IWD march hits war, economy, bigotry
By Betsey Piette
Philadelphia
Mar 11, 2009
For the second year in a row, the International Women’s Day
Philadelphia Coalition has brought together women from diverse communities,
cultures and struggles.
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Construction workers march
in Philadelphia.
photo: Joe Piette
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This year's event included strong participation from Latina, Asian and
Black women, as well as many activists from Philadelphia's LGBT
community. With the growing economic crisis hitting women the hardest, many
speakers addressed social and economic justice issues, including the mortgage
crisis, health care reform and the struggle to pass the Employee Free Choice
Act.
Jaci Adams, representing Transgender Women of Color, spoke at a City Hall
rally, noting that it was the first time she knew of in Philadelphia that a
transgender woman was invited to speak at an IWD event. Helen Gym of Parents
United for Public Education and Asian Americans United described her
community’s fight against attempts to build a gambling casino in
Chinatown, already impacted by gambling addiction.
The rally featured many young women who presented the history of IWD and
read from a resolution honoring the day passed by the Philadelphia City Council
on March 6. Louise Francis of NOW addressed corporate greed and the drive for
profits as the root causes of the mortgage and foreclosure crisis. The outdoor
event was followed by a march to an indoor afternoon rally at the Family
Planning Council office on South Broad Street.
After a ceremonial opening featuring Aztec drumming and dance by Fuego Nuevo
from the Raíces Culturales Latinoamericanas and songs from the Anna Crusis
Women’s Choir, Afghan activist Suraya Pakzad addressed the crowd. In
1988, this Afghan mother of six founded Voice of Women, one of only a few
women’s nongovernmental organizations in Afghanistan.
Pakzad explained that while by law, women in Afghanistan have the right to
go to school, to work and to walk on the streets, real practices concerning
women haven’t changed. Every 13 minutes a woman in Afghanistan dies in
childbirth and many children do not survive to their fifth birthday.
Other speakers included Kathy Black of the Coalition of Labor Union Women
and U.S. Labor Against the War, who said women are disproportionately the
victims of war, of suffering in countries under occupation and from the
economic impact of a wartime economy and suffering as soldiers subject to
sexual abuse and rape.
Pattie Eakin, president of the Pennsylvania Association of Nurses and Allied
Professionals, spoke on the need to pass HB 676 for Universal Single Payer
Healthcare. She noted that, because of lack of health care, women in the U.S.
are far more likely to die from childbirth due to medical complications than
women in 32 other countries.
Focusing her remarks on the importance of passing the Employee Free Choice
Act, Roni Green of SEIU spoke on the conditions working women face in
today’s near-depression economy. “It’s a race to the
bottom,” she noted, referring to the decline in wages and employee
benefits. “Women need union protection to fight for a livable wage,
health care and a guaranteed pension.”
Green described conditions for women working at Wal-Mart who are paid
minimum wage and must rely on government programs for health care and food
stamps. She noted, “During his election campaign Obama was attacked for
suggesting ‘a redistribution of the wealth.’ But workers are the
ones who create the wealth and we’re only asking for what is ours. The
fight for the Employee Free Choice Act may be one of the most important
struggles in the upcoming period.”