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Woman's
Day - 8th March |
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Happy
International Women's Day ! |
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History
of Woman's Day |
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In
accordance with a declaration by the Socialist
Party of America, the first National Woman's
Day was observed across the United States on
28 February1909.
Women continued to celebrate it on the last
Sunday of that month through 1913. In 1910,
the Socialist International, meeting in Copenhagen,
established a Women's Day, international in
character, to honor the movement for women's
rights and to assist in achieving universal
suffrage for women. The proposal was greeted
with unanimous approval by the conference of
over 100 women from 17 countries, which included
the first three women elected to the Finnish
parliament. No fixed date was selected for the
observance.
As a result of the decision taken at Copenhagen
the previous year, International Women's Day
was marked for the first time (19 March) in
Austria, Denmark, Germany and Switzerland, where
more than one million women and men attended
rallies in 1911. In addition to the right to
vote and to hold public office, they demanded
the right to work, to vocational training and
to an end to discrimination on the job.
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Less
than a week later, on 25 March, the tragic Triangle
Fire in New York City took the lives of more
than 140 working girls, most of them Italian
and Jewish immigrants. This event had a significant
impact on labour legislation in the United States,
and the working conditions leading up to the
disaster were invoked during subsequent observances
of International Women's Day.
As part of the peace movement brewing on the
eve of World War I, Russian women observed their
first International Women's
Day on the last
Sunday in February 1913. Elsewhere in
Europe, on or around 8 March of the following
year, women held rallies either to protest the
war or to express solidarity with their sisters.
With 2 million Russian soldiers dead in the
war, Russian women again chose the last Sunday
in February to strike for "bread
and peace". Political leaders opposed
the timing of the strike, but the women went
on anyway. The rest is history: Four days later
the Czar was forced to abdicate and the provisional
Government granted women the right to vote.
That historic Sunday fell on 23 February on
the Julian calendar then in use in Russia, but
on 8 March on the Gregorian calendar in use
elsewhere.
Since those early years, International Women's
Day has assumed a new
global dimension for women in developed
and developing countries alike. The growing
international women's movement, which has been
strengthened by four global United Nations women's
conferences, has helped make the commemoration
a rallying point for coordinated efforts to
demand women's rights and participation in the
political and economic process. Increasingly,
International Women's Day is a time to reflect
on progress made, to call for change and to
celebrate acts of courage and determination
by ordinary women who have played an extraordinary
role in the history of women's rights.
Source: from publication of United
Nations Department of Public Information--DPI/1878--January
1.
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