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DESCRIPTION:  Call for more info about local actions:  415-626-4114  8 March 2004  --  
 Calling all women  5th GLOBAL WOMEN’S STRIKE  Calling all men to join 
 with women to   STOP THE WORLD AND CHANGE IT!   INVEST IN CARING NOT 
 KILLING!     A long grassroots history  The GLOBAL WOMEN'S STRIKE was born 
 in 1999, when women in Ireland decided to welcome the new millennium with a 
 national general strike.  They asked the International Wages for Housework 
 Campaign to support their call, and we called on women all over the world 
 to make the Strike global on 8 March 2000.  The Strike came out of a long 
 grassroots history, starting in 1952 with a little pamphlet called A 
 Woman’s Place and continuing with Power of Women and the Subversion of 
 the Community, now a classic, in 1972, and Sex, Race and Class in 1973.*  
 All three made the case that the work women do for wages is a second job, 
 that the work we do in the home and in the community without wages, 
 producing all the workers of the world, and our struggle to change the 
 world, were invisible but central.    Since then, we have been campaigning 
 to get RECOGNITION and WAGES for all the unwaged work women do, as well as 
 for PAY EQUITY-- these are JOINT LEVERS against women's poverty, 
 exploitation and discrimination of every kind.  According to the UN, women 
 do 2/3 of the world’s work: from breastfeeding and raising children to 
 caring for those who are sick, older or disabled, to growing, preparing and 
 cooking the food that feeds families, communities and continents (80% of 
 food consumed in Africa is grown by women), to volunteer work and to work 
 in the informal economy as cleaners, seamstresses, street sellers, sex 
 workers, as well as work in the formal economy.  Here again women’s work 
 is often caring for people, in hospitals and schools, as domestic workers, 
 childminders, personal assistants . . . or in sweatshops - jobs where men 
 who do comparable work also get low pay.  But women get the lowest, and 
 often face sexual and racial harassment.   Although in every country all 
 this work is basic to the welfare and even survival of humanity, it is 
 devalued and ignored by the Market, and women get only 5% of the world’s 
 assets in return.  In Beijing in 1995, the International Women Count 
 Network which we co-ordinate, supported by more than 1,500 organisations, 
 won a major UN decision.  National accounts were to include how much of 
 their lifetime women spend doing unwaged work and how much value this work 
 creates.  Trinidad & Tobago and Spain have put this into law; other 
 countries are carrying out time-use surveys and increasingly consider 
 unwaged work in court decisions and government policies.  *  *  *  *  *  *  
 *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  Women in over 
 60 countries  Since 2000 the Strike has been a great success.  It has 
 brought together women in over 60 COUNTRIES, including grassroots 
 organisations with impressive track records, who also demand a world that 
 values all women’s work and every life, and who have achieved much.  They 
 are now part of an international network of Strike co-ordinators.  In 
 Venezuela, we are working with the women who are building a caring economy 
 and won Article 88 of the Constitution, which recognises housework as an 
 economic activity that creates added value and produces social welfare and 
 wealth, entitling housewives to social security.  The Strike has been 
 spreading news of such momentous victories, supporting the revolutionary 
 process there in which women from the grassroots are the most active 
 participants.  The Strike is part of the movement against war and 
 occupation not only in Iraq but in Palestine, Chechnya, Colombia, Congo, 
 Kashmir . . . Our priority has been to highlight the struggle that women 
 make and the direction this gives, from which the whole movement benefits 
 but which is often as ignored as the unwaged survival work we do.  With the 
 theme INVEST IN CARING NOT KILLING, we demand that the $900+ billion now 
 spent on military budgets is used instead for basic survival needs -- clean 
 accessible water, food security, healthcare, housing, education, safety 
 from rape and other violence, protection of our planet -- and therefore for 
 women who are the first carers and the first fighters for the survival of 
 loved ones.  We claim for a start the US military budget -- over half the 
 world’s military spending -- with which “Corporate America” imposes 
 its economic and political interests on the whole world (including on 
 people in the US).    *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  
 *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  The contribution of those sectors most 
 discriminated against  Those sectors of women who are most discriminated 
 against – all women of colour, including women of Indigenous, African and 
 Asian descent, single mothers, women with disabilities, immigrant women, 
 sex workers, lesbian women . . . use the Strike to spell out their 
 contribution to every economy, society and struggle. The Strike insists 
 that more powerful sectors acknowledge this contribution.     We also 
 demand recognition for the contribution of men who actively support our 
 struggle because they agree that INVEST IN CARING NOT KILLING is the 
 priority of all workers and all humanity.  Not only do men owe women their 
 daily survival -- from breastfeeding to cooked meals, clean clothes and 
 emotional support -- but they also depend on women prioritising survival to 
 oppose the values of the Market, values which now threaten the survival of 
 the world.  The web page of Payday, a network of men, 
 http://www.refusingtokill.net, is an important contribution to the movement 
 against war, and to the recognition of all those who risk their own life 
 and liberty in defence of everyone’s life and liberty.    *  *  *  *  *  
 *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  *  A framework for 
 unity  We are often told that in order to win we must unite, but we don’t 
 hear much about how to do that (except from political parties that want to 
 lead us).  We use the Strike as a framework for unity -- among sectors of 
 women, between women and men, within and among countries -- because it is 
 based on each sector accepting and enriching the independent struggle of 
 every other.  The Strike is not party political, nor is it separatist.  It 
 is ambitious for the movement for change but it stands against personal 
 ambition that undermines mutual accountability.  The Global Women’s 
 Strike has extended from taking joint action every 8 March.  It is now a 
 global network that strengthens the ongoing daily struggle of grassroots 
 women (and men).  We attach what Strike coordinators in some countries say 
 about what they have achieved with it.    The Strike establishes that as 
 carers, waged or unwaged, we are always WORKERS, and that we have the power 
 to bring the whole economy to a halt.  That’s what women did in Iceland 
 on 24 October 1975.  They said: WHEN WOMEN STOP, EVERYTHING STOPS.    We 
 add: STOP THE WORLD AND CHANGE IT.     Selma James and Nina López, 17 
 January 2004  womenstrike8m@server101.com  http://www.globalwomenstrike.net 
                 Strike demands  ·           Payment for all caring work 
 – in wages, pensions, land & other resources. What is more valuable than 
 raising children & caring for others? Invest in life & welfare, not 
 military budgets & prisons.  ·           Pay equity for all, women & men, 
 in the global market.  ·           Food security for all, starting with 
 breastfeeding mothers. Paid maternity leave, breastfeeding breaks & other 
 benefits – stop penalising us for being women.  ·           Don’t pay 
 ‘Third World debt’.  We owe nothing, they owe us.  ·           
 Accessible clean water, healthcare, housing, transport, literacy.  ·       
     Non-polluting energy & technology which shortens the hours we work. We 
 all need cookers, fridges, washing machines, computers, & time off!   ·    
        Protection & asylum from all violence & persecution, including by 
 family members & people in positions of authority.  ·           Freedom of 
 movement. Capital travels freely, why not people     *Until then, it was 
 assumed that only those who did waged work, mainly men in industrial 
 countries, were ‘real’ workers, and that only they could change the 
 world.  The Wages for Housework Campaign broke with this sexism and racism, 
 establishing autonomy as a new basis for organising and unifying.       
 ____________________________________________________________________________________________ 
     l  Visibility and respect  l  Wider networks  l    l  Grassroots 
 women’s anti-racism  l    l  The largest women’s anti-war event in our 
 history  l    l  We’ve all changed  l  ARGENTINA, Santa Fe  "For more 
 than 15 years we struggled in isolation for the huge amount of work we 
 women do caring for others to be recognised with a wage and a pension. 
 While this country was being sold and put in debt, women were more and more 
 impoverished, and had to support a hungry population with only our free 
 work.  In all this time we have been called all sorts of names. For trade 
 unions, civil servants, political parties and many feminists, we were 
 “backward and mad”.  As we felt we were weakening, we had the immense 
 pleasure of finding that there were other “mad ones” in many parts of 
 the world, who had been in this struggle much longer than us. With the 
 first Strike call we found these women on every continent.  This has 
 strengthened our organisation enormously. It has made us revalue the 
 autonomy which has prevented any party from using us.  From 2000 we have 
 made a great leap forward locally and nationally. Now they look at us with 
 respect.  We have been able to reach more grassroots women all the time, 
 encouraging them to form autonomous inter-neighbourhood women’s networks, 
 and to relate to other organisations which share our goals.  Many times we 
 had enclosed ourselves within borders put up by those who dominate us, 
 thinking that we are worse off or better fighters than everyone else. Since 
 joining the Strike, we have realised that there aren’t better or worse 
 struggles or experiences. Each of us invents thousands of ways to survive 
 and take the Strike forward, which is the synthesis of all our convictions. 
  This year most of our city (150,000 people) ended up under water because 
 of a river flooding and the corruption of those who rule us. Strike women 
 in other countries gave us the support we needed. Most importantly, we can 
 carry on our class action for justice against the most powerful without 
 fear, because we know that we are not alone and that in the face of any 
 attack women in other parts of the world will raise their voices in our 
 defence."  Sindicato de Amas de Casa de Santa Fe  
 ___________________________________________________________________  
 GUYANA, Georgetown  "Sometimes Guyana is a country at war - when the 
 tension and conflict that the British and American governments first helped 
 create between Indo-Guyanese and Afro-Guyanese explodes into violence. Then 
 there is the other kind of violence that those of us who are from these 
 groups commit against those of us who are Indigenous Guyanese, whose 
 interests are just thrown aside.  In the last two years the Strike helped 
 us to make our opposition to the racism and violence whose main victims are 
 grassroots women and children visible. In 2002 we organized a march of 
 women, of all race groups - Indo-Guyanese, Afro-Guyanese, Indigenous, Mixed 
 - supported by children and men. We went to an Afro-Guyanese community, 
 Linden, from which Indo-Guyanese were violently driven out in the 1960s and 
 we said publicly that we had come to reclaim Linden for grassroots women of 
 all races.  Through the Strike we’ve gained recognition as grassroots 
 women who are anti-racist.  More women have joined our network.     Every 
 year we put forward practical demands - especially against the higher 
 prices we’re paying for water and electricity because of privatisation. 
 But our main demand has been for an end to racist violence. We organized 
 marches of mostly women, of all race groups - Indo-Guyanese, Afro-Guyanese, 
 Indigenous, Mixed - supported by children and men, proclaiming our 
 opposition to racist violence in Guyana and racist war in Iraq.  We said: 
 “We don’t want to make our children to go and kill some other woman’s 
 child.”  We’ve all changed: all of us are more conscious of the racism, 
 and more willing to speak out against it.  We have begun to feel we’re 
 part of a global movement where before we used to feel cut off.  We feel as 
 if something happens in Guyana the Strike will fight with us 
 internationally."  Red Thread  
 ___________________________________________________________________  
 IRELAND, Galway  “What we are most proud of is that the Strike has given 
 us a way to come together across many divides.  Irish women are not 
 expected to unite with English women, who come from the country that waged 
 war and occupied Ireland so many centuries ago and where the bitter divides 
 still remain.  The religious divides between Protestant and Catholic that 
 are a legacy of this have plagued us on this island, and now the new rift 
 the warmongers have stirred up between Muslim and Christian is added to 
 that.  Many expect women from the South to know what women in the North 
 have been through in the recent war there over whether that part of the 
 island should be a part of the Irish or British State, but our ignorance is 
 great and even there the divisions run deep.  Under our constitution 
 Ireland is neutral in all wars so the US military use of Shannon airport is 
 supposed to be illegal. We have been able to use the Strike to organise a 
 weekly picket against war and occupation, and an anti-war convoy to Shannon 
 from Galway city, bringing women together from North and South of Ireland, 
 Catholic and Protestant, Muslim, Christian, atheist, and to say why as 
 women we are particularly opposed to war in many of the protest events we 
 have participated in.”  Wages for Housework Campaign  
 ____________________________________________________________________  PERU, 
 Lima   “With the Strike we acknowledge that women’s struggles and 
 objectives are the same all over the world. We have related to other 
 women’s organisations which fight for our common objectives with great 
 courage and determination, each from our own specific situation, demanding 
 our fundamental rights as women and as workers who care for the whole of 
 humanity.  We have extended our network in the provinces - Chota, 
 Cajamarca, Jaén, Trujillo - where there are now new organisations of 
 domestic workers, and our interchange with the Aymara communities of Puno.  
 As a result of the Strike pressuring the UN and of the demands of 
 organisations like our own and the Confederation of Domestic Workers in 
 Bolivia, some governments are considering meeting the demands of our sector 
 and laws have been passed in Peru and Bolivia.  The Strike has helped us to 
 accept ourselves as we are, so that, for example, our sisters can have free 
 sexual choice.  Before the Strike we were prejudiced because of our 
 machista and patriarchal culture.  We have broken the ice and lesbian women 
 are able to organise autonomously and make their situation visible.  We 
 have learnt to be self-critical about our mistakes while also speaking our 
 mind. From this we learn to be stronger and more aware.”    “The Strike 
 has helped us to have a wider vision and to situate ourselves both as an 
 exploited class and in the struggle against those who oppress the women of 
 the world.  The Strike is part of me because the demands of the women of 
 the world are my demands. I feel that we are invincible because we are the 
 great majority and they are my sisters in struggle. The Strike is the voice 
 of all because we each carry out a mission of extending activist awareness 
 for the defence of life.”  Centro de Capacitación para Trabajadoras del 
 Hogar  __________________________________________________________________  
 PERU, Puno   “The Strike gives us visibility, a space where rural women 
 can participate and speak out about the issues that affect our daily lives. 
 With the Strike we have won over more women’s organisations such as 
 mothers’ clubs, craft groups, soup kitchens, as well as the support of 
 men from some of these groups.   It has enabled us to strengthen our local 
 demands and form groups of different types of Andean crafts. The income 
 that rural women contribute through crafts is for the benefit of the family 
 - its education, food, housing. We now hope to reach an international 
 market with our produce and cut out the middle men.  We hope to call out on 
 strike many more sectors in our country and in Bolivia.”  Centro Aymará 
 “Pacha Aru”  
 ____________________________________________________________________  
 SPAIN, Barcelona   “The Strike has transformed us, helping to break us 
 free of the habit of relating and prioritising one sector of women over 
 others, to move beyond our neighbourhood and region, to act locally - in 
 our neighbourhoods, plazas, markets, schools, workplaces - but with an 
 international perspective, and to widen our networks. It has made visible 
 the contribution of those of us who are immigrant.  We have used the Strike 
 to press for implementation of the laws to measure and value unwaged work 
 in national accounts, which we won in the Catalan Parliament in 1997 and in 
 the National Congress in 1998.  The mass Strike actions brought together 
 women’s opposition to war and globalisation. We have compared the 
 military budget and the government’s support for US and UK warmongering 
 (in spite of over 90% of the population actively opposing the war in Iraq), 
 with welfare benefits for low income families - the lowest in the EU.    In 
 Catalunya we won changes to school dinner grants for families without 
 income who were discriminated against.  With ongoing translations of 
 materials over the e-mail, telephone, radio and at meetings, we grassroots 
 women work hard to be connected, accountable and useful to each other.”   
 Campaña por un Salario para el Trabajo sin Sueldo  
 ____________________________________________________________________________ 
  UGANDA, Kaabong   “The poorest are the grassroots women globally. We are 
 neglected and discriminated against because we are poor. BUT the Global 
 Strike has changed our lives. We have gained free medical services, no cost 
 sharing. The Land Act also allows women to own land and properties and 
 inherit the late husband’s properties. The Strike has helped to express 
 our point of view in a more effective way. Like we say, Invest in Caring 
 Not Killing. Wars will never bring peace in the world.  Through our network 
 many people are very much interested in the Strike because of the good 
 fruits it has produced. Our major demand for this year’s Strike is: we 
 need accessible clean water. It’s all our suffering. No war, no guns, and 
 the government should stop the war which has been affecting especially 
 children, women and all the communities in the whole of northern and 
 eastern Uganda. Many people have died, or been raped and abducted; 
 thousands are internally displaced without essentials. Why is our 
 government interested in solving wars in other countries instead of 
 handling this war in Uganda which has gone on for 17 years?  There are many 
 demands which are not met. But we shall win and change the world.  An 
 elderly member said, “We shall never give up the Strike. I ask all women 
 to stand up and put their voices together and join in the Strike. Did I 
 ever dream that my husband would give me a cow for my caring work? It is 
 all because of the Strike.  Please join us in our demand of WATER, WATER. 
 We have the source of the river Nile in Uganda.Why shouldn’t we take the 
 water for agriculture, so that women have enough food for their families!"  
 Kaabong Women’s Organisation  
 ______________________________________________________________________________ 
  USA, Los Angeles   “The 2003 Strike was the largest women’s anti-war 
 and International Women’s Day event in LA history, with an estimated 
 3-5,000 participants.  It brought together grassroots women, with the major 
 anti-war networks, and activist celebrities such as actors Ed Asner, Dave 
 Clennon, Danny Glover and Wendy Malnick, and internationally known Vietnam 
 Vet Ron Kovic (played by Tom Cruise in the Hollywood film “Born on the 
 4th of July”), and it was supported by KPFK, a major alternative radio 
 network.  Women’s contribution and leadership now have an unprecedented 
 level of visibility in all movements for change in LA.   The power of the 
 Strike helped kick off our weekly anti-military/corporate occupation picket 
 outside Bechtel Corporation, and to form an ongoing working relationship 
 with community-based anti-war networks, the El Sereno and San Gabriel 
 Valley Neighbors for Peace and Justice.  The biggest anti-war network has 
 supported the Strike and our ongoing activities. We are also invited to 
 speak at press events and protests in support of the massive strike of 
 grocery workers.  Despite unprecedented access to male-dominated platforms, 
 the Strike has helped us to resist the pull of two dangerous seductions: 
 separatism on the one hand and male power on the other, and to remain 
 accountable to grassroots women.  The Strike has also given us a practical 
 tool to acknowledge and attack the provincialism of those of us living 
 “in the belly of the beast”. By forcing us to focus on the global even 
 as we focus on our local situation, the Strike helps those of us in the US, 
 no matter how poverty stricken we may be, not to scab on our sisters in the 
 South who are in much more dire straits. It has helped open our eyes to the 
 leadership offered by those resisting US domination outside of the US and 
 to be strengthened by it.”  Global Women’s Strike/LA  Women of Color in 
 the Global Women’s Strike  
 ____________________________________________________________________  USA, 
 Philadelphia   "The Strike gained visibility, prominence and respect for 
 women’s voices and demands in the massive protests against war in Iraq. 
 We have been asked to speak on the impact of the war at home and defend 
 welfare and other benefits and services, which are being cut to make way 
 for military spending, and are key to increasing the minimum wage and 
 therefore all wages.    We won’t allow the disabilities and illnesses 
 created by war and weapons pollution, in countries attacked by the US as 
 well as among US vets and their families, to remain hidden.    The Strike 
 brought together the most diverse multiracial crowd of any anti-war 
 activity in the region to date, an indication for all to see that the 
 Strike demands speak to a wide cross-section of people, not just the 
 “white peace movement”. We have been a crucial voice for mothers and 
 grandmothers against military recruitment programs in school. A Black woman 
 raising her grandchildren said what we oppose: ‘Billions for war and not 
 a dollar for a child.’   The Strike’s involvement in Venezuela, has 
 greatly enriched our view of the world and what is possible.”    Wages 
 for Housework Campaign  WinVisible - women with visible and invisible 
 disabilities  
 __________________________________________________________________  USA, 
 San Francisco   “The Strike is where each year we make visible our 
 particular initiatives, but it challenges us to draw out the 
 inter-relationships between what have seemed ‘separate’ issues.    Our 
 strength has been the organizing for the civil and legal rights of women in 
 the sex industry, which led to our founding a grassroots legal service for 
 women.  Many of us are lesbian, and in running a legal service for many 
 years we have a wealth of experience based on organizing against the 
 discrimination women, especially ‘sexual outlaws’, face from the 
 police, courts, judges, in both criminal and family law. By the third 
 Strike we used it to press City Hall on a resolution to end violence 
 against sex workers.     The Strike has helped us to extend our network to 
 other sectors, organizations and neighbourhoods, ie homeless women, older 
 women, welfare mothers, Immokalee farm workers, anti-war, solidarity and 
 anti-globalisation networks . . . International Women’s Day activities 
 were almost non-existent in the Bay Area until the Strike.    The Strike 
 has brought an international focus to our work, connecting us more to the 
 lives and reality of women in the South.  We have learned what corporations 
 are based in SF and what their role is in international exploitation.   
 During the Strike we are taking control over areas of the City where many 
 of us grassroots people don’t ordinarily go. We also have seen the 
 response of women and men at the Strike, and experienced ourselves a taste 
 of the power of the sectors and issues coming together as one force.”  US 
 PROStitutes Collective   Wages Due Lesbians  
 __________________________________________________________________  Global 
 Women’s Strike Co-ordination   ENGLAND  International co-ordination   
 Crossroads Women's Centre  230a Kentish Town Road, London NW5 2AB  Tel: 
 00-44-20-7482 2496  Fax: 00-44-20-7209 4761  womenstrike8m@server101.com  
 Website: http://www.globalwomenstrike.net  Co-ordination of men’s actions 
 and support:  Address above   payday@paydaynet.org   Website: 
 http://www.refusingtokill.net       ARGENTINA  SAC, Francia 3036, 3000 
 Santa Fe    Tel: 00-54-342-453 0216  &  496 0868    izanutig@gigared.com; 
 amadecasa@gigared.com     GUYANA  Red Thread, 72 Princess & Adelaide 
 Streets, Charlestown,  Georgetown    Tel/Fax: 00-592-227 7010     
 thread@sdnp.org.gy     INDIA  Chhattisgarh Women’s Organisation  Pithora, 
 Mahasamund, Chhattisgarh 493551  Tel: 00-91-7707 71107     
 sharmanand@yahoo.com     IRELAND  10 Galway Bay Apartments, Salthill, 
 Galway  Tel: 00-353-91 520269     maggie.ronayne@nuigalway.ie     PERU  132 
 Wakulski, Cercado, Lima  Tel: 00-51-1-423 1958     ccth@terra.com.pe     
 Jr. 20 de Julio No 159, Urbanización Fernando Belaunde Terry, Chanuchanu, 
 Puno    Tel: 00-51-51-356 808     pacha_aru@hotmail.com     SPAIN  Centro 
 'Las Mujeres Cuentan', Radas 27 Local,   08004 Barcelona    Tel/Fax: 
 00-34-93-442 2304  huelgademujeres8m@teleline.es     TRINIDAD & TOBAGO  
 NUDE, Mount Pleasant Rd, Arima  Tel: 001-868-667 5247     
 domestic@tstt.net.tt     UGANDA  KWO, PO Box 9344, Kampala, Uganda  Tel: 
 00-256-41 271012, Fax: 00-256-41 346456  akulum@hotmail.com     USA  Los 
 Angeles  Crossroads Women's Centre  PO Box 86681, LA, CA 90086-0681  
 Tel/Fax: 001-323-292 7405  la@crossroadswomen.net     Philadelphia  
 Crossroads Women's Centre  PO Box 11795, Philadelphia, PA 19101  Tel: 
 001-215-848 1120  Fax: 001-215-848 1130   philly@crossroadswomen.net     
 San Francisco  Crossroads Women's Centre  PO Box 14512, SF, CA 94114  
 Tel/Fax: 001-415-626 4114   sf@crossroadswomen.net           \n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2004/03/03/32533.php
SUMMARY:5th Global Women's Strike: Defend a 'Caring Economy' in Venezuela/Condemn US in
LOCATION:Federal Building in San Francisco  450 Golden Gate (nr Polk..Civic Center 
 BART)  3:30-5:30, all Welcome
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2004/03/03/32533.php
DTSTART:20040308T233000Z
DTEND:20040309T013000Z
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