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all recognition. Those who walk the streets will walk them in

darkness. Those who are in prisons and mental institutions

will not see the sky at all, only the dark out of barred windows. Those who are hungry and in despair may not look up at all. They will see the darkness as it lies on the ground in

front of their feet. Those who are raped will see the darkness

as they look up into the face of the rapist. Those who are

assaulted and brutalized by madmen will stare intently into

the darkness to discern who is moving toward them at every

moment. It will be hard to remember, as the storm is raging,

that still, even though we cannot see it, the sun shines. It will

be hard to remember that still, even though we cannot see it,

the sun burns. We will try to see it and we will try to feel it,

and we will forget that it warms us still, that if it were not

there, burning, shining, this earth would be a cold and desolate and barren place.

As long as we have life and breath, no matter how dark the

earth around us, that sun still bums, still shines. There is no

today without it. There is no tomorrow without it. There was

no yesterday without it. That light is within us— constant,

warm, and healing. Remember it, sisters, in the dark times to

come.

8

Our Blood:

The Slavery of Women ia A m erika

(In memory of Sarah Grimke, 1792-1873,

and Angelina Grimke, 1805-1879)

( 1 )

In her introduction to Felix Holt (1866), George Eliot wrote:

. . . there is much pain that is quite noiseless; and vibrations that

make human agonies are often a mere whisper in the roar of

hurrying existence. There are glances of hatred that stab and

raise no cry of murder; robberies that leave man or woman for

ever beggared of peace and joy, yet kept secret by the sufferer—

committed to no sound except that of low moans in the night,

seen in no writing except that made on the face by the slow

months of suppressed anguish and early morning tears. Many

an inherited sorrow that has marred a life has been breathed

into no human ear. 1

I want to speak to you tonight about the “inherited sorrows” of women on this Amerikan soil, sorrows which have Delivered for the National Organization for Women, Washington, D. C., on

August 23, 1975, to commemorate the fifty-fifth anniversary of women's

suffrage; The Community Church of Boston, November 9, 1975.

marred millions upon millions of human lives, sorrows which

have “been breathed into no human ear, ” or sorrows which

were breathed and then forgotten.

This nation’s history is one of spilled blood. Everything that

has grown here has grown in fields irrigated by the blood of

whole peoples. This is a nation built on the human carrion of

the Indian nations. This is a nation built on slave labor,

slaughter, and grief. This is a racist nation, a sexist nation, a

murderous nation. This is a nation pathologically seized by the

will to domination.

Fifty-five years ago, we women became citizens of this nation. After seventy years of fierce struggle for suffrage, our kindly lords saw fit to give us the vote. Since that time, we

have been, at least in a ceremonial way, participants in the

blood-letting of our government; we have been implicated

formally and officially in its crimes. The hope of our foremothers was this: that when women had the vote, we would use it to stop the crimes of men against men and of men

against women. Our foremothers believed that they had given

us the tool which would enable us to transform a corrupt

nation into a nation of righteousness. It is a bitter thing to say

that they were deluded. It is a bitter thing to say that the vote

became the tombstone over their obscure graves.

We women do not have many victories to celebrate. Everywhere, our people are in chains— designated as biologically inferior to men; our very bodies controlled by men and male

law; the victims of violent, savage crimes; bound by law, custom, and habit to sexual and domestic servitude; exploited mercilessly in any paid labor; robbed of identity and ambition

as a condition of birth. We want to claim the vote as a victory.

We want to celebrate. We want to rejoice. But the fact is that

the vote was only a cosmetic change in our condition. Suffrage

has been for us the illusion of participation without the reality

of self-determination. We are still a colonialized people, subject to the will of men. And, in fact, behind the vote there is the story of a movement that betrayed itself by abandoning its

own visionary insights and compromising its deepest principles. August 26, 1920, signifies, most bitterly, the death of the first feminist movement in Amerika.

How do we celebrate that death? How do we rejoice in the

demise of a movement that set out to salvage our lives from

the wreck and ruin of patriarchal domination? What victory is

there in the dead ash of a feminist movement burned out?

The meaning of the vote is this: that we had better flesh out

our invisible past, so that we can understand how and why so

much ended in so little; that we had better resurrect our dead,

to study how they lived and why they died; that we had better

find a cure for whatever disease wiped them out, so that it will

not decimate us.

Many women, I think, resist feminism because it is an

agony to be fully conscious of the brutal misogyny which

permeates culture, society, and all personal relationships. It is

as if our oppression were cast in lava eons ago and now it is

granite, and each individual woman is buried inside the stone.

Women try to survive inside the stone, buried in it. Women

say, I like this stone, its weight is not too heavy for me.

Women defend the stone by saying that it protects them from

rain and wind and fire. Women say, all I have ever known is

this stone, what is there without it?

For some women, being buried in the stone is unbearable.

They want to move freely. They exert all their strength to claw

away at the hard rock that encases them. They rip their fingernails, bruise their fists, tear the skin on their hands until it is raw and bleeding. They rip their lips open on the rock, and

break their teeth, and choke on the granite as it crumbles into

their mouths. Many women die in this desperate, solitary battle against the stone.

But what if the impulse to freedom were to be bom in all of

the women buried in the stone? What if the material of the

rock itself had become so saturated with the stinking smell of