of the Socialist Party of America in 1909 calling for such an event on the last Sunday of February.

The date of March 8 gradually became an accepted time because it commemorated an 1857 protest in NYC by garment workers who later went on to establish the first labour union in the USA two years later. March 8 was also the day when women in Europe held peace rallies in 1913 as the clouds of WW1 gathered. IWD also gathered force from the Commemoration of the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire on March 25, 1911 when 140 garment workers were killed in a factory fire because the owners had locked the doors, barring any escape.

On the persuasion of Alexandra Kollontai IWD was declared a holiday in the USSR shortly after the Revolution. But.....this "holiday" remained a regular working day until May 8, 1965. Wags might remark that this is the usual stuff of communist pronouncements, with the name and the reality usually at significant variance. Nonetheless IWD remains an official holiday in many countries today. Most are members of the ex-Soviet bloc or other communist countries. By 1975, International Women's Year, the United nations began to sponsor the day. Today there is pressure in many countries to declare it an official holiday. In 2005, for instance, the British Trade Union Congress passed a resolution calling on the United Kingdom to issue such a declaration.

Nowadays celebrations are held across the world on this day. The global women's group Aurora hosts a semi-official list of events and resources. For an anarchist take on the day and its significance see THIS and THIS from the Anarkismo.Net news site. Also 'Feminism, Class and Anarchism' by Deidre Hogan (also available as a downloadable pdf).

Molly’sBlog 2009-03-08 21:53:00


INTERNATIONAL WOMEN'S DAY:
STATEMENT OF THE CHILEAN FEL ON INTERNATIONAL WOMEN'S DAY:
The following, from the Anarkismo site, is the statement of the Chilean Frente de Estudiantes Libertarios Santiago on the occasion of International Women's Day. The following has been slightly edited for English grammar.
,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
Statement on the International Women's Day:

On this important day, our organisation declares:
That today, 8th of March, we celebrate internationally the struggle of women to end the oppression that has been systematically exercised on us by the patriarchal society.
However, we witness the way in which the establishment and the political and economic powers behind the dominant class try to eclipse and manipulate the very origins of this day, which lay with working class women, with those women who are part of the students and of the urban poor, women that suffer from a double oppression and exploitation due to their class origin and their condition as woman .
That there is an official International Women’s Day is because there has been a long tradition of struggle carried by working class women since late in the XIXth Century, women who saw that the final abolition of exploitation could not be complete without the end of another oppression, the first and fundamental form of oppression: that of men against women. With the roots in the first expressions of the socialist movement and in the midst of the industrial boom that led women to the factories, it was there that was born the organisation of those revolting for their right to vote and also against the abuse at work imposed by Capital and the domestic exploitation of men that turned them into slaves.
On the day itself, it is important to note that there were many women’s days until it was decided, arbitrarily, to pick the 8th of March, a date chosen by German socialist women in 1914. In the Russian calendar, women’s day is February 23rd, the day in which the first stage of the Russian Revolution started in 1917 with the strike of the garment industry working women from Petrograd, who ,without obeying the Party instructions to wait for action, voted to struggle for their right to bread and peace.
These events have been largely forgotten, and the liberal bourgeois movements that turned Women’s Day into an institution, reduced the importance of its class origins to turn it into the mere attempt to make women equal to men when it comes to their right to be exploited by capitalism. This is to deny and misrepresent a struggle that had as its main objective to end all forms of oppression, which aimed at creating a free and equal society, without classes nor bourgeois institutions based on coercion.
Women, in the heat of the struggle, have historically been at the forefront, destroying at revolutionary times existing norms, a role still played today, being a fundamental actor in the rise of our people’s struggles.
We cannot let ourselves be deceived because some women are in high posts in government and in private companies, from where they bark a supposed equal condition given by bourgeois society. In reality, all women are oppressed because of their gender, we know of it from our experience when looking for a job, when we receive our wage and in the way we are treated daily by this capitalist and patriarchal society.
We do not conform with an official day in our calendar, while the true origin of our struggle is concealed, and every day -we make it our day. We hold as our duty, as left-wing revolutionaries, not to tolerate discrimination or exclusion against our females comrades in our circles, attitudes which derive from the authoritarian relation of this traditionalist and bourgeois society in which we live. And we hold, as well, as something of paramount importance, to smash the illusion of “equality” when oppression keeps alive and well and we can’t turn a blind eye to it.
Against Patriarchy and Class Society!
Against Imperialism and for Libertarian Socialism!
Up the Women in Struggle!
FEL Santiago
Related Link: http://feluchile.blogspot.com/

Molly’sBlog 2009-03-08 20:34:00


INTERNATIONAL WOMEN'S DAY:
WORKERS' SOLIDARITY ALLIANCE IWD STATEMENT:
The following statement from the American anarchosyndicalist Workers' Solidarity Alliance was published today at the A-Infos website.
,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
US, WSA: International Women's Day statement:
One hundred and one years ago today, on March 8, 1908, thousands of women left their jobs in the sweatshops of New York City's Lower East Side and took to the streets to demand their rights as women and as workers. In 1917, their sisters in Russia followed suit, and helped to bring about the revolution that overthrew the Tsarist autocracy. And in Spain in 1936, the anarchist women of Mujeres Libres helped to free their sisters from centuries of oppression.
----
In more recent times, women have played key roles in the civil rights and anti-war movements of the 1960's and early 1970's. In the 1990's and into the 21st century, women workers are still in the forefront of the continued struggle against sweatshop conditions in many industries and services. This vibrant movement has already won important victories, both against the institutions relationships of women.
The Workers Solidarity Alliance honors these women, as well as the countless others in every corner of the world, who, generation after generation, rise up against inequality, oppression and domination.
We salute their struggles and the sacrifices they made.
Still, the dream of freedom, equality and peace for all people is far from reality. Every day, women continue to confront sexism in their personal relationships as well as sexual harassment and violence on the job, in the streets, and at home. Millions of women workers are still ruthlessly exploited. The right-wing and religious fanatics threaten women's most basic right to control our own bodies.
The roots of sexism and all oppressive relationships are intertwined deep within the systems of hierarchy, authority and militarism that dominate society. These principles are the basis for every modern state and established socio-economic power. We know that this is not simply "the way it is." There are other, better possibilities for a more livable world. Faced with overwhelming webs of oppression and subjugation, we must fight back and take control of our own lives. We can begin by organizing with our sisters and brothers in our communities, our schools, and our workplaces.
We strive for a society in which one person or group of people do not dominate or exploit another. In such a society there would be no basis for sexual oppression, domination or class exploitation. We must work to replace the institutions of power, the nation-state and capitalism with a worldwide system of grassroots empowerment and self-management of all facets of social and economic life. See the dreams of these women workers fulfilled; join us in a movement with an extraordinary history and an inspiring future.
Help us build this new world of freedom and self-management.
Workers Solidarity Alliance
Related Link:
http://www.workersolidarity.org/
http://www.myspace.com/workerssolidarityalliance
Workers Solidarity Alliance:
339 Lafayette Street-Room 202
New York, NY 10012

Molly’sBlog 2009-03-08 18:29:00


CANADIAN LABOUR:
TAKE BACK OUR RADIO:
The following appeal for solidarity with locked out radio programmers at Toronto's CKLN radio is from the Ontario Coalition Against Poverty (OCAP).
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This International Women's Day Support Locked-Out CKLN Programmers!‏:
This International Women's Day
… Support campus-community radio & locked-out CKLN programmers!
Join our national radio direct action!
...TAKE BACK OUR RADIO!
LIVE TO AIR: Wednesday March 11th, from 5-10pm (EST)
LOCATION: The Imperial Pub (54 Dundas Street East, just east of Yonge/Dundas)
------------------------
** PROGRAMMING GUIDE BELOW **
** FIND OUT HOW YOU CAN SUPPORT **-
In 2008, 53 volunteer programmers were 'fired' from campus-community radio station CKLN 88.1 FM in Toronto without explanation. Tune-in to a live broadcast by former CKLN hosts and DJs, as they stream onto the internet and reclaim the lost airwaves.
Marking International Women's Day, the 'fired' programmers include the hosts of CKLN's only feminist program, as well as many other women, trans and queer, activist and marginalized programmers. This 5-hour broadcast will feature voices otherwise silenced in the mainstream, as well as focus on community grassroots media across this country, its significance and importance.
SIMULCASTERS & RE-BROADCASTERS: This broadcast will be available in high-quality over the internet @ www.RMR.fm and archived for later re-broadcast @ www.Radio4All.net .
LISTENERS ACROSS CANADA: Catch this broadcast on March 11th as it happens in full or partially through CKUT in Montreal (90.3 FM, www.ckut.ca ), CHRYin Toronto (105.5 FM, www.chry.fm ), CJUM in Manitoba (101.5 FM,www.umfm.com ) and Co-op Radio in Vancouver (102.7 FM, Starchoice 845 Satellite, Telus Channel 178, www.coopradio.org ). TUNE IN @ www.RMR.fm
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WHAT YOU CAN DO:
1. ENDORSEMENTS! If your organization or group or local is interested in endorsing this broadcast, let us know and we'll thank you on-air …
2. DONATE! Make a financial or in-kind donation (food for the day of the broadcast, photocopying, printing, etc.) …
3. OUTREACH! Help us spread the word, through flyering and postering
4. COME OUT ON THE DAY! Join us as we broadcast live, help us on the ground of the broadcast, join us in listening to powerful voices and music, be there for a memorable community event… (LOCATION: TBA)
Remember, you too can help make this national radio direct action a success. For more info, email us at: takebackourradio@gmail.com
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TAKE BACK OUR RADIO! PROGRAMMING GUIDE
A Live-To-Air Broadcast for IWD (Toronto)
March 11th, 2009 – 5 pm to 10 pm (Eastern Time) - www.RMR.fm
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5:00 PM
Honour the Earth
Featuring the music, thoughts & perspectives of First Nations women of Turtle Island. HOST: Audrey Redman
5:30 PM
Saturday Morning Live Weekend energy for a week night action!
Featuring SML regular contributor Gerald Horne (Professor in History at the University of Houston and prolific African American historian), and 'Amandla', with a focus on events and analysis from the African continent,featuring the voices and issues of women.
HOSTS:
Audrey Wandolo and Omme-Salma Rahemtullah
6:00 PM
OCAP Radio
Brought to you by the Ontario Coalition Against Poverty (OCAP), a proud radio space hosting the voices of women fighting back against poverty. Highlights include tenants waging a creative struggle for affordable housing, and disability rights activists battling against ableist government policies and working to create accessible space. Music of resistance will be present too as we reclaim the airwaves once again!
HOST: Stef Gude
6:30 PM
Anti-Psychiatry Radio
Long-time anti-psychiatry activist Don Weitzwill interview Bonnie Burstow, feminist anti-psychiatrist. Don will also comment on key struggles against electro-shock, including the current campaign "Stop Shocking Our Mothers and Grandmothers" organized by the Coalition Against Psychiatric Assault (CAPA).
HOST: Don Weitz
7:00 PM
No One Is Illegal Radio Featuring the "Shelter.Sanctuary.Status"campaign,
NOII radio will highlight on-going work towards access to services and the provision of full legal immigration status for all women and their families fleeing diverse forms of violence. This show will also recognize the violence of deportation and detention, and demand the elimination of these forms of state violence.
No One is Illegal-Toronto is a group of immigrants, refugees and allies who fight for justice for all migrants, and believe that granting citizenship to a privileged few is part of a racist immigration and border policy that marginalizes and exploits migrants.
HOST: Yen Chu
7:30 PM
Dat Dere
A jazz improvising creative music and poetry community radio program, its roots are in the Black experience in the diaspora and internationally. The show is dedicated to challenging inquiring minds of all ages. Over 100 years ago,15,000 women marched through New York City demanding their rights politically,socially and economically. Today and every year on this day since that march, we celebrate that significant event. We celebrate women all over the world, We hear their voices, and We rejoice in all our achievements.
HOSTS: Chloe Onari, Gary Topp, Sharon McLeod.
8:15 PM
Ventana Al Barrio / WOM Fridays presents:
"Resistentes! Womyn Still Standing and Moving Strong" [Resistentes: Plural, Adj., Lang:Spanish. Trans: 1. resistant, strong, tough 2. those who resist] We resist through music, words and actions! Join this 30-minute journey through word and song along a path of resistance. Hear women's voices speak about grassroots political and cultural activism in writing, music and social advocacy as they comment on who and how many people across borders struggle to rescue, reclaim, transform and survive - their lives, their stories, their cultures, and their voices- against the forces of market and capital driven trends that place greed above need. HOST: Susy Alvarez.
8:45 PM
Radio Cliteracy Broadcasts from Exile!
Focusing on the importance of community radio in encouraging women's empowerment locally and globally, this show will feature:
* "Things left unsaid" - Through a series of creative writing pieces, black queer youth speak to the experience of existing just beyond the fringes of a black civil rights movement that often excludes queer voice and a feminist movement that often does not represent their reality.
* The White Ribbon Campaign - Radio Cliteracy trains youth to produce radio segments on the issue of violence against women.
* ISIS Manila - Daniel Vandervoort interviews about ISIS Manila, an NGO working to broadcast the voices of women in the Global South through grassroots communications initiatives. www.isiswomen.org
HOSTS: Carmelle Wolfson, Kim Crosby, Nat Tremblay, Sarah Reaburn & Ruby Tuesday
9:15 PM
Frequency Feminisms
*Womyn Powered is a diverse collective of real womyn - of colour, dis/abled, poor and subversive - who are bringing you the stories that you will not find in the mainstream. Tune in for spoken word, collective action, music and other expressions of our oppression and redemption. Because we survive, because we can sing, because we reclaim - join us! For IWD, we will cover the struggles of womyn migrant workers and our collective resistance, as we take back the airwaves.
HOSTS - Anna Saini,Yolisa Dalamba, Joeita Gupta, Oriel Varga, Gein Wong
9:35 PM
Limin in de African Diaspora Come lime with Verlia in de African Diasposa! Let us honour our African Caribbean women who have brought strength and power to their people. Come listen to Ella Andall, Singing Sandra, Sanelle Dempster, Alison Hinds just to name a few! We will also discuss the history of "Limin'" and the contribution this show has provided to our diverse communities.
HOST: Verlia
NOTE:
Archives for the entire broadcast will be available for download and replay for not for profit purposes at www.Radio4All.net following March11th.
For more info and updates, visit
http://takebackourradio.blogspot.com

Happy International Womens’ Day

That’s all.

Molly’sBlog 2009-03-08 01:32:00


INTERNATIONAL ANARCHIST MOVEMENT-BOLIVIA:
WOMEN AND LIBERATION IN BOLIVIA:
Continuing on with our feminism theme in the run-up to International Women's Day here's yet another opinion, this time from the Mujeres Creando (Women Creating) anarcha-feminist group in Bolivia. What it is is an indictment of the "anti-imperialist" government of Evo Morales and its ignoring of the situation of women. Molly herself has few opinions on Bolivia, not knowing enough to comment on the situation. Still...this is another view that should be heard.
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Evo Morales and the Phallic Decolonization of the Bolivian State:
por María GalindoTraducción: April Howard

The Law of Convocation to the Constitutional Assembly: Society didn't propose a change of government.
In Bolivia there are hundreds of thousands of Evos, in each public high school, on each neighborhood soccer team, in each little workers union, from the taxi drivers to the ice cream vendors. There are intuitive Evos, with beautifully dark complexions, casual and unorthodox in terms of cultural identity. They are Evos as modern as they are indigenous but, above all audacious in their use of words and careless and macho in sex and love. They use ponchos, suits or sports jackets and they choose their clothes with the liberty that patriarchal societies prohibit women, and above all those that are called Indigenous and who, for that reason, have to carry their cultural identity on their hips and backs, undrawing their curves in the use of masculine mandates.
This Evo whose face is an immediate and magical social mirror did not receive just a presidential mandate in the past elections, he received a historic mandate that, moreover, consisted of the nationalization of the hydrocarbons and the sentencing of Sanchez de Losada, in the convocation of a constitutional assembly that would permit the redesign of the Bolivian political system. An assembly that was past of an agenda installed by the social movements and not the political parties, an assembly that marked Bolivian society's need not for a change of government, but instead for a historic meeting at which to redesign the bases that had created crisis together with the neoliberal model.
Due to that clear responsibility and his Indigenous condition, the hope existed that Evo would convoke an assembly that was open to all possible forms of participation.
However, though the Law of Convocation created by the government of Evo Morales, with the direct responsibility of Alvaro García Linera, promulgates a law that:
- Restitutes the legitimacy of the political parties defeated by the revolt in October of 2003, including those that committed genocide against the people of El Alto.
- Closes all possibility of direct representation of social movements, which has obligated many movements to seek out alliances with MAS in order to be able to propose candidacies or opt to stay out of the assembly and therefore the socio-political discussion that this has unleashed in Bolivian society.
- Ratifies the technocratic neoliberal criteria of representation of women as a biological quota within political parties, with the addition of the Otherness which inhibits all form of alliance between women by needing to alternate each woman with a man.
- Leaves out the important sector of Neoliberal exiles who are a migrant population in countries like Argentina, Brazil, U.S. and Spain. This population has grown steeply in past years and now constitutes a quarter of the economic support of our society.
- Closes the character of the constitutional assembly to session during a year in a framework that addresses powers already constituted, with which the assembly converts itself into a mere constitutional reform.
With this exclusion and weakening of social movements, Evo Morales and his indigenist-leftist government has the security of obtaining an absolute majority within the assembly. This permits him to co-opt social sectors like clients of the party, to carry out a plebiscite in place of assembly elections and to rewrite the text of the constitution from a place of executive power. So the project plans to annihilate spaces of dissidence and political autonomy in respect to the party of the government.
With this assembly then, we witness the silencing of the social movements in our society. We also witness a re-accommodation of the social movements from the role of being the forces of the veto and the Bolivian social mobilization, to being the cheap clients of a liberal state. They are left to be rats tricked by state power. It isn't the silencing of the bullet, and it isn't the silencing of censure, but rather a cynical exclusion. A silencing as could only come from Œone of ours¹ (in quotes): an ex prisoner who took up arms, like Alvaro García Linera and an indigenous union member, like Evo. In this way, the assembly converts itself in the scenario for the substitution of liberal representative democracy that we defeated in the streets, hundreds of thousands ,without leaders or parties, in unheard of mobilizations, to substitute this for a mono-partied democracy that offers us MAS as an alternative without alternative. In this way, the magic Evo, the Evo who wakes up identities, can convert himself into an identitive antidote that inaugurates a regime closed around its leaders.
I don¹t want to campaign for a candidate, I want to vomit: The electoral campaign.
It is not casual chance that the most conservative sectors have taken enthusiastically to the electoral campaign as a chance to make ridiculous reparations that will allow them to prolong their agonizing mediocrity by displaying gargantuan portraits of themselves which are unmistakable invitations to vomiting.
Other sectors that are taking advantage of the occasion are the great proliferation of Churches and Evangelical sects. They have presented their own candidates, thanks to thousands and thousands of their faithful, to defend their interests in the assembly and, like all churches, to go on eating the pieces of social life.
The military, which today enjoys important attributes in the present constitution, and which is not disposed to lose even the obligatory military service with which it installs in our youth its model of chauvinist virility, have also proposed their own candidates, borrowed and rented in all of their varieties. They range from pro-government to the extreme right, all coinciding in defense of their corporate interests.
Even the Catholic Church, using its intuitive instincts for the accumulation of power, has suffered an unexpected love-affair with MAS in order to put the brakes on the process toward a Secular State. Their campaign is characterized by efforts to delay, restrain, and confuse the processes of political recreation that a society as dynamic as Bolivia had proposed.
We, the Mujeres Creando [Women Creating], are street agitators, autonomous, self-summoned to all of life. We are women who have questioned representative democracy and the vision of equality proposed by the gender technocracy. We have proposed a candidacy, and so with our queerness, are entering a terrain that is a farce of representation. Our almost tiny candidacy has entered through a crack in the law, in the institution and the system, like rainwater that filters itself by simultaneously seeking and creating leaks. A crack in the roof of the houses, of the Palace and the institutions from where we let our dissidence leak.
To say that women are a political subject that for centuries was denied the right to speak, with which they emptied us of our own contents whether with arguments of complementariness, of submission, of exclusion or inclusion. In the end, all women come to the same end, women are ahistorical, apolitical and invisible. And all social pacts are pacts are made between categories of men according to the culture they pertain to, their skin color, the social class they pertain to or the ideology they subscribe to. And this social pact signifies a convivial pact regarding the interests of categories of men about hegemonic projects in which some are above others.
Today in Bolivia, Indigenism and Leftism repeat themselves and find themselves next to neoliberalism in the same phallic, patriarchal posture, a posture that ratifies the confusion between social projects and power projects, the control of society, the submission of the other, as the only interest around which history and politics should revolve.
I'm not native, I'm original: The colonial character versus the patriarchal character of the Bolivian State
As feminists we want to be neither underneath nor on top of anyone. That is why we will not find our own place in this process. As quasi undesirable tenants of the candidacy that we postulate, we use this space to affirm that the decolonization of the State is not possible without its depatriarcalization.
We affirm that the social pact rests on a sexual contract that has expropriated from women the sovereignty over our own bodies. And that this is a phenomenon of all political systems, of all ideologies and all cultures. A renovation of this social pact that does not question the sexual contract that sustains it can only reiterate forms of colonial and patriarchal submission at the same time. And looking at supposedly original cultures is not the mechanism that will permit us to decolonize our society, nor make it fuller, more livable or freer.
The demand for the original culture as pure, as the culture that will build the nation, the project of power and then nationalism will only drive us to the patriarchal and colonial renovation of power, where power simply exercises power with a mere change of actors.
A sample of this today is the andinocentrism with which one expects to reinterpret Bolivian society. Our society is not a society of pure, original, indigenous people versus undesirable mestizo white-oids. It is much more complex than that; ours is a society of disobediences and cultural mutations in which the technological revolution is sugar to the soul of all kids who, thanks to piracy, conquer it in their quotidian chatting and navigating with the world. It is a society like all societies of the world where we as social actors also construct culture and thus we can talk about youth culture, about an urban culture, about this, that and the other culture, about a culture of queers and a culture of the street and the street vendors and who culturally transform the meaning of the street and public space, for example.
We are not obedient originals and for that reason and because we put in question cultural mandates, starting with clothing and ending with pleasures. Due to and thanks to this disobedience which makes us happy, we propose a decolonizing and depatriarchalizing societal project that has the rise of nationalisms as a principal question.
They want to substitute the project of the united Nation State for a project of autonomous plurinationalisms in order to open an eternal struggle for land, for resources, for power and control. We want to be neither on top nor underneath and so we challenge this project with our body and our skin, sensitive and open to sin.
The only fight you lose is the fight you abandon:
The strategy of concrete proposals.
We have also developed a handful of concrete proposals that matter to us because they are born of our daily life:
Our Father if you are in heaven liberate us from the power of the Church:
Today the Bolivian State has an official religion, which is Catholicism. Freedom of worship is guaranteed but the secular character of social matters is not. In this way the Church has confabulated with State Power in everything. We have religion class in all public schools, the Church exercises a mountain of non ecclesiastical activities, and worst, we have inherited the Judeo-Christian concept of family in our constitution and in all judicial law.
That is why to propose a secular State is to recuperate an hour of class time in schools from religion and to put it, for example, to the service of a secular sexual education, and to our right to know our bodies through school and the classroom. Beyond that, our proposal separates the concept of family from the patriarchal Judeo-Christian vision, reconceptualizing the family, honoring all the complex forms that this has in our society. This opens the doors the recognition of all forms of free union that occur beyond the state, these pretty and unusual forms that make freedom possible in love and in the construction of affectionate and supportive coexistence. Of course this includes couples made of men and women, community unions, houses of mothers and daughters, sons, grandmothers, aunts, uncles, until complexity widens it without impositions, without models and, above all, without imposing suffering nor shortages, nor absences who have the right to grow and live in sympathy and liberty.
Che and Evo are the same Irresponsible Fathers:
Society has expropriated maternity from women, it values and protects reproduction at the same time it imposes maternity as a reason for living for women. However, it subordinates maternity to the existence of a father who gives it legitimacy. While the women give life, the fathers have the power to grant social space, and so convert the act of giving life into a secondary act. That is what invents the concept of the single mother, to whom society grants the burden of condemnation in some cases, in others the burden of the fate of the abandoned mother. Mothers' recuperation of their maternity is a cultural theme, but it also addresses the legal act of the paternal last name, which in our society is the first [of the two last names], the one that counts and, at the same time, is a mechanism of recognition of the ignorance that every man has regarding his sons and daughters. That is why we propose maternal filiation, which is to say that boys and girls should carry the last name of their mothers first. This recuperates the place of the mothers, where women change from being objects of reproduction to subjects of maternity. It also recuperates the daughters' place in the family, a place that all statistics show us is not valued in comparison to their brothers'.
This act also will have consequences in all family jurisprudence, in so much as what is called patria-potestad, which is a concept of patriarchal authority over sons and daughters. Sovereignty in my country and in my body:
They have also expropriated from us, the women, the right to make decisions about our bodies, and this is presented in legal rulings in various situations, one of them is the penalization of abortion. The recuperation of women¹s sovereignty over their bodies is a wider concept than the mere depenalization of abortion. This is why we consider it fundamental to insert within the special constitutional regimes, one that concretely carries the title of women's constitutional regime. This has to do with a chapter that would permit all of those fundamental rights to be concentrated and, as the principal of all rights, a woman's right to make decisions regarding her body.
Every political party is a weapon loaded with blood, machismo and corruption:
We propose to break the monopoly that the political parties have in respect to political representation though the aperture of the exercise of direct representation of all forms of social representation that exist in Bolivian society. In respect to the representation of women, for us it is fundamental to challenge the quotas that were introduced during the neoliberal period and ratified by the Indigenist-Left. This quota converts the political representation of women into a biological quota, empty of content, in which any woman, due to her biological condition of being female, is representative of all women in a situation of non-ideological representation. This quota has been moreover reinforced in its non-ideologization though the concept of alternity, alternity that has as effect the negation of the political alliance between women. Both are mechanisms that deny women political autonomy, which is to say, the sense of organizing from themselves, outside of political parties and mixed organizations.
Long live the deserters, the so-called cowards and all youth who object to the use of weapons
These days military service is obligatory for men, and the gender technocracy has motivated the creation of voluntary military service for women, giving power to one of the densest nuclei of patriarchal culture in our society. Military service in Bolivia has constituted itself as the school of macho virility and the mechanism for the acquisition of manliness. That is why the young men who come back from military service acquire authority in their communities and are celebrated for it.
Conscientious objection is the door that allows the value of the use of weapons and the very existence of an army in society to be questioned. It is a fundamental right for all young men to be able to object to this sense of virility and the possibility of substituting this service for social service allows us to repropose to young men the logic of service to society and the place and sense of masculinity.
Give the Constitutional Assembly back to society, opening deliberative spaces from the Assembly itself
The Assembly is crossed by a series of themes that are axes for Bolivian society. It is a historic irresponsibility to leave it in hands of the political parties that, moreover, have filled the majority of the lists with characters that in many cases do not even correspond to social sectors. There are all kinds of candidates fulfilling even marital quotas, like that of the Mayor of the city of La Paz's wife.
In other cases, the candidates are making proposals that have nothing to do with the constitutional scenario because, if they are elected, they will simply respond to postures that will be cut up into other spaces. ON the other hand, the complexity of the themes converts itself into a species of mosaic that is impossible to assemble from a single perspective. This is why we consider that the scenario of the assembly raises, above all, a methodological challenge that can gather together the knowledge and visions of the actors and protagonists of each theme.
This is why it is urgent that, once the elections take place, departmental, regional and thematic pre-constitutional assemblies are opened by social actors. We have posed to ourselves the proposition of convoking a pre-constitutional assembly of women as a complex political subject.
BECAUSE WOMEN ARE NOT A BIOLOGICAL QUOTA,
NOR A RIB OF ADAM'S,
EVE TO THE CONSITUTIONAL ASSEMBLY.
We, the Mujeres Creando, have a self-managed house that is located at:
2060, calle 20 de octubre
Between Apiazu and J.J. Perez, Tel. 2413764, La Paz, Bolivia.
Our house is named Virgen de los deseos [Virgen of Desires]
There you will find:
A market, a dining room, lodging, an audiovisual hall, classrooms for workshops,
Solidarity, feminist culture in all its forms
And a universe of Indians, bitches and lesbians,
Restless assemblies and sisterhoods.
Our website is:
www.mujerescreando.com
www.mujerescreando.org
Our email is:mujerescreando@alamo.entelnet.bo