In 1991, I was among 75 women who met in Dubrovnik, Yugoslavia (which at that moment still existed), and founded the Network of East-West Women<https://neww.org.pl/opening-the-electronic-curtain-by-sonia-jaffe-robbins/>. NEWW was created to support women activists, writers and artists, and academics in the newly noncommunist countries of Eastern Europe, and over the years, NEWW connected women’s centers to the then new mass medium called the internet.
I worked for NEWW for its first few years and got to know some amazing activist women in such countries as Poland, the Czech Republic, Bulgaria, and Croatia. Today I met with one of them, who I hadn’t seen or spoken with for years. Lenka Simerska, from Prague, was NEWW’s first social/economic Fellow in the early 2000s, interning at WEDO, the Women’s Environment and Development Organization, and taking a course in labor studies at Rutgers. Currently, she works in the Czech Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs, presently heading the program to reduce the gender pay gap in her country. And this week she was in New York at the United Nations for meetings of the Commission on the Status of Women.
It was really great to see Lenka and catch up with her work, her family, and life in the Czech Republic, sometimes now called Czechia, though she said that is not official. There’s been some talk about changing the name to Bohemia — a one-word name for a country is supposed to be preferable? — which refers to the largest historical region of the Czech Republic. But that ignores other regions, like Moravia and parts of Silesia. Czechia is also now host to many Ukrainian refugees, and cutbacks in energy that comes from Russia is causing many Czechs to be softening their support for Ukraine.
I wanted to add a photo here of the two of us, but for some reason the internet hasn't yet passed it from my phone to my laptop. Maybe someone knows whether it might be in my iCloud account and how I might find it?
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In 1991 you were part of something that has endured. It is illuminating to read about these international issues through the lens of this renewed relationship with your friend.
ReplyDeleteI have such a hard time with some kinds of change. I still want to say "Czechoslovakia" and "Yugoslavia" ... surely because that's what they were when my memories of those places were created. I love that you got to see Lenka. You haven't talked about NEWW in a long time!
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