http://sydney.indymedia.org/front.php3?article_id=27190&group=webcast

Peace, Justice, Diversity, Solidarity

Women against War and Racism

SYDNEY INTERNATIONAL WOMEN'S DAY 2003, March 8

11am, Saturday March 8
@ Sydney Town Hall,
+ then March to Belmore Park (near Central Station)

International Women's Day 2003 is opportunity to highlight the effects 
of war and racism on society as a whole, but also women in particular 
IWD 03 will be an important day to take to the streets to declare our 
opposition to the Australian government's support for a war on Iraq and 
to highlight the impact of war and racism on women.

Please join us and demand:

§ No War on Iraq, No Australian Involvement, Lift the Sanctions
§ Free the Refugees: Money for Settlement, Not Detention
§ Stop Racist Attacks on Women and Girls
§ Justice for Indigenous Women
§ Money for Paid Maternity Leave, Childcare, Public Education, Social
Services, Not Warfare
§ Rights for Working Women and Our Unions
§ Free Palestine

Speakers include:

- Senator Kerry Nettle (Greens),
- Cleonie Quayle (Indigenous activist),
- Layla Mohammad (Committee In Defence of Iraqi Women),
- Rowan Abdul (Palestine activist),
- Naomi Arrowsmith (trade unionist & Socialist Alliance NSW Legislative
Assembly Candidate),
- Aghnar Niazi (Iraqi refugee),
- Rafa Zaim (Muslim Women's Association).

Performances at Belmore Park by:
Mettaphor, Anika,
and hip hop artists Maya Jupiter and MC Trey
--------------------------------------------

For more information:
Kim on 0439 454 375 or [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Mel on 0409 655 922 or [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Karen Isles on 0412 462 646

The Poster as of February 12 can be downloaded from (2nd PIC):
http://www.active.org.au/sydney/news/front.php3?article_id=2201&group=webcast

Checkout http://www.active.org.au/sydney/ and
http://sydney.indymedia.org/ for the latest.

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Regular Green Left Weekly column:

A woman’s place is in the struggle
----------------------------------
War: a feminist issue

Some feminists in the First World argue that feminism is simply about
changing the way men and women relate in ``our’‘ society — critiquing
gender stereotypes in movies, for example, or having affirmative-action
policies in the Australian parliament. According to some of these
feminists, war has little or nothing to do with feminism.

The opposite is true: the impending war on Iraq is the key feminist 
issue of the moment. Opposing and ultimately defeating the war needs to 
be the key priority of the feminist movement here and everywhere.

This is not simply because the war will compound the oppression and
suffering of Iraqi women by killing and maiming them and their families,
destroying their homes, leaving them without schools, hospitals and 
other social necessities and leaving them with the burden of cleaning up 
the devastation — although war will do all of these things. Feminists 
should also oppose the war, however, because that struggle will advance 
our own.

As long as women's oppression is global, so too must be the feminist
fightback. Across the world, while the way this oppression manifests
itself varies, it has the same cause. It rests on the commodification,
enslavement and subjugation of women in order to push them into 
providing for the reproduction and care of a future generation of 
workers, and in order to provide a cheap source of labour for 
profit-hungry business.

Across the world, women suffer so that profits are kept high: from the
sweatshops and plantations of the Third World to the multi-million 
dollar plastic surgery industry in the United States. Women perform 
two-thirds of the world's work, and receive one-tenth of the world's pay.

The same profit-hungry elite that will make money after the invasion of
Iraq also profits out of the subjugation of women. That’s why, in 
between waging wars, US president George Bush has found time to attack 
abortion rights (in the US and abroad), affirmative action programs and 
vital welfare programs that allow women some relief from domestic drudgery.

Just as we oppose the oppression of women for profit, so we must stand
with the Iraqi people against a war, with all the attendant suffering, 
for profit.

Feminists should also oppose the war because women's liberation is
impossible while we are divided by racism and nationalism. When Bush,
British Prime Minister Tony Blair and Prime Minister John Howard talk
about war there is little mention of the Iraqi civilians who will be
killed. In 1996, the US secretary of state Madeleine Albright referred 
to the 500,000 Iraqi children killed as a result of sanctions an
``acceptable’‘ level of ``collateral damage’‘.

The corporate rulers would like us to think ``there's plenty more
malnourished, coloured Iraqi children where those 500,000 came from’‘.
Outraged? You should be. The idea is that, while every Australian or US
citizen lost in a terror attack is a tragedy, every Iraqi lost in war or
poverty is ``necessary collaterall damage’‘. It’s not that different,
really, to arguing that women should be paid less because they are
``emotional’‘ or that they like doing housework, or spending 20% of a 
pay packet on cosmetics.

Like sexism, racism confuses people who would be stronger if they stood
together.

Muslim women wearing the hijab, easily identifiable, have also suffered
acutely from the racism whipped up to support this war.

As long as racism and nationalism divide women, we cannot effectively
challenge sexism. If women in Australia are conned into believing Iraqis
to be the enemy, it will be harder to challenge the massive budget cuts 
to services planned in order to bolster defence spending.

In order for any feminist movement to be ultimately successful in its 
aim of liberating women, it must be committed to challenging every 
injustice. This means uniting with others in their own struggle for 
liberation — including the struggle of the Iraqi people for freedom from 
exploitation, domination and war.

BY KATELYN MOUNTFORD

[The author is a member of the socialist youth organisation Resistance.]

>From Green Left Weekly, March 5, 2003. 
Visit the Green Left Weekly home page @
http://www.GreenLeft.org.au/


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