Global, Politics

#WhyIMarch in the Women's March Today

[pullquote align=right] For those of us today who wish to make history, we too must walk.
[/pullquote]For me, history is about footsteps. Moving from one place to another. From one reality to another.

As Jews, our ancestors moved from slavery in Egypt toward freedom. They were not freed by standing still; they had to walk toward their redemption, one step at a time.

For those of us today who wish to make history, we too must walk.

Our job is to decide which footsteps we will take, where they will take us and how we want our lives to be when we get there. Will we advance our civilization toward justice or will we retreat into chaos? Will we move toward peace or toward war? Will we pursue a world built on freedom or will we allow the vulnerable to be enslaved and oppressed?

To me, the path is clear. And that is why I am joining hundreds of thousands of people, together with friends in the AJWS community, who are walking in the Women’s March in Washington, D.C. and New York. In partnership with people marching in hundreds of locations around the world this Saturday, we will put the new U.S. administration and Congress on notice that we are definitely walking toward justice.

[pullquote align=left] I will be walking with a community of Jewish friends who are committed to reaching a just world.
[/pullquote]I will be taking footsteps with and for women worldwide.

We will be walking toward a world in which women shape their own lives — no matter who they are, where they live or whom they love. We will be walking toward a world free of sexual violence and free of child marriages. We will be walking toward a world without the barriers that block women from applying their intelligence and inventiveness in schools and workplaces. And, we will be walking to hasten a time when all women are finally in control of decisions about their bodies and their lives.

Making history is not a solitary activity, and we won’t be taking these footsteps alone. I will be walking with a community of Jewish friends who are committed to reaching a just world, grounded in our deep belief in the dignity and equality of all people. We will be walking with a much larger American and global community that understands that justice will only exist when women are completely and unquestionably free.

We will also be walking in solidarity with the courageous women AJWS supports in 19 countries in the developing world who are fighting for their rights today. I will be walking in solidarity with Julienne Lusenge, from Democratic Republic of Congo, who is stepping toward a world in which rape is no longer used as a weapon of war. Sitha Mark of Cambodia, who puts one foot in front of another to build a movement of women garment workers who refuse to be abused and underpaid in sweat shops in Phnom Penh. And Berta Carceres, of Honduras, who lost her life last year standing up to the builders of a mega dam that threatened to destroy the land and waters that thousands of indigenous men and women depend on for survival.

[pullquote align=right] We will walk in the footsteps of Emma Goldman, the fiery Jewish radical feminist who took to the sidewalks of New York at the turn of the 20th Century.
[/pullquote]We will also be taking these footsteps along the paths made by generations of women who marched before we did. We understand that history is not linear, and sometimes we need to re-walk well-trod paths.

We will walk in the footsteps of Emma Goldman, the fiery Jewish radical feminist who took to the sidewalks of New York at the turn of the 20th Century to demand the end of all exploitation of women by men and the structures they had built that controlled women’s speech, sexuality and liberty.

We will walk in the footsteps of American Jewish feminists including Betty Friedan, Gloria Steinem and others who questioned the stifling gender conformity of post-war American life, so aptly captured by the feminist Jewish poet Adrienne Rich — one of the most influential writers of the second half of the 20th century.

We will walk in the footsteps of countless Jewish women who demanded a role for themselves in Jewish communal life and shaping our future — by studying Torah, leading congregations and organizations, examining our history as scholars and rewriting it.

[pullquote align=left] I march through the streets — as a Jewish man, a proud feminist and a believer that we have the power to make and change history .
[/pullquote]This week, as I march through the streets — as a Jewish man, a proud feminist and a believer that we have the power to make and change history — I will march in solidarity with women who have been my mentors in the Jewish community and beyond, as well as with women and men of every background who are moving us toward the kind of world we want to live in.

While the journey may be long and we don’t know how many steps are ahead — we must put one foot in front of the other and embark on our leg of that journey.

We cannot get there alone. We must all walk together.

A version of this post originally published on Medium.com and has been republished at the request of the author. 

AJWS #WhyIMarch in the Women's March

 

2 thoughts on “#WhyIMarch in the Women's March Today

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

The reCAPTCHA verification period has expired. Please reload the page.

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.