I wrote this for the blog away back in 2011, there have been changes, but sadly, there is still a long way to go, to have that desired equality across our society.
March 8 is celebrated across the world as International Women's Day (IWD), a day when we can come together to honour women world wide.
In 1910, the Second International held the first international women's conference in Copenhagen and an 'International Women's Day' was established. It was suggested by the German Socialist Clara Zetkin, although no date was specified. The first IWD was observed on March 19, 1911 in Germany.
It is a day when we can pay homage to all those women who selflessly fought to improve the conditions of not just women, but all humankind. Women who struggled to improve working conditions, for justice, for peace, for unity of all ordinary people.
Every country, every city, has its role of honour of such women, perhaps not publicly displayed but it will be there, in folklore, in song, in theatre and poem. Glasgow can be proud of its list of women who fought injustice where they saw it, some struggled away in obscurity, some in the limelight of publicity, all played their part in improving our lives. Today more than ever we need our women heroes, we need the unity of all men and women to combat the savage onslaught against our living standards. Today more than ever people have to stand up and join hands in solidarity with all people's across the globe.
Here are just a few of Glasgow's women from our recent past that are worthy of being honoured today.
"It is not by changing ministers - such guilty men! - or
issuing declarations that fascism will be conquered. The problem is more
complex than that. We do not intend to add our voice to those who
delude the workers that their 'leaders' will get them out of the mess.
The problems need a complete transformation in the present attitude of
the working class." Marie Louise Berneri From; War Commentary, December 1940.
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