As I listen to the news, and hear friends debate about the relative merits of Hillary and Obama,I’ve been increasingly uncomfortable about the feminist argument that as women, we must support Hillary, as the first viable woman candidate.
My discomfort had many sources, including a sense that some were being blinded by gender loyalty, and weren’t fully seeing or acknowledging the depth of the racial history and legacy we all bear in this country. The recent articles by
Linda Burnham (who hosted a panel at last year’s Bioneers on envisioning what a new feminist movement might look like) and
Alice Walker (the wonderful author who joined us for Women Re-Imagining the World at last year’s conference, soon to become an hour-long radio special) reminded me of the racial schisms in the past feminist movement, and also of just how recently our friends and colleagues of color have suffered – and continue to suffer today from – racist systems and beliefs embedded in our culture in the past, and still real today.
This schism between the feminist and racial justice movements has deep roots, too, on both sides. During the sixties and seventies, for the ‘first wave of feminism,’ most women of color felt that it was an elitist movement led and defined by privileged white women, to the exclusion of women of color. And yet, at the very beginnings of the suffrage movement, in Seneca Falls, the white women who started it all were inspired by the equality and justice they witnessed in the treatment of women among the Iroquois Six Nations people, with whom they were friendly and close. So, the movement for women to have equal rights in this country is founded upon a cross-cultural collaboration.
As Alice Walker says, (I paraphrase) we are like goddesses who can see in many directions...witnessing the truth of the past, the present, and a hoped-for future, when we can all be free enough of the scar tissue and pain of our past to be able to relate to each other on our human merit, with consciousness, fairness and humility.
What do you think about the issue of gender and the electoral process? Should it be part of the discussion? Do we as women have a societal obligation to support a candidate because she is a woman?