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Senator
Douglas Roche: Women, Peace & Security
Rosalie Bertell, on nominating The Canadian Voice of Women for Peace
for the Millennium Peace Prize for Women, said:
| "From the outset, the organization's philosophy has been
one of inclusiveness and outreach to other women, refusing to
accept labelling of other women as "enemy." They espouse
and practice peacebuilding through cooperation. Their record
speaks of the mobilization of women, and public and governmental
education." |
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Below we touch on some of the highlights of VOW's history
1960's
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Born in 1960 when women of Canada were aroused about
the possibility of nuclear war and how nuclear testing was endangering
their children's lives. Lotta Dempsey wrote columns in the Toronto
Star asking women to write to her if they were willing to DO something
about this awful threat. Hundreds replied and four women, Jo Davis,
Dorothy Henderson, Helen Tucker and Beth Touzel met with Dempsey and
shortly thereafter started "The Voice of Women". Soon thousands
joined, paid a membership fee of $2.00, received bi-monthly newsletters
urging them to form small groups to keep in touch with one another
and to encourage all their women friends to join. |
National VOW:
- Organized an international conference held in 1962 in St Donat, Quebec,
focussing on building mechanisms for working together and influencing
the United Nations and asking the UN to declare an International Year
of Peace. This was later proclaimed as International Co-operation Year
in 1965. A second international Conference was held in 1965 and a third
in Montreal in 1967.
- Pressured Canadian Government to support the international appeal
for a Nuclear Test Ban Treaty resulting in the partial test ban in 1963.
- Organized the collection of thousands of children's baby teeth for
testing of Strontium 90 content.
- Organized a visit of VOW members to the former USSR to meet with Russian
women in defiance of the cold war.
- In opposition to the War in Vietnam VOW brought women from Vietnam
to tour Canada on a well organized public speaking tour and to meet
with American women at border points across the country at mass rallies.
Local VOW groups:
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- Held educational meetings on the threat of nuclear war.
- Demonstrated to stop the war in Vietnam.
- Protested the manufacture and sale of war toys and the violent nature of TV programs.
- Knit thousands of baby articles and children's clothing for the children in war-torn Vietnam.
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1970's
National VOW:
Became accredited at the United Nations, with observer status in 1977.
- Participated in the UN Special session on Disarmament in New York
as a Non-Governmental Organization in 1982.
- Presented briefs, lobbied government delegates on disarmament in Ottawa,
New York and Geneva.
- Sent delegates to international conferences in Europe.
- Obtained consultative status with the Economic and Social Council
of the UN. in 1977.
- Represented VOW at International Women's year in Mexico in 1975.
1980's
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- Represented VOW at United Nations Conference on Women in Copenhagen, 1980
- United Nations Second Special Session on Disarmament (UNSSOD 11) in 1982 attended by many VOW members. Past president Kay Macpherson spoke to one million persons on behalf of Canadian citizens
- Presented the Women's Peace Petition (115, 000 signatures) to UN session.
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- Sponsored and organized the Women's International Peace Conference "The Urgency for True Security: Women's Alternatives for Negotiating Peace", in Halifax, in 1985, attended by 350 women from 33 countries. This conference re-appropriated the word "security", defining it away from the military.
- Held fourteen local peace conferences across Canada that same year
- Incorporated as a non-profit organization under title of Canadian
Voice of Women for Peace in 1986.
- Represented at United Nations Conference on Women in Nairobi, 1985
where the famous Peace Statement from the Halifax International conference
was presented to the Peace Tent.
- Organized in 1986 the first of annual lobby trips to the United Nations
in New York to heighten women's visibility at the UN and to lobby multiple
missions on demilitarization and concern for human life.
- Presented a statement to UN Third Special Session on Disarmament in
1988, calling on the UN Secretary General to report on ways the UN and
its system could increase women's participation in peace and disarmament
processes.
Local VOWs:
- Organized opposition to training exercises by US Nuclear Warships
in BC waters and in Halifax ports.
- Campaigned for the rights of Native people and against low level flying
over the INNU people in Labrador by NATO Military Training Exercises,
sent representatives to be in solidarity with INNU women and received
official status at the government 's Environmental Assessment.
- Held events in commemoration on Hiroshima Day.
1990's
- Represented at United Nations Conference on Women at Beijing.
- Participated with Women for Mutual Security at several international
women's lobby efforts of NATO and Warsaw Pact officials throughout the
90's.
- Called on the Canadian government to include women at the negotiating
table in Kosovo.
- Brought to the early attention of Canada's ambassador to the UN a
stinging NGO critique of peacekeepers and UN staff's sexual abuse of
women in Cambodia in 1993.
- Helped to mount the first International Somali women's peace conference
in partnership with Somali women in diaspora, July 1999.
- Completed in January, 2000, the first of an annual series of practical
training in feminist leadership and legal literacy, including CEDAW
and the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action, for 50 diverse,
grass roots Canadian women.
- Completed a proposal together with archivists, writers, artists and
other peace women, for a major travelling exhibition "Groundswell:
Women Building a Culture of Peace" to illustrate a century of grass
roots women's extensive work for peace and non-violence.
Local VOWS throughout the past decade have organized and joined peace
coalitions to hold public events, lectures, vigils, demonstrations at
the time of the Gulf War, the war in Kosovo and the war in Afghanistan.
2000's
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