Women Speak on Life, Health, Family and Finance

Women Aging

Steinem at 69: More radical with age?
BY PATRICIA CORRIGAN

Gloria Steinem

Just about the time last week that American forces launched the first attack on Iraq, Gloria Steinem called for the impeachment of President George W.Bush.

"George W. Bush is doing exactly what Osama bin Laden has in mind. Bush has antagonized our allies and endangered every one of us. He should be impeached," said Steinem, a foremother of modern feminism, when she addressed more than 850 people attending an "Arts & Issues" lecture at Southern Illinois University at Edwardsville.  A "whoop" of support came from part of the audience.

"First of all," Steinem continued, "Bush is not our elected president. He took office due to fraud in Florida. He is an illegitimate leader and does not deserve our respect or obedience. He is making us hated around the world."  Steinem`s sharp edges, finely honed over 30 years, were softened from time to time with humor throughout the 90-minute program, but she was forthright on every point.

"We are the women our parents warned us against, and we are proud," she said, grinning. Later, she reminded the audience - made up mostly of women of all ages - that women make up the one group that gets more radical with age. Steinem, slender and clad in black with her graying hair pulled back turns 69 today.

A native of Toledo, Ohio, Steinem is a graduate of Smith College. Working for New York magazine in 1968, Steinem embraced the new wave of feminism and became arguably the most articulate and outspoken leader of the cause. With Bella Abzug, Shirley Chisholm and Betty Friedan, Steinem formed the National Women`s Political Caucus in 1971 to encourage active female participation in politics.

Steinem also was the founding editor of Ms. magazine, which was first published in 1972. Steinem served as editor for the next 15 years, then as a columnist, and since 1988 she has been a consulting editor. Steinem also is the author of four books, including "Outrageous Acts and Everyday Rebellions"; "Marilyn," a biography of Marilyn Monroe from a feminist perspective; "Revolution from Within"; and "Moving Beyond Words."

She is working on a book about being on the road for 30 years, bringing the message of feminism to all corners of the world That message has been heard, Steinem said.

"More women today identify themselves as feminists than as Republicans or Democrats," she said, "but the movement is not over and it isn`t dead. The first time a magazine declared that feminism was dead was in 1969, and by now Time magazine has declared the movement dead 27 times. Think about the abolitionists and the suffragists. These other great movements seeking legal and social equality took a century.

We`re only 30 years into it at this point, and already we have accomplished a great deal." Steinem said that as a society, we no longer believe that biology is destiny- that women are on Earth simply to give birth. She said we now believe that women can do what men can do, but we still do not believe that men can do what women can do.

"We have to come full circle, to go where we haven`t gone," she said. "A critical mass of men need to develop the qualities necessary to raise children, these same qualities of nurturing and patience that men are encouraged to suppress. We need to give full humanity to our sons and daughters, and not continue to replicate old gender roles."  Those old gender roles are the deepest cause of violence in the world, she said, adding that men feel a need to prove their masculinity by being in control. As an example, Steinem named Mohammad Atta, the leader of the terrorists in the attacks on Sept. 11, whose father was said to berate him every day for not being masculine enough and who wrote that no women were to be allowed at his funeral. She named the young men, all upper middle class and white, who have killed students in their own schools. And she named George W. Bush, saying, "He is as Taliban as he can get in his policies toward women."

Steinem urged people to recognize the "profound linkages" among the many movements against sexual equality, racial equality and nonviolence. "Our adversaries are all the same folks," she said. Asked by an audience member how to handle these adversaries, Steinem said,"As individuals, we must speak out. The art of behaving ethically is believing that everything we do matters." In an interview after her speech, Steinem spoke about the heightened awareness of the plight of women everywhere in the world. More than 20 years ago, Ms. magazine was one of the first American publications to write about women in Afghanistan. Steinem said that at this point, the situation might have improved for some women in Kabul but that the warlords who oppose any rights for women - including education - are back in power outside the city where lawlessness once again reigns.  She also said the cancer rate in Afghanistan has gone up 700 percent because of depleted uranium from bombs and land mines.

"If Afghanistan is a model of the Bush administration`s idea of creating a democracy after a war, then Iraq is in big trouble," Steinem said. The media have spent little time on that angle of a hot topic, and Steinem commented on the media`s reluctance to report news from the feminist movement. "The stories have been few and far between," she said. "The ultraright wing did three effective things. They cynically accused the press of being liberal, which isn`t true, and that and a number of lawsuits caused over-reporting of right-wing views. They trained writers and spokespeople.  And they purchased the media."

Then Steinem recalled an article on the front page of The New York Times on March 16 about female cadets raped and attacked at the Air Force Academy. That article and a few others like it give Steinem hope. "I think now the tide is turning," she said.

Reporter Patricia Corrigan:
E-mail: pcorrigan@post-dispatch.com
Phone: 314-340-8324

Source: Post-Dispatch, 03/24/2003 07:30 PM, Steinem at 69: More radical with age? BY PATRICIA CORRIGAN


All Rights Reserved © 1999-2008
Nancy D. O’Reilly, PsyD
Clinical Psychologist and founder of the WomenSpeak Project
Email:

Last Updated: February 13, 2008
Webmaster and Development by Pin Oak Web Designs, Inc.