After Day 2 of the Annual NOW Conference it became very clear to me that we need to:
- act now to stop the erosion of women’s rights, as well as of our allies,
- use terms such as Christian Taliban (this is a wholly personal decision – I heard no one at the conference but me use the phrase)
- foster unity: we are not of one mind but we are working together, mostly.
NOW 101
The day started with the Tucson Now Coordinator and I attending NOW 101 that was a meetup for new chapters and members to meet National Now Officers in the NOW suite for coffee and very basic information. Am I glad I went? Yes. Did I learn a lot? No not really. But that is okay. My brain was on overload from info from the first day. The highlight of the 101 session was actually when a young woman from Romania spoke to us about the lack of access to abortion and birth control and how this denial of access to health care created the horrific conditions found in orphanages in Romania when it opened to the West, and how the Orthodox Church continues those practices today.
Inspirational Women
Being in the audience for Carol Mosley Braun‘s talk was the highlight of the morning for me.
I am in awe of women of color, such as herself, who have been on the front lines of the white, male, and largely conservative-fueled war on women and minorities for the entirety of their lives. As the first woman of African-American descent to serve in the U.S. Senate she broke ground that was once lethally defended against persons such as herself, and had a cadre of nay-sayers watching and broadcasting her every move. I doubt any woman could stand up unscathed from such scrutiny. Senator, Ambassador, and then entrepreneur – although she did not promote her company to the NOW audience in an expression of ethical standards from which most if not all of those on Capitol Hill could learn, shows that women can survive the political arena. That, in and of itself, is perhaps the most critical message that attending women must internalize from the conference experience. We can and must run for office. Governance in the United States must include women at least in numbers representative of composition of the electorate if structurally generated hostility toward women and the erosion of rights are to end and equality is to be fact for all U.S. Citizens and residents.
Heading Up NOW Is Not for Wimps
Terry O’Neill, NOW President, spoke with a passion that surprised me as she introduced panel and plenary speakers. I am not a big fan of placing an attorney in the key leadership position of a national organization. In the current media-driven culture, it takes a very flexible, talented, and specifically crafted persona to lead, speak, and advocate at all levels of society. Few people can lead, motivate and connect with people in group settings as well as Patricia Ireland who served as NOW President for years during the tumultuous 90s in which feminism became a word from which many third wave feminists distanced themselves. This is like trying to describe the appeal differences between Al Gore and Bill Clinton; it is a matter of charisma underlying conscious study and presentation.
ONLINE ADVOCACY & ACTIVISM
Best breakout/workshop session ever. The session focused on online activism drew a standing room only crowd and struck a balance between the personal narrative of success by two women, Marian Bradley of MT NOW, and Joanne Tosti-Vasey, National NOW Board and PA NOW Executive Committee Member, to bring light and justice to a horrific judicial miscarriage of justice and the responsive, upbeat, and exquisitely informed presentation/demonstration of social media tools by the founders of the first official virtual Chapter of NOW, was a great testament to the extent and power of our reach if we use the tools available to us at this very moment in time.
Parliamentary Procedures
As my first experience with a NOW conference, it proved to be a crash course on parliamentary procedures. I do not really want to discuss the stuffiness and irony of the conscious choice of one of the most important organizations for women to use a hierarchical, 18th Century, male communication and governance system, such as the parliamentary system, to conduct its business. This, pardon my brutish language, “Chaps my ass.”
Petitioning
I absolutely planned to keep my big mouth shut at this conference, as I am a newbie to the organization. But c’est l’vie I stumbled across an issue about which I happen to have personal knowledge that came up in an Issue Hearing on emergent issues. The issue was not one of the two forwarded out of the hearing, but it was heard and successfully brought to the floor of the Assembly on Resolutions on Sunday by means of petition for which I helped gather signatures after the hearing. The issue? The conservative, opaque , and possible fraudulent “museum” for which I naïvely volunteered in 2002-2003 when I lived in Virginia in the D.C. suburbs which is making its way through Congressional recognition. Every organization or woman concerned with the factual presentation of the history of women in the United States should contact their senators to let them know that any support of The National Women’s History Museum must include transparency of all financial records and a governing board of museum professionals, historians, anthropologists as is the practice observed in any public/private venture with which the government assists. The self-appointed executives of the “museum” are conservative Republicans, have been collecting blind donations for 17 years, and have agreed to only having noncontroversial exhibits. Non-controversial exhibits? I suppose, as do others, that this means no coverage of the torture of women working for suffrage in the late 19th and early 20th Centuries, no coverage of the struggle for the ERA, or the stripping of any balanced presentation of the fight for complete women’s healthcare and access to reproductive services . This incarnation of a museum for women is flawed and potentially fraudulent. That said, there is a need for a museum of women’s history. This petition just asked NOW to endorse the notion that this particular version of the idea is flawed.
Intersectionality
Life every conference from which I have come away with a positive experience, talking to people from other chapters, institutions and groups and forging personal network bonds provided one of the most important takeaways. This was greatly enhanced by cancelled sessions that allowed me to talk to women interested in subjects about which I care. I am glad for those cancelled sessions as I would not have mingled much with people outside of my region had I relied on the mixer on Saturday evening. I got there too late to claim one of the 50 free drink tickets distributed and the $6 cash money burning a hole in my pocket was not enough to even get a domestic beer and there was no free water so soft-drinks, so I left the event as I was parched and did not feel like sticking around through an auction in which I was too poor to take part. The theme of the conference may have been Strength In Diversity but the structure of the event really did not give support to inclusive intersectionality that is the rubric from which diversity is built.
Working Together
Summarily, it is very clear to me that we need to act now to stop the erosion of rights, use terms such as Christian Taliban, and become as loud and ubiquitous as we ever have been. We are not all of one mindset, but we all are working together.
I will discuss viewing a film on Anita Hill, talking to vendors, and a few other highlights I’ve missed in this coverage, so far, and why feminists need to blog as plain ol’ women when I cover my view of day three of the annual National NOW conference that took place in Albuquerque, New Mexico, June 27 -29, 2014.
Joanne Tosti-Vasey
Thanks for the kudos. I’m glad you liked our workshop on online advocacy.
Nancy Hill
You are most welcome, Joanne. It was a great session reporting on your significant, cutting-edge advocacy that shined light on, and changed the conversation about, grievous judicial behavior resulting in change.
Cathy
Bravo, Nancy, for this well-written and informative article about a conference I would have loved to attend. I always liked Carol Mosley Braun, as I did other African-American women in the forefront such as Shirley Chisholm and Barbara Jordan ( who also had MS, like me, and was the first A.A. woman elected to the Texas Senate) who broke ground showing that women are more than equal to the task of being leaders as men.
As for no lawyers? Hmm. I take issue since my personal life is surrounded by good, genteel and brilliant ones that I happen to be related to. But that’s another story, right? 🙂
Excellent.
Nancy Hill
Cathy, Per the attorney reference, I think it is difficult for most folks who have survived the bar to disengage from the argument-based mindset that they must have. More on that in the Day Three piece when I get around to covering the next day. Yes, yes, yes, to all the wonderful women you mention. They inspired so many girls and women of all ethnicities and abilities to act, be involved, and change the world! Thanks for the engagement!
Kim Tackett
Nancy, thanks for not only attending the conference and using your voice, but for sharing with us. You’re firing us up!
Nancy Hill
Fired up? Yay and mission accomplished!
Ellen Dolgen
Thanks for sharing this info with us! Sounds like a great conference!
Nancy Hill
It was an amazing gathering! I’m glad to share.
Carol Cassara
It’s shocking how our rights are being chipped away at in this modern age. I used to be actively interested in NOW but they faded from my sight. Thanks for bringing them back to me.
Nancy Hill
Yes it is shocking, Carol, and you are most welcome. I too came to think of NOW as almost like a self-sustaining entity, but I recently realized it is still grassroots-based and grassroots-nourished, and needs us to continue the process of gaining equal rights.
CaptCruncher
“Foster Unity”!!!! We are so much stronger when we act and speak together! OK, so you are preaching to choir. Are you ready to be a choir director?
Nancy Hill
Oh Ruth, you honor me by saying that I could direct anything. I just put together the congregation’s newsletter. But we must stand strong and do all that we can!
Lois Alter Mark
So much good stuff here. I am so with you on all of this and believe we need to stand together and make our voices heard. Thanks for representing us, Nancy, and for really making a difference.
Nancy Hill
Thanks Lois! If I can help get messages distributed more widely and nudge even just a few women to be vocal and also help spread information, then I have been successful! ERA Now!
Diane
Wish I could have been there! Thank you for this!
Nancy Hill
Wish you and many more could have attended! You are most welcome.
Chloe Jeffreys
Thanks for this update. As a Christian I must admit my breath was taken away by the term “Christian Taliban”. This is what moderate Muslims must feel like when their faith was usurped. In this case, a religion started by a man who loved women and treated them entirely differently than any other recorded man in history before him has been taken over by a bunch of small-minded people who only see the world through the lens of themselves. It’s so disheartening.
But, as much as it bothers me personally, I think the term is appropriate. I cannot believe how similar some believers are to the Taliban. I find it stunning that these people seem to want a society much like the one our supposed mortal enemies want. It’s baffling!
Nancy Hill
Chloe, I knew that usage of the phrase would enrage some, but I have stopped trying to soften the harshness of the very harsh purportedly Christian and certainly fundamentalist and Old Testament brutality that echoes the reality of Bronze Age existence to which some in the 21st Century long to return. This is not the Bronze Age, nor even the Iron Age of Jesus; we are worlds away from the knowledge bases of either of those realities.
Thank you for addressing my use of the term directly, eloquently, and genuinely. It is heartening to know there are Christians such as yourself who understand and work to preserve the essence of the love and acceptance in the teachings of which Radical Rabbi lived and spoke.
Chloe Jeffreys
Nancy, radical is right! Jesus told women it was more important to learn and talk about important matters than clean house and cook! And in some sectors of society this is still a radical idea today!
We are out here, the Christians who reject a viewpoint of our faith so narrow that only a member of the club could buy into it. Some days I feel like giving it and agreeing with my detractors that I’m no sort of good Christian, but then I remember that Jesus himself said, “I am not good.”
I’m unconcerned with being good. I’m way more concerned that women and children don’t continue to be the victims of a man-made, man-serving theology so hateful and hurtful to them.
Nancy Hill
Yes, Chloe, this is what coalition-building is about, and yes, what Christianity, and every love-based religion, is about.
Tam Warner Minton
I love the Christian Taliban! How perfect a tag that is! I will begin using it instead of “wing nuts”!
Nancy Hill
So glad you like the phraseology!