What's new this week | Feminist Poetry for Revolution and Self-Determination
[Si desea recibir el boletín en español, haga clic aquí. Si vous désirez recevoir le bulletin en français, cliquez ici. Se deseja receber o boletim em português, clique aqui]
Capire is a media tool to echo the voices of women in movement, to publicize the struggles from different territories, and to strengthen local and international references of anti-capitalist, anti-racist, grassroots feminism. To learn more, watch this video or read our presentation.
What's new this week | Feminist Poetry for Revolution and Self-Determination
::: Sophia de Mello Breyner Andresen: Poetry and Revolution
November 6th is the birthday of the Portuguese poet Sophia de Mello Breyner Andresen | Culture
::: Al Khadra: “Nobody Taught Me How To Be a Poet”
We publish a translated poem by Al Khadra, an acclaimed name of Sahrawi poetry in defense of self-determination | Culture
::: Grassroots Feminisms and the Transnational Struggles of the World March of Women
The World March of Women’s repertoire of action and reflection to build an anti-racist, anti-systemic, and grassroots feminism | Analysis
::: Women Building Feminist Economy and Food Sovereignty in India
Capire talked to Sheelu Francis from the Women’s Collective about experiences to create new ways of work and living | Interview
...And while you are here, check out our content from previous weeks:
::: Living Memory: The World March of Women International Meetings
See in this gallery pictures and experiences of the World March of Women | Gallery
“The International Meetings have been held since 1998, when the alliances to form the March were only beginning. Such meetings have been held in ten different places, up to now: Quebec, United States, India, Rwanda, Peru, Galicia, Philippines, Brazil, Mozambique and the Basque Country.”
::: Feminization of Poverty, a Pandemic Across the Americas
Marilys Zayas looks into how women in Latin America and the Caribbean experience poverty | Analysis
::: Food sovereignty: the trajectory of the World March of Women
Over these 25 years of the principle of food sovereignty, women have contributed to biodiversity and reorganization of labor | Experiences
::: Women Hold Up Half The Sky: How China Eradicated Extreme Poverty
Read Tings Chak's piece on grassroots organizing and policies to fight poverty in China | Analysis
::: History and Analysis of the Feminist Movement in Morocco
Read an excerpt from the article “Feminist Movement in Morocco,” by Khadija Ryadi | Experiences
::: Building feminist economy in Tanzania
Theodora Pius shared experiences and struggles on how woman build feminist economy | Analysis
::: September 28: Latin America and the Caribbean in the feminist struggle for legal abortion
Watch the video with testimonials about the fight for the legalization of abortion in the Americas | Video
::: Internationalist Feminism In Solidarity To Overthrow Authoritarianism
Nalu Faria discusses authoritarianism, which has been afflicting the world with control strategies, escalation of precarious conditions of life, and exploitation of labor and nature | Analysis
::: Peasant Feminism to Face Wars and Authoritarian Governments
In view of the Colombian armed conflict, inequalities, and violence, we must organize. Read and listen to the words of Nury Martínez at the “Feminist Struggles to Bring Down Authoritarianism” webinar | Analysis
::: Feminism in Galicia: Fighting Against the Patriarchal Justice System in the Periphery of the Center of Capitalism
By the World March of Women in Galicia. Putting the confrontation with sexist and judicial violence on the feminist agenda is key to get some laws off the paper | Experience
::: Femicide, An Old Unhealed Wound Bleeding For Kurdish Women
Read the article from Hacer Özdemir about the Kurdish feminist struggles against patriarchal domination and the Ezidi femicide. "In this context, it is necessary to see the Ezidi genocide as a femicidal program" | Analysis
::: We Are Militant Artists, Artist Militants Defending Our Land
Ana Chã discusses the revolutionary potential of women artists in rural areas and cities and invites us to join the call for artists of La Vía Campesina. "Art has a potential for transformation. Because it is an element of culture, it is related to nature and is essentially human. Art arises from our capacity of imagining and projecting different situations from those we are living in the present" | Culture
:::Guatemala Is Iximulew: Pushing Toward Plurinationality, Democracy, and a Decent Life
Indigenous peoples and women rise up and hold intense demonstrations against Guatemalan president, for a plurinational state | Analysis
::: Amid the Pandemic, Women in Morocco Face marginalization and lead struggles
The World March of Women Coordinating Board in Morocco has been continuously supporting women’s struggles against the policies of impoverishment and humiliation that affect them | Analysis
::: Lebanon Under Collapse: Refuge, Precarious Work and Marginalization
How is the economy, precarization, and the pandemic being felt by women and the working class in Lebanon today? | Analysis
Share this email! Sign up to our newsletter and follow us on social media (@capiremov). We need everyone's support to promote and expand the Capire portal!
Newsletter | Telegram | info@capiremov.org
Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube | Spotify