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Vilma Espin, 1930-2007
Interview with Vilma Espin by Greek journalist Elisabeth Popagay in 1989.
from the Ocean Press book Cuban women confront the future
What is the history of the Federation of Cuban women?
The Federation of Cuban Women was founded on August 23, 1960. When
the revolution triumphed women forcefully expressed not just their support
for the revolutionary laws and measures that benefited the people as a
whole, but also showed their willingness to participate in the revolutionary
process. Since then the FMC has been a way of channeling the activity and
enthusiasm of the masses of women into many tasks requiring their efforts.
The FMC is organized throughout the country in both urban and rural areas,
with between 50 and 70 women in its grassroots organizations.
There are now more than 65,000 delegates in the cities, towns and rural
areas. A young woman usually chooses to join the Federation at about 14
years of age. Today we have more than 3.2 million members, representing
about 81 percent of women over 14 years old.
The leading bodies of the FMC are organized on a municipal and provincial
level according to the political and administrative divisions in Cuba. We
therefore have 14 Provincial Committees and Secretariats and 169 Municipal
Committees and Secretariats.
The national leadership is composed of a National Committee and a
Secretariat which carry out or ensure the carrying out of decisions and
recommendations of the FMC congresses which are held every five years. The
national leadership body also outlines the direction and program of our work
in the short, medium and long term in line with the Social and Economic
Development Plan in our country.
To sum up, the FMC is a fundamental force in raising the ideological,
political and cultural level of women, protecting the full exercise of
women's rights, ensuring equal access to opportunities, in all areas and
levels of society.
The FMC has won great respect for its work of incorporating women into the
workforce, in the development of community health plans, in prevention and
social work, in the education of women and the new generations, and in the
creation and organization of childcare centers that provide a fundamental
service to working women and to the development of children from birth to
six years of age. Through the plans and program of the party and the state,
the Federation channels the willing support of its members, providing a
driving force for the revolution.
Do you believe in the international feminist movement?
Although throughout history, in different epochs, movements have
arisen for women's rights, for their integration into productive social
labor and into political life, these struggles have certainly gained
momentum in the last century. A turning point in the development of the
concept of women's equality was the victory of the October Revolution and
the creation of the first workers' and peasants' state. It is a truly
admirable fact that in the first decade of this century there were a number
of outstanding women in the European socialist movement such as Clara Zetkin
and Rosa Luxemburg, whose Marxist thinking and actions are real examples for
revolutionaries of all times.
Lenin also had the strong backing of women with a firm ideological and
political foundation—admirable, courageous and worthy women considering the
opportunities of those times. Alexandra Kollontai, Inessa Armand, Lenin's
sisters Anna and Maria Ulyanov, his companion Nadezhda Krupskaya and many
others were pioneers in the struggle for socialism and building a new
society.
These historic events gave a powerful impulse to the international struggle
for women's rights.
At the end of the Second World War, the conditions and desire existed among
the diverse women's organizations of professional women, housewives, workers
and intellectuals to unite in the fight for their legitimate rights as
citizens, mothers and workers, and to struggle for the peace that had been
won at the cost of so many lives and so much suffering. Thus the
International Federation of Democratic Women was formed in 1945 to work
towards these objectives. The proposal of the IFDW that the United Nations
declare a Decade for Women (1975-85) brought about wider recognition of the
justice of the demand for women's equality and raised the level of
consciousness on these questions. The Decade for Women undoubtedly gave a
boost to the work of many different women's organizations, including the
feminists, who took the name of the first groups of women demanding female
suffrage.
Feminists have given the impulse to the process of raising social
consciousness of women's oppression.
In particular, I believe in those feminist groups who tie the solution to
the oppression of women, of the liberation of women, to the liberation of
all the exploited, the oppressed, the discriminated against, which also
means taking into consideration social, political and ideological, as well
as economic problems, from the perspective of a class, sex and race
analysis.
I am convinced that the problems women face cannot be seen in isolation from
other social problems, and that they cannot be analyzed outside of their
economic context. Nor should they be considered as side issues within a
particular social, historical situation. Thus there are no solutions to
women's problems unrelated to their context.
It is ridiculous, for example, to think that in an imperialist country a
businesswoman and a woman worker can be equal.
Therefore, I can say that I believe in the feminist groups that propose
radical social changes in socio-economic structures, as the undeniable basis
of the struggle for equality between the sexes. But naturally in today's
world the fight for sexual equality in many places is simultaneous with the
struggle for revolutionary change.
There can be no doubt now whether the struggle for equality should precede
or be postponed until the taking of power. As revolutionaries we think that
all struggles that propagate economic and social changes, that pose ideas of
social justice and an end to discrimination and inequality are worthy of
recognition and encouragement.
We also think that the most clearsighted members of feminist groups
understand the danger of an isolated struggle for partial demands. We see
with great satisfaction how every day feminists are joining with greater
political skill the particular interests of women, which are a reality, with
the interests of other social groups which are oppressed and exploited by
the injustice and cruelty of capitalist society.
It is noticeable that in their political and ideological struggles in the
capitalist countries the left is deepening their analysis in response to the
concrete fact of the awakening of women throughout the world.
Do you believe in women's liberation on a world scale?
Of course I believe in women's liberation on a world scale. By that I
mean women's right to attain full equality of opportunities with men; the
right to fully develop their potential, to forge a multifaceted, cultured
personality, to cultivate their best qualities, to enjoy a full life with
respect and human dignity.
For two centuries, equality—that yearning that arose as a hope 200 years ago
with the French Revolution—has been only a dream.
Equality between human beings—without regard to sex, race, class,
religion—economic and social equality among peoples are goals yet to be
realized by the millions of people who are struggling all over this planet.
Our revolution has made great gains in the fields of health, education and
social justice in general. It has made important steps along the road to
full respect for the equal rights of men and women.
How many Cuban women work in difficult jobs?
I don't exactly understand what you mean by difficult jobs," nor what
could be considered "difficult jobs for Cuban women.
Well if you mean leadership or government, this i• thing that is relatively
new for women, that developed after the revolutionary triumph. Women's
participatio0 these areas is gradually increasing, although we are still not
satisfied that we can't do better, especially considering the technical and
professional level thousands of women have now reached and the proven
qualities they have shown. The figures speak for themselves: in 1987 24.7
percent of the directors in the Central State Administration were women.
Women comprise 18.2 percent of the Central Committee of the Cuban Communist
Party and 12.5 percent of the Political Bureau, the highest leadership
bodies between party congresses.
I think that leadership tasks should be considered among the so-called
difficult tasks for anyone— for men and women. But despite of being new,
women have met these challenges most successfully.
We can also talk about production, where traditionally there was a strict
division between those jobs considered suitable for one sex or the other, in
line with the accepted social roles of the past. We can now say that women
are proving themselves in professions and positions that had never been
thought possible before. Since the revolution women have started to enter
middle level polytechnical institutes and technical schools to become
qualified workers.
In construction, for example, more than 25,000 workers are making important
contributions as plasterers, tilers, carpenters and other jobs. There are
also construction brigades composed entirely of women that have done
excellent work.
Women presently constitute 56.7 percent of medium and top level technicians
in Cuba. Every day the participation of women in those professions requiring
a high level of technical preparation, such as engineering, mining, sugar
and industrial chemistry etc is growing.
In 1986 women made up 31.6 percent of the graduates in the technical
sciences, 35.5 percent in agricultural science, and 66.5 percent in medical
science.
In general, since the triumph of the revolution, women have had the
possibility to choose whatever technical career, or so-called
non-traditional jobs such as welders, machinists, builders, artificial
inseminators and many other industrial and agricultural jobs.
How did the Cuban feminist movement begin?
Feminism in Cuba reached a certain peak in the 1920s, mainly among
intellectuals. In 1924 and 1925 the first and second feminist congresses
took place in our country. But their demands, apart from the right to vote
for women, were eminently bourgeois and elitist.
Nevertheless, a sizable group of very cultured and advanced women were
around the first Marxist-Leninist groups that emerged. They had absorbed and
studied the theory of scientific socialism and many of them joined the first
Cuban Communist Party founded by Julio Antonio Mella in 1925.
Then in 1939 the third feminist congress was held (this year we are
celebrating its 50th anniversary) taking up revolutionary demands for women
workers and peasants, demanding the recognition of civil, political and
labor rights for women and calling for laws and measures of a social
character that were very advanced for those times. That congress also called
on all political forces to unite in the struggle against fascism in defense
of peace that was threatened by Hitler's invasion of different parts of
Europe.
Many women stood out in these feminist struggles, among them intellectuals
of the stature of Camila Henriquez Ureña and Mirta Aguirre, as well as
Vicentina Antuña Tabío, who is currently the director of UNESCO in Cuba.
The majority of the demands raised by the women in 1939 were not realized
until the victory of the revolution in 1959.
Feminism as a movement, although it had never been very strong in Cuba in
terms of organization and membership, emerged in Havana among university
professors, writers, journalists and some women political leaders. But it
declined in the years 1940-50.
Then, many of its members participated in a broader form, not just in the
struggle for women's rights, but in the battles of workers and peasants that
arose during those years.
Under the Batista dictatorship women joined the struggle against the
criminal regime that was sustained by U.S. imperialism. In other words,
women fought equal to and alongside men for liberty, justice, sovereignty
and real independence, for the right to decide the destiny of our country
without the interference of an imperialist master.
Since the revolution, as I explained, women have demanded better
organization, and created the FMC with the principal aim of supporting the
revolution, by participating in the battle for development and revolutionary
advances which can build the economic, legal, political, social, cultural
and ideological foundations that can guarantee the full exercise of women's
equality, which has been proclaimed by the revolution as one of its
principles.
We concur with feminists in the idea that women confront a specific
situation in society as a result of the secondary role they have been
assigned by capitalism and all preceding class societies. Therefore,
specific work among Cuban women is needed to raise their political, cultural
and ideological level and to help them understand the role socialism
guarantees women as free and equal human beings.
Fidel described the women's movement in our country as a "revolution within
a revolution." Such is the magnitude of the changes taking place in the life
and thinking of Cuban women.
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