No Woman, No
Revolution, Part 10b
President Jacob Zuma, Speech to the PWM, 2012
This document is included as a further assistance in
examining the questions as previously put:
“Is the Progressive Women’s
Movement (PWM) supposed to be a subsidiary of the ANC Women’s League, and
therefore a junior partner of the ANC? Or is the PWM a wider movement, open to
all women, of which the ANCWL is only one part among many? To what extent have
the problems and tensions of the FEDSAW period in the 1950s been solved? Or,
have those problems not been solved?”
In the attached and linked speech to the PWM the President
certainly does not directly address these questions. It is even quite hard to
see, during many passages of the speech, where they refer to women and women’s
organisation, at all.
Among many other things, the President said the following:
“To further promote the legislative
environment, we are to fast-track the Gender
Equality Bill. This progressive Bill will promote the prohibition and
elimination of discriminatory religious practises, and eliminate discrimination
in access to socio-economic rights.
“It will seek to prohibit harmful
traditional practises. It will help eliminate and prohibit discrimination in
employment and other opportunities for women.
“The provisions of the Bill also already
talk to the need for the participation of women in the economy and also full
economic emancipation for women.
“The legislation alone will not achieve our
goals. This means that all of us, men and women, must actively work to promote
women’s rights as human rights.
“It means that the Progressive Women’s
Movement must work with relevant government departments on an on-going basis to
promote development and women’s emancipation.
“What is important is that all these new or
amended laws and protocols indicate that the commitment exists and that we are
moving forward with the promotion of gender equality. Some progress has been
made already in many areas.”
Read and discuss the document, comrades.
Apart from the above, President Zuma also, in the same
period of time in 2012, made a speech in memory of Charlotte Maxeke, which is on the ANC web site,
and another on the occasion of the 56th Anniversary of the 1956,
Women’s March to the Union Buildings, which is also National Women’s Day. The
latter speech is attached and linked below.
These are the last documents in our course, “No Woman, No
Revolution”.
- The above is to introduce the original reading-text: Speech to the Progressive Women's Movement, President Jacob Zuma, 2012; Speech on National Women’s Day 2012.
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