CUBA - CENTENNIAL OF FEMINIST MOVEMENT - NEED MORE RIGHTS, LESS VIOLENCE, MORE VISIBILITY
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There are no purple billboards on city streets, and no public service
announcements on television to mark the date. But many different voices
in Cuba
remember that this year marks the centennial of the birth of the local
feminist movement, a platform for fighting for equality and against
gender-based violence.
On
this 100th anniversary, we need to paint the island purple, historian
Julio César González Pagés told IPS, referring to the colour that
symbolises feminism around the world.
Cuba
does not have any self-described feminist organisations at this time,
even though the feminist current of thought has its followers here and
is studied in universities. The anniversary is passing without much
glory, lamented González Pagés, who invited everyone to pay tribute to
the Cuban women who stood up to fight for their rights in 1912, as well
as those who have continued their legacy.
It
was in November of 1912 that the Partido Popular Feminista (Feminist
Popular Party) was born. And in December the Sufragistas Cubanas (Cuban
Suffragists) and the Nacional Feminista (Feminist National) parties were
founded, marking the start of a political movement that was aimed first
and foremost at winning the vote for women. And other womens rights
associations continued to emerge.
The
movement persevered until winning most of its demands, such as the 1917
parental rights law and the 1918 divorce law, which made Cuba the first Latin American country to legalise divorce. However, the right to vote was not fully exercised until 1934.
Ideas about womens emancipation had existed in the country since long before, said González Pagés, coordinator of the Ibero-American Masculinity Network. But they became more visible in 1912, when women came together in feminist organisations.
When
we appropriate that philosophy, we can fight for equality and against
gender-based violence, the activist said this month during a series of
concerts that are being held in eight provinces as part of a prevention
campaign.
Between
January and March of this year, González Pagés and singer Rochy
Ameneiro led a tour through 11 Cuban provinces in an effort to fight
violence in music. The tour, which was called All Women Against the
Current, included concerts, workshops for art students, and visits to
places that are important in the history of Cuban women.
Many
Cuban feminists applauded the creation in July of a national network
for connecting the efforts of people and institutions for gender
equality. The idea came up during a talk sponsored by the Mirta Aguirre
Department of Gender and Communication at the José Martí International
Institute of Journalism.
In
separate efforts throughout the year, various organisations,
universities, media outlets, blogs and others have discussed the
feminist movement in Cuba,
which went into decline after 1939. In response to the debates over
this date, writer Teresa Díaz Canals called for a moment of collective
reflection.
We
have to come to an agreement and clarify that the history of women is
not just the history of feminists, she said in an interview with IPS.
We cannot toss out our legacy to the mute ones, our mothers, she
said. For her, many people continue to confront machismo quietly,
without making any declaration of faith or winning any battles.
National oblivion has thicker layers, which writer Inés María Martiatu tears apart as a way of vindicating the struggle of black women in Cuba.
Ignorance about Afro-feminism in Cuba
reduces the history of the movement to a certain era, and emphasises
the leadership of middle- and upper-class white women, she told IPS.
When
black and poor women are excluded or minimised, that history is
incomplete, said Martiatu, who is the co-author, along with Daysi
Rubiera, of the compilation Afrocubanas: historia, pensamientos y
prácticas culturales (Afro-Cuban Women: History, Ideas and Cultural
Practices), published in 2011. The conditions they live in and their
demands have been different, she said.
And other voices highlight the struggle of lesbians for their rights.
To
fight against that oblivion, historian and researcher Raquel Vinat de
la Mata has devoted many years of her life to highlighting the role of
women in the 19th century. It is painful that we still do not have a
book about womens history, she lamented, holding an unpublished book
about the biographies of outstanding Cuban women.
The
lack of information about the Cuban womens movement and its actions
has really hurt us, she said. People tend to think that we were just
given all of our rights, and that is why many women do not do more to
defend the ones they have, said Vinat de la Mata, who said she has
observed a resurgence of machismo in society today.
Cuban
women earn the same wages as men, have access to free abortion on
demand, and enjoy paid maternity leave and shared paternity, among other
benefits. At the end of 2011, women held 43.3 percent of seats in
parliament and 36.7 percent of leadership posts, and made up 61 percent
of university students.
However,
women workers face a double workday, given that they shoulder most
domestic work, and they are a minority in jobs with high economic
remuneration and decision-making power. And inequalities include the
persistence of gender-based violence, although no statistics exist to reflect its magnitude.
After
the decline of the first wave of feminism, which was described as
liberal, the struggle slumped until it reappeared as part of the leftist
guerrilla forces that won the 1959 revolution.
Vinat
de la Mata recalls those years very fondly, when she was one of the
anonymous protagonists of the revolution within a revolution.
She
was referring to the emancipation of women within the socialist
transformations that began at the time. In 1960, various organisations
in the country merged to form the Federation of Cuban Women, the only
legal group representing women in Cuba today.
Through the Federation, women have increased their participation in the public sphere, for example. In 1993, the Asociación de Mujeres Comunicadoras
(Association of Women in Communication), Magín, was created, to work
for gender awareness in the media. But it never received the official
authorisation it requested, and was shut down in 1996.
Feminist
awareness should not be based solely on an organisation, but on each
one of us, Vinat de la Mata said. It has cost those of us who are
feminists today a lot of work to open the way, she said, recalling the
stigma that was associated with the term feminist until the 1980s,
when studies on women and gender emerged in Cuba.
http://www.ipsnews.net/2012/11/feminists-want-to-paint-cuba-purple/
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