Origins of
International Women's Day
Their spirit ricochets through time from the days when immigrant women
marched out of the factories in
International Women's Day, March 8, is a holiday celebrated by the
oppressed around the world. It is a holiday that came out of the struggle of
women. In particular, the struggle of immigrant garment workers in
Around the turn of the century thousands of women worked in the garment
district in
In 1908 women began to stage walkouts and strikes at various sewing
factories. Sometimes a company would settle a strike by meeting some of the
demands of the male strikers but included clauses in the settlement that said
"no part of this agreement shall refer or apply to females.'' In spite of
many arrests and heavy fines, in spite of brutal beatings by police and hired
thugs, the women, many of them teenagers, continued the walkouts. Middle and
upper class women inspired by the strikers came out to the pickets to give
their support and were arrested too. And when newspapers covered these unusual
arrests, the public began to find out about the brutal conditions and slave
wages of the women strikers.
After months of small shop actions the women decided to escalate the
struggle by calling for a tradewide general strike.
And in defiance of the heads of the union, on November 22, 1909, the
"Uprising of Twenty Thousand'' began.
One garment worker from the Triangle Shirtwaist Company described the
event: "Thousands upon thousands left the factories from every side, all
of them walking down toward
The strike lasted for months and ignited strikes in other areas. Though
the strike itself was only partially successful in terms of changing work
conditions, the "uprising" did change some important things. It
challenged the image of what uneducated immigrant women could do, and it filled
the
In 1910 the anniversary of these demonstrations, March 8, was declared
International Women's Day by an international conference of socialists and
communists. Since then it has been celebrated worldwide by all revolutionaries
and those fighting for the liberation of women and the emancipation of all of
humanity.
8 March Women’s Organization (Iranian-Afghanistan)