I forgot that yesterday was International Women’s Day and hence neglected to commemorate it properly. Since I’m busy today, I’m going to re-run last year’s piece, to which I really have nothing to add.
First we had Mothering Sunday, a religious holiday Western Christians celebrate on the fourth Sunday of Lent.
Then, under the influence of the US, Mothering Sunday was largely replaced by Mother’s Day, a secular holiday without any religious overtones whatsoever. That’s understandable: our delicate sensibilities can no longer accommodate any Christian festivals other than Christmas Shopping.
Now that secular but basically unobjectionable holiday has been supplemented by International Women’s Day (IWD), celebrated by all progressive mankind on 8 March. Our delicate sensibilities aren’t offended at all.
Actually, though the portion of mankind that celebrates 8 March calls itself progressive, it isn’t really entitled to this modifier – unless one accepts the propensity for murdering millions just for the hell of it as an essential aspect of progress.
For, not to cut too fine a point, 8 March is a communist event, declared a national holiday by the Bolsheviks in 1917, immediately after they seized power and started killing people with the gusto and on a scale never before seen in history. A few wires were expertly pulled after the war, and IWD also got enshrined in Soviet satellites.
The event actually originated in America, where the Socialist Party arbitrarily chose that date to express solidarity with the 1909 strike of female textile workers. Yet the holiday didn’t catch on in the States, doubtless because the Socialist Party never did.
Outside the Soviet bloc, 8 March went uncelebrated, unrecognised and, until recently, unknown. I remember back in 1974, when I worked at NASA, visiting Soviet astronauts made a big show of wishing female American employees a happy 8 March, eliciting only consternation and the stock Texan response of “Say what?”
The event was big in the Soviet Union, with millions of men giving millions of women bunches of mimosa, boxes of chocolates – and, more important, refraining from giving them a black eye, a practice rather more widespread in Russia than in the West.
But not on 8 March. That was the day when men scoured their conscience clean by being effusively lovey-dovey – so that they could resume abusing women the very next day, on 9 March. For Russia was then, and still remains, out of reach for the fashionable ideas about women’s equality or indeed humanity. As the Russian proverb goes, “A chicken is no bird, a wench is no person.”
Much as one may be derisory about feminism, it’s hard to justify the antediluvian abuse, often physical, that’s par for the course in Russia, especially outside central Moscow or Petersburg. Proponents of the plus ça change philosophy of history would be well-advised to read Dostoyevsky on this subject.
In A Writer’s Diary Dostoyevsky describes in terrifying detail the characteristic savagery of a peasant taking a belt or a stick to his trussed-up wife, lashing at her, ignoring her pleas for mercy until, pounded into a bloody pulp, she stops pleading or moving. However, according to the writer, this in no way contradicted the brute’s inner spirituality, so superior to Western materialistic legalism. Ideology does work in mysterious ways.
The Russian village still has the same roads (typically none) as at the time this was written, and it still has the same way of treating womenfolk – but not on 8 March. On that day the Soviets were housetrained to express their solidarity with the oppressed women of the world, or rather specifically of the capitalist world.
As a conservative, I have my cockles warmed by the traditionalist way in which the Russians lovingly maintain Soviet traditions, including the odd bit of murder by the state, albeit so far on a smaller scale. Why we have adopted them, at a time when communism has supposedly collapsed, is rather harder to explain.
But why stop here? Many Brits, especially those of the Labour persuasion, already celebrate May Day, with red flags flying to symbolise the workers’ blood spilled by the ghastly capitalists. Why not spread the festivities more widely? I mean, May Day is celebrated in Russia, so what better reason do we need?
The Russians also celebrate 7 November, on which day in 1917 the Bolsheviks introduced social justice expressed in mass murder and universal slavery. I say we’ve been ignoring this glorious event far too long. And neither do we celebrate Red Army Day on 23 February – another shameful omission.
But at least we seem to be warming up to 8 March, an important communist event. At least we’re moving in the right direction.
A reader of mine suggested that those who celebrate IWD should perform the ballistically and metaphysically improbable act of inserting the holiday into a certain receptacle originally designed for exit only. While I don’t express myself quite so robustly in this space, I second the motion.
Cherie (Mrs Tony) Blair predictably expressed her support for IWD, ending her letter to The Times with “Count me in”. Well, count me out.
I was born and raised in a communist Soviet Union and it scares me to see how deep asleep are Americans today. They accept things that are offered to them without questioning of its roots…..
The hearts of all American Cubans, American Chinese, American Russians / ex-Soviets, Polish and Czechs are bleeding a the sight of such horror. The beast of communist is coming alive in the USA, the former refuge place of the victims of communist regime.
Lord, Jesus Christ, have mercy! How many times am I to witness horrors of communist regime and communal dictatorship?! Please Lord save us from this beast in the name of Jesus Christ.
Thank you for the article. At least now I know that I’m not the only one who is still awake.
God Bless.
“For, not to cut too fine a point, 8 March is a communist event, declared a national holiday by the Bolsheviks in 1917, immediately after they seized power and started killing people with the gusto and on a scale never before seen in history. A few wires were expertly pulled after the war, and IWD also got enshrined in Soviet satellites.”
Perhaps only such a person as Alexander would be aware of the significance of the “holiday” and the modern context. And we all thank him for doing so.
‘Mothering Sunday’ was the day on which girls ‘in service’ were allowed to see their mothers. On the other hand, ‘Mother’s Day’ and ‘Father’s Day’ are simply blatant opportunities to sell overpriced goods. But in that regard, nothing beats the annual festival of St Salesman on December 25. Interestingly, unsold overpriced goods are drastically marked down in the ‘January’ sales (now starting on December 26) and also on ‘Black Friday’ following ‘Thanks giving’ or ‘thank you for buying’. Its all harmless fun folks regardless of the cynical intentions. And so is IWD regardless of its cynical origins.
If we want to take something down, why not start with Mr ‘Nasty, Brutish and Short ‘ Putin.