Ain’t
I A Woman”, railed Sojourner Truth, “I have ploughed and
planted and gathered into barns, and no man could head me! And ain’t
I a woman! I could work as much and eat as much as a man –
when I could get it – and bear the lash as well. And ain’t
I a woman? I’ve borne thirteen children and seen most all sold
off and when I cried out with my mother’s grief, none but Jesus
heard me! And ain’t I a woman.”
The
similarities and differences between Black and white women are
captured in Sojourner Truth’s famous December 1851 speech. She
movingly talks about the men who say women should be “helped
into carriages, and moved over ditches, and have the best place
everywhere”, while “nobody ever helps me into carriages
or over mud puddles, or gives me any best place”. Both Black
and white women cry a mother’s grief for the loss of a child,
and both endure labor pains. Black women’s lives, while
similar, are different and often disadvantaged because they lack the
privilege that white women so easily take for granted and often fail
to notice or remedy.
Thus
it did not surprise me that a white woman in Hawaii called for a
“Million Women’s March” on Washington on the day
after the Presidential inauguration. And it did not surprise me when
white women took up the call. Too bad these same white women did not
advocate more forcefully against the man who won the Electoral
College vote for the Presidency.
My
first inclination was to ignore this women’s march. The
organizers have repeatedly struck me as tone-deaf and indifferent to
the diverse needs of women. But when I talked to Tamika Mallory, the
dynamic young woman activist who was once Executive Director of Rev.
Al Sharpton’s National Action Network, I shifted my
perspective. Tamika shared that, just a few days after the initial
call to March was issued, organizers reached out to her asking for
help. She said they said they “needed to ensure that women of
color were involved.”
Now,
there are four co-chairs of the Women’s March on Washington,
including African American leader Tamika Mallory, Latina activist and
part of Harry Belafonte’s Gathering for Justice, Carmen Perez,
a white woman entrepreneur whose t-shirts have been galvanizing, Bob
Bland, and Palestinian activist Linda Sarsour. I applaud the
diversity in leadership, but wonder how many women of color will turn
out on January 21. Tens of thousands of women from all over the
country are expected, with more than 100,000 saying they plan to be
there. But many African American women have looked askance, perhaps
with distaste from the cultural appropriation of the initial
organizing descriptive, “Million Women’s March”,
perhaps because we recoil from the strong support white women gave
the President-elect, choosing race loyalty over gender, class, or
personal interest.
I
applaud Tamika Mallory. She told me “I was not willing to let
this convening come together without having black women involved.”
In other words, white women cannot speak for all women. If white
women had their way, the March and rally would probably focus only on
equal pay and reproductive rights. Thanks to Tamika and her
colleagues a statement of principles, to be issued next week, will
also address racial justice, police brutality, criminal justice
reform and mass incarceration.
Absent
the involvement of young Black women like Tamika, it would be
extremely easy for me to ignore this March. But because some women
have drawn a line in the sand and insisted on space for Black women
in this March, they deserve support. They remind me of the women of
Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc., who in 1913 elbowed their way into
the Women’s Suffrage March when their involvement was
unwelcome. They reminded the Women’s Suffrage Association that
Black women were also women, and we would not be excluded.
Now,
white women are at it again, but strong, brave, black women, the
descendants of Ida B. Wells, aren’t willing to sit on the
sidelines. The march is to remind all watching that “women’s
rights are human rights”. Black women’s rights will be
considered in this gathering because some black women dared place
themselves in an uncomfortable space (working with privileged white
women is never easy) in order to make a difference.
Click
here for information on the women’s march
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