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NEWS & LETTERS, December 2001

Women step out and speak-out

Chicago - The Chicago International Women's Day Planning Committee hosted a Fall Speak-Out at the end of October at Roosevelt University. Toni Bond of Chicago Abortion Fund (CAF) and African American Women Evolving kicked off the meeting. Toni focused her discussion on what she called "the perverse relationship between race and reproduction," giving a history of this relationship from slavery to today. She included in this history the limitations within the pro-choice movement and challenged it to operate from an "anti-racist, human-rights framework."

For example, while CAF is confronted daily with the consequences of the Hyde Amendment which denies women on medicaid abortion services, forcing them to sell everything from their TVs to their bodies, the pro-choice movement largely focuses on abortion rights, not access. Toni declared, "I want to know when we're going to reverse the Hyde Amendment? I hear pro-choice activists say it's not possible to win so they don't bother trying. It speaks volumes to their value of women of color. When you don't work to overturn Hyde, you collude with the anti-choicers and maintain a connection between race and reproduction."

Alissa Hull of the Young Women's Empowerment Project spoke next on the sexual trafficking of women and girls, saying that the U.S. government's estimates that 50,000 per year are trafficked into the U.S. are low. She stressed the need to make a distinction between sexual and labor trafficking, noting that sexual assault is more than a labor issue. She said that what is needed in this time of globalization is to "globalize dignity." Maria Gonzoles of the Day Labor Organizing Project, and a day laborer herself, was the third speaker. She said, "Women arrive at the day labor agencies at 5 a.m. after dropping children off at a babysitter's around 3 a.m. Sometimes you stand in line for hours not knowing if you'll get work or what kind of a job you'll be sent to. You have to take anything you can get."

She talked about discrimination from agencies that only hire men for certain jobs and "the offers to exchange sexual favors for work. You have to be nice to them if you want to work." Maria asked, "How can women come together to create alternatives? People talk about 'rights' but we just can't find them."

The thoughtfulness of these three speakers can help us rethink not only where the Women's Liberation Movement is headed, but where other movements need to go as well.

Sonia Bergonzi

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