(Editor's note: This article is a 1972 CWLU conference account of
the fact- finding trip taken by Estelle Carol, Tibby L. and Mary M.
Traveling across the country in Estelle's orange VW bug, they met
with many women activists. It is a snapshot of the women's liberation
movement of the time.)
The idea
of this trip began when Tibby and Estelle from Graphics Collective
decided to travel the country with their posters. Then a few women
in the Union realized that this was a good opportunity to really
see what the women's' movement was doing nationally and to share
our experiences of the Chicago movement. So, Mary came along for
the East Coast trip to New York, New Haven, Boston, Philadelphia,
Baltimore and Washington D.C. Then Tibby and Estelle continued on
the West Coast trip to Eugene and Portland, Oregon, Seattle, San
Francisco, Los Angeles and Albuquerque, plus a short stop in Champaign,
Ill. We brought with us the paper on the Union, papers on workgroups,
and Womankind, as well
the Socialist Feminism paper for
those women who were interested in action and the paper's politics.
The
trip was mind blowing. It was incredible meeting all these women
committed to getting personhood back for themselves and their sisters.
Just like us in Chicago, they have been working in isolation. So,
when things got rough they couldn't even cheer up on the successes
of their sisters a 100 miles away. Despite the lack of communication
among cities we discovered a pattern. There were tremendous similarities
in the way groups functioned, in the questions women asked, in
the method of getting women interested, in the political ideas,
and especially in the kinds of projects. For example, most of the
cities had a women's center which had information on different
groups, which was run by a staff of volunteers, and which often
was struggling to survive. Many cities had a liberation school
and most had a health service project. We discovered that both
our news from Chicago and the cities already visited was enthusiastically
received.
There
were lots of differences between cities, too, of course. Sometimes
a common problem like conflict between gay and straight women was
getting totally out of hand, like in N.Y., but at other times had
been worked through, like in New Haven and Seattle. Yet the thing
that really hit me and scared me too was the general frustration
and unsure-ness that touched everybody. So often we found ourselves
in conversation about things like: Where do we go from here; More
groups are disappearing than forming lately; Women aren't coming
to our center as much as they used to; Women just aren't committed
enough.
It didn't
take us long to stop taking CWLU for granted. No where else did
we find a citywide women's liberation organization which provided
city-wide communication and resource sharing. No where else did
we find a unity (amorphous as it is at times) among such different
kinds of groups with such different priorities and political ideas.
We just couldn't take for granted anymore our office with its reliable
staff who keep reliable hours. And no more passing lightly over
steering committee which doesn't always work to everybody's satisfaction,
but still is a good system for democratic decision making based
on representation by groups. The organization closest to ours was
in the process of being formed in Washington D.C. There were lots
of independent groups wherever we went, rap groups, work projects
like abortion referral), common interest groups (like film or theater
groups), skills classes (like karate), and women's centers. Some
were solid and growing like the Liberation School in Boston. Some
just managed to survive like the women's center in Baltimore.
From
what we saw it seems that only in Chicago so far, is there centralized
organization made up of autonomous groups who more or less do what
each pleases, but who work together when they want to or need to.
The groups and individuals who have chosen to be members of CWLU
have put their common goals and common work first, their political,
personality, and work priorities second. Maybe its because we put
our work first that we are able to put aside our other differences.
Before
the trip I used to worry about the problems and mistakes -- like
not having ways for more women to work with us, I worried alot
about the bad feelings between Lesbian Liberation and the Union.
But now I worry about the Union in perspective, because not only
does the women's movement in other places have a worse time with
these two issues, but usually they have neither the communication,
the resource sharing, the unity, the democratic decision making,
nor the office with reliable paid staff. In Seattle there was communication,
a hardworking paid staff of four, and a beautiful big office. But
policy was made by the staff and the board of the YWCA (the University
Y served a the women's center). On the other extreme. NYC and Boston
had none of these structures for a city-wide movement. Our organization
was strong and growing -- women wanted to know how.
We gathered
so much information on these l4 cities, including their history,
present situation, and future plans, that I can only give a short
run down on four of them. Then for the sake of the questions facing
this conference, I'll use examples from all the cities in a discussion
of three major issues: organization, program, and political ideas.
For the short run downs I'll do two east Coast and two West Coast
cities - N.Y.C, because it was one of the worst experiences, Boston
because it has some great workgroups, Los Angeles because it is
both typical and has some unusual problems, and Seattle because
it was one of our best experiences.
BOSTON
In Boston we found five projects. Three were healthy and doing
exciting work: the Liberation School, the Day Care Coalition, Female
Liberation, and the Somerville Women's Health Clinic. The fourth,
the Women's Center in Cambridge was having heavy financial problems.
The
Liberation School was into its second term this summer. Last Spring
they had 350 women and this summer 250. It's a workgroup of about
15 women, some of whom were in Bread and Roses before it folded.
They got the idea of a liberation school from some Chicago women.
Although they hold their classes in the Women's Center there is
bad feeling between the two groups. The school women think it was
a bad idea to put so much money and energy into this huge house
which the Center group bought. The School women feel even stronger
about this now that the house has been repeatedly vandalized. A
fire and no money for repairs means there's has been no electricity
for months. No one lives in the house and not much was happening
there except liberation school classes. Unfortunately we don't
have the story from the Center side because the staff woman for
the Center was not there the afternoon we expected to meet her.
The
Day Care Coalition is a workgroup of 15-20 women (and a few men
too) who are trying to force the city of Cambridge to implement
a referendum that voted in favor of child care. The city doesn't
want it to be community controlled. They have many supporters who
come to their forums and actions. In fact our Action Committee
for Decent Childcare was very similar to them except that ACDC
had many neighborhood chapters and they have one big work group.
They seemed determined and enthusiastic.
The
third group, Female Liberation, puts out a magazine called Second
Wave that has many well thought out articles on important issues.
They had worked hard on the child care referendum and were thinking
of working on the implementation struggle with the Day Care Coalition.
They are 20-30 women who are action oriented, but who have set
up some rap groups as well. They have an office with lots of literature
and a staff person.
The
Somerville Women's Health Clinic was the best equipped, best staff
staffed, best organized, and not surprisingly, the best funded
of the women's clinics on the East Coast. They were interested
in direct action against Somerville Hospital, a private hospital
and the only one in the community. The Clinic limits its service
to residents of Somerville, a working class suburb of Boston.
NEW YORK
Our
first problem in N.Y.C. was that we couldn't find the women's movement.
Their one information clearing house, the Women's Center in Manhattan,
had just moved, was disorganized and had few contacts for us. The
staffer we met there felt that the N.Y. women's movement was very
fragmented and suffered from splits within groups and isolation
between groups and projects. She felt that the Center's isolation
was caused by tension between gay women and straight women. Even
though the Center's minority of straight women worked well with
their gay sisters, there was a problem with Center women not being
interested enough, or not being able to relate to new women with
lower consciousness then their own. She said there was also a strong
resistance to defining responsibility or devising organizational
structure by a majority of Center women, which resulted in decisions
falling on a small group, and work not getting done. After a few
days we tracked down some women active in Radical Feminists, the
two and a half year old organization which has set up 100-150 rap
groups throughout the city. It too doesn't define responsibility.
Decisions are made by those who show up at the coordinating committee.
They sponsor large monthly meetings on specific topics, like sexuality.
Recent developments include a follow-up committee to the rap groups,
and a few issue committees like one on abortion.
In the
Radical Feminists there has been a lot of anti-money, anti- structure
sentiment to the point where they cannot get women to pay $3 for
their organizational newsletter. A few women find this a handicap
and were excited about how the Union operates -- that we have an
office, paid staff, collect dues, and have both an organizational
newsletter and an outreach newspaper. Some Radical Feminists were
concerned that the Union had a left, that is anti-capitalist, orientation.
They believe that sexism is the issue not capitalism. Some women
there also felt that they shouldn't work around traditional women's
issues, like child care, because women have done that too long.
They
also discussed the issue of the fragmentation of the N.Y. movement.
One woman felt that one reason for the splits was that there are
a lot of strong women who think of themselves as theoreticians
and leaders, who disagree with each other and leave if things don't
go their way. The media aggravates this by encouraging the star
system, that is only covering things where name women appear. Many
R.F. women feel very handicapped by the enormous influence of the
media in N.Y., including their own emphasis on media.
We weren't
able to talk to many other groups because of the great difficulty
in locating them. We did talk to women from Up From Under magazine
over the phone. They are a group of left oriented women who find
it impossible to relate to the rest of the N.Y. women's movement
and decided for that reason to have nothing to do with it in order
to better put out their magazine.
LOS ANGELES
L.A.
has two centers which are home base for service and education projects.
The Women's Self-Help Clinic is the largest project and has done
more to bring women to the Center than any other. We arrived a
few days after the Self-Help Clinic was busted. They are a year
old and are the same group that traveled around the country starting
self-help groups by giving public presentations of do-it-yourself
pelvic exams. They get enough money from their abortion referrals
(all done in hospitals) to pay for a big house and eight staff.
They were busted for doing menstrual extraction. The L.A. Center
started 2 1/2 years ago as a coordination center for women's groups,
using $1500 given by UCLA women students. An intergroup council
met monthly, but gradually became meaningless and died since the
staff really made all decisions. Besides, in many cases the staff
and the representatives were the same people. The Center projects
like legal referral and liberation school, are handled by one woman
alone. When she is drained out, no one will takeover and the projects
die. The newsletter, on the other hand has six people and is one
of the stronger projects. There is a Radical Psychiatry group and
a lesbian feminist group, a media group, and a guerrilla theater
group that was starting. Staff meetings are open, any volunteer
staff who comes can help make decisions for the Center. Politically
left women don t work with them according to Center women because
the Center is too middle class, and because there was once a fight
between the left-women and the non- left women. Six months ago
a second center opened in a western community L.A., which holds
classes,
does referrals, forms rap groups, and shares a page in the older
centers newsletter. It has a good size volunteer staff, does its
own fund raising, and rents a house.
SEATTLE
Seattle
was a pleasant surprise. We found at the same time an unusual
movement and one very similar to our Union. The women's center
is a YWCA that is independent from the typical community Ys
that we familiar with. Yet they they are funded like other
Ys, so have a huge office and four paid staff. They are very
committed to the independent women's movement and encourage
women to start projects using the Ys space, phone, and resources.
Y projects include a liberation school abortion referral, divorce
counseling, rape counseling and a gay resources center. Two
other projects began at the Y, a women's car repair collective
and a women's newspaper called Pandora. Both left the Y when
they felt strong enough to be independent. The staff and the
Y board make policy decisions. There is so much happening at
the center that the staff are under heavy work pressure The
four of them work collectively.
There
is a women's health clinic named Aradia affiliated with the Y
and funded separately by HEW. The clinic shares resources with
the free clinics. The gay women's group which is about a year
old is on great terms with the Y and the staff. (which is gay
and straight). There is a a women's bookstore that manages to
support itself and is run by a collective. The women's movement
on the University of Washington campus has an office and paid
staff funded by the university which has done research on student
and faculty women. Lastly a coalition is forming of all women's
groups in the city to pressure the city government to decide
in favor of women's issues.
ORGANIZATIONAL QUESTIONS
We tried
to get a sense of citywide organization: from the women we met,
but don't know what we missed. We had little contact with women
working on women's issues who considered themselves outside the
women's movement. One key to the puzzle was finding out how much
communication and sharing went on among groups. In Eugene and
Portland, Oregon, the women's movement was so small (the cities
are small) that the whole movement was basically a community
of friends. In Eugene the groups were in touch because many of
the same women belong to the same few groups. Both L.A. and N.Y.C.
had problems with city wide communication because of their size,
that was not counteracted by some conscious effort at coordination.
N.Y. couldn't bridge the gap due to divisiveness, and L.A. couldn't
due to transportation problems in sprawled out L.A. coupled with
a lack of neighborhood spirit. The second center in L.A. tried
to deal with this transportation problem. In Berkeley on the
other hand, it was much easier to find out what was happening
and where, not because there was a center or organization pulling
everyone together, but because things were close together and
people just knew what was happening. A few strong projects like
the Women's Crisis Center, A Woman's Place Bookstore, the Women's
Health Collective, the Radical Psychiatry Center were communicating
informally. In San Francisco across the Bay there was a women's
switchboard that had extensive files, and a woman on duty answering
the constantly ringing phone.
Another
factor we tried to look for was how much groups work together,
shared resources and identified with the importance of each others
work. Take a project like Liberation School, which in Chicago
is one of the important ways women get involved in the Union.
It is often the first contact from which women can join other
CWLU groups. In Boston and Berkeley, the liberation schools are
independent and did not seem to plan their classes in relation
to other women's groups in the city. The liberation schools in
L.A. and New Haven (only has an introductory and an advanced
course) were projects of the women's centers there, like in Chicago.
Decision
making was another organizational issue we asked about, usually
when it was a case of a center or a group functioning as the
base of activity for other groups and service projects. The New
Haven Center had a steering committee like ours. Even though
ten groups were members of the N.Y, Center responsibility fell
on the few individuals committed to the survival of the Center.
Washington was in the process of creating its Center, which would
be run by a steering committee of member groups. Chicago was
one of their models. In Philadelphia, Baltimore, and L.A. the
volunteer staff made decisions.
Integrating
new women is an organizational problem that the Union has never
figured out, and it is facing us again at this conference. In
Baltimore, where the women's center is very small and not much
is going on, the center sponsored a women's assembly earlier
this year which a lot of people worked hard on. It was great.
A lot of women attended, but it didn’t lead anywhere. The Center
women didn't know how to involve the women they had attracted
to the assembly in an ongoing way. The bigger problem was a lack
of things for these women to do.
Money
is the last thing I want to talk about under organization. It's
not accidental that the two most together women's centers were
in the best financial position. Seattle has money because the
Center is funded by the YWCA. Washington Center women are probably
getting the grant which they had applied for while we were there.
They were also seriously pursuing the possibility of a benefit
concert by a female singer like Baez or Collins. One drawback
with the grant money is that runs out, which happened to Women
In Transition, in Philadelphia, a counseling center for women
separating from their husbands. It was the most active project
in Philadelphia last year and paid most of the rent for the Centers
house, as well as paying four full time and some part time staff.
PROGRAM
CWLU's
approach to program has been guided by the idea that it is important
to do service, education, and action simultaneously. In the other
cities we found that service projects predominated. Education
was next common, and action was the least.
There
was a lot of counseling and referral. Almost every city had an
abortion referral group or a women's health collective. The only
exception was Baltimore where these services were done by the
large free clinic in the same building as the women's center.
The Philadelphia health group was not functioning while we were
there. The only women's clinics with independent facilities were
the ones with money -- Boston, Seattle, and Los Angeles. Other
health collectives used space at a nearby free clinic, as in
Washington and Eugene. The Berkeley women's health collective
had its own storefront but used a Berkeley free clinic for the
actual exams once a week. The Washington health collective wants
to set up in their new Women's Center, and have used free clinic
space up til now.
Psychological
counseling was very common too. Berkeley's project is part of
a men's and women's anti-professional counseling center called
Radical Psychiatry. The Washington Center's Feminist Counseling
Project included individual and group counseling done all by
non-professionals. New Havens therapy project refers women to
trained therapists which they have previously screened. The rape
counseling groups in Washington and Seattle are relatively new
and really exciting. Washington's is a 24 hour hot line which
has white and third world women on its staff.
Divorce
and separation counseling sometimes was legal counseling, as
it is here in Chicago. Other times it is psychological counseling
and aid, as in the Women in Transition project in Philadelphia.
Day
care co-ops were a common alternative institution-service project.
Educational program included rap groups, newspapers, film and
theater groups, press and graphics collectives and liberation
schools. Rap groups seem to continue to be the main way that
women get involved in women's liberation, though women are becoming
more disillusioned with what rap groups can accomplish. They
are of short duration and in cities where there is little program
women do not move on to anything else. There is a feminist press
of some kind in every city. If nothing else there is a center
newsletter as in Philadelphia. The Radical Lesbians in Philadelphia
have their own newsletter because they are one of the most active
groups there. In Washington there was no center paper but two
independent papers: Off Our Backs,
which is nationally oriented and
feels little commitment to the local movement, and the Furies,
which is a well known lesbian vanguard paper. In Baltimore,
the strongest women's liberation project is the nationally
focused, left-oriented Women:Journal of Liberation.
Not
including legislative actions done by N.O.W, or actions on women's
issues done by women who don't think of themselves in the women's
liberation movement (who we unfortunately had little contact
with), most action projects were around day care and health.
There is significant direct action against city government in
Berkeley and Seattle which we will have to find out more about.
Besides the Day Care Coalition in Boston, the day care group
in L.A. includes action in its future plans. A New Haven group
was doing a class action suit against the Connecticut anti- abortion
laws.
The
Somerville Women's Health Clinic is
an important example of an action -service education project. It started out
as a service-alternative institution, added classes on women's health,
and is now planning to build community support in order to make demands
on Somerville Hospital.
POLITICAL IDEAS
We do
not think that it is an accident that our Union is multifaceted,
unified, larger than most women's movements, and growing. We
think there are political ideas underlying the creation of the
Union three years ago and others we have learned from experience
since then, which are responsible for our success. One of the
most important ideas that has been around from the first is that
we are flexible and tolerant toward each others political ideas
and projects. A lot of this comes from a belief among many Union
women that political analysis largely follows from experience.
In other words, if we think we have a good idea it is far better
to do than discuss and rediscuss it hoping to find an ideal strategy
for the women's movement. The NYC's women's movement suffers
badly from intolerance. It desperately needs some cohesion to
its frustrated fragmented parts which will never happen until
the groups with opposing theories sad strategies unite on the
basis of program. Many Radical Feminists do not want to fight
for traditionally female concerns, like child care, and most
of them do not consider themselves part of the left. Yet probably
the Radical. Feminists could use the connection with child care
groups or action projects run by left women, now that they are
feeling the need to go beyond their consciousness raising groups.
Probably service and action groups would benefit from the ability
of the R.F. to reach large numbers of women via their city-wide
consciousness raising groups.
Another
political difference between CWLU and
other women's movements that appeared over and over again is that
from the beginning in the Union women with left politics (anti-capitalist)
have worked with women who are feminist but not left. In
Los Angeles, Baltimore,Washington, and New York, left and
non-left women avoid each other. The non-left women resent being pushed
to become involved in opposing imperialism and capitalism,
which to them would be wasting their time on building a different
movement. They feel that only women's issues will build
a women's movement. The left women are patronizing to the non-left
women who do not agree with or understand that capitalism and imperialism
are major reasons for the oppression of women. We were
surprised to find that the staff of the Baltimore Journal (who
are Marxists) have hardly anything to do with the Baltimore
Women's Center, even though both offices are in the same building.
The left women often know how to organize, plan actions; and
build ongoing movements because they have done it before. The non-left
women are deeply concerned with meeting women's needs and making
personal into political. They also communicate much better to apolitical
women, which is after all,is most women.
Finally,
we found a lot of resentment against structuring an organization,
against recognizing women with leadership and other skills,
and against the idea that money is important for building organization.
This was most true in NYC and in the Northwest (except Seattle).
We went to a conference in the Northwest which had been planned
beforehand by a handful of women. Even though to us it seemed
to have a loose planning many women complained that still it
was too structured. These women felt that there was a clamp
on their freedom, a limit on their growth. The existing social
structures in our society are clamps and limits, not because
is the nature of the structure, but because those who hold power
have created these structures to keep us cramped, ignorant and
uncreative. Many women in the Union believe that for women to
feel comfortable, to participate, to learn skills, to gain confidence,
there must be a conscious plan to make sure that these things
happen. Sometimes women who oppose structure in theory still
like our Liberation School classes because they move smoothly
and spontaneously (of course they don't always), without realizing
the hard work and planning that made this possible.
We found
that the problem many women have with leadership
works the same way. These women feel that it is wrong for some women
to have more knowledge, more experience,or more skills at running
meetings, planning actions, writing down their
ideas, speaking to large groups or talking to women about our movement.
We feel, that women with these skills must be recognized so they teach
them to other women. In Philadelphia many women
in the Radical Lesbians were against leadership because they had
a bad experience with a woman who wanted to control things and
would not share her skills. But after the group forced her to stop
this power trip, many of the members chose to deny leadership
altogether which only leaves a leaderless vacuum for some other
person, not chosen by the group to slip into.
POLITICAL LESSONS FOR THE UNION
It was
clear to us from the cities that we visited that it is not possible
to build a women's movement without organization. But we should
remember if we do national outreach that the specific form of
that organization depends on the size of the city, the size and
composition of the women's movement, the number and kind of groups
in a city,the way other groups that relate to the organization,
the needs of women in that city, and the political awareness
in and outside. These same criteria should be a lesson for us
in Chicago.
Our
own structure should change as our
needs and our situation changes The structure proposals at the
conference are responses to new needs.
It seems
to us that lack of program, that is, a lack of a variety of things
for women to do on many levels of responsibility and commitment,
is holding back the growth of the women's movement nationally.
Women get their consciousness raised and then don't have a way
to act upon their new ideas. Although lack of program is a problem
for us too, we are in a much better position to deal with it.
Our three year old organization and the programs we do have have
given many Union women skills, confidence, and invaluable experience.
We can afford to adopt a position like the Socialist Feminism
paper because it provides a direction for much needed program
here as well as other cities. To really understand the possibilities
of this strategy many women's groups should use it. The Union
should continue to try out out ideas, and learn experience rather
than deciding that any political theory or strategy either correct
or incorrect. Many cities have begun to look to Chicago as a
model because we are ahead. Many of our political ideas work.
We should write these up just as the Socialist Feminism paper
was written, so that women's groups can benefit from them.
Confusion
over the role of leadership is another
issue that is holding back the women's movement nationally Although we
have dealt it better than other places in our practice,
we have not yet clearly defined what a responsible leadership for the
CWLU would mean. This Steering Committee Proposal is an attempt
to do this.
Our
trip taught us the importance of gay and straight women
working together in the women's In many cities, gay and straight
women have not been able to work with each other. Sometimes the
gay women predominate and set the tone. Other times it is
the straight women. In most cities, the woman whose sexual preference
is the minority will feel uncomfortable and leave the movement.
Instead of sharing, learning together, and helping each other
get the most out of the women's movement, the gay:; and straight
women use their energy to argue and resent each other. Straight
Union women still have to learn how to make gay women feel comfortable.
Only then will large numbers of gay women will work
with our present Union groups or form their own chapters and workgroups
to deal specifically with the needs of gay women.
The
last issue has hardly been mentioned so far, yet
should not be ignored. Some women asked us how the Union related
to black and third world women. This has been a problem for the
women's movement nationally, which has up til now been predominantly
white middle class. Since the Union has resolved many of the
unresolved questions in other cities, we have a responsibility
to take into account black and third world women in relation
to programs being developed.
We were
both were personally changed by this trip. The information
alone has made us far more aware of where the women's movement came
from and where we should go. The warmth, trust, and enthusiasm
we received from women we met more than made up for the
exhausting car trips from city to city, and the long hours of explaining
the Union over and over again. Women went out of their
way to make sure we had a comfortable place to sleep and something
to eat. They set up meetings for us at extremely short notice
and helped find us contacts. This trip has shown to us the deeply
felt sisterhood among women in the women's movement nationally,
and convinced us that the Union should start playing a
national role.
November, 1972