Why I joined the Socialist Party

My whole life, there a few things I have always believed without any doubt and one of these is the indisputable right for a woman to decide what to do with her own body. It is the first and basic step toward the achievement of a real and complete women’s emancipation.

My whole life, there a few things I have always believed without any doubt and one of these is the indisputable right for a woman to decide what to do with her own body. It is the first and basic step toward the achievement of a real and complete women’s emancipation.

I was surprised when I found out that in Ireland abortion was illegal. At first, I did not want to join any party, but I was willing to get involved in a pro-choice organisation. While postering Dublin, I met Yvette, a socialist who introduced me to ROSA. I must honestly say that at the first I was skeptical and, maybe almost “hostile” to any other ideas. What was halting me was not to think and rethink a feminist perspective in socialist terms, but the idea to join a party was not appealing to me.

Younger and in my country, Italy, politics appeared to me as something far from me, something far from real people. No parties were in the government or even in the parliament to talk on my behalf, to defend my needs. What was more and even worse, the strong sense that everything was fake, artificial as a play- theater where each part is already determined and it does not matter if you like it or not, if you realised or not; you can not decide your own life. This was the feeling that I brought with me to Ireland and then when I met the women in ROSA and the Socialist Party.

I do not remember the moment in which I changed mind. Bit by bit, my perspective changed: from a passive and viewer point of view, to an active one. I realised, what seems logical to me now, that everything is connected and each issue is like a part, a little part, like a finger or an arm in a body and you can not attack or heal that part if your are not able to see the whole body, the whole mechanism, the whole system.

For example, it is not possible to make abortion accessible in Ireland without involving working class women, and migrant women. The ones who much more than others are affected by the economic crisis.

I have just started my path and I do not know where it will bring me. I am hopeful and excited because I do feel I have made the right decision. In some way everything is much more clearer, like when you walk to the edge of a cliff and you look around and you admire the landscape, the ocean.

Now I watch the world from a point that is much more wider and higher than before. It is this sort of understanding that makes me feel aware of what I am and what I can do.

I do not feel an invincible warrior against the capitalist system, but I do feel confident about the possibility that I finally have to control my life and fight for change, not let others do it for me.

 

Total
0
Shares
Previous Article

Mortgage write-downs, not repossessions

Next Article

Rent Allowance cuts “making families homeless”

Related Posts
Read More

The trial of Chelsea Manning

The final days of the trial revealed the disgusting new depths to which the US Military is sinking in an effort to persecute Chelsea (formerly Bradley) Manning. In 2010 this brave young military intelligence analyst released hundreds of thousands of secret documents to show the world the true face of the US wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Read More

Magdalene whitewash: State’s dirty laundry – slavery of poor women

What a rancid state and political establishment. Even the whitewash of a report by  devout Catholic, Martin McAleese illustrates intimate state involvement of various hues in the Magdalene Laundries. Yet, the mealy-mouthed immediate response from the government constituted a blatant shirking of responsibility, and a refusal to apologise, or even clearly admit wrongdoing on behalf of the state.

Read More

MEPs discuss protests across Europe this week

Following an appeal signed by 16 MEPs from the Left Group in the European Parliament (GUE/NGL), this week (21 to 26 June) has been designated as a "Week of Protest & Solidarity" across Europe - in opposition to the attacks on working people across Europe and in solidarity with the struggle in Greece.