WAND,
others recommended for Nobel Peace Prize
In
the Pursuit of Peace, Acknowledge, Listen to Women
Published Thursday, December 20, 2001 in the Miami
Herald
by Carolyn L. Bennett
I know that life isn't fair. But the peace of the
world depends on a whole lot more fairness than we're
getting.
I believe the world is in the state it's in because
women's power and perspective are underused and underappreciated.
Nations most often still cannot find means other than
war to resolve conflict and curb violence in large
part because men, almost exclusively, have held the
reins of power. And they have taken the prizes for
their brand of peace. Women's numbers and achievements
say that they should share more in this. They should
be far more represented in leadership and at tables
of peace than is the case now.
This year marks the 100th year of the Nobel Peace
Prize, and at least one war and many regional conflicts
are raging around the world. Since the start of the
Nobel Peace Prize in 1901, women have received solo
prizes only four times: in 1905 (Baroness Bertha Sophie
Felicita Von Suttner of Prague), 1979 (Mother Teresa
of India), 1991 (Aung San Suu Kyi of Burma) and 1992
(Rigoberta Menchu of Guatemala). The other six times
that women have won the prize, they shared it with
men, with an organization or with another woman --
Betty Williams and Mairead Corrigan of Northern Ireland.
This means women have won less than a tenth of the
peace prizes awarded in Nobel's 100 years.
The numbers alone beg a change. The world population
now is just over 6 billion people. Women 65 and older,
often the age when male leadership and achievement
are rewarded, make up 235 million of the 6 billion,
close to 52 million more than men 65 and older. These
numbers suggest that women and organizations with
their spirit, activism and leadership should be winning
the peace prizes -- and taking the lead in the world.
These are some of my picks for leadership and Nobel
Peace Prizes:
-
The Women's International League for Peace and Freedom
goes back almost to the start of Nobel. Its goals
include truth and reconciliation, political solutions
to international conflict, economic and social justice
within and among nations, elimination of all forms
of discrimination and exploitation, respect for
basic human rights and promotion of women to full
and equal participation in all aspects of society.
- Women's
Action for New Directions. It's a 1980s invention
with missions that include empowering women to act
politically to reduce violence and militarism and
to redirect excessive military resources toward
unmet human needs.
-
Though the United Nations and its Secretary-General
Kofi Annan won this year's prize, there is another
program of the U.N. worth note -- UNIFEM. It works
for women's empowerment and gender equity generally,
but specifically within the U.N. system to ensure
participation of women in all levels of development
planning and practice. When the peace party went
to Germany on behalf of Afghanistan, there were
no women in leadership positions, for example.
Such organizations should ensure that women get the
peace prize, run and get elected the leaders of nations
and, beginning now, that they take substantive and
permanent places at tables for peace in the Middle
East, Afghanistan, Bosnia, East Timor and elsewhere
where conflicts rage. Women also should have a larger
role in U.S. battles between the haves and the have
nots -- women being the majority in the latter category.
Women waiting to assume world peace and leadership
jobs are:
-
Hanan Ashrawi, who directs the Palestinian Initiative
for the Promotion of Global Dialogue and Democracy;
-
Mary Robinson, the U.N. High Commissioner for Human
Rights since 1997 and before that the seventh president
of Ireland and the first head of state to visit
Somalia in its famine in 1992 and Rwanda after the
genocide there;
-
Mary Brownell, president of the Liberian Women's
Initiative who helped bring about Liberia's disarmament
and its first lasting cease fire;
-
Rosa Parks, who prepared herself and then carried
out peaceful resistance against a racist regime
in the U.S. South, paving the way for Nobel Laureate
Martin Luther King, Jr.;
-
U.S. Rep. Elizabeth Furse, who founded the Black
Sash, a women's anti-apartheid group, and the Oregon
Peace Institute and who has worked tirelessly for
human rights, peace, environmental responsibility,
American Indian treaty rights and for changing U.S.
spending priorities;
-
Lani Guinier and Angela Davis for deep thinking
and distinguished teaching and for tirelessly speaking
truth to power.
Americans must stop celebrating dead people and worshiping
self-created, silly heroes and celebrities when peace
and moral and humanistic leadership are so sorely
needed. On this 100th anniversary of the Nobel Peace
Prize, in this season of lights lighting up the winter
darkness, we must think seriously about the value
of women's spirit in bringing peace to a troubled
world.
Dr.
Carolyn L. Bennett is a public affairs columnist and
professor of journalism at Rowan University based
in Pitman, N.J. bennettc@rowan.edu
Copyright 2001 Miami Herald