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Every
International Women’s Day since 2000, women in over 60
countries have taken all kinds of grassroots actions as part of
the Global Women’s Strike, demanding together that society
Invest in Caring Not Killing, and that money squandered on war
goes instead to our communities’ needs.
The Strike network has grown stronger over the past five
years, especially in countries of the global South, and women,
and increasingly men, now take Strike action throughout the
year.
This year the Strike also demanded “A Living Wage for
All Our Work and Pay Equity in the Global Market.” Actions in
the US this month took place in a number of communities
including in Philadelphia, San Francisco, and Santa Cruz,
California.
On
Thursday afternoon, March 10, a Global Women’s Strike action
in Los Angeles brought together over 300 women and men, mostly
young and mostly people of color -- including former prisoners
and family members of prisoners campaigning for justice;
campaigners against the three strikes law and against the death
penalty; family members of fallen U.S. soldiers; Black people
and Latino(a)s; Muslim and Jewish people; immigrants and Native
Americans; hiphop artists and Catholic nuns; neighborhood
anti-war vigilers and veterans; grandmothers and anarchists;
gay/lesbian/bisexual/transgendered activists;
mothers and fathers with children on their shoulders.
All converged on the Federal Building in downtown Los
Angeles for a rally demanding welfare and other payment for
caring work, an end to the criminalization of survival
(including locking up women for crimes of poverty), and money
for mothers and communities, not for war.
Placards said no to US war, occupation, destabilization,
rape and other torture, from Iraq to Haiti to Venezuela or
anywhere.
From
the Federal Building, the demonstrators, led by a colorful
decorated truck for elders and children and by young women
loudly chanting, Aztec dancers, and mothers with their children
in strollers, marched behind a banner saying “End the Twin
Terrors of Poverty and War” to the Twin Towers jail, as
rush-hour commuters honked, waved and cheered their support.
At the Twin Towers Jail,
during a second rally to “Strike Against the Racist and
Sexist Criminal ‘Injustice’ System and the Criminalization
of Poverty,” the Global Women’s Strike played a rousing
recorded message of support from Mumia Abu Jamal,
activist-journalist and death-row inmate who applauds the
Strike’s theme, “Invest in Caring Not Killing” - “What a
concept!” he says. The Strike issued a women’s award to
Mumia, accepted for him by Fidel Rodriguez of Divine Forces
Radio on KPFK 90.7FM and Bertha Rocha, the activist aunt of a
young Latino man given two life sentences at the age of 16 for
crimes he didn’t commit.
Speakers
at Thursday’s event included Margaret Prescod, co-coordinator
of the Global Women’s Strike in the U.S. and KPFK host, on her
recent visit with imprisoned Prime Minister Yvon Neptune of
Haiti; Susan Burton, founder and director of A New Way of Life,
on how women released from incarceration are turned out into the
streets with no resources; Ruth Gilmore of Critical
Resistance-LA: Celes King IV, LA Vice Chair of the Congress of
Racial Equality, on efforts to save King/Drew Hospital; Cindy
Sheehan, co-founder of Gold Star Families for Peace, whose
soldier son was killed in action in Iraq; US Air Force veteran
April Fitzsimmons, on sexual abuse in the military and its
effect on women; Lily la Torre, of Racimos de Ungurahui, on how
indigenous tribes are defending the Peruvian rainforest from the
logging industry; and Juana Nicolas, of the Domestic Workers
Organizing and Advocacy Project, on fighting workplace abuse and
“la migra” violence. Performers
included Haitian rapper J.G. and LA-based rapper Will B as well
as singers Kerry Getz and Danny Peck and the satirical musical
group, “Billionaires for Bush.”
Members of Payday, a network of men working with the
Global Women’s Strike, and in support of refuseniks from
around the world (see Payday’s website, www.refusingtokill.net),
provided technical and other kinds of support.
Said Margaret Prescod of
the spirited crowd, which represented such a broad range of
races, ages, communities, and concerns, “This is an
unprecedented coming together for Los Angeles. When we arrived
at Twin Towers Jail, prisoners knew we were there and waved to
the crowd as we demanded ’No more jails,’ ’No three
strikes,’ ’Money for mothers and communities, not Guantànamos
and war.’ ”
The
Southern California event was organized by the multiracial
Global Women’s Strike/LA and co-sponsored by the Action
Resource Center, Alexandria House, A New Way of Life, ANSWER
Coalition, Critical Resistance L.A., East Side Café, El Sereno
Neighbors for Peace and Justice, IAC, No New Jails Coalition,
Office of the Americas, Payday, San Gabriel Valley Neighbors for
Peace and Justice, and endorsed by many more. KPFK Pacifica
Radio 90.7FM was the media sponsor.
For information on these and other actions around the
world, contact 323-292-7405 and go to www.globalwomenstrike.net
More
photos...
November
2005
Public Meeting, Nov 17,
7pm:
Venezuela, Haiti, Benton Harbor, New Orleans:
The Self-Mobilization of the Grassroots
Holman United Methodist
Church, 3320 West Adams Blvd., Los Angeles.
September
Hear Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez
interviewed by Margaret Prescod (KPFK radio and
Strike coordinator US West Coast), Amy Goodman and
Juan Gonzalez on Democracy Now, 19 Sept 2005 News Flash and Request for Endorsement!
June
6th: Meeting on Venezuela with Key Advisor to President
Chavez
May
Hands Off Social Security – End the War in Iraq
April
Women’s
Contingent at the March for Immigrants’ Rights
April
Defend the Right to Vote In Benton Harbor!
Stop the Frame-up of Rev. Edward Pinkney!
March
Gathering our forces against poverty & war - march & rally to Twin
Towers Jail
LA
countdown to the Strike
Invitation
to Endorse the Strike
Statements:
FACTS (Families to Amend California's Three Strikes)
statement
Solidarity
Statement in Support of the Strike from Iraq Veterans Against the War
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