From: b sabha <[email protected]>

From: Fr. Cedric Prakash sj 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>




Women Strike!

                                                       -Fr Cedric Prakash sj*


March 8th dawns every year! As the world observes International Women’s Day 
(IWD), there will be the usual round of cosmetic programmes, with speaker after 
speaker using the politically correct words and with the typically patronising 
attitude towards women. The sad and cruel reality is that precious little seems 
to change. In India and in several other parts of the world, most women 
continue to be condemned to live as second-class citizens in patriarchal and 
male-dominated societies.

Gurmehar Kaur, a 20-year old peace activist and student of the Delhi 
University, has over the last few weeks, emerged as an icon. She has 
courageously and brazenly taken on the fascist forces that are doing their best 
to destroy the fabric of India. The message she wants to convey is simple: she 
wants peace in the sub-continent. Her father who was in the Indian Army was 
killed in the Kargil war, when she was just two years old. However, several men 
in India (including some so-called ‘celebrities’) are still unable to respect 
Gurmehar’s audacity and forthrightness. They have been trolling her, spewing 
hate and threatening her with violence and rape. In doing so, the men prove a 
point that they are still unable to accept the Gurmehars of our world!

Gurmehar’s courage, finds resonance with the theme for this year’s IWD Campaign 
#BeBoldForChange<https://www.internationalwomensday.com/BeBold>  that 
challenges one for “ground-breaking action that truly drives the greatest 
change for women. Each one of us - with women, men and non-binary people 
joining forces - can be a leader within our own spheres of influence by taking 
bold pragmatic action to accelerate gender parity. Through purposeful 
collaboration, we can help women advance and unleash the limitless potential 
offered to economies the world over”.

Very significantly, on March 8th, in the US and across the globe, women 
(supported by their allies) will find common cause and will act together for 
equity, justice and human rights of women and all gender-oppressed people 
through a one-day demonstration of economic solidarity. The plan is to remove 
themselves from the economy to protest societal barriers that keep all women 
from achieving true equality. Though two events are being held—A Day Without a 
Woman(#DayWithoutAWoman), organized by the ‘Women's 
March<http://www.glamour.com/story/march-organize-win-its-much-more-than-one-womens-march>’,
 and the International Women's Strike(#IStrikeFor), a grassroots endeavour 
founded by a team of activists, feminists, and scholars—organizers are working 
together in solidarity to create a united message that represents women from 
all walks of life. They want to combat decades-long socioeconomic inequality by 
calling for marginalized communities—working women, women of colour, Native 
women, immigrant women, Muslim and other minority women, disabled women, and 
lesbian, queer, and trans women—to come together and make their voices heard.

The ‘Women’s Strike’ is intended to become the most impacting global movement. 
This is not an impossibility given the fact that women organised the ‘Women’s 
March’  on January 21st, which brought out millions of women not only in 
Washington, but across the United States and in several Capitals across the 
globe – to protest against the anti-women rhetoric of the newly- elected US 
President. On March 8th this year, all (particularly those women who cannot go 
on ‘strike’ for obvious reasons!) are encouraged to wear red, which is the 
colour of love, revolution energy and sacrifice- as a sign of solidarity.

Since 2013, February 14th also has a newer meaning with the ‘One Billion 
Campaign’, which has been fighting against the sexual and physical violence 
against women... This year, the One Billion Rising Revolution gave sharper 
focus and visibility to the exploitation of women and has tried to harness even 
stronger global solidarity to demand an end to violence in all forms. ‘Rise! 
Disrupt! Connect!’ are the catchwords today for this significant campaign. The 
‘Nirbhaya’ reality in India was not a once-and-for-all. It is a painful reality 
to which the average Indian woman is subjected to – in the private precincts of 
one’s home, at the work place and even in open, public places. Women, in 
general, continue to be demeaned and even dehumanised.



A few days ago in New Delhi at a programme REMEMBERANCE – highlighting the 
fifteenth anniversary of the Gujarat Carnage there were several extraordinary 
women present. There was Zakia Jafri and Nishrin Jafri, the wife and the 
daughter of Eshan Jafri who was brutally murdered during that carnage. Teesta 
Setalvad, Shabnam Hashmi and others who have relentlessly championed the cause 
of the victim-survivors. Painful memories were shared. No one will easily 
forget the horrors and the brutalities, which several hundreds of women had to 
face during those terrible days of Gujarat 2002.



India has several other outstanding women today in every possible field. Fresh 
in our memory are the eight “rocket women’ of India, who recently were 
responsible for the launching of 104 satellites in one go. A historic 
scientific feat indeed; and as if on cue, it is the male politicians of India 
who want to take credit for the work of these women. All of us can easily find 
and cite several other examples of selfless and courageous women, including our 
own mothers and sisters, who have helped make our country and our world a 
better place.



Another stellar example is Savitribai Phule, widely regarded as the country’s 
first woman teacher. On March 10th, we observe her 120th death anniversary .She 
is credited with laying the foundation of education opportunities for women in 
India and played a major role in the struggle for women's rights in the country 
during the British rule. She was a poet too; her poems were against 
discrimination and of the need for education. For most of her life, she 
campaigned vigorously against untouchability, the tradition of sati, child 
marriage and other social evils, which affect women. In one of her poems she 
writes, “end misery of the oppressed and forsaken…break the chains of caste.”



>From Savitribai to Gurmehar , there has certainly been plenty of change.Sadly, 
>the plain truth remains- that it is not easy for women today- in India and 
>elsewhere. Men have first to change their mind-sets and their behaviour 
>towards women: to treat them as equals, to give them the dignity they need. 
>This is certainly a tall order; however, the bugle to be bold for change has 
>been sounded: “WOMEN STRIKE!”

                                                                                
                       5th March 2017

* (Fr Cedric Prakash sj is a human rights activist. He is currently based in 
Lebanon, engaged with the Jesuit Refugee Service (JRS) in the Middle East on 
advocacy and   communications. Contact: 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>)

Fr. Cedric Prakash sj
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