Knowing Why We Celebrate International Women's Day

As International Women's Day comes around, we have a lot to reflect on, but we must also remember women are not alone in our quest for justice. From Dhaka to DC, we are united in saying the rights that were denied to us will not be denied to our daughters.
This post was published on the now-closed HuffPost Contributor platform. Contributors control their own work and posted freely to our site. If you need to flag this entry as abusive, send us an email.

Women's History Month is officially underway, and next week we celebrate International Women's Day. But how many of us actually know what this day is all about?

International Women's Day began in the early 1900s during a time when American women were becoming more vocal about their oppression, socially and legally, and organizing to bring about change, most notably by the suffragists.

In 1908, 15,000 women marched through New York City demanding the right to vote and better pay. Two years later, an International Conference of Working Women was held in Copenhagen, Denmark where the idea to hold a day around the world where women demand their rights was proposed. International Women's Day was born.

Since then, this day has been a time not only to reflect on how far women have come around the world, but how far we have to go.

This year UN Women states that International Women's Day theme, "Empowering Women, Empowering Humanity: Picture it!" will focus on the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action, a historic feminist roadmap signed by 189 governments 20 years ago.

While normally I would share my thoughts on the status of the global feminist movement from the perspective of a woman born and raised in Bangladesh, this year International Women's Day has me looking in from an entirely new window.

Since giving birth to my American daughter, settling in Washington and becoming a U.S. citizen myself last year, I find my feminist focus on the unfinished work for women in one of the most powerful countries in the world- the United States.

What rights are women in one of the richest countries in the world fighting for? Most people think the answer to that question is not much, and that the struggle for women's rights in America is already won. But the average person will be shocked to discover just how systematically sexism continues for women in the U.S.

Not only do American women still not have an amendment recognizing us as equal citizens, but in 2015 women are paid less than men for the same work. In addition, women in America are still fighting for paid maternity leave and paternity leave for their partners.

In the absence of accessible, affordable childcare many women have no choice but to drop out of the workforce when they lack the assurance their children are safe while they work.

Without key benefits like paid sick leave and flex-hours, how can the American economy retain its female workforce, instead of ultimately punishing women for becoming mothers?

Across the Atlantic, my motherland Bangladesh is outpacing the U.S. when it comes to certain rights for women. Bangladesh may be one of the world's few Muslim democracies, but it gives paid leave to all new mothers, and has had back-to-back female Prime Ministers, the highest political office in the country, for over a decade.

Bangladesh also ratified CEDAW, the United Nations' Women's Treaty that the US still has not signed, way back in the 1980's.

Despite these disparities between women's movements, and the major hurdles which continue to exist for women and girls, the feminist movement around the world is progressing overall.

One of the best examples is the Internet, and when I think about how mobilized women's rights activists are online, I instantly get energized.

From feminist hashtags to seeing women in the Middle East apply the Internet to lead the the Arab Spring protests, it is safe to say women online have some serious digital capital, and we know how to use it.

Viral campaigns like #YesAllWomen and #AllMenCan showed us the power of hashtag activism, and that if there was ever a place feminists could organize to take our power back, it is the Internet. We blog, we network, we post, and most importantly we organize online.

The Internet is where a ton of millennial energy, both male and female, are also invested when it comes to advancing gender equality, and really resolving issues like equal pay, flex hours, etc. once and for all.

As International Women's Day comes around, we have a lot to reflect on, but we must also remember women are not alone in our quest for justice. From Dhaka to DC, we are united in saying the rights that were denied to us will not be denied to our daughters.

Popular in the Community

Close

What's Hot