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Not just another Women's Day: feminist one-day strike brings 'edge' to movement

For the first time, feminists in more than 50 countries are calling an international women鈥檚 strike to protest against violence and inequality, in an effort to combat a global tide of male revanchism.

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Agencja Gazeta/Slawomir Kaminski/Reuters
Women throw flowers as they attend a protest during the International Women's Day, outside the Parliament building in Warsaw on March 8, 2017.

International Women鈥檚 Day on March 8 has sometimes been the occasion for department stores to offer promotional deals on perfume or lingerie.

That might not play well this year, however, amid a mood that is much more militant. Fueling the movement is 鈥渁 sense of alarm around the world鈥 about impending attacks on women鈥檚 rights by conservative populist leaders, says Nisha Varia, a women鈥檚 rights advocate with Human Rights Watch in New York.

So for the first time, feminists in more than 50 countries are calling an international women鈥檚 strike 鈥 a daylong absence from paid and unpaid labor 鈥 to protest against violence and inequality.

And recognizing that the prejudices they face are universal, women from Poland to Colombia to South Africa are working across borders to bolster the progress they have made against a tide of male revanchism 鈥 which many see exemplified by the election of President Trump.

鈥淲e are facing the same problems in almost all countries,鈥 says Marta Lempart, a strike organizer in Poland. 鈥淩estrictive reproductive rights, religious leaders interfering in our private lives, and lower wages than men. We can only win if we stand together.鈥

Crossing borders

The idea for the strike, and the new sharper edge that the women鈥檚 movement has taken, was born last October in Poland. There, a one-day women鈥檚 strike and protest marches against a bill that would have outlawed abortion under any circumstances forced the government to back down. That success encouraged organizers to broaden their vision.

鈥淩eproductive rights are a litmus test for women鈥檚 rights in society,鈥 argues Anna Karaszewska, a leader of the Polish Women鈥檚 Congress. 鈥淲e won鈥檛 be able to break the glass ceiling or fight the gender pay gap and other forms of discrimination if we can鈥檛 decide about our own bodies and health.鈥

The movement added an international dimension when Polish strike organizers got in touch by social media with women in other countries, including Argentina, where hundreds of thousands of women had taken to the streets to protest against a string of murders of women.

In Latin America, femicide is the most pressing feminist issue on the agenda; seven of the 10 countries with the highest female murder rates in the world are in Latin America, a region where the aggressively hypermasculine culture of 鈥渕achismo鈥 is dominant.

鈥淰iolence against women is everywhere,鈥 complains Olinda Garcia, a Colombian activist. 鈥淚t鈥檚 in public spaces, it鈥檚 in private, in your home carried out by people close to you.鈥 One woman has been killed every 18 hours in Argentina so far this year, according to a recent report.

Governments are changing the law and raising the penalties for violence against women. 鈥淏ut our culture lags behind the legal framework,鈥 says Diana Castillo Murrle, a Colombian gender and citizenship researcher. 鈥淲e need to put those laws into practice, we need to invest in the classroom as well as the police station to change attitudes.鈥

The manifesto calling for today鈥檚 international women鈥檚 strike opens with a declaration that 鈥渨e, the women of the world, are fed up with violence addressed to us, physical, economic, verbal, or moral. We will no longer tolerate it passively.鈥

'The Trump effect'

Though recent years have seen worldwide improvements in the rates of school enrollment among girls and in women鈥檚 health care, economic injustice is still rampant. Women account for two-thirds of the hours worked in the world every year, but take home only one-tenth of the global income, according to United Nations figures. At the current rate of improvement, women will not achieve economic equality with men for another 170 years, the World Economic Forum Gender Gap report found this year.

But the spark that lit the touch paper for today鈥檚 worldwide action, say feminist activists in several countries, was less such depressingly familiar statistics, but rather Mr. Trump鈥檚 election.

The new US president, notorious for his sexist remarks, has espoused political positions that feminists say would roll back women鈥檚 rights.

鈥淭he Trump effect has really galvanized women all over the world because he is so emblematic of what so many of us have gone through in our own countries,鈥 says Sisonke Msimang, founder of Sonke Gender Justice, a South African group working for gender equality.

If women staged more than 600 marches on all seven continents on Jan. 21 in support of the Women鈥檚 March on Washington, 鈥渋t is because we all feel the same from the same experiences of abuse, there is solidarity,鈥 adds Ariadna Estevez, a human rights researcher at the National Autonomous University in Mexico.

Ms. Msimang admits to 鈥渁 delicious sense of irony鈥 that for once, in a reversal of traditional roles, 鈥淎frican women were turning out in solidarity with the plight of American women. We felt sorry for them.鈥

Urgency with an edge of anger

But African women have their own reasons for concern about Mr. Trump鈥檚 election, she adds. One of his first acts as president was to reimpose and broaden the 鈥済lobal gag rule,鈥 denying US international healthcare funds to any nongovernmental organization that provides abortion counseling or referrals.

"How can we allow this kind of funding to come with such restrictions?" says Tlaleng Mofokeng, who runs a women's health clinic in Johannesburg. "How can you import a foreign country's laws and perceptions onto the women of South Africa?"

Meanwhile, 鈥渢here is an urgent and immediate sense that we must mobilize to protect the gains we have made so far and defend against setbacks鈥 in women鈥檚 rights, says Ms. Varia of Human Rights Watch.

That is easier to do nowadays. 鈥淚t鈥檚 very clear who our enemies are, and that is slightly enlivening,鈥 says Joanna Biggs, deputy editor of the London Review of Books, who helped organize the woman鈥檚 march in London last January.

鈥淲e didn鈥檛 have to explain why we were doing a march 鈥 people are ready to do something now,鈥 she adds. 鈥淭here is an edge of anger and I think that is useful to the movement.鈥

And it is spreading, too. 鈥淭he feminist movement,鈥 proclaims Dr. Estevez, 鈥渋s going global.鈥

鈥⒙燤onika R臋ba艂a in Warsaw; Emily Wright in Bogota, Colombia; and Ryan Brown in Johannesburg, South Africa, contributed reporting to this article.

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