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Apr 18
2008

Passover Bread for the Breadless

Posted by Infogal in Race and GenderGlobal FeminismCulture

Aurora Levins MoralesWe received these passover reflections from poet, writer and historian Aurora Levins Morales. We asked her to share them with you. Aurora and her mom Rosario were both members of the Chicago Women's Liberation Union.

Dear Friends: Like other Jews around the world, I am preparing for Passover, our annual feast in celebration of freedom. I've been cleaning house, chopping nuts and fruit, and if I were not allergic to wheat anyway, I'd be getting rid of my bread. But in the midst of this work that I love, I can't get my mind off all the people who are taking to the streets this month, in country after country, to demand changes in the food policies that are starving them. The prices of wheat, rice, beans, cooking oil and other staples have skyrocketed in the last three years and hundreds of millions of people can't afford to eat them. Although the Haitian people's protests brought down their government, people are still eating patties made of salted mud.

Mar 06
2008

Feministing.com starts a Feministing Alliance

Posted by Infogal in Sexism and SocietyRace and GenderGlobal Feminism

banner1791.jpgFeministing.com is a bold brash feminist blog site where many women and some men start their day by reading the articles and opinion pieces and then posting their comments.

The youngish organizers of Feministing represent a generation of women who are fighting the complex 21st century battle for gender equality. They are web-savvy, very smart and refreshingly outspoken.

Now they are trying to create network of likeminded groups through an online initiative called the Feministing Alliance.

Mar 01
2008

Mardge Cohen to be honored at the annual Debs-Thomas-Harrington

Posted by Infogal in Our BodiesGlobal FeminismChicagoland

Mardge CohenWhen Mardge Cohen and her partner Gordy Schiff left Chicago for Boston, they were warned that their old friends in the Windy City would do what was necessary to drag them back here.

Mardge is one of the world's leading experts on the treatment of HIV/AIDS and a former CWLU member. Gordy is a prof at Harvard and has written extensively on patient safety.

Well, on April 25, Marge will be back in town to receive an award from the Chicago Democratic Socialists of America at their annual dinner. Les Orear of the Illinois Labor History Society and labor lawyer Laurie Burgess will be her co-honorees.

Rose Ann DeMoro of the National Nurses Organizing Committee will be the featured speaker on the theme," Universal Healthcare Now!

Feb 14
2008

Women in the Global City

Posted by Infogal in Race and GenderGlobal FeminismChicagoland

Womenheads.gif
Women in the Global City 
6-8pm Tuesday, March 4th
The Rudy Lozano Public Library
1805 S. Loomis St., Chicago

In an effort to remake Chicago into a "global city" – one attractive to businesses and tourists worldwide – Chicago's educational, environmental, employment and housing policies have been rewritten over the last two decades. These changes in policy and funding priorities have effected Chicago residents differently by class, race and, as we focus on here, by gender.




Jan 04
2008

Are you a Marjane Satrapi fan?

Posted by Infogal in Womens HistoryGlobal FeminismCulture

persepolis01.jpgCall for contributions for an edited essay collection on Marjane Satrapi’s works (film, literature, and art).

Satrapi's autobiographical graphic novel, Persepolis, was an instant success in France and the U.S. It has garnered numerous book prizes, and the animated film version was awarded the Grand Prize of the Jury at the 2007 Cannes Film Festival. Satrapi's other texts, including children's books, have been translated into numerous languages and published worldwide.

The proposed collection aims to examine Satrapi's works as literature, art, film and cultural phenomena, bringing diverse ideological and theoretical perspectives to bear on the intellectual and political issues that they raise.

Dec 09
2007

Remember your sisters...

Posted by Infogal in Global FeminismCulture

This came to my e-mail box and it really made me think, so I decided to share it. I have no idea who wrote it, but thanks to my friend Gail for sending it to me.

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A young wife sat on a sofa on a hot humid day, drinking iced tea and visiting with her Mother. As they talked about life, about marriage, about the responsibilities of life and the obligations of adulthood, the mother clinked the ice cubes in her glass thoughtfully and turned a clear, sober glance upon her daughter.

Nov 11
2007

Iranian feminists against a US war on their country

Posted by Infogal in ViolenceUS PoliticsGlobal Feminism

Azer MajediWe recently received a communication from Azer Majedi , leader of the Organization for Women's Liberation, an Iranian feminist organization. Azer Majedi lives in exile in the UK. In her statement, she calls upon the people everywhere to join together and say,"No to a US military attack."

She was especially concerned with the recent meetings between George Bush and Nicholas Sarkozy, which resulted in some bellicose rhetoric directed against Iran. Her organization opposes the current Islamic regime in Iran and points out that along with the other misery that a war brings, it would make the job of the democratic resistance in Iran even more dangerous and difficult.

Her complete statement follows:



Oct 28
2007

PulseWire will connect women around the planet

Posted by Infogal in Sexism and SocietyRace and GenderGlobal Feminism

If you are working in the fields of human trafficking, HIV/AIDS, and water sustainablity, PulseWire welcomes you to their founding online community.

Here, any woman with access to a basic computer, and eventually a cell phone, can speak her truth, ask for what she needs and share her solutions through pictures, audio, video and the written word.

Please visit Pulsewire to learn more.

 

pulsewire.jpg
Oct 07
2007

Aung San Suu Kyi on Non-Violence

Posted by Infogal in ViolenceGlobal Feminism

As the terrible repression continues in the nation of Burma, here is a video of Nobel Prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi talking about the importance of non-violence in the struggle for democracy.

Aung San Suu Kyi has been under house arrest by orders of the corrupt Burmese military regime for most of the past 17 years. If the people of Burma could realize their dreams, she would be leading the country instead.

Aung San Suu Kyi in a 1999 interview

Sep 11
2007

Robin Morgan on the September 11, 2001 Attacks

Posted by Infogal in ViolenceGlobal Feminism

A day after the September 11, 2001 attacks, feminist writer Robin Morgan sent out this letter from her home in Greenwich Village, NYC not far from where the Twin Towers had once stood.

On this anniversary of the attacks, we thought it appropriate to republish her original letter. We also recommend her book The Demon Lover, which is one of the best explanations of terrorism available.

Sep 07
2007

Flying: Confessions of a Free Woman

Posted by Infogal in Global FeminismCulture

 From the film Flying: Confessions of a Free WomanAdella Ladjevardi of Zohe Film Productions contacted us about a new film that will open in Chicago at the Siskel Center September 14-18.

Flying: Confessions of a Free Woman is a global conversation among women that spans 17 countries. According to the film's press kit:

Never before in our collective human history have so many women had such freedom to construct a life of their own creation. Yet old structures and realities still haunt us; many women are looking for new role models, but finding them difficult to identify for lack of precedent and because even today women so often remain the invisible, silent class...From South Africa to California, from Sweden to India, the film creates a cross-cultural story about common experiences of modern female life on issues such as love, socialization, marriage, work, childrearing, aging, violence, spirituality, death, politics.

Filmmaker Jennifer Fox has divided the film into three 2 hour episodes. She used an innovative technique she calls "passing the camera" to make the women's conversations more intimate and less artificial. I know I plan to see it. You can visit the film's amazing website at www.flyingconfessions.com.

View the trailer and some brief reviews after the jump.

Aug 28
2007

“Educate a woman, you educate a nation”

Posted by Infogal in Global Feminism

That was the lead story on August 28 from the Women News Network, a new online project that spotlights news from Women's UN Report Network.

South African girlsDedicated the notion that feminism is global and that the means of communications should be in the hands of women everywhere, WNN uses video, audio and text to deliver the women's news you'll never see even on the Oxygen channel.


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