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DESCRIPTION:March 8th is International Women's Day!   Please join us in solidarity with 
 Code Pink and the six Iraqi women they are bringing to the US to share 
 their stories of the real effects of the war and occupation in Iraq! (more 
 info and the opportunity to take immediate action below!)***  Wednesday 
 March 8th  Clock Tower/Collateral Damage Sculpture  Corner of Water and 
 Pacific, Santa Cruz  5-6:30 PM  Wear PINK!!!! (we will have extra) - bring 
 signs, streamers, balloons, drums, bells, boas...etc!!!!  sponsored by Code 
 Pink Santa Cruz and Women in Black SC  (NB - folks who have incarnated in 
 the male gender are definitely welcome too!!!!!)  As we say in our call, 
 "This is not the world we want for ourselves or our children. With fire in 
 our bellies and love in our hearts, we women are rising up - across borders 
 - to unite and demand an end to the bloodshed and the destruction."  more 
 info here!!  ***Code Pink, that incredibly creative and dynamic feminist 
 peace group, has spent the last three months organizing the Women Say No to 
 War campaign - male or female, you can sign their petition right NOW! at  
 http://www.womensaynotowar.org  They are having many events in Washington, 
 DC from March 7-9, and have called for solidarity actions  all around the 
 country - so far, they have collected 50,000 signatures on their petitions, 
 which they will be presenting at the White House on March 8th  about the 
 Iraqi women:  Six Iraqi women will converge in Washington, DC to begin a 
 speaking tour to educate Americans about the reality in Iraq and meet with 
 UN and US officials to call for a peace plan to end the escalating spiral 
 of violence.  The delegation is a diverse group, including Shia, Sunni and 
 Kurdish women - some secular, some religious. All have paid a very high 
 price for the war and occupation of their country, and want to tell their 
 stories to the American people.   Unfortunately, two Iraqi women whose 
 families were killed  by US troops were denied visas to enter the US as 
 part of the delegation.  These women are not politicians, but ordinary 
 Iraqis who are desperate to see an end to the violence and are taking great 
 personal risk to come to the US. It’s a rare opportunity to hear from 
 Iraqis themselves, and we hope that you will help ensure they are heard.  
 The delegation is promoting a Women’s Call for Peace, signed by over 
 50,000 women from around the world. The Call for Peace requests the 
 withdrawal of all foreign troops and foreign fighters from Iraq, 
 negotiations to reincorporate disenfranchised Iraqis, full representation 
 of women in the  peacemaking process, and a commitment to women's equality 
 in the post-war Iraq. This Call is part of a Women Say No to War campaign 
 (http://www.womensaynotowar.org) designed to bring women together across 
 borders to demand an end to the bloodshed in Iraq.  Below are brief bios of 
 the Iraqi women. Information about the events and actions in DC  are 
 available at: http://www.womensaynotowar.org.  IRAQI WOMEN'S DELEGATION 
 BIOS  Nadje Al-Ali is a writer/researcher specializing in women in the 
 Middle East. She is a founding member of Act Together: Women’s Action on 
 Iraq and mother of a 3-year-old daughter.  Faiza Al-Araji is a civil 
 engineer, blogger (afamilyinbaghdad.blogspot.com), religious Shia with a 
 Sunni husband, and mother of three. After one son was recently held as a 
 political prisoner by the Ministry of the Interior, the  family fled to 
 Jordan.  Eman Ahmad Khamas is a human rights advocate who has documented 
 abuses by the US military in Iraq. She is a member of Women’s Will, and 
 is married with two daughters.  Dr Entisar Mohammad Ariabi, a pharmacist at 
 the Yarmook Teaching Hospital in Baghdad, has documented the deteriorating 
 health system. She is married with five children.  Dr. Rashad Zidan, a 
 pharmacist, works in Baghdad and Fallujah with the Women and Knowledge 
 Society to aid victims of war, especially orphans.  Sureya Sayadi, a 
 Kurdish woman born in Kirkuk, is an activist for human rights in the Middle 
 East, particularly for the Kurdish people. She now lives in the United 
 States, but her family is dispersed in Iraq, Iran and Turkey.  THE 
 FOLLOWING WOMEN WERE DENIED VISAS BY THE US STATE DEPARTMENT  Vivian Salim 
 Mati is a widow who lost her husband and three children when they were 
 fired on by U.S. tank fire as they attempted to flee the bombing of their 
 neighborhood in Baghdad in April 2003.  Kadhim Jawad (Anwar) is a widow 
 whose husband and three children were killed by US soldiers at an unmarked 
 checkpoint.  again:  please join Code Pink SC and Women in Black SC  in 
 Santa Cruz, at the Clock Tower/Collateral Damage Sculpture Wednesday March 
 8th from 5-6:30 PM\n https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2006/03/07/90913.php
SUMMARY:International Women's Day
LOCATION:Clock Tower/Collateral Damage Sculpture  Corner of Water and Pacific, Santa 
 Cruz
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2006/03/07/90913.php
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