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Argentina scarf

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My kids’ dad,” Gleeson says, “his grandfather moved here from Poland and brought huge textile machines over on a ship and installed a textile factory in San Martin, an industrial suburb northwest of Buenos Aires. Making natural wool textiles—it was everything here.” The original founders of the group were Azucena Villaflor de De Vincenti, Berta Braverman, Haydée García Buelas; María Adela Gard de Antokoletz, Julia, María Mercedes and Cándida Gard (four sisters); Delicia González, Pepa Noia, Mirta Acuña de Baravalle, [6] Kety Neuhaus, Raquel Arcushin, and Senora De Caimi. Aldo Marchesi: Old Ideas in New Discourses". Ssrc.org. 26 November 2001. Archived from the original on 2 March 2009 . Retrieved 1 March 2012.

Argentina’s vice-president Cristina Fernández de Kirchner speaks during the debate on the abortion bill. Photograph: Matias Baglietto/Reuters They have received widespread support and recognition from many international organizations, including being the first organization laureated by the Sakharov Prize for Freedom of Thought, and helping several human rights groups throughout their history. The 1980 Nobel Peace Prize recipient Adolfo Pérez Esquivel was an active supporter of the association, for which he was the subject of harassment by the dictatorship. In reaction, the Argentine anti-abortion movement created a light blue scarf, "in favor of the two lives". [9] Internationalization [ edit ] Rise Up 4 Abortion Rights distributing the green scarf outside Sproul Plaza in Berkeley, California Issues of gender and motherhood were embedded in this movement. [32] From its inception, the Mothers has been a strictly women-only organization, [33] as the mothers who lost their children were asserting their existence in the embroidery scarves, posters and demands for restoration. [1] In the later political movement, the women felt it had to be women-only partly to ensure their voices and actions would not be lost in a male-dominated movement, and partly out of a belief that men would insist on a lengthy bureaucratic process rather than immediate action. [34] They also believed that women were more tireless and had more emotional strength than men. [35] Krause, Wanda C. (2004). "The Role and Example of Chilean and Argentinian Mothers in Democratisation". Development in Practice. 14 (3): 366–380. doi: 10.1080/0961452042000191204. S2CID 144459929.It was after the 2015 #NiUnaMenos march that pro-choice campaigners realised the fight against “femicide” could also encompass demands for access to legal abortion. Some of the movement's most prominent supporters' bodies were never found, such as French national Léonie Duquet. Duquet and her sister Alice Domon, both French nuns, were taken during the Dirty War. Their disappearance attracted international attention and outrage, with demands for a United Nations investigation of human rights abuses in the country. France demanded information on the sisters, but the Argentine government denied all responsibility for them. [14] a b c d e f g h i j k "Why is green the color of the fight for abortion rights?". Le Monde.fr. 14 May 2022 . Retrieved 23 May 2022. Hebe de Bonafini S.A.: Cuando el dolor sirve para ganar dinero y poder". Patagones Noticias. [ permanent dead link] Many of the students from Bolivia and Peru were the children of artisan and natural fiber producers,” Marina recalls. “I felt angry that all the richness was there in Patagonia, and it could not find a market. That the people lived so, so poorly, with all these treasures.”

Esther Ballestrino and María Ponce de Bianco, two other founders of the Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo, also "disappeared".

Her boyfriend was pressuring her to get married, but she wasn’t enthusiastic about the idea. So, like any good Patagonian princess, she gave him a challenge. There was a baby guanaco whose mother had died trying to jump a razor wire fence. If he could catch it and bring it to her, she would marry him. DyN, EFE (news agencies) (26 January 2006). "Las Madres de Plaza de Mayo realizaron la última Marcha de la Resistencia". Clarin . Retrieved 28 March 2011. The bill, which legalises terminations in the first 14 weeks of pregnancy, was approved by Argentina’s lower house earlier this month after being put to congress by the country’s leftwing president, Alberto Fernández.

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