Southall Black
Sisters<\/a>, an organisation by and for Black and Asian women which
began in 1979 in the aftermath of the death of Blair Peach (an
anti-facist protestor who died from police violence). Since then SBS
has changed and expanded its remit to fit the needs of those around
it – specifically as advocates of womens’ rights,
supporting women suffering from domestic violence and campaigning
against religious fundamentalism. The role of SBS as a support group
especially for ethnic minority women is especially important as
women of colour often face different pressures (see their forced
marriages campaign) and specialised services are needed.<\/p>\n
Southall Black Sisters first came to my attention at a London
Feminist Network meeting in 2010 and they’re regulars at
Fawcett Society gatherings and marches, too. Their speakers have
always been bright, warm, engaging and utterly unwavering in their
points, unfazed by the battles they have ahead. Working at
grassroots level, the SBS have their fingers on the pulse and
report to people in power – they have been invited to speak
at the Home Office and the UN.<\/p>\n
In 2007 SBS faced funding cuts from Ealing Council which would
have closed all SBS’s operations. The council claimed argued
that their services were no longer necessary due to ‘Social
Cohesion’ – SBS fought this in the high court citing
the Race Relations Act and their victory has set a legal precedent
for other ethnic minority support groups facing cuts – an
especially important victory as so many charities and support
networks are squeezed and so many women and ethnic minorities feel
the force of the cuts deeper them others.<\/p>\n
Me (Miranda):<\/strong> Following on from that, I’m gonna
get on my political crate for a moment here too and mention that
International Women’s Day has its roots in socialism. It
was founded by Clara
Zetkin<\/a> under the name International Working Women’s
Day. It came from the labour movements at the turn of the
twentieth century, and in a year when government cuts have put
women at a twenty-five
year high for unemployment figures<\/a>, I think this is
something that it pays to bear in mind. Opposing these cuts
– to our NHS, to our jobs, to our libraries, to our
working lives – is vital as far as I’m concerned
because they
enforce and underline systemic inequalities<\/em> and limit
our power to do something about them. Denise Marshall handed
back her OBE<\/a> just over a year ago on this very
point.<\/p>\n
All of which is to say: nope, Dave, SHAN’T “calm
down, dear” and my recommended Thing I Am Doing is
probably “yelling at Parliament about these cuts at
every possible opportunity” because I believe that
absolutely is a feminist issue – the NHS for example
is a major employer of women, of whom I am one, aside from
the obvious issue of service cuts! In terms of being more
specifically-IWD, there’s also the Women’s Resource
Centre<\/a>, and as has been well documented, I really dig
the Red
Pump Project<\/a> over in the USA.<\/p>\n
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What are you doing this IWD? <\/em><\/li>\n<\/ul>\n