[blind-democracy] ‘In a deepgoing revolution, women want to take part’

  • From: "Roger Loran Bailey" <dmarc-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> (Redacted sender "rogerbailey81" for DMARC)
  • To: blind-democracy <blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Mon, 18 Mar 2019 20:05:31 -0400

https://themilitant.com/2019/03/16/in-a-deepgoing-revolution-women-want-to-take-part/


Books of the Month

‘In a deepgoing revolution, women want to take part’




Vol. 83/No. 12

March 25, 2019
Asela de los Santos, right, receiving award in 1974 from Vilma Espín, both of whom had been leaders of the Federation of Cuban Women. Also present are Fidel Castro and Raúl Castro.
Federation of Cuban Women
Asela de los Santos, right, receiving award in 1974 from Vilma Espín, both of whom had been leaders of the Federation of Cuban Women. Also present are Fidel Castro and Raúl Castro.

The excerpt below is from Women in Cuba:The Making of a Revolution Within the Revolution by three leaders of the Federation of Cuban Women, Vilma Espín, Asela de los Santos and Yolander Ferrer. It is one of Pathfinder’s Books of the Month for March. The extract is from the chapter “It Gave Us a Sense of Worth,” an interview by Mary-Alice Waters with de los Santos. This book, subtitled From Santiago de Cuba and the Rebel Army to the Birth of the Federation of Cuban Women, is featured here to mark both Women’s History Month and the 60th anniversary of the Cuban Revolution. Copyright © 2012 by Pathfinder Press. Reprinted by permission.

ASELA DE LOS SANTOS: Cuban women have a tradition of struggle, from the mambises in the nineteenth century wars of independence to today. That tradition is an important political element in our socialist revolution.

With a historical leap, we find ourselves in 1953, the beginning of the struggle for genuine independence — I’m referring here to the attack on Moncada — and the heroic examples of Melba Hernández and Haydée Santamaría, who participated in that action.

As the struggle continued, more and more women became part of it.

Fidel’s course of building a mass revolutionary movement capable of sustaining and supporting the armed struggle enabled both men and women to be integrated.

Women joined the ranks of the Rebel Army. In the Sierra Maestra there was a platoon of women fighters known as the Marianas, named after Mariana Grajales, the mother of the eight Maceo brothers, all of whom fought for independence from Spain. She was one of the great heroes of the war for independence.

In the underground we did whatever was necessary. We sewed uniforms and armbands for the Rebel Army. We helped provide cover for moving weapons and young combatants. We found families who would house revolutionary fighters who had gone underground. We secured medicine. We served as messengers between different revolutionary fronts. We distributed subversive propaganda and collected supplies.

In short, women worked on every front in the underground struggle. …

As the struggle deepened, women saw greater possibilities opening up. There were many important things to do. The revolution offered them this opportunity. And I’m talking about even before the victory.

When a deepgoing revolution takes place, women, who have been oppressed for centuries, for millennia, want to take part.

You asked me if working in the underground was a liberating experience for a woman. Yes, it was. No one could stop the women.

WATERS: It gave you a sense of worth …

DE LOS SANTOS: … of worth as a human being, as part of the people.

WATERS: For me this is a very significant element of the Cuban Revolution. Your generation in Cuba was in the vanguard of the historic changes in women’s economic and social status, as we were drawn out of the home and into social labor to a previously unprecedented degree, something that began during the Second World War.

In no other socialist revolution have there been so many leaders who were women: Vilma Espín, Celia Sánchez, Haydée Santamaría, Melba Hernández, to name but a few of the best known. Their leadership was indispensable. It’s one of the elements of Cuba’s revolutionary history that needs to be better known and better understood. …

DE LOS SANTOS: In History Will Absolve Me, Fidel denounced the existence in Cuba of widespread illiteracy. Illiteracy is a tool in the hands of the exploiters. If you are ignorant, if you don’t know how to read or write, you’re not free. Not knowing even how to sign your name makes people feel inferior.

The rural population in the Second Front was poor, exploited, hungry. Many young people joined the Rebel Army, so the number of combatants who were illiterate grew. And this was a challenge.

That’s how the education effort started. Raúl issued orders that we teach all these young combatants to read and write. …

After the victory of the revolution, Raúl told all these teachers, all those young women from the Second Front, that they would be given scholarships to continue their education. And all those who wanted to remain teachers could do so.

In 1961 we launched a literacy campaign across the country. Before the revolution, 23 percent of the population was illiterate — more than 40 percent in the countryside. The goal was to eliminate this backwardness in a single year. The experience in the Second Front was a big help in the nationwide campaign. The campaign to wipe out illiteracy ended with a gigantic scholarship program that gave all young people continued access to study at higher levels. …

There was a growing consciousness among women, as well as in the leadership of the revolution, that it was necessary to organize a women’s movement. It was necessary to do political work among women, because they were at the bottom, the most exploited. We didn’t speak in terms of women’s equality at that time. We talked about women being housewives, confined to work in the home, overlooked and discriminated against. We talked about the need to integrate women into society and the workplace. …

Vilma stressed the need to incorporate the revolutionary capacities of women in the work of building a new society — a source of strength that was very important.

At the same time, the unfolding revolution itself increasingly helped women grasp their place in it. It helped them develop a consciousness of the need to take part in socially useful work outside the home. It helped them develop a consciousness that they had as many rights as men.

The federation set itself the goal of defending women, without bringing on a confrontation with men.













Related Articles



Join the May Day brigade to Cuba!
Is there an alternative to the “look out for number one,” profit-driven capitalist system? Do we have to accept that the bosses are constantly trying to speed our work up, cut corners on safety, push down our wages? Do we…

Sign up for International May Day Cuba Brigade
CHICAGO — More than 30 people turned out here for a March 10 film showing to build and raise funds for the 14th May Day International Volunteer Work Brigade in Solidarity with Cuba. The event was sponsored by the Chicago…


In This Issue

Front Page Articles •Erie UE strike ends, Wabtec bosses agree to negotiations
•Nat’l blackout deepens crisis in Venezuela - US hands off!
•‘Workers need to organize our own party to take power’
•Protests continue in fight against police killing of Stephon Clark
•Democrats’ fractures widen in cover-up of anti-Semitic remarks
•Supreme Court puts limits on cops seizing property, a gain for workers

Feature Articles •Sign up for International May Day Cuba Brigade

Also In This Issue •Celebrate the political life of veteran communist in UK
•‘Militant’ continues to receive readers’ contributions. Thanks!
•Capitalism at fault in Alabama tornado catastrophe
•Are ‘hate crimes’ and racism on the rise in the US?

Editorials •Join the May Day brigade to Cuba!

On the Picket Line •Indiana teachers rally for higher pay, better working conditions
•Weeklong strike in Oakland ends as teachers’ struggle continues

Books of the Month •‘In a deepgoing revolution, women want to take part’





25, 50 and 75 years ago



Corrections




© Copyright 2019 The Militant  -  306 W. 37th Street, 13th floor -  New York, NY 10018  -  themilitant@xxxxxx

--


---

Carl Sagan
“ The truth may be puzzling. It may take some work to grapple with. It may be 
counterintuitive. It may contradict deeply held prejudices. It may not be 
consonant with what we desperately want to be true. But our preferences do not 
determine what's true. ”
―  Carl Sagan



Other related posts:

  • » [blind-democracy] ‘In a deepgoing revolution, women want to take part’ - Roger Loran Bailey