International
Women's Day


International Women's Day (8 March) is an
occasion marked by women's groups around the world. This date is also commemorated at the
United Nations and is designated in many countries as a national holiday. When women on
all continents, often divided by national boundaries and by ethnic, linguistic, cultural,
economic and political differences, come together to celebrate their Day, they can look
back to a tradition that represents at least nine decades of struggle for equality,
justice, peace and development.
International
Women's Day is the story of ordinary women as makers of history; it is rooted in the
centuries-old struggle of women to participate in society on an equal footing with men. In
ancient Greece, Lysistrata initiated a sexual strike against men in order to end war;
during the French Revolution, Parisian women calling for "liberty, equality,
fraternity" marched on Versailles to demand women's suffrage.
The idea of
an International Women's Day first arose at the turn of the century, which in the
industrialized world was a period of expansion and turbulence, booming population growth
and radical ideologies. Following is a brief chronology of the most important events:
1909
In
accordance with a declaration by the Socialist Party of America, the first National
Woman's Day was observed across the United States on 28 February. Women continued to
celebrate it on the last Sunday of that month through 1913.
1910
The
Socialist International, meeting in Copenhagen, established a Women's Day, international
in character, to honour the movement for women's rights and to assist in achieving
universal suffrage for women. The proposal was greeted with unanimous approval by the
conference of over 100 women from 17 countries, which included the first three women
elected to the Finnish parliament. No fixed date was selected for the observance.
1911
As a result
of the decision taken at Copenhagen the previous year, International Women's Day was
marked for the first time (19 March) in Austria, Denmark, Germany and Switzerland, where
more than one million women and men attended rallies. In addition to the right to vote and
to hold public office, they demanded the right to work, to vocational training and to an
end to discrimination on the job.
Less than a
week later, on 25 March, the tragic Triangle Fire in New York City took the lives of more
than 140 working girls, most of them Italian and Jewish immigrants. This event had a
significant impact on labour legislation in the United States, and the working conditions
leading up to the disaster were invoked during subsequent observances of International
Women's Day.
1913-1914
As part of
the peace movement brewing on the eve of World War I, Russian women observed their first
International Women's Day on the last Sunday in February 1913. Elsewhere in Europe, on or
around 8 March of the following year, women held rallies either to protest the war or to
express solidarity with their sisters.
1917
With 2
million Russian soldiers dead in the war, Russian women again chose the last Sunday in
February to strike for "bread and peace". Political leaders opposed the timing
of the strike, but the women went on anyway. The rest is history: Four days later the Czar
was forced to abdicate and the provisional Government granted women the right to vote.
That historic Sunday fell on 23 February on the Julian calendar then in use in Russia, but
on 8 March on the Gregorian calendar in use elsewhere.
Since those
early years, International Women's Day has assumed a new global dimension for women in
developed and developing countries alike. The growing international women's movement,
which has been strengthened by four global United Nations women's conferences, has helped
make the commemoration a rallying point for coordinated efforts to demand women's rights
and participation in the political and economic process. Increasingly, International
Women's Day is a time to reflect on progress made, to call for change and to celebrate
acts of courage and determination by ordinary women who have played an extraordinary role
in the history of women's rights.
The Role of the United Nations
Few causes
promoted by the United Nations have generated more intense and widespread support than the
campaign to promote and protect the equal rights of women. The Charter of the United
Nations, signed in San Francisco in 1945, was the first international agreement to
proclaim gender equality as a fundamental human right. Since then, the Organization has
helped create a historic legacy of internationally agreed strategies, standards,
programmes and goals to advance the status of women worldwide.
Over the
years, United Nations action for the advancement of women has taken four clear directions:
promotion of legal measures; mobilization of public opinion and international action;
training and research, including the compilation of gender desegregated statistics; and
direct assistance to disadvantaged groups. Today a central organizing principle of the
work of the United Nations is that no enduring solution to society's most threatening
social, economic and political problems can be found without the full participation, and
the full empowerment, of the world's women.

|