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AUGUST 2005
Bella Abzug
("Activist and Stateswoman")
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Bella Abzug is quite possibly a name
that may not be familiar to you, this
is one of the reasons we have chosen to
highlight this amazing woman in the archives
of the Honorary Oakley. Bella Abzug was
an amazing woman who fought her entire
life for civil rights, social justice,
womens rights and peace (amongst other
things). It is these qualities of goodness
and unshakable courage that have landed
her square in the archives of the Honorary
Oakley.
Now let's take a closer look at the
lady herself.....
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Bella Abzug
- A quick bio:
Full Name: Bella Savitsky
(Married - Abzug)
Born: Bronx,
USA
Parents: Esther
Tanklefsky & Emanuel Savitzky
(Russian Immigrants)
Birthdate: July
24th 1920 - 1998
Best Known as:
Activist and Stateswoman - Big
Heart Big Hat!
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Background Information:
Bella Abzug was an amazing
woman and one little known outside the
United States. An attorney, author,
lecturer, news commentator, and former
U.S. Representative from New York she
fought her entire life for the things
humanity should hold dear: civil rights,
equal rights for women, and peace. In
the 60's Bella helped start the nationwide
'Women Strike for Peace' which spoke
out against U.S. and Soviet nuclear
testing, she also became a strong voice
against the War in Vietnam. By the 1970's
Bella had become the first woman elected
to Congress on a women's rights and
peace platform. By 1990, she had co-founded
an international advocacy network called
the 'Women's Environment and Development
Organization' which represented the
culmination of her lifelong career as
public activist and stateswoman. Bella
was never shaken from her beliefs for
not only women's rights but also social
and economic justice for all.
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Land of the Free:
When Bella was questioned about what
America meant to her she replied that
America "was a place of opportunity
and a place to be able to be free".
This appears to have been something
that this amazing woman truly believed
in, anti-Semitism was fairly rife in
Russia and America offered a new sense
of freedom. Bella suggested that New
York is considered to be a more forward-thinking
city than other cities in the country,
as many since would attest to. The strength
of character of the city itself appears
to have played a large role in Bella's
free thinking and greater sense of social
justice and freedom, but even amidst
this great country there was injustice
and it was this that Bella worked hard
to iron out.
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The Early Signs
of a Feminist Rebel:
According to the [Jewish Womens Archive]
even as a little girl, Bella was attuned
to inequality in her religious heritage.
"We were a religious family. My
grandfather went to the synagogue twice
a day, and whenever I wasn't in school,
he took me along. I learned to recite
the solemn Hebrew prayers like such
a wizard that he always made it a point
to show me off to his friends.... It
was during these visits to the synagogue
that I think I had my first thoughts
as a feminist rebel. I didn't like the
fact that women were consigned to the
back rows of the balcony."
When her father died Bella was only
12. Although the custom of saying Kaddish
is traditionally reserved for sons,
she stood by herself in synagogue each
day for a year to say the mourning prayer.
"In retrospect, I describe that
as one of the early blows for the liberation
of Jewish women. But in fact, no one
could have stopped me from performing
the duty traditionally reserved for
a son, from honoring the man who had
taught me to love peace, who had educated
me in Jewish values. So it was lucky
that no one ever tried."
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Harvard - Men
Only Please:
According to the Jewish Womens Archive
at the age of ten Bella had decided
she wanted to become a lawyer, she had
also decided to go to Harvard.. the
best Law School in the land. Bella later
applied to Harvard and received a letter
stating it did not accept women. "In
1942 only 3 percent of the nation's
lawyers were women. I was outraged (I've
always had a decent sense of outrage),
so I turned to my mother. In those days
there was no women's movement, so you
turned to your mother for help. 'Why
do you want to go to Harvard, anyway?'
she asked. 'It's far away and you can't
afford the carfare. Go to Columbia University.
They'll probably give you a scholarship,
and it's only five cents to get there
on the subway.'
Columbia gave Bella a scholarship, the
subway did indeed only cost only five
cents and that, according to the lady
herself is how she became an advocate
of low-cost public transportation.
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Equality
for ALL:
As previously mentioned Bella helped
to set up WEDO, the Women’s Environment
& Development Organization. WEDO
set out to increase the power of women
worldwide in policy making institutions,
such as the United Nations. The overall
hope was to achieve worldwide economic
and social justice, and a more peaceful
and healthy planet. Bella championed
women's rights, human rights, gay and
lesbian rights, equality, peace and
social justice, she worked as an attorney
in civil rights and labor law, working
often without pay to represent the poor.
Despite suffering from both breast
cancer and heart disease, Bella was
an inspiration to women leaders from
all over the world at the UN conference
on women in Beijing in 1995. In 1998
just prior to her death Bella predicted
that in the twenty-first century “women
will change the nature of power, rather
than power changing the nature of
women.”
Well we can but hope Bella. |

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The more you read about Bella Azbug
the more you become a devotee to her
way of thinking, she was an amazing
woman with foresight into what the human
spirit should be, she wanted what is
best for humanity and was willing to
fight for this. There appear to be no
double edged beliefs with Bella, she
wanted equality and fairness for everyone
regardless of gender, economic status,
sexuality etc. Her undying belief and
inner goodness are why we at Thumb Bandits
Salute her! She is everything the Honorary
Oakley stands for and more. She was
a strong woman who has made fantastic
achievements to help those with less
freedoms and rights than others.
And that is why Bella Azbug is Thumb
Bandits Honorary
Oakley for the Month of August
2005!
All pictures copyright
their respective owners. Any pictures
appearing here you feel should not
be will be removed immediately
Thanks to Artist
Richard Gelernter and Sandy Rapp
of the LGCMA for permissions to use
their pictures herein.
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