|
Run
Date: 10/04/01
By
Cynthia L. Cooper
WEnews
correspondent
http://www.womense-news.com/article.cfm/dyn/aid/673
(October 4/10)
Women
in Black, an international network of women protesting war, holds
silent vigils worldwide to protest U.S. plans to wage war following
the Sept. 11 terror attacks. Their silence also underscores women's
historic voicelessness.
NEW
YORK (WOMENSENEWS)--At first, four women dressed in black formed
a line on the wide, white steps of the New York Public Library,
15 feet in front of one of the guardian lions. In addition to black
pants, black shirts and black jackets, some wore black head scarves--to
demonstrate solidarity with Muslim women who have been assaulted
or harassed in blind reprisals for the Sept. 11 terrorism attacks.
Even
in the aftermath of terrorist bombings, these peace activists deliver
no speeches, chant no slogans and invite no male participants. And,
they say, these are precisely the elements that make the international
human rights group, Women in Black, effective.
On
Wednesday evening, the women in line were soon joined by more women,
most wearing black but some gray, denim and khaki, until over two
dozen stretched across the white stone steps to create a stark and
imposing image. A plain cloth banner announced: "Women in Black
Against War."
The
women stood without speaking for the next hour.
"At
times like this when people don't know what to do, we allow for
people to communicate in silence," said Indira Kajosevic, one of
the participants. "Silence is very powerful. I am mourning the victims
of violence, and I am making a public statement about that."
Women
in Black Silently Focuses on Historic Voicelessness of Women
Women
in Black is a loose international network of women who share a common
philosophy of opposition to militarism and violence and use a similar
style of silent demonstration. Without a formal organization or
officers, they convene at standard times for peace vigils in public
squares, wearing black clothing of bereavement. Only women are invited
to participate.
"There's
a strong communal energy among women together," said Stephanie Damoff,
a philosophy student who began standing in the vigils in New York
several years ago. "It makes people stop and think."
The
silence is a contrast to noisy demonstrations, a familiar part of
the anti-war protests during the Vietnam years. "There are already
too many words about the issue," said Pat DeAngelis, a longtime
participant. And silence, said Kajosevic, draws attention to the
historic voicelessness of women.
The
first Women in Black protests began in Israel in 1988 to mobilize
sentiment for peace with Palestinians. In 1991, a group formed in
Belgrade, where women stood weekly in the Republic Square to protest
war in Yugoslavia. Allied groups sprang up in Azerbaijan, Canada,
Denmark, England, France, Israel, India, Indonesia, Italy, Scotland,
Spain, Switzerland and Turkey, and in several U.S. locations, including
San Francisco, Portland, Ore., Ann Arbor, Mich., Rhode Island and
Arizona.
The
Belgrade group, which has been particularly active in "street manifestations"
and programs offering assistance to displaced women, was awarded
a Millennium Peace Prize for Women by the United Nations Development
Fund for Women and International Alert, a global women's awareness
program, in March 2001. In June, eight Danish and Norwegian parliamentarians
nominated Women in Black for this year's Nobel Peace Prize.
Women
in Black Urge Male Leaders to 'Step Back From War'
Monthly
New York vigils have been ongoing since 1993, at first located across
the street from the United Nations to protest the rape of women
as a tool of war in the former Yugoslavia. At times, the women have
joined with local action groups, such as Women in Mourning and Outrage,
an organization that formed in response to the New York City police
killing of Amadou Diallo, an unarmed immigrant from Guinea.
After
the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, the New York group changed its
monthly vigils to weekly ones.
A
flyer handed to passersby at the library calls on government officials
to "step back" from war.
"We
mourn the dead and feel deep sympathy with the bereaved and injured,"
the flyer says. "Those who perpetrated the violence must be brought
to justice under international law."
Unlike
a conventional nonprofit organization, Women in Black does not have
officers, staff or an operations center. Core members make collaborative
decisions and take on particular assignments, such as Internet postings
or photocopying. Money, when needed, is collected in a coffee tin.
"We
are not interested in power; we are very interested in social change,"
said Kajosevic, who joined New York vigils after moving from Belgrade
in 1994. "It's a means of mobilizing," she added.
Women
in Black groups around the world act independently. But an international
network comes together yearly. At the tenth reunion in Novi Sad,
Yugoslavia, in August, 250 women from 16 countries attended and
made opposition to violence in Macedonia a priority topic.
The
idea of acting in concert with women around the world is central
for many regulars.
"I
have a tremendous sense of solidarity with all our sisters around
the world facing conditions of violence and war," said DeAngelis,
who has sometimes maintained the vigil on her own in rain and cold.
"It's terribly important to take a stand against injustice and to
take a visible stand."
Responses
to that stark and silent stand are not always positive. One man
raised his fist and yelled, "Bomb them, bomb them!" But a woman
spectator stopped
and
pointedly shook the hand of every woman in the line.
"It's
effective," said Damoff, adding, "but slow and steady, not big and
splashy."
Cynthia
L. Cooper is a free-lance writer in New York.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
For
more information:
Women
in Black:
http://womeninblack.net/
http://wib.matriz.net
|