Κυριακή 8 Μαρτίου 2020

A GLOBAL TREND OF FEMALE AWAKENING


“Women everywhere. Great sign. When women get involved, when the housewife pushes her husband, when she grasps the black flag, hovering over the pot to plant it between two sidewalks, it is because the sun will rise in a revolutionary city”. The words of French journalist-writer Jules Vallès about the women of Commune, remind us of the powerful presence of women in demonstrations, strikes and uprisings in recent years.

For years, especially after the economic crisis, as a result of the neoliberalism failure (2008), with the austerity programs the working conditions and the social benefits were downgraded and the cost of living increased dramatically. All of these have lead millions of workers, primarily women, often single mothers to unpresented uncertainty. Childcare is difficult, from taking them to kindergarten (if they find), to school, food and clothing. On the other hand, after an exhausting day at work, how can you take care of children and family?  Because there is an expectation of society: “To work as if they did not have children and to raise their children like they were not working.” Women’s labor conflicts are related to the fact that the female paid employment has increased significantly, into a patriarchal society full of inequalities and discrimination, into a society where women suffer dual oppression (work-home), and are faced with social and class issues such as sexual, gender discriminations, abuse and violence (domestic, trafficking, prostitution…).
In Lebanon women are in the front line of the demonstrations, inspiring the women of the other Arab countries. In Algeria women do not just ask equal rights and to wear whatever they want. They are on the streets against the regime itself. In France the women’s presence in the “Yellow Vests” is notable and often in the forefront of the protests. Today in France the working women constitute 51% of the working class. On 1968 it was 35%. 49% of the women have part-time precarious jobs, compared with 21% of men.
In the recent uprisings of Latin America the role of women has been crucial. In Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Uruguay, Mexico, Venezuela the international organization "Bread and Roses" has roots within the working class, does not support a separate female movement from the working class and fights for the women's rights believing that the complete woman's emancipation, as well as the emancipation of the working class is not possible within capitalism.
This new wave of women’s mobilizations is more radical, breaking the decades of domination of “liberal feminism”, which has passed, by whatever means that the upper class has,  in the consciences of the people that the "individual free choice" as the horizon of female emancipation. Ignoring that all the rights which had been won, they are not always available to all women that equality in "civil law" does not mean equality in life. And that the capitalists whatever they give with one hand in a period of prosperity, they will take it back with the other in a time of crisis.
The female workforce, due to the dual presence -work, home- plays a basic role by linking the workplaces with other social strata. The struggle against women's oppression is a part of class struggle. If these millions of women, who are an integral part of the working class, stop, the whole society will stop. These are the women who are rising up. For the right to work, better living conditions, childcare, equal wages, the right to abortion, against sexist violence and abuse. For the right to bread as well as to roses. "If the women's emancipation is impossible without communism, then communism is unthinkable without women's emancipation", as the Bolshevik, revolutionary Inessa Armand said.

Olga Stefanidou