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Once Upon a Time, Nearly All of Iceland’s Women Went on Strike and the Results Were Incredible

Tuesday, October 27, 2015 6:55
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    Since even the most feminist country in the world hasn’t been able to close the gender pay gap, it’s no wonder Icelandic women continue to strike for more rights. Petur Asgeirsson / Shutterstock.com

The Icelandic women’s rally held in 1975 led to undeniable progress on the women’s rights front. The October day that 90 percent of Iceland’s women decided they wouldn’t work—whether in offices or their homes—is celebrated as “Women’s Day Off” every year. And every year for forty years the country, which has been hailed as the “most feminist place in the world,” is reminded of the importance of equal pay in the workplace as well as fair compensation for housework and child care.

The BBC reports on the historic event in which men “began to get the point”:

Forty years ago, the women of Iceland went on strike – they refused to work, cook and look after children for a day. It was a moment that changed the way women were seen in the country and helped put Iceland at the forefront of the fight for equality…It is known in Iceland as the Women’s Day Off, and [Vigdis Finnbogadottir, Europe’s first female president] sees it as a watershed moment.

“What happened that day was the first step for women’s emancipation in Iceland,” she says. “It completely paralysed the country and opened the eyes of many men.”

Banks, factories and some shops had to close, as did schools and nurseries – leaving many fathers with no choice but to take their children to work. There were reports of men arming themselves with sweets and colouring pencils to entertain the crowds of overexcited children in their workplaces. Sausages – easy to cook and popular with children – were in such demand the shops sold out.

It was a baptism of fire for some fathers, which may explain the other name the day has been given – the Long Friday. … “There was a tremendous power in it all and a great feeling of solidarity and strength among all those women standing on the square in the sunshine,” Vigdis says. A brass band played the theme tune of Shoulder to Shoulder, a BBC television series about the Suffragette movement which had aired in Iceland earlier that year.

The blog Mic suggests how American women can take a page out of their Icelandic peers’ book today.

What might happen if women went on strike in America? While Iceland’s strike ultimately did not close the gender wage gap, it did have noticeable sociopolitical effects. Given American women’s increased presence in the labor force today, such a drastic action could call attention to the need to close the wage gap in our own country.

Of course, American women have gone on strike before. Known today as the Women’s Strike for Equality, 20,000 women marched in the streets of New York City in 1970 to protest systemic economic inequality, as well as anti-abortion laws. But while the Supreme Court overturned anti-abortion laws with Roe v. Wade in 1973, economic equality, primarily in the form of closing the gender wage gap, has remained elusive for women. … Recent economic statistics suggest that a strike in 2015 would have greater consequences than the 1970 strike. That’s because today, women “make up 47% of the labor force, compared to 38% in 1970,” according to a 2014 White House report.

If all American women went on strike together for one day, “the economy would grind to a halt,” Justin Wolfers, senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, told Mic. “Think about it: If 48% of the workforce walked off the job, it wouldn’t be a recession, it would be a depression, likely much worse than the Great Depression.”

In fact, in light of what feels like an never ending, ever-widening gender pay gap (Labor Department data recently showed that “men’s earnings are growing this year at twice the rate of women’s”) perhaps causing a depression “worse than the Great Depression” with a Women’s Day Off is the only way American men will “get the point.”

—Posted by Natasha Hakimi Zapata

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Source: http://www.truthdig.com/eartotheground/item/once_upon_a_time_nearly_all_of_icelands_women_went_on_strike_20151027/

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