Time_23Mar2020

(Greg DeLong) #1
Time March 16–23, 2020

1980s

1981


Nawal El Saadawi
For a more equal Egypt


For Egyptian psychiatrist, feminist and
novelist Nawal El Saadawi, prison was
a rebirth. The 1972 publication of her


fundamental work of feminist criticism,
Women and Sex, had cemented her rep-
utation as a fearless commentator on


women’s rights in Egypt. In 1981, she
was jailed for “crimes


against the state” for her
outspoken views, includ-
ing her criticism of fe-


male circumcision. For
El Saadawi, the sentence
was a clear demonstration of the link


between political power and patriarchy.
With eyebrow pencil and a roll of toi-


let paper, she wrote of her experience:
Memoirs From the Women’s Prison, pub-
lished in 1983, became the basis of a


continued body of work that has shaped
the discourse on women’s liberation in
the Arab world. —Aryn Baker


1980


Anna Walentynowicz


Mother of Polish independence


Poland’s escape from Soviet rule


began with Solidarity, a movement
for the rights of workers that Anna
Walentynowicz, a welder and crane op-


erator, helped create in 1980. In retalia-
tion for her activism, she was fired that
year from the Lenin Shipyard. Her col-


leagues went on strike to
get her job back, spark-
ing a mass resistance
that culminated in the
Gdansk Agreement,
which allowed the first
free-trade union in communist Eastern
Europe. Within a year, the Solidarity


union had nearly 10 million members,
with Walentynowicz as one of its lead-
ers. The triumph in Gdansk precipitated


the fall of communism, a decade later.
It also led generations of Poles to see


Walentynowicz as the mother of their
independence. ÑSimon Shuster


72

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