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@wfc2015
Rest in power, #IndiaClarke #BlackWomenMatter #TransWomenAreWomen
#SandraBland & #KindraChapman both died in custody this week and both police departments are suggesting suicide. This is why we fight for freedom. This is why we say #BlackWomenMatter!
Dolores Huerta co-founded the United Farm Workers along with Cesar Chavez. Her work was instrumental in bringing attention to migrant workers.
For more info about the 2015 Women's Freedom Conference, subscribe here! tinyurl.com/wfcsubscribe
#BreeNewsome arrested after she removed the Confederate battle flag from a monument in front of the South Carolina Statehouse in Columbia, S.C., today. (Bruce Smith / Associated Press)
Mother of three, reverend, and high school track coach, Sharonda Coleman-Singleton, murdered last night. #AMEmassacre
Cynthia Hurd, librarian, murdered last night. #AMEmassacre
“When we talk abut creating change, we have to think about what it really means to make change happen. We have to hire trans women of color, we can’t just sensationalize our issues and fantasize that things will get better — we actually have to do something about it.”
- CeCe McDonald accepting the Paul A. Anderson Youth Leadership Award at Creating Change 2015.Â
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Ella Baker was a civil rights leader who advised & mentored greats like WEB Dubois, Thurgood Marshall, Martin Luther King Jr, and Rosa Parks.
The Women’s Freedom Conference
The Women's Freedom Conference is a digital conference designed to amplify the voices of Women of Color around the world!
You're going to be able to take classes from leaders and experts, attend live keynotes, and learn from women of color.
Stay tuned for more info about submitting your ideas for a webinar, teach-in, and other opportunities!
#IMarchFor
We’ve been tweeting to tell you some of what #WeMarchFor. Today and tomorrow, to close out Women’s History Month, tell us why YOU march!
We ask that you share with us your personal and individual reasons for marching by using the “#IMarchFor” hashtag.
Ex: #IMarchFor better prenatal care for WoC mothers-to-be bc my sister couldn’t afford it.
Ex: #IMarchFor women like me who have survived domestic violence
We look forward to seeing a sharing all the reasons you march for women’s freedom!
Some of #WhyWeMarch
If you haven’t been following, we’ve been tweeting just some of the reasons that we will be marching!
#WeMarchFor freedom from harassment while we walk down the street!
— Womens Freedom (@WFM2015) March 23, 2015
#WeMarchFor all those who are intentionally misgendered, disrespected, harassed, and murdered simply for being TWoC.#TransWomenAreWomen
— Womens Freedom (@WFM2015) March 23, 2015
#WeMarchFor the 64,000 missing Black women who cannot march for themselves.
— Womens Freedom (@WFM2015) March 23, 2015
#WeMarchFor OURSELVES as we've spent a LOT of our lives marching for EVERYONE. pic.twitter.com/jQfAmep69b
— Womens Freedom (@WFM2015) March 23, 2015
#WeMarchFor
Despite much of the progress made in modern society, women of color across the globe remain marginalized and have to fight for basic rights and freedoms that should be afforded to all humans. This continues be a daily struggle for these women - women like us. Â
Our witnessing and experiencing of these injustices motivate us as we organize what we are calling the Women’s Freedom March.  Our vision involves providing a safe, supportive, and loving space for the oftentimes silenced women in our communities to lift their voices and share information about the work they are doing. We also want to inspire and empower everyone in attendance to return home and provide the same support and information to the women in their communities.
From now until the end of Women’s History Month, (March 31st) we will continue to share reasons that the Women’s Freedom March will not only be a helpful tool, but a necessary one via the “#WeMarchFor " hashtag.
We encourage each of you to use the hashtag to tweet and share the issues you believe are pertinent in the lives of women of color.
Ex: #WeMarchFor wage equality, not just across gender, but across race & Â ethnicity.
Ex: #WeMarchFor an end to the lack of quality healthcare that disproportionately affects WoC.
On March 31, to close out Women’s History Month, we will ask that you share with us your personal and individual reasons for marching by using the “#IMarchFor" hashtag.
Ex: #IMarchFor better prenatal care for WoC mothers-to-be bc my sister couldn't afford it.
Ex: #IMarchFor women like me who have survived domestic violence
It is important to us that you lend your voice because the key element to making the Women’s Freedom March a reality is you.  Please click here to register as a volunteer at this wonderful event.  To stay abreast of news and updates from us, please be sure to follow us on social media.
Like us on Facebook:  Women’s Freedom March 2015
Follow us on Twitter: Â @WFM2015
We look forward to your participation!
Yours in solidarity, empowerment, and sisterhood,
Women’s Freedom March Organizers
Why We March: 64,000
It appears that Cuban officials have spoken the final word on the fate of Assata Shakur: Without question, she’s staying in Cuba.
“I can say it is off the table,” Gustavo Machin, the deputy director for American affairs at the Cuban Ministry of Foreign Affairs, told Yahoo News in Havana when asked about calls for Cuba to return Shakur, also known as Joanne Chesimard.
While that news will be greeted with glee within many Black activist communities in the U.S., where Shakur is seen as a hero for her courageous fight against the most powerful nation on the planet, it won’t be warmly received by American lawmakers and law enforcement officials, particularly in New Jersey, who have been energetically trying to get their hands on Shakur ever since President Obama and Cuban President Raul Castro announced in December they were normalizing relations.
This is a time when white supremacy and power stands so extreme that a leader of a foreign land, Benjamin Netanyahu, would feel so empowered to march into the Capitol chamber in Washington, DC, and insult the American president. So the fact that the small island of Cuba and this 67-year-old grandmother continue to withstand the enormous pressure being exerted from the U.S. strikes many as admirable.
Not only have U.S. officials issued tough-talking statements and increased the bounty on her head to $2 million, they even declared she was one of the country’s most wanted terrorists—permanently distorting the word “terrorist” in the eyes of many observers by placing that label on Shakur, who was convicted in 1977 of killing a New Jersey state trooper during a 1973 shootout on the New Jersey Turnpike. But after her conviction, Shakur escaped from a New Jersey state women’s prison two years later and fled to Cuba, where she has lived under the protection of the Cuban government for 30 years.
As recently as last week New Jersey officials were still at it. Cuba’s decision to provide sanctuary for Chesimard “is an intolerable insult to all those who long to see justice served,” including members of the slain New Jersey state trooper’s family, Sen. Bob Menendez, ranking Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, wrote in a letter to Secretary of State John Kerry last week.
Menendez said to Yahoo in an emailed statement that Chesimard is a “cop killer” and her return should be “a top agenda” item before any further concessions are made to the Castro government. But Cuba hasn’t budged on Shakur.
In an interview in Havana at the Foreign Ministry, Machin told Yahoo that Cuba had granted her political asylum and so she would not be subject to any extradition to the United States. He added that the U.S. is harboring its own terrorists involved in attacks in Cuba, such as Luis Posada Carriles, a former CIA operative charged in Venezuela for the 1976 bombing of a Cuban airliner that killed 73 people. After escaping from jail, Carriles was accused by the Cubans of orchestrating a spate of hotel bombings in Havana in 1997.
In December, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, who is reportedly considering a run for president, sent a letter to President Obama stating that Cuba’s granting of asylum for Shakur was “an affront to every resident of our state, our country, and in particular, the men and women of the New Jersey State Police, who have tirelessly tried to bring this killer back to justice.”
The Queens-born Shakur, the step-aunt of rapper Tupac Shakur (her brother was Tupac’s stepfather), has been the subject of films, documentaries and rap songs over the years, in addition to her own writings, which were influential to a generation of activists.
http://atlantablackstar.com/2015/03/04/cuba-issues-the-final-word-on-assata-shakurs-return-to-us-no/
Why We March: Wage Gap
Volunteer for WFM!
Want to help bring the vision of the Women's Freedom March into fruition? Sign up to become a volunteer and take part in planning the most empowering event of the year! Sign up here:
http://tinyurl.com/WFM2015Volunteer