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  • Today, March 8th is International Women’s Day.

  • A day dedicated to celebrating the cultural, social, and political achievements of women.

  • And a day to reflect on the issues that they still face globally.

  • But when did International Women’s Day start, who started it, and did it help destroy a

  • centuries old Russian monarchy?

  • Well, Let’s Find Out.

  • To unravel the true history of Women's Day we need to go back over 100 years.

  • The first hints of it appear around 1900.

  • The German Social Democratic Party were holding conferences to discuss women's issues.

  • Such as the fact that they weren't allowed to vote.

  • By 1907 the International Conference of Socialist Women had gathered in Stuttgart, Germany.

  • This was led by Clara Zetkin a German Marxist from the German Social Democratic Party.

  • One of her primary goals was to get women into work so that they could take part in

  • workers rights organisations.

  • So they had the means to improve their own conditions.

  • At the conference they demanded

  • the right to universal female suffrage without qualifications of property, tax, education

  • or any other kind of barrier which may hinder members of the working class from availing

  • themselves of their political rights.”

  • Across the ocean in the US the Socialist Party and the Women’s national committee had declared

  • the first Woman’s Day.

  • Marching through the streets of New York they protested for better pay and working conditions.

  • Which took place on the 28th of February 1909.

  • The March 8th date hadn't been set yet.

  • Following this a second International Conference of Working Women came together in 1910.

  • There in Copenhagen over 100 delegates from across the world came together.

  • Clara Zetkin pushed the idea of an International Woman's Day.

  • A day every year and in every country were women could organise and press for equal rights.

  • After a unanimous vote, International Woman's Day was born.

  • These women at the conference were pushing some other revolutionary ideas.

  • They demanded an eight-hour working day.

  • They proposed that pregnant women stop working for eight weeks prior to giving birth, and

  • that women be paidmotherhood insuranceof eight weeks if the child lived and all

  • working women would enjoy these benefits, including agricultural laborers, home workers

  • and maid servants.

  • These policies would be paid for by a special maternity fund out of tax revenues.

  • These policies were supposed to not only help mother’s and keep them safe but also pay

  • women for the essential non-paid work that kept society functioning, while allowing them

  • to remain in the paid workforce.

  • These policies heavily influenced the ideas of maternity and paternity leave that are

  • common in nearly all developed countries today.

  • From it's very start International Woman's Day was a day for working women and it's goal

  • was to address their issues.

  • Following this.

  • International Woman's Day celebrations sprang up across Europe.

  • The first European celebration of International Woman's Day happened in Vienna on March 18

  • 1911.

  • Women marched around the famous Ringstrasse carrying banners including red flags commemorating

  • the martyrs of the Paris Commune and demanding the equal right to vote.

  • If you don’t know what the Paris Commune is go check out Stepback History’s video

  • on the subject.

  • Link is in the description.

  • Millions of flyers soon carpeted Germany.

  • Crying out: “Comrades!

  • Working Women and Girls!

  • March 19 is your day.

  • It is your right.

  • Behind your demand stands Social Democracy, organized labor.

  • The Socialist women of all countries are in solidarity with you.

  • March 19 should be your day of glory!”

  • More than a million women took to the streets in Germany.

  • Crying out for equality.

  • The fervor continued into 1912 with the Lawrence Textile strike in the US, better known as

  • the Bread and Roses Strike.

  • Bread and Roses was the slogan coined by Rose Schneiderman.

  • A Polish-born American socialist and feminist.

  • During her speech she said

  • "The worker must have bread, but she must have roses, too".

  • In other words, workers need more than just wages to survive, the bread.

  • They also need dignity and decent working standards, roses.

  • More and more demonstrations took place as Woman's day continued to be celebrated.

  • But then the world decided to have a war.

  • A First World War.

  • Across Europe political demonstrations such as Woman's Day were cracked down on to keep

  • peace on the homefront.

  • To oppose this war, Clara Zetkin organised the third and final Socialist Women’s Conference

  • in April 1915.

  • It drew delegates from across the globe including people such as Nadezhda Krupskaya and her

  • husband, Vladimir Lenin.

  • They stated that the war only benefited the rich and the arms manufactures and stole away

  • the sons and husbands of mothers.

  • The war went on despite all the efforts of thes e women, but the idea of Woman’s Day

  • also went on.

  • The most dramatic celebration of International Woman's Day was in 1917 in Russia.

  • Led by feminist Alexandra Kollontai.

  • She is a recipient of the Order of the Aztec Eagle award, which is completely unrelated

  • but I just thought was badass.

  • Women's Day had already caused a ruckus in Russia.

  • Russian women had observed their first International Woman's Day in 1913.

  • The following year all the organisers of the International Woman’s Day in Russia ended

  • up in handcuffs.

  • Which kind of dampened the celebrations.

  • But the war had changed things quite quickly.

  • By 1917 the amount of women working in factories had skyrocketed as men marched off to war.

  • The women replacing them were paid half as much.

  • On top of this women found themselves mostly working in the textile and chemical industries.

  • Ones with long hours and horrific conditions.

  • Things came to boiling point on International Woman's Day 1917 as women took to the streets

  • to protest their mistreatment.

  • Storming the streets of Petrograd on Feburary 23rd or March 8th on our calendar, women striked

  • against war, starvation, and the Czar.

  • In their thousands they marched through the streets calling out to factory workers, men

  • and women alike, to join them.

  • Two days later nearly every industry in Petrograd had ground to a halt.

  • The protests weren't just made up of workers anymore either.

  • Students, teachers, and those across the economic spectrum joined in.

  • Czar Nicholas ordered the military to shot if they deemed it necessary.

  • Soldiers and police smashed into the demonstrators.

  • But to no avail, they couldn't be stopped.

  • The women had managed to convince whole regiments to switch sides and join them.

  • As Leon Trotsky’s tells us this about the women.

  • They go up to the cordons more boldly than men, take hold of the rifles, beseech, almost

  • command, ‘Put down your bayonets; join us!”

  • Russia's February Revolution had begun.

  • Trotski wrote, “23 February (8th March) was International Woman’s Day and meetings

  • and actions were foreseen.

  • But we did not imagine that thisWoman’s Daywould inaugurate the revolution.”

  • 7 days after International Womans' Day, Czar Nicholas II abdicated, ending 304-years of

  • Romanov rule over Russia.

  • The provisional government became one of the first governments of a major power to grant

  • women the right to vote.

  • In 1921, Clara Zetkin and Second International Conference of Communist Women in Moscow stated

  • that March 8th would now be the official date.

  • Lenin, with help from Zetkin made International Woman's Day a communist holiday in 1922.

  • Communists in China started celebrating it that year as well.

  • These things were eventually destroyed by Stalin.

  • In 1936, he reversed most liberal policies and banned abortion.

  • Women’s right to vote would become useless afterward.

  • But the idea still remained and the revolutionary spirit that caused them to be won in the first

  • place couldn’t be done away with.

  • With its connection to Communism and Russia, Woman's day fell out of favour in the West.

  • Especially as women gained the right to vote and people considered women’s fight for

  • rights to be over.

  • The US, gripped with panic and fear at the thought of communism's existence, disowned

  • the day entirely.

  • After 1922 information on it becomes scarce.

  • Sometime during the 1940's it seems to have switched names from Woman's day to Women's

  • day.

  • And so this day.

  • One that had inspired working women of the 20th century.

  • One that had been the rallying cry for rights and the fuel for a revolution was hidden behind

  • an iron curtain.

  • International Women’s Day remained a major holiday only celebrated in socialist countries

  • up until the 1970's.

  • But as Flower Power took hold in the late sixties, feminists brought the celebration

  • back and gave it new meaning as the women’s movement grew.

  • Most of the international community did not formally observe the date until 1975.

  • The UN celebrated International Women's Year that year, with Valentina Tereshkova the first

  • woman in space acting as the Soviet representative.

  • Since that year the UN officially celebrated International Women’s Day on March 8th.

  • International Women’s Day is now an official holiday in many countries.

  • On this day feminist demonstrations are held in many countries.

  • Because even though those early revolutionary women of the 20th century achieved an enormous

  • deal for women's rights.

  • The sad fact is that globally, women still earn less than their male counterparts, they

  • are less represented in business and politics, they suffer greater risks of violence and

  • carry the burdens of family care nearly single-handedly.

  • But every year brings more progress.

  • From Kabul to Kentucky every International Women's Day celebrates a new year with more

  • powerful women as this revolutionary day continues to inspire women just like it did over a century

  • ago.

  • I hope you enjoyed this video!

  • You can leave a comment if you did or if you have any questions regarding the video.

  • All the sources used are in the description down below.

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  • Thanks so much for watching!

Today, March 8th is International Women’s Day.

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