”I was still sucking my thumb
the first time I sang we shall overcome’
it was a numb December night, it was a small town fable
my first corporate villain and my mother was the hero
all Ginsburg tradition, howling human rights for workers!’
I asked her,
“Why are we so mad?”
And she parked her head down in the freezing rain and saw me
So serious and small with my big Mack Truck union sign
She smiled to herself,
pondered politics of fingers curled,
“This is solidarity,” she whispered to her baby girl.” — Alix Olson
Today’s rally was disappointing to say the least. Turnout: pathetic. Union organiser types doing union speeches and hardly anyone talking about domestic violence or abortion rights… and lots of people talking about industrial relations and the stolenwealth games. Why does this annoy me? Because no one ever talks about women’s issues at industrial relations rallies. Meanwhile a group of filipino women hold up their placards: ‘stop trafficking in women’… and seem quite confused about the speeches.
Alix Olson ends her poem with a tribute to the women before me and calls out Audre Lorde, Germaine Greer, my mother, my grandmother, and you and you… inviting the audience to call out their names. Last time I called out Emma Goldman and Rosa Parks and Eleanor Roosevelt. I want to make a difference. One day, I want to be one of those names. No problem with aiming high, is there?