|
Young
women say:
Invest in Caring, Not Killing! |
One girl’s
view of her
work in Uganda:
“In many families,
girls do more work than boys. They
walk very far to collect firewood, collect water, plus cook and wash
dishes. But the boys play football, sometimes they do a little work,
picking and drying coffee beans. But
that is the only work they do. Some
families don’t want to send girls to schools – they want girls to
marry or be at home working for the family or working for others. If a girl goes to school the father feels he will lose money,
which he would get from the man who marries her. Girls are sent to work
for other families – the money the girl gets is sent home, or she is not
paid at all, just food and clothes. So
many times, girls are raped and abused by men who employ them, or by men
in the family.”
Emily, 18, England
"I joined the strike because I wanted to make a difference. I dropped
out of school when I was 16.
I am currently unemployed and have been since October 2005. However, I
haven’t just been wasting my time, since May 2006 I’ve been a full time
volunteer at the Crossroads Women’s Centre.
I went to a public girls’
school where we were pressured to
achieve the highest grades possible. We were taught that being rich and
successful should be our ultimate aim and this was how we’d gain
equality. We were told that our careers should come first and it was
suggested if we had children we shouldn’t allow them to interfere with
our career. We weren’t even allowed to contemplate the idea of being a
housewife as that went against feminist ideas and was not considered
useful or fulfilling. In one of the richest countries in the world
parents barely see their children as people in the UK work the longest
hours in the UK. I for one didn’t want to have to make such sacrifices
like missing seeing my children growing up.
Living in London
one would expect that things would be better because this is where the
government is based and therefore they should tackle the problems on
their doorstep before they tackle the rest of the country. But
throughout London and the UK woman are being discriminated against.
There is a lack of benefits for mothers and those women that do work are
often under paid. What’s more women coming to this country seeking
asylum are given even less support. In addition to having escaped
traumatic experiences in their home country, they are then imprisoned
when they come here. And so I strike in an effort to change this and the
many other problems women face."
Another
young woman speaks about why she is joining the Strike:
"I lived
close to a military airport in Sweden (one of the safest countries in the
world) and as the planes flew overhead, I
never felt I could trust them not to drop a bomb on us.
I also worried (and still do) about my dad and two younger brothers being
conscripted to some awful war, because military service is compulsory for
men. And now in the name of
feminism the government (in collaboration with the left party) wants to make it compulsory for women as well.
At
school and university (which I never finished) I always felt frustrated
– I wanted to learn but we were seldom taught something really useful.
Also, almost all of the teachers chose not to see the psychological
and physical violence that I and others suffered at school.
In considering our grades more important than our emotional
well-being, the school establishment valued our ability to work for the
killing machine rather then giving us a caring upbringing
I
joined the Strike because . . .
we should have real healthcare instead of drugs pushed by the
pharmaceutical industry; good food instead of poisoned food because we
can’t afford anything else; and because the cruelty against animals
created in these industries must stop.
Last summer, during anti-capitalist demonstrations in Gothenburg,
Sweden, the police shot and almost killed several unarmed protesters.
When this happens in what is called the “safest country in the
world", you
know the world is in big trouble"
No
wonder girls and young women have been centrally involved in the GWS since
it started. In Uganda, young
women joined other
rural women who walked for 3 days with no food and their babies
on their backs to join the Strike, which won some free hospital care for
all.
In Europe and the US,
students in Barcelona, Galway, Sheffield, London,
Kent, Cambridge, Brighton, Los Angles, San
Francisco, New York and Philadelphia are involved in the
Strike. In London, we had a Whistle-Stop Tour and Cacerolazo (pots & pans protest)
to Sweep Out the Global Killers, from
the Shell Centre (piped poison), to the Ministry of Defence (global
killers), Institute of Director (pushers of arms, poisoned food &
drugs), and ending at the World Bank (global loan sharks).
Why not write your own
statement individually or with friends?
Send it in, and we'll publish it on the website.
Also, volunteers are always welcome at Crossroads Women's Centre.
More
statements from young women
Home |