This site uses cookies. Read how we use them, in our
privacy policy
.
I accept
ABOUT BAPS
SPIRITUAL LIVING
HUMANITARIAN SERVICES
CULTURE AND HERITAGE
DEVELOPING INDIVIDUALS
VICHARAN
(current)
NEWS
GLOBAL NETWORK
INDIA
NORTH AMERICA
UK & EUROPE
AFRICA
ASIA PACIFIC
MIDDLE EAST
PUBLICATIONS
QUICK LINKS
DAILY SATSANG
LATEST UPDATES
CALENDAR & FESTIVALS
ENLIGHTENING ESSAYS
સત્સંગ લેખમાળા
SATSANG SABHA
SATSANG EXAMS
AUDIOS
VIDEOS
PRAYER
DOWNLOADS
FAQS
GLOSSARY
ABOUT US
SPIRITUAL LIVING
HUMANITARIAN SERVICES
CULTURE AND HERITAGE
DEVELOPING INDIVIDUALS
VICHARAN
NEWS
GLOBAL NETWORK
INDIA
NORTH AMERICA
UK & EUROPE
AFRICA
ASIA PACIFIC
MIDDLE EAST
PUBLICATIONS
BOOKS
AUDIO
VIDEO
MAGAZINES
QUICK LINKS
DAILY SATSANG
LATEST UPDATES
CALENDAR & FESTIVALS
ENLIGHTENING ESSAYS
સત્સંગ લેખમાળા
SATSANG SABHA
SATSANG EXAMS
Audios
Videos
PRAYER
DOWNLOADS
FAQS
GLOSSARY
Home
>
News
>
UK & Europe
>
London
>
Celebrating Women: Past, Present & Future
Celebrating Women: Past, Present & Future, London, UK
10 Apr 2010 - 11 Apr 2010
Photo Gallery
10 April 2010
(12 photos)
Haridarshan
(44 photos)
Preparation
(17 photos)
11 April 2010
(16 photos)
Keynote Address by Sarah Brown
(8 photos)
Seminars
(8 photos)
Cooking Demonstration and Workshops
(16 photos)
Presentations
(8 photos)
Panel Discussion & Closing Ceremony
(16 photos)
Celebratory Devotional Dance
(8 photos)
The first National Women’s Day was marked on 28 February 1909 in the United States after a declaration by the Socialist Party of America.
While International Women’s Day is now largely aimed at inspiring women across the world and celebrating their achievements, its roots are in movements campaigning for better pay and voting rights.
During an International Conference of Working Women in Copenhagen the following year, Clara Zetkin, leader of the ‘Women’s Office’ for the Social Democratic Party in Germany, suggested the idea of an International Women’s Day (IWD). She proposed that every year in every country there should be a celebration on the same day. The idea was met with unanimous approval.
1911 saw IWD honoured for the first time in Austria, Denmark, Germany and Switzerland on 19 March. Over a million people attended rallies campaigning for women’s rights to work, vote, be trained, to hold public office and end discrimination.
On the eve of World War I campaigning for peace, Russian women observed their first International Women’s Day on the last Sunday in February 1913. In 1965, it was declared as a non-working day in the USSR.
International Women’s Day was transferred to 8 March that same year and has remained the global date for the event ever since.
In 1975, the United Nations gave official sanction to International Women’s Day and began sponsoring it. The UN also declared 1975 as ‘International Women’s Year’.
This year, a coalition of campaign groups including Oxfam, Amnesty International and White Ribbon Alliance are using IWD to call for more action to reduce deaths among pregnant women in developing nations. Sarah Brown, wife of British prime minister Gordon Brown, is patron of the White Ribbon Alliance, which campaigns for safe motherhood.
Next year is IWD Global Centenary 1911-2011.
Page 1
|
Page 2
|
Page 3
|
Page 4
|
Page 5
|
Page 6
|
Page 7
|
Page 8
| Page 9 |
Page 10
|
Related News
BAPS Campus Fellowship Diwali Celebration 2024
Harrisburg, 18 Nov 2024
BAPS Campus Fellowship Diwali Celebration 2024
Jersey City, 18 Nov 2024
Diwali & Hindu New Year Annakut Celebrations 2024
Leeds, 17 Nov 2024
Diwali & Hindu New Year Annakut Celebrations 2024
Berlin, 17 Nov 2024
Diwali & Hindu New Year Annakut Celebrations 2024
Warsaw, 17 Nov 2024
Diwali & Hindu New Year Annakut Celebrations 2024
Norwich, 16 Nov 2024