It’s international women’s day.
I’ve been discussing issues of body image with people this week, but one of the things this has made me remember is how much we still have to do.
I want to take a moment to be thankful for what we have but also note what we still need to fix (I’ll come back to this post and add sources when I have a little more time).
- In this country, every woman over 18 can vote, just like men can
- In this country, women have access to equal education
- We have a certain freedom to act as we choose and not be judged for it
- We still have access to abortion if we need it
- We have paid parental leave
BUT:
- There are still more men in parliament than women
- We’ve never had a female prime minister
- Domestic violence is still rife and the perpetrator is often not charged
On a world scale, it’s a lot worse:
- In the US, murder is the leading cause of death for pregnant women
- Women living under shari’a law in Iran and Nigeria still suffer terribly, including being sentenced to death by stoning for getting pregnant outside marriage, even if they were raped, or being revenge-raped as ‘punishment’ for their brother’s action in raping someone else (the logic of this one still horrifies me).
- Women are still the poorest people in the world
- Orthodox Jewish Women in Israel still need their husbands’ permission for divorce.
- Depending on whose statistics you listen to, one out of every four women will be sexually abused in their lifetime and every three minutes a woman is beaten in America.
I don’t have time today to write more. I have to go off on my Vespa to get a roadworthy and then meet a friend for lunch and try on a tuxedo because I’m going to be best man at his wedding. It makes me cry that I have these freedoms as a woman in this country to live this life and do these things today, ride a motorscooter, wear trousers, cross-dress with (almost) no derision while others in the world still suffer. May I never forget my blessings.
Thank you to all the women who went before me and fought for this life. Thank you to my mother for everything you ever did for me, for telling me I could be whoever I wanted to be and for buying me the train set as well as the kitchen set when I asked for one for Chanukah and the other for my birthday. I wish I could find a transcript of Alix Olson’s “The Women Before Me” to post for you to read. See what I can do later today.
Rally today, 5pm, State Library Melbourne. See you there?