NEWS

Post date: Sun, 10/04/2020 - 14:40

By Marybeth Gardam
Chair, Women, Money & Democracy Committee

October 2020

What’s new at WILPF’s partner An Economy of Our Own (AEOO) and their Screwnomics project? Two intriguing “Zoom of Our Own” Conversations just for you, co-sponsored by WILPF’s Women, Money & Democracy Committee.

Register for these FREE virtual Zoom Webinars and meet real women making a difference on the front lines of economic justice. They are creating real solutions to a rigged economy and modeling how to use their ideas for system change.   

Tuesday, Oct 13 - 8pm EST / 5 pm PST
SHARED ECONOMIES: The Future is Collaborative

What if your community owned your own bank and your own cooperative corporation?

How can the collective approach of cooperative business models and banking in the public interest work together in concert? Why would these make a difference for women? Participants include two AEOO advisory board members, Jamila Medley of the Philadelphia Area Cooperative and Jhumpa Bhattacharya of The Insight Center for Community Development in Oakland, CA. Susan Harman, a public banking activist and long-time WILPF ally in Oakland, will also join us.

Tuesday, Oct 27 – 8pm EST / 5 pm PST
THE INIVISIBLE WOMAN: Exploitation Beyond the Pay Gap

Macroeconomy’s erasure of caring work at home and in our communities via the GDP—and women’s adventurous ways to fix this.

Riane Eisler, revered author of The Chalice & The Blade and The Real Wealth of Nations, will reveal the links between macroeconomic GDP measures and microeconomic invisibility of care work, women’s discounted paychecks for care work, and what the COVID-19 pandemic has helped us see more clearly: all our work at home we’re expected to do for free. She says “our society values what we count, and we don’t count women’s unpaid labor.”  

Khara Jabola-Carolus of Hawaii’s Commission on Women will join us. She put together a report on government stationary called Building Bridges, Not Walking on Backs: A Feminist Economic Recovery Plan for COVID-19) and she is also an artist.

Patti Maciecz has created an invoice she calls Bill the Patriarchy, part of her Invisible Labor Union. 

WILPF’s own Martha Collins will bring the perspective of single moms who are doing it all, and often facing poverty, through her work for the Milwaukee Area Food Bank.

Find registration information for both events here.

 

 

 

Post date: Sun, 10/04/2020 - 14:27

Artwork depicting Pachamama, the Incan earth/time mother who is an ever-present and independent deity and who has her own creative power to sustain life on this earth. The Law of Mother Earth was written into the new Bolivian Constitution in 2009. Thank you to the unknown artist for this wonderful image.

By Nancy Price
Co-chair, Earth Democracy Issue Committee

October 2020

While massive wildfires burned in northern California, on Tuesday, September 29, my Yolo County Board of Supervisors passed a Climate Emergency Resolution spearheaded by the Yolo County Climate Emergency Coalition. The coalition spent months drafting the resolution, and it was endorsed by over 100 grassroots groups and individuals in the community including local farms, businesses, faith-based alliances, educational institutions, and various advocacy campaigns, as reported in Common Dreams. This resolution declared a climate emergency and committed to mobilization to achieve a just transition to zero carbon emissions by 2030.  

Significantly, in their 4-1 vote the supervisors committed the county to enacting a plan “to achieve a just economic recovery and transition to a countywide carbon-negative (climate positive) footprint by 2030.” They agreed to fund a climate advisory committee tasked with helping the county achieve this just transition with equitable outcomes for marginalized communities and to retool livelihoods. 

Adelita Serena, a Woodland-based organizer for Mothers Out Front, a grassroots climate action organization and a key supporter of the resolution, explained, “As a mother and Indigenous woman, what we are currently seeing is a very clear and loud alarm from our mother earth and ancestors. We must change course off fossil fuels before it’s too late. I have two sons and I want them to have a future. We must act now with great urgency.” Supervisor Don Saylor said, “The goal of carbon neutrality might not be fast enough. I’d like to make sure we as a county have done our part and have made measurable progress by 2025.” 

After the resolution passed, Juliette Beck, an organizer with the Yolo County Climate Emergency Coalition, emphasized: “Being on the front lines of the fires and suffering from heatwaves and days of hazardous, smoke-filled air this summer has definitely created a new sense of urgency…Yolo County's action today of declaring a climate emergency in our predominantly rural agricultural county of 220,000 residents is a testament to the social movement power demanding both transformative climate action and concrete steps to remedy the legacy of systemic racism.”

In Yolo County during this time of COVID-19 and the climate impacts, the Hispanic farmworkers have been especially vulnerable due to a lack of adequate masks and gloves and long hours in the sun picking the fruits and vegetables for our tables. A farmworker, who preferred to remain anonymous and continued to work when the smoke from recent fires blanketed the county, spoke at the hearing, saying, “My lungs are still irritated from breathing contaminated air, all the smoke, dust, and ash I inhaled while working in the fields. I’m still working every day even though I can’t stop coughing because I know the work will end soon and I need to…help take care of my family… What other choice do I have?” 

With this action, Yolo County joins over 110 local governments within 24 U.S. states that have passed a declaration, representing just over 37 million people or 11.3% in this country. Worldwide, 1,783 declarations have passed within 30 countries plus the EU for a population of 835 million now under Climate Emergency Declaration. This is a project of The Climate Mobilization, a decentralized global campaign that is engaging local communities in policymaking. (Learn more about the movement and its impact here). 

The number of declarations passed has greatly increased just in the past two years, and no wonder – massive forest fires, droughts and crop failures,  extreme weather, an Artic warmer than in the past 3 million years, and melting glaciers are clear evidence of this emergency and that we are teetering at the tipping point. Global warming no longer adequately describes this crisis.   

Can we recover or are we doomed? No matter who wins the election, it’s time for us to organize in our communities to pass a Climate Emergency Declaration or Resolution to both change local policy and to build a bold, massive grassroots Climate Emergency mobilization to demand our representatives take action now and set the deadline for 2030 – not 2045 or 2050, dates still cited, when it will be way too late.

As the Earth Democracy Issue Committee develops our program for the next 6-18-24 months, let’s remember that one of our framing principles is “Guardianship of Present and Future Generations.”  Being part of an all-hands-on-deck, emergency-speed mobilization to protect humanity might just save the day. After the election, we’ll develop a Toolkit for members and branches.

Join with us! Let’s be part of this emergency-speed, whole society Climate Mobilization. If you would like to help with developing materials, please write nancytprice39[at]gmail.com or call 530-758-0726 Pacific Time.

 

Post date: Sun, 10/04/2020 - 14:17

WILPFers join Detroit water picketers during the 2014 Congress. The 2021 Congress in August will be entirely virtual. Photo by Darien De Lu.

October 2020

We’ve set tentative dates for the WILPF US national Congress: Save these two weekends in August 2021 – August 6-8 and also August 13 -15 2021. 

Right now, WILPF is looking for a skilled individual for the paid Congress Coordinator position. Are you a WILPFer comfortable with virtual meeting technology, attentive to details, and able to prioritize time and address multiple tasks? 

Get to know many interesting WILPF members and help shape the future direction of WILPF! This independent contractor position is part-time, for approximately one year. Responsibilities include ongoing general organizational work, publicity, technology logistics (with tech support), and tracking program details for this virtual Congress. The program work requires supporting the efforts of branches to participate in the Congress program by encouraging and advising them on the Congress event(s) branches may be organizing.

Across the country branches are developing projects related to our six issue committees. The Congress will showcase that work, weaving it in with other Congress activities to illustrate our Congress theme of "WOMEN, POWER, and SOCIAL JUSTICE: Building from Strength". Evening plenary programs will make the connections between WILPF US work and other national movements as well as international WILPF work. The coordinator will help all these activities, including opportunities for socializing – virtually – flow smoothly together!

To apply for the Congress Coordinator position, you must be a WILPF member. Please spread the word to possible candidates. More details are in this job description. For further information, contact President@wilpfus.org. Application deadline is October 18, but the position may be filled sooner!

Post date: Sat, 10/03/2020 - 11:08

October 2020

By Dorothy Van Soest
WILPF US Liaison to the Poor People’s Campaign

A month before the election, our nation mourns 200,000 plus COVID-19 deaths, disproportionately concentrated among low-wage essential workers and people of color. Conflagration on our streets burns down centuries of willful ignorance and silence about the racism pandemic, far deadlier and longer lasting than COVID-19. We reel from multiple tribulations: attacks on voting rights and democracy, failure to pass a fair and just relief package, refusal to charge anyone for murdering Breonna Taylor, stacking the Supreme Court. 

But this is not the time for despair. This is the time for greater than ever voter turnout and it is a moment ripe for socioeconomic transformation. This is the time to unleash the power that 140 million poor and low-income people in our country have to change the political landscape. And that is exactly what the Poor People's Campaign: A National Call for Moral Revival is doing. Its mass, multicolored initiative called We Must Do M.O.R.E. has been mobilizing, organizing, registering, and educating people who will vote for a moral agenda that will transform our nation.  

“In the midst of exacerbated pain,” says Rev. William Barber, co-chair of the Poor People’s Campaign, “poor and low-income people are preparing to vote in massive numbers.” 

And they are a force to be reckoned with. A study released by the M.O.R.E. project in conjunction with Columbia University provides evidence that a small uptick in the number of poor and low-income voters in fifteen states could have changed the outcome of the 2016 presidential election, if just 1% more had voted in Michigan or up to 19% more in North Carolina. (See "Unleashing the Power of Poor and Low-Income Americans".) 

The M.O.R.E. project is pushing on several fronts: Challenging voter suppression nationwide. Increasing voter participation, particularly in strategically important communities. Conducting trainings of M.O.R.E. organizers. Recruiting poll watchers. Recruiting 1,000 organizations to get 1,000 people to vote. Holding online Senate Town Halls and Moral Monday events. Over one million people participated in the “Voting is Power Unleashed” special mass assembly on September 14. More than 150,000 people participated in a recent Moral Monday March on all six offices and the D.C. residence of Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell in circling caravans, flooding his phone lines to fill up his voicemail, and tuning in online for live reports. 

“This is how we must cry power, this is how we unleash our power,” says Rev. Liz Theoharis, co-chair of the Poor People’s Campaign. 

M.O.R.E work is not just about getting out the vote in November. It’s about building power for the long haul among all of us who see the urgent need for health and economic well-being, the protection of participatory democracy, and an informed electorate. A perfect fit for WILPFers!

WILPF, an organizing partner of the Poor People’s Campaign, enthusiastically endorses and encourages participation in the M.O.R.E. initiative. For information and to sign up, go to www.poorpeoplescampaign.org/ then click on M.O.R.E. at the top. On the M.O.R.E. page you can choose among various options:

1. Become a Poll Monitor
2. Take the M.O.R.E. Prophetic Pledge
3. Sign Up for Election Reminders & Register to Vote
4. Fill Out the 2020 Census

If you belong to a WILPF Branch or other community organization, encourage your group to “Take the M.O.R.E. Prophetic Pledge.” By doing so, your group is “signing on to help build a movement that votes with the power we need to hold our elected officials accountable to the policy agenda that we are demanding.”

Post date: Fri, 10/02/2020 - 10:33

Stages of Detention Poster from the No Way to Treat a Child Campaign of Defense for Children International - Palestine.

By Odile Hugonot Haber and Jan Corderman
For the Middle East Peace and Justice Action Committee 

October 2020

Over the years we’ve kept WILPFers informed about the #nowaytotreatachild campaign.  Israel is the only country in the world to automatically prosecute children in military courts that lack basic safeguards for a fair trial. In addition to e-News articles, we’ve sent you postcards to sign and send to your member of the US House of Representatives asking them to support bills introduced by US Representative Betty McCollum (D-MN).  

Representatives of the American Friends Service CommitteeArab American Institute, Center for Constitutional Rights, Defense of Children International-Palestine, Human Rights Watch, and other organizations have documented how persistent grave human rights violations, systemic impunity, discrimination, and recent U.S. policy decisions—like relocating the US embassy to Jerusalem—impact the lives of Palestinian children growing up under military occupation.

The #nowaytotreatachild Campaign believes the U.S. government must take concrete steps towards a safe and just future for Palestinian children by holding Israeli authorities accountable for state violations of their rights.


Des Moines Branch shows support for Palestinians after a meeting with members of Iowa’s Congressional Delegation. From left: WILPFers Patti McKee, Kathleen McQuillan, and Mary Ann Koch. Friends Elizabeth Leas & Rhonda Phelps. Photo by Jan Corderman.

Representative McCollum’s bill this session is HR 2407, “Promoting Human Rights for Palestinian Children Living Under Military Occupation Act”.  HR 2407 prohibits using our tax dollars to fund the military detention of children by any country, including Israel. Check it out here:  https://www.congress.gov/bill/116th-congress/house-bill/2407.

Thank you for your work so far. To date, 24 Members of Congress have co-signed this important bill. Join with us to continue our push to make this bill law.  

Use this link to find out who has signed HR 2407.  If your representative has not yet signed on, please call them and ask them to become a cosponsor.  If your rep is a cosigner, call and thank them for their support.

Helping to find cosponsors for HR 2407 is not the only way we can help:    

1) Jewish Voices for Peace has a campaign that includes a letter signed by 1,600 Jewish activists, artists, Rabbis, writers, and others stating that children should never experience military detention and torture. Ask your friends who are part of JVP to join Jewish leaders to say: “NO KIDS IN CAGES”. As a partner of the No Way to Treat a Child Campaign led by Defense of Children International-Palestine (DCIP) and the American Friends Service Committee (AFSC), Jewish Voices for Peace (JVP) is also organizing a letter from Jewish leaders in support of HR 2407. Here’s a link for more info: https://jewishvoiceforpeace.org/no-way-to-treat-a-child/

2) A second bill in the House also has support of the #nowaytotreatachild Coalition, and working to support it will help with the passage of HR 2407. This bill is H.R. 8050: The Israeli Annexation Non-Recognition Act

3) Watch a BBC report where you can hear directly from three of the children who have been detained: "Diaries of Childhood in Israeli Military Detention". Share this video with your local and national representatives, with your branches, and with your social networks.

Palestinian children have the right to a safe and just future. 

In Solidarity,
Odile & Jan

Other helpful links:
https://www.facebook.com/nowaytotreatachild
New Bill Prohibits Israel from Using US Funds to Detain Palestinian Children
Support-H.R.-8050-The-Israeli-Annexation-Non-Recognition-Act-USCPR.pdf

 

 

Post date: Fri, 10/02/2020 - 09:23

WILPF Fresno Branch members celebrating Women’s Equality Day on August 26, 2020. Back row, from left: Nancy Hatcher, Joan Poss, Bev Fitzpatrick, Teresa Castillo. Front row, from left: Ann Carruthers, Evonne Waldo, Jacinda Potikian, Jean Hays. Photo by Bev Greene.

By Nancy Hatcher
Member, Fresno Branch 

October 2020

Neither the extreme heat of the San Joaquin Valley, the air thick with smoke from California’s tragic wildfires, nor the COVID-19 pandemic could keep Fresno WILPF members from celebrating National Women’s Equality Day, and urging the community as a whole to VOTE. With several months of detailed planning and preparation, under the leadership of our Fresno Branch Membership Chair, Evonne Waldo, we celebrated Women’s Equality Day 2020 in a very special way. 

On August 26, we gathered in the parking lot of the Fresno Center for Nonviolence, to put the finishing touches on our decorated cars before enthusiastically embarking on a car caravan. Traveling on Fresno’s main thoroughfares, passing through a popular shopping center, and crossing major intersections, we rallied The Vote. Our cars decorated with banners, buntings, printed posters, streamers, and handmade signs promoting The Vote and Equality Day, we passed other drivers, pedestrians, shoppers, and those out for a morning walk who waved and cheered us on.

View a slideshow of photos from the day here ».

As our caravan completed its well-planned 45-minute route, we lined our cars up and gathered for group photos. In addition to our cars being decorated, Evonne and I dressed as suffragettes, while others wore their Jane Addams “dangerous women” T-shirts, and Evonne made us all custom-made WILPF Fresno face masks. I also wore a 100+ year old hat my grandmother wore when the Connecticut Women’s Suffragette Association came together to urge the ratification of the 19th Amendment.  

After pictures, our day continued as we split up to go on individual assignments. Wanting to honor our longest and strongest members as well as inspire new Fresno WILPF members, and urging all of our members to VOTE, we departed with handmade totes off to the homes of 40 members who were ‘sheltering in place.’ Evonne and her team filled the totes with Women’s Equality Day, suffragette, and 19th Amendment memorabilia recognizing WILPF’s long-standing commitment to speaking up for peace and social justice, following the trailblazing work of WILPF founder Jane Addams.

With this caravan, Fresno WILPF honored and paid tribute to those brave and tireless suffragettes who fought so long and so hard to assure women had the right to vote, and we also recognized the continued struggle women of color faced in gaining the right to vote. As the posters and banners proclaimed, “Suffragists were protesters too, they won the vote for me and you!” The caravaners and members of Fresno WILPF stand strong together in recognizing that suffrage is yet unfinished business, until true equality exists for all people! We will continue the fight for justice.

 

Post date: Fri, 10/02/2020 - 09:16

Washington, D.C., September 19, 2020: Wreaths outside the Supreme Court after the death of Ruth Bader Ginsburg. Photo credit: Eli Wilson / Shutterstock.com.

By Jane “Cricket” Doyle
US Liaison to the WILPF International Board Americas Representative

October 2020

On behalf of everyone in WILPF US, I write to honor Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg and to express our feelings of grief and loss at her death. In her fearless and inspiring efforts on behalf of equity, equality, and the rights of women she epitomized the values and aspirations common to many of us in WILPF. We thank her for her courage and her leadership. 

For me, Justice Bader Ginsburg is a lodestar. Hearing and reading of all she accomplished sometimes intimidates me. Perhaps, as individuals, none of us believes we can ever rise to her heights. Yet as an organization, as a group of strong, committed WILPF women, we have supported goals like hers. 

We’ll continue to carry on and expand what she strived for. We honor her memory as work in our programs for the rights of women internationally, for peace, for economic and social justice, for protection of the Earth, and for a better future for all. 

The current US chief executive shows a profound lack of respect by nominating a new Supreme Court justice only hours after the funeral of Justice Bader Ginsburg. His stance, and for so many Senators to support his position, only reminds us how rare it is that persons in positions of national leadership maintain the human and ethical values she so clearly demonstrated.
 

Post date: Fri, 10/02/2020 - 09:02

By Alycia (Longriver) Davis
Cape Cod WILPF Branch

Cape Cod Branch member Alycia Longriver Davis, 71, has written a thank you letter to all WILPF members and has also shared two books she has created about peaceful living and respecting the earth. Her letter begins:

“I’m Stage 4 cancer, hospice, spiritually at peace 
with last months upon Mother Earth, but certainly 
not with political and judicial events unsettled. 
During 71 years here I’ve been active, as a 
voice for earth and the family of people.”

You can read her letter in its entirety here.

Alycia DavisAlycia Davis created this painting for the back cover of a 2017 International Women’s Day program, and donated it as a raffle prize for the event.

Alycia has also created two books that she would like to share for anyone who is interested:

1. A story and activity book, Open Our Hearts: Stories of People Respect, Earth Respect.

2. Seeds of Peace: Writings of peaceful living for sharing with all.
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Post date: Fri, 10/02/2020 - 08:00

In this time of crisis, heroism, and despair, I write about an ideal. Around us, the pandemic's constraints bring the pressures from multiple crises — political, economic, climate, and health — to a climax. Structures, systems, and even governments are tottering, threatening to collapse. Yet in response to these situations, most governments, rather than seek an alternative to the military model, rely on investing massive resources in armies and weapons.  

As we have for over a century, WILPF seeks an end to wars. Now that multiple situations and events bring us to confrontations with mortality — in our own lives, in our disaster-wracked towns, and in our entire society — WILPF proclaims that we must act to return meaning to life. We issue a Call for Peace.  

The context and shape of events is dramatic. The world we've come to expect is rocked by global quakes. Even the countries of the "Western World", once viewed by many as the bastions of civil liberties and stability, are affected. How can we not feel shaken in these times?   

But there is good news: In the US, more and more people of privilege are dropping their blinders. No longer obscured is the racist violence that has haunted this country since its origins — starting with the genocide against the original inhabitants and the enslavement of many imported inhabitants.

The bad news is that we see little institutional change in the racist practices in many areas: The police, the courts the prisons; the census and apportionment, voter registration, voting rules; working conditions, under-employment, job opportunities; local schools' funding, educational options, college costs; pay differentials, indebtedness, "pay day loans" vs. easy money from the Federal Reserve for corporations. Far too many racist and classist practices and conditions continue.

Here in the US, societal decay is accelerating. But, especially for white, middle-class people, the knowledge of others' circumstances is often restricted. Lives are segregated one from the other, particularly in these times of isolation. Though the corporate news may carry some reports, those are often presented as data points in a vacuum. In WILPF, we seek out the connections and look at the wider context.

Already, WILPF is responding. We're protecting the vote and preparing — see the October eNews article about organizing to prevent an election-time takeover. And WILPF does more than just react to threats.

With the Call for Peace, we offer a positive choice, for aspiration and uplift - an ideal.  We call for the extension of the UN's Global Ceasefire and a 50% cut to all US military spending. Along with others, we call for those saved funds to be moved to programs — new and existing — to meet human needs, including the need for a healthy planet.

In the months ahead, through the efforts of issue committees, branches, and at-large members — through your chosen focus — WILPF will develop and refine strategies and actions to advance and extend this Call. I invite you to make the Call yours by claiming a part of it to pursue: 

  • Will you contact government leaders, to call on them to speak at the October 2 UN High Level Meeting for the Elimination of Nuclear Weapons?
  • Can you review the Poor People's Moral Budget, that calls for cuts and redirects Department of Defense (DoD) budget funds? The Poor People's Campaign Moral Budget specifies many new constructive investments for the destructive DoD money.  Share the Moral Budget's facts and figures with WILPFers and others.
  • Will you select and, then, help track down some specifics of unneeded US military expenditures, further researching such areas for US military spending cuts?
  • Perhaps you'll specialize, looking for cuts in nuclear weapons budgets, ending investments in the nuclear weapons industry and to testing?
  • How will you increase public awareness of the UN Global Ceasefire -- letters to the editor? vigils? social media? an op. ed.?
  • You can start now, considering how, after the elections, you will organize to reach out within your local government. Nationwide, activist will be to lobbying for representatives to sign on to support moving military money to human needs programs. (More information to come.)
  • The DoD budget hearings come up in January and February. Can you mobilize pressure in your community to cut military spending at least 50%, in ways that "increase our diplomatic capacity" with reinvestments of the money saved to benefit the domestic economy and the global future?

With the Call for Peace, WILPF declares to the people of the US that we have an alternative! Let us unite our efforts, committing to creating the conditions that support a peaceful world. We know it is past time to invest our nation's energies and resources in building a new model.

I encourage you to learn about this initiative, which builds on and with the work of our allies. Read the Call for Peace

Yours for the vision of a brighter future.

Darien Elyse De Lu 


WILPF US President
President@wilpfus.org

Post date: Wed, 09/09/2020 - 06:12

Women on the Frontlines

By Cindy Domingo
Co-chair, Cuba and the Bolivarian Alliance Issues Committee

September 2020

We hope you will join WILPF’s Cuba and the Bolivarian Issues Committee and US Women and Cuba Collaboration in celebrating the 60th anniversary of the Federation of Cuban Women (FMC), and our work in solidarity with their organization. The Zoom webinar will be held on Sunday, September 20, 2020 at 2:30 – 4:00 pm (PT); 5:30 – 7:00 pm (ET). View the full event flyer here.

The FMC’s members are composed of 4 million women and girls over the age of 14 years. Under this organization’s guidance, women and girls have made remarkable achievements towards equality in Cuban society. Guest speakers include Ambassador Ana Silvia Rodriguez, Cuban Ambassador to the United Nations, and Gretel Marante Rossett from the FMC. Please register at this Zoom link.

The FMC was established in 1960 under the new revolutionary government with Vilma Espin as its president. It is her face that is embodied in the FMC logo and, though she passed in 2007, she remains the “forever” president of the FMC. Espin served in the mountains as part of the July 26th movement prior to 1960 and eventually married former Cuban President Raul Castro, the brother of Fidel Castro. As a result of Espin and the FMC’s role, in 2017 Cuba ranked third in the world for having the highest percentage of women members of parliament while the US ranked 80th. Women have free healthcare, including reproductive healthcare, and they account for nearly 60% of the country’s students. Over 65% of Cuban women have graduated from institutions of higher education.  

The webinar speakers will talk about the leading role Cuban women are playing in the fight against COVID-19, including doing research to finding a vaccine, treating patients at the Cuban clinics and hospitals, and serving on the medical brigades dispatched to over 35 countries to battle the pandemic. WILPF has been sending delegations to Cuba for almost three decades and continues to work to lift the 60-year-old US blockade against Cuba. Visit our webpage to see what you can do to lift the blockade and participate in the Saving Lives Campaign that is calling for US-Cuba-Canada cooperation to fight COVID-19.

 

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