-------------------------
Via Workers World News Service
Reprinted from the March 29, 2001
issue of Workers World newspaper
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MUMIA ABU-JAMAL FROM DEATH ROW: 

THE "OTHER" WOMEN'S HISTORY MONTH

By Mumia Abu-Jamal

["If the first woman God ever made was strong enough to turn 
the world upside down alone, these women together ought to 
be able to turn it back, and get it right side up again!"

--Sojourner Truth, "Ain't I A Woman?" (1858)]

Within weeks of the arrival of Women's History Month, the 
nation's cultural and financial center explodes into yet 
another controversy over religious art, with Gotham's tight-
lipped mayor, "Rudolf" Giuliani, fulminating against the 
depiction of a Christ-figure as a dark-skinned, naked woman. 
Some called it blasphemy.

This cultural critique serves as a perfect introduction to a 
month which memorializes the distinctive histories of women. 
However, the women discussed here will rarely be seen on TV 
or featured in newspaper reports, for these are not "safe" 
women, as are those usually portrayed.

The world's history is one of resistance, of rebellion and 
of radical action, which is usually suppressed in 
traditional history.

How many of us know of the food boycotts of the early 1900s, 
when poor and working women organized tens of thousands into 
mass demonstrations that rocked cities across the nation?

In 1910-era New York, Jewish women "declared war on Kosher 
butchers" because of high prices. In August 1914, over 1,000 
Italian women in Providence, R.I., broke into wholesaler's 
storage and threw macaroni into the streets, battling for 
lower pasta prices.

A few years thereafter, in 1929, the Women's Revolt took 
place in Nigeria, shaking the colony to its foundations. 
These brave, radical women were protesting an agricultural 
tax imposed by the British through the chiefs. The women 
seized colonial offices (and held some for four days!), 
organized mass protests and mass community meetings. Before 
it was over, over 50 women were killed, and at least 50 
wounded, by colonial military forces. However, the women 
forced the British to revoke the tax.

Nor are women limited to mass actions of resistance, as 
shown by the examples of some of the following: Sarah, 
Harriet Ross, Mangobe, Jo Ann Robinson and uncounted others.

Sarah was a captive in 1822-era Kentucky. One Kentucky slave 
owner described her as the "biggest devil that ever lived." 
The fierce 6-foot-tall Black woman poisoned her owner's stud 
horse, set several stables afire, destroyed over $1,500 
worth of property, and escaped five times!

Mangobe was described by the late revolutionary historian 
C.L.R. James as the "most revolutionary woman in the Congo" 
for her role in leading the popular religious movement of 
the Prophet, Simon Kimbangu, which had a deep anti-colonial 
character. The imprisonment of Kimbangu and Mangobe sent the 
Belgian colony into righteous and sustained revolt in 1921.

Harriet Ross thwarted the will of a slave trader who was 
seeking her son by barring the door and telling the man, 
"The first man that comes into my house, I will split his 
head open." When her (so-called) owner's son tried to beat 
her, she grabbed a pole, "and beat him nearly to death with 
it." Her daughter stood by, watching and learning this 
tradition of resistance.

Such a woman as this could truly be no man's slave, and 
shortly thereafter, Harriet Ross demonstrated as much by 
mounting a cow and riding away from slavery and the 
plantation in broad daylight.

Oh. Her daughter? She learned her lesson well. You know of 
her by the name Harriet Tubman, a woman revered as "Moses."

The American Civil Rights Movement made the great orator the 
Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. a household name. Almost as 
well known is the sweet, quiet presence of Rosa Parks, the 
proud woman who refused to relinquish her seat to a white 
man on a bus.

But few recognize the name of Jo Ann Robinson, whose work as 
an organizer insured that you now know Mme. Parks' name. She 
was the chair of the Women's Political Council, a 
professional women's group in Montgomery, Ala.--the little 
known organizers of the historic bus boycott. Robinson wrote 
the leaflet that informed and energized thousands, and the 
WPC worked the phones getting the word out.

The names of women warriors of Black Liberation, of those 
who are still politically active, and of radicals of later 
generations are known to us, perhaps, as contemporary 
visions of resistance that continues to move us: Angela 
Davis, the Africa sisters, Assata Shakur, Kathleen Cleaver, 
Nehanda Abiodun, Alice Walker, Marilyn Buck, Afeni Shakur, 
Kiilu Nyasha, Linda Evans, Susan Rosenberg, Tarika Lewis, 
Elaine Brown, Rosemari Mealy and on and on, show us a new 
face spawned by an ancient seed of female fighters for 
freedom. Many of these names are not well known (perhaps 
with the exception of Angela, Assata and Alice), but neither 
were those of history.

They are, nonetheless, valuable contributors to a rich 
history of women who rebel.

- END -

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