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NEWS & LETTERS, December 2001

Young women activists challenge Left

Editor's Note: This month we turn the Woman as Reason column over to Jen Bennett, a young woman involved in the anti-globalization movement. We look forward to any responses or comments readers may have.

by Jen Bennett

In 1953 Raya Dunayevskaya wrote that women "wished to have not only sexual but human relations" to men. She went on to say that "women were out searching for a total reorganization of society. In that search, some women also came to the radical parties. These radical parties failed to recognize this new concrete revolutionary force in society, but that force recognized them, for it had set up new standards by which to judge this so-called revolutionary movement." Dunayevskaya wrote these words almost 50 years ago, but unfortunately there is still a tendency on the Left that would like women to wait for our freedom until after the revolution.

The anti-globalization youth movement, a movement I took part in, had been working against the ever-expanding power and influence of multinational corporations. It is against a backdrop of global activism supported by much of the western world's populace that the events of Sept. 11 exploded. The Sept. 11 attacks and the subsequent police state in the U.S. have disoriented the movement.

This disorientation comes from a limited vision. Just like the capitalists they abhor, many of the anti-globalization youth see only large structures the organizations, the buildings, the tariffs and trades. The poor Guatemalan or Mexican or Malaysian women that they invoke stand only as symbols, Madonnas of poverty.

The anti-globalization youth movement's relationship to women in its ranks is similarly problematic. When I was at the university and belonged to an anti-globalization group there, activism on behalf of local women was shunted off to other organizations. The men in the group did not participate in the local Take Back the Night rally, and the women participated, but under the name of a different organization. One of the men in the group bragged about his pornography usage and made a number of misogynistic sexual comments to me and other women in the group. When I raised concerns about these incidents, I was brushed off.

This group would not take a stand against the mass rapes in Bosnia, nor would they admit that Milosevic was a genocidal dictator. For this group, and for many in the anti-globalization movement, any opposition to U.S. imperialism is good.

This cultural and moral relativism hampers the progress of the anti-globalization youth movement, combining the oppression-ranking of the old Left with the cultural relativism of the new Left. In other words, the anti-globalization youth movement believes both that class is the first oppression, race is secondary, and women will have to wait until after the revolution, and that "you can't judge someone else's culture." These tendencies are to be mourned, because they are killing a movement that poses exciting new challenges to capitalist hegemony.

The anti-globalization movement is not going to be able to function in our brave new world until they are working for freedom, and this includes freedom for women in all parts of the world. As numerous feminist groups, especially RAWA, have been at pains to point out, women are, distressingly, the canary in the coal mine. When women are oppressed, further widespread oppressions are sure to follow.

When I pointed out this last fact to the anti-globalization group that I belonged to, their response was, at best, muted. Similarly, when I asked them what should happen after they succeeded in disbanding the IMF, World Bank, and WTO, they were unable to give me even the most general description of what was to come.

In the face of these failures on the part of the Left, and in the face of threats from both fundamentalist terrorists and the U.S. government, we must work for freedom for all people. All people should be able to speak freely and be heard. All people should live free of rapes, bombings, genocides and poverty. I would like to see more leads on women and women's issues in News & Letters. And I would like to see more people challenging old, sexist assumptions wherever and whenever they appear on the Left.

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