The Vietnamese Communist Party’s Policy of Mobilizing Women in the 1930-1945 Revolution for the National Liberation *
The Vietnamese Communist Party’s Policy of Mobilizing Women in the 1930-1945 Revolution for the National Liberation *
(In Vietnam Journal of Family and Gender Studies, Dec2007,
volume 2, number 2, from p 24 to p38)
Dang Thi Van Chi
In the early 20th century, as a result of two campaigns of
colony exploitation by the French colonialists, there were important economic,
social and cultural changes. These were important and necessary basics for the
reception of bourgeois democratic thoughts from outside and the establishment
of new trends in revolutionary propaganda. Along with these changes, the
increasing presence of women in factories, plantations, and mines participating
in socialized forms of labor brought about by capitalist methods of production
and the emergence of a class of women intellectuals (teachers, journalists,
writers, poets, etc.) caused women to become an important social force,
attracting the attention and efforts of all contemporary political trends.
1. Political background and viewpoint of the Vietnamese Communist Party(1) about the role of women in the national democratic people’s revolution.
After World War I, in 1918, several political trends and
parties took form in the petty capitalist and capitalist class in Vietnam.
Political organizations had different viewpoints about women’s role depending
on their political aims. For example, Pham Quynh, Minister of Education in the
Hue court, who together with King Bao Dai planned to resume the implementation
of the 1884 Treaty and called for “national sovereignty”, “constitutionalism”,
“national unification”, highly appreciated Vietnamese women in history but only
took upper-class women into account. According to him, “for women, the most
important thing is to establish a character suitable to one’s social
condition”. Under social changes and the influence of French culture, he
believed that upper-class women could take part in innovating society, in other
words Europeanization, but it should be within their own families, “making
examples of their families” by doing charity and relief work, child protection,
and setting up “salons to receive famous scholars to talk about national and
life issues, with the hope it will affect the evolution of the Vietnamese
nation” (Nam Phong Newspaper, October 1917). Bui Quang Chieu, leader of the
Constitutionalist Party and Nguyen Phan Long, both of whom represented the
middle-class national reformist trend, considered the “women’s role is in the
house” (Bui Quang Chieu, Women New Literature, 20 June 1929) or “women should
only choose to be housewives” (Nguyen Phan Long, Women New Literature, 11 July
1929), thus they did not need to take part in social work, the struggle for
equal rights, and women liberation. They believed that women were not equal to
men because of women themselves, “because of their nature, not through anyone’s
fault”. The political objectives of the capitalist class as represented by Bui
Quang Chieu were to ask the French Government to expand democratic and liberal
rights in Indochina and to allow the native capitalist class greater
participation in colonial councils. Therefore, he opposed women who asked for
equal right to men, as he was afraid that assisting women in the struggle for
equal rights would mean assisting them to become “protestors ... in the family
as well as in society (Bui Quang Chieu, Women New Literature, 20 September
1929). In general, these organizations and political trends did not mention
national liberation and thought that women should only be homemakers. Only Phan
Boi Chau surpassed his contemporaries in terms of political viewpoint, moving
gradually from monarchism to bourgeois democratic thought, and then approaching
socialist thought. His patriotism helped Phan Boi Chau accurately assess the
role of women in national liberation in the early 20th century. He also
actively mobilized our people to struggle for national liberty. However, since
his house arrest in Hue in 1925, Phan Boi Chau’s activities were restricted to
speeches, propaganda leaflets, and his ideas about organizing and uniting women
stated in the book “Women’s Issues” published 1929 were not implemented in
revolutionary reality. The Vietnamese Nationalist Party, founded in December
1927, was a revolutionary party of the petty capitalist class and patriotic
progressive intellectuals based on “Nam Dong literary society” group. The
policy of this party was to promote a national revolution, fight against the
French colonialists and the autocratic monarchy in order to establish
democratic political institutions. However, the Vietnamese Nationalist Party
did not have grassroots in the labor class. Although the initial regulations of
the Vietnamese Nationalist Party allowed women to join the Party, they had to
do their activities in a separate cell. Later, the Vietnamese Nationalist Party
for some reason no longer allowed women to join the Party, but rather gathered
them in a separate union called the Vietnamese Women’s Union (with the
exception of one party cell of women founded before the change in policy that
included the participation of Ms. Bac and Ms. Giang). According to the
Regulations of the “Vietnamese Women’s Union”, the purpose of this union was
to:
1. Cooperate with men in undertaking national revolution.
2. Establish a democratic republic group.
3. Assist and protect oppressed nations (Tran Huy Lieu,
1958: 118).
These above purposes indicate that the Vietnamese Nationalist
Party was concerned with organizing and attracting women, but did not have a
plan to mobilize women for their particular requirements. On 3 February, 1930
(according to pre-1945 revolutionary newspapers it was 6 January, 1930), the
Vietnamese Communist Party (VCP) was founded in Hong Kong by unifying three
communist organizations established in Vietnam at the end of 1929, marking an
important breakthrough in Vietnamese national history and ending a time of
crisis in the national salvation of the Vietnamese people. The summary
political program of the Party (Vietnamese Communist Party, 1998: 2) clearly
stated the objectives of the Party as doing “bourgeois revolution of civil
rights and land revolution to progress towards a communist society” and “equal
rights between men and women” - which was one of the 13 main policies of the
Party, and one of the 10 objectives mentioned in the Appeal (Vietnamese
Communist Party, 1998:14) of the leader Nguyen Ai Quoc on the foundation of the
Party. The 1930 political thesis (Vietnamese Communist Party, Volume 2, 1998:
95) of the Vietnamese Communist Party also clearly stated one of the ten
“essential tasks of a bourgeois revolution of civil rights” which was
implementing “equal rights between men and women”. The Resolution of the
Central General Conference in October 1930 on mobilizing women clearly
expressed the Party’s viewpoint on women’s role in the people’s democratic
national revolution led by the Party, as well as the Party’s policy of
mobilizing women. The determination that women were an important force
accounting for “a large part of the proletarian class” who were exploited not
only by capitalists and feudalists but also restricted by feudal customs and
morality, and “did not have any freedom”, led to the confirmation that if women
could be awakened to revolutionary ideas, they would enthusiastically join the
revolution and become “an essential force. If the women in the public at large
do not join the revolutionary struggle, the revolution cannot be victorious”.
The Vietnamese Communist Party asserted the significant and decisive role of
women in the people’s democratic national revolution, thus it regarded
mobilizing women as “a very big and essential task” (Vietnamese Communist
Party, 1998: 188). This is one of the basic differences between the Vietnamese
Communist Party and other contemporary political organizations, at the same
time; it is also a source of strength which led the Vietnamese Communist Party
to victory.
2. The Indochinese Communist Party’s (ICP) policy of mobilizing women
In the 1930s, in publicly issued bourgeoisie newspapers,
women’s rights and women liberation were mentioned quite often, with slogans
demanding the right for women to go to school and calling on women to learn a
trade in order to live independently, regarding this as a solution to the
implementation of women’s rights and the objective of women’s propaganda.
However, they still targeted only women in the upper class. It can be seen that
this campaign for women’s rights had the features of the theory of women’s
right to freedom - bourgeois women’s rights, which was entirely separate from
the movement of national liberation. Therefore, in its resolution on the
propagandizing of women, IC Party emphasized “helping women escape from
capitalist thought, overthrowing the illusion of ’equal rights between men and
women’ within the frame of capitalism” and propagandizing to women the
awareness that only when the nation is independent and the feudal system
removed would women have real opportunities for equality and freedom. Therefore
mobilizing women to participate in revolutionary activities was very essential
because “if women stand on the sidelines of the revolution of workers and
peasants, the objective of national liberation will never be reached”
(Vietnamese Communist Party, 1998: 189). Unlike all previous patriotic and
revolutionary movements, the targets of the Vietnamese Communist Party’s
propaganda were working women, female workers and peasants, which made up a
majority in society. To mobilize women to participate in revolutionary
activities, our Party emphasized that first of all women should be re-organized
into workers’ unions, peasants’ unions, youth unions and separate women’s
unions. Specifically, the Party set the following requirements for the workers’
unions: “Workers’ unions must set up a women’s commission to develop propaganda
for women” (Vietnamese Communist Party, 1998: 139). The female commissioner of
the workers’ union was responsible for examining living and working conditions
of female workers in order to make recommendations to the General Workers’
Union for slogans suitable to women’s requirements and interests, then
mobilizing and attracting female workers to take part in Workers’ Union
activities. For the Peasants’ Unions, the Party also pointed out that “Under
the executive committee, the Peasants’ Union organizes departments for the
mobilization of women, to convince female peasants to participate in peasants’
union to struggle together” (Vietnamese Communist Party, 1998: 155), and that
“if we want women to participate in revolutionary struggles, we have to first
overturn all religious or moral customs, and give them political training ...
making them more aware of social class in order to attract them to join the
unions of the proletarian class”; “In the leading institutions of the Party and
Youth Union (from local to central levels), Women’s Committees should be
organized or there should be a person tasked specifically to manage this
issue”. In addition, IC Party also planned “to establish women’s organizations
like the ’Women’s Alliance’ to promote the interests of women and the complete
liberation of women” and attract all women who were not members of Workers’
Unions and Peasants’ Unions such as “workers’ wives and street sellers”
(Vietnamese Communist Party, 1998: 190-191). In leading the revolution, the
Party was always concerned about and directed the organization and mobilization
of women. The resolution of the second Central Conference (March, 1931), in the
item addressing party cells, it was pointed out clearly that “if there are
female workers in the factory, the party cell must send one or two party
members to work with them, in accordance with the plan set forth by female
officers of the City Party Committee or Zone Party Committee. Even if there are
no female workers, they should also send someone to mobilize the wives of
workers. These party members must maintain close contact with the female
officers of the Workers’ Union”. (Vietnamese Communist Party, 1999: 111). At
the first Party Congress of the Indochinese Communist Party in 1935, the
mobilization of women was considered one of the urgent tasks of the Party. The
Party pointed out clearly that it was necessary to organize women’s participation
in the Party, Communist Youth Union and revolutionary unions, to admit active
women into steering agencies, and to attract women to suitable organizations
through public and semi-public forms. “Each level of Party cell has to set up a
Women’s Commission. The person responsible for that commission is entitled to
attend conferences of the Party Committee, to vote about women’s issues”
(Vietnamese Communist Party, 2002: 66). Accordingly, there should be special
propaganda documents for women. Newspapers of the Party and other revolutionary
unions needed to have articles about mobilizing women as well as taking a stand
against the tendency to denigrate women and reactionary propaganda of upper
class and feudal theories aiming to prevent women from participating in the
struggle. The Party also emphasized that in struggles with the participation of
women “...there must be special slogans for women (such as equal wages for
equal work, no night work, 2 months of maternity leave before and after giving
birth with full salary in accordance with the action programs of the Party,
Workers’ Union, Communist Youth Party... Oppose polygamy and the French
government’s maintenance and exploitation of prostitution to collect tax)”
(Vietnamese Communist Party, 2002: 66-67). Faced with our nation’s new
opportunities, during the 1936-1939 period of democratic mobilization, the
Party made timely plans about organizing work, specifically about women,
emphasizing that “it is necessary to set up public and semi-public Women’s Unions
... to protect the common interests of all people and women in particular” such
as Unions of ‘democratic women’, ‘liberated women’, ‘progressive women’, or
‘supporting women’ (Vietnamese Communist Party, 2000: 244), and in regions with
many women’s organizations with different names, ‘Women’s Alliances’ should be
set up to unite them. In the general election of people’s representatives in
the North in August 1939, under the leadership of the Party, the Indochina
Democracy Front proposed a list of candidates along with their minimum action
program. The program stated slogans relating to women’s interests such as
“oppose prostitution; equal salary for women and men with similar jobs; women
with talents equal to men should be given similar positions in public and
private institutions; protect women and children (before and after giving
birth, women working in offices and factories shall all receive paid maternity
leave, establish daycare facilities for newborns)” (The News, issue 12, dated
25-29 June 1938). In 1939, World War II broke out. In September 1940, the
Japanese fascist army entered the North and on the 8th in May, 1941, the
Central Conference decided to establish a broad United National Front called
the Vietnam Independent Alliance (Viet Minh for short). One of the ten main
programs of the Viet Minh was “equal right between men and women”. The
organizational structure of the Front included a Women’s Union of National
Salvation. The Union’s regulations stated clearly that it aimed to “unite all
patriotic Vietnamese women to fight for women’s everyday interests and together
with other organizations of national salvation to fight against French
colonialists and Japanese fascists for the complete independence of Vietnam”
(Tran Huy Lieu, 1960:8). In 1941, faced with the urgent situation of mobilizing
the anti-imperialist movement, a Resolution of a conference of officers from
the entire northern region gave the following instructions: do not use female
agitprop officers for transportation work, rather “train others to do
transportation work and let female agitprop officers do their work’; “It is
necessary to train more female cadres by training female party members from
members of the Women’s Union of National Salvation ... issue propaganda
leaflets to appeal to urban women. Use all the means to unite women of all
classes” (Vietnamese Communist Party, 2000: 198), because “Only with the
participation of women will the national liberation struggle easily achieve
success” (Vietnamese Communist Party, 2000: 301). Revolutionary reality showed
that this correct policy of mobilizing women and the Indochinese Communist
Party’s timely guidance of the women’s movement made a decisive contribution to
the success of the August 1945 Revolution.
3. Revolutionary newspapers and propaganda leaflets - an effective means of propagandizing and mobilizing women
Right when it was founded, the VC Party was very concerned
with mobilization and propaganda, considering it an important task “to convince
people and the vast majority of workers and lead them in the struggle”. In the
process of leading the revolution, the Party always closely supervised and
offered timely guidance for the mobilization of women through revolutionary
newspapers and propaganda leaflets, pointing out that “the Party’s newspapers
are liaison instruments between the Party and the working people: “(Vietnamese
Communist Party, 1999: 117). Therefore, revolutionary newspapers had to address
the everyday life of the workers and peasants, introduce political issues, basic
political concepts and suitable political slogans, and the literary style of
the newspapers had to be simple, understandable for working people.
Mobilization “must be based on the educational level of workers and peasants”.
As for mobilizing women, the Party emphasized “Regarding propaganda, newspapers
of the Party, Youth Union, Workers’ Union and Peasants’ Union must address
practical issues for women or have a separate column for those articles”
(Vietnamese Communist Party, 1998: 191). It is remarkable that, apart from
articles written specifically for women, in most propaganda leaflets and Party
appeals women were always given equal standing with men through the pronouns of
address “Men and women...” In 1930-1931, under the leadership of the Indochinese
Communist Party, for the first time, workers and peasants united in the
struggle. In this movement, the Party provided timely and close guidance for
the work of organizing women. Most revolutionary propaganda leaflets of the
Party during this period included slogans demanding rights for women, for
example: equal rights between men and women; no marriages forced by parents; no
polygamy; and the overturning of the unsound custom of despising women
(Revolutionary propaganda leaflets. No BTCM 187/Gy374). On 8 March 1930, under
the guidance of the Southern Regional Party Committee and the Southern Workers’
General Union, for the first time Vietnamese women celebrated Women’s Day. To
guide women in the struggle, the Party launched a propaganda program and distributed
leaflets to appeal to women to participate in the struggle. The program
introduced the significance of the 8th of March as the day “to struggle for
women’s liberation all over the world”, the day when women all over the world
united to struggle against “all the tricks of exploiting and dominating women,
against capitalism, an oppressing and exploiting regime, and against
imperialist war”. The program also talked about Russian women, revealing the
oppression and exploitation of Indochinese women under the colonialist regime.
On this occasion, the Party issued propaganda leaflets with the appeal to
women: “Working Indochinese women must participate actively in workers’ and
peasant organizations in involved in the struggle, and together with men
establish a revolutionary front to promote the liberation of the proletarian
class and all oppressed people” (Revolutionary propaganda leaflets, No 1920/ Gy
616). Meanwhile, they also set up specific tasks for Indochinese women: “First
of all, remove all unsound customs and traditions, the ruins of the feudal
regime... discuss common demands of the proletarian class, participate in large
numbers in organizations involved in the struggle... participate
enthusiastically in everyday work... Regarding the everyday work of the
people’s organizations, women and girls have to take an active part just as men
do”, and affirmed that this was the only way by which women could “protect the
interest of the proletarian class, and liberate women” (Vietnamese Communist
Party, 1999: 67).
In revolutionary newspapers during this period, there was a
lot of news about women’s activities and examples of women in the struggle. The
newspaper The Proletarian Flag, issue 3, in 1931 reported: “On 21 January, a
woman waited for the sanitary worker(2) at the market to give speech
commemorating the anniversary of three comrades L”(3); “On 21 January in Hanh
Thong Tay market (Gia Dinh), a woman gave a speech which was cheered by people,
so much so a woman was moved to tears...”; the Workers and Peasants Newspaper,
issue 26, 1 October 1931 reported that in Song Loc, a district chief beat a
pregnant woman nearly to death. Some women going to market heard about it and
immediately went to some neighboring communes to appeal to men and women for
help. People in 6 neighboring communes (in Dang Xa zone) responded and the
struggle soon became a demonstration of strength with approximately ten
thousand people “surrounding the district chief, declaring his guilt and
sentencing him to death, starting a widespread struggle” of people in Nghi Loc
district. The Suffering Working People Newspaper, issue 13, published 18
September 1930 reported: “This fierce struggle is like other fierce struggles
in Thanh Chuong, Ben Thuy, Can Loc, Ha Tinh which were led by women. Everywhere,
women are bravely sacrificing themselves”. The article also affirmed that: “In
this period of fierce struggle, while workers, peasants and soldiers are united
in the struggle, women are also starting to participate in the struggle, and
gloriously so, lending great strength to the people’s force. It means that
women have broken the chains of slavery which had long confined them, and are
participating in the struggle”. In the period from 1930 to 1935, French
colonialists encouraged a movement of happiness and youthfulness to delude
young people. Regarding women, there was a women’s liberation movement with
‘modern girls’, night fairs, speeches from the South to the North on the topic
of ‘liberated women’ and ‘career women’, and articles in bourgeois newspapers
like Women’s New Literature Newspaper (1929-1935), Women’s Discussion on
Current Topics (1930-1934), Phong Hoa (1932-1936), which misled the women’s
struggle. During this period, some progressive intellectuals like Phan Khoi,
Diep Van Ky who were aware of the Vietnamese people’s condition of slavery,
mobilized to liberate women from feudal morality. Some people who were
influenced by the bourgeois women’s rights movement called for education and
careers for women, and considered this to be the objective of the mobilization
of women. To fight against these trends, during the period 1934-1935 the
Women’s New Literature Newspaper published many communist journalists who
disclosed the real situation of women: “Nine out of ten women are ignorant; all
women are considered as children by the law .. women in Indochina can not
organize themselves to protect their interests” and pointed out that the
reasons for this were “the law does not allow women to set up trade unions and
participate in all political and social rights related to their right to exist”
(Women’s New Literature, 11 April 1935). They also pointed out that calling
upon women to liberate themselves was only “idle talk” and emphasized the most
pressing thing to be done: “The most important task in mobilizing women is to
penetrate into the public. Firstly, the nation will be liberated, then all
humankind will be liberated” (Women’s New Literature, 6 December, 1934). In
1936, the Popular Front was set up in France. The Popular Government took office
and made some progressive reforms. The Indochinese Communist Party took
advantage of this to launch a movement demanding freedom and democracy all over
the country. Many revolutionary newspapers published publicly became the
offices where the revolution was guided and led, specifically the new Young
Spirit newspaper (issue 1, published 6 June 1936), New Society (issue 1,
published 10 October, 1937), Present Life (issue 1, published 1 December 1938),
New Day (issue 1, published 19 April, 1939), The News (issue 1, 2 April, 1938),
Rice Branch (issue 1, published 15 January, 1937), The People (1938-1939), etc.
Due to the favorable political situation, the Indochinese Communist Party
planned to mobilize the establishment of legal public associations to organize and
educate people as well as train cadres in order to create a force to be used in
the struggle. To instruct people, many issues of the Labor Newspaper
(1938-1939) included procedures to establish associations legally, the
significance of legal associations, and techniques in dealing with the
colonialist authority’s tricks to prohibit and disband fraternal associations.
The News newspaper (issue 14, published on 2 - 6 July, 1938) analyzed “Women’s
responsibilities” in the National Assembly election of 1938 and mobilized women
to support representatives endorsed by The News and Present Day newspapers,
emphasizing that mobilizing for “these candidates to be elected is to open a
new era in the history of women’s liberation in this nation”. Newspapers were
also where misleading thoughts in the mobilization of women were attacked. In
the issue of the New Society newspaper published on 10 November, 1936, there
was an article by Tam Kinh (Nguyen Thi Trac – an agent of the branch of the
Northern Indochinese Congress) against the Present Day newspaper for publishing
an article which criticized the conference of Northern women on 24 September,
1936. It pointed out the intention of the article in the Present Day Newspaper
was to “take advantage of our low educational level and make sport of it for
readers, which we strongly condemn”, and called upon women to “put themselves
above that unconcious ridicule. We should just actively and enthusiastically do
our work...” In the article titled Discussing Women’s Issues with the female
writer Tuyet Dung (The People, issues 16, 17, 18 published on 14, 17, 21
September,1938), the author Nguyen Thi Kim Thanh criticized the fascist theory
of “Women returning home” as aiming to take women back to the position of “good
wives and mothers” who “run a house effectively”. The article emphasized and
pointed out the fact that “advising women to be content with their fate as
housewives does not only confine women to slavery but also misses out on half
of the force that could be used in the struggle for national liberation in
society, in general the liberation of humankind”. It also warned that “each man
and woman should keep in mind that ’the family is broken when the nation is
lost’ and that the family cannot be happy and equal if society at large is
discontented”. Regarding some women’s incorrect awareness about women’s
liberation, the article titled The Issue of Women’s Liberation (The People
newspaper, issue 35, published on 7 December 1938) analysed and pointed out
specific manifestations of this wrong thinking; “For example, some women are
superficial because their family situation oppresses them, persecutes them and
restrains them, which makes them think that liberation means leaving their
families, escaping with an obscure thought about freedom... Some women
misunderstand that liberation is dissolution and equality means romance. They
are profligate and imitate various fashions, become utterly absorbed in impure
pleasure-seeking and drawn-out dissipation in casinos full of material evils and
carnal desire and forget about their responsibilities to family and society”.
The article also emphasized that in order to deal conclusively with the issue
of woman, women could not be separated in terms of gender, but rather “the
essential aspect of the issue is the general aspect, the aspect of class”. By
the year 1939 the Indochinese Communist Party was forced to work in secret, and
the Party’s newspapers also had to publish secretly among the people. After the
period of democratic mobilization the revolutionary public forces were trained
in the practical aspects of the struggle, so revolutionary newspapers during
this period focused on introducing international news, analysing the world and
national situation, giving instructions for the struggle against the war,
resisting the war, denouncing crimes of the French colonialists and Japanese
facists towards our people, and in particular held up examples of model
revolutionaries and instructed people to participate in specific activities to
prepare for the general uprising to seize power. The Independent Vietnam
Newspaper (1941-1945) had articles with questions and answers about the Work of
Organizing Women and specific issues like: “Can women join armed units? If they
cannot, what kind of work can they do? What are the weaknesses of our women?”
(Independent Vietnam Newspaper 1941-1945, 2000:462). In 1945 New Year’s issue
of the National Salvation Newspaper, there was an article “What Women Can Do”
pointing out that in history, Vietnamese women had long been patriotic
participants in wars against foreign aggression with typical examples like the
Two Trung Sisters, Lady Trieu, and the female general Bui Thi Xuan; or more
recently Miss Tam carrying weapons for Phan Dinh Phung, the third wife of De
Tham, Miss Nguyen Thi Minh Khai, Miss Giang, etc. And the article concluded
that women could shoulder hard work like men, and moreover “they have to do the
work that men find difficult to do well”. Specifically “acting as street
vendors to go on reconnaissance” or “guarding offices and venues where
revolution is discussed” or “acting as good-natured peddlers” who transport
weapons, working as couriers, carrying out agitation and propaganda among enemy
troops, providing emergency medical care, or “even joining guerilla troops and
running for election to revolutionary councils”, etc. Revolutionary newspapers
during this period were published and handed out in Viet Bac revolutionary
bases and countryside, so the literary style was simple, understandable, easy
to remember and learn by heart, and used a lot. For example, on the issue of
the Drive Off The Enemy newspaper published on 15 July 1944, there was a long
poem encouraging women to struggle against the war with detailed instructions:
Women! Don’t cry as it is no use... Roll up your trousers and go to the army
camp. We urge and convince our husbands to come home. Lie down to block trains.
Let’s shout at fascists... Or in the Freedom Newspaper issue 6 published in
1941, there was an article “A Beautiful Woman Draws The Sword” with strongly
appealing poem: ...Stand up, women! We can draw the sword as well as anyone.
Who is our national enemy? They are the French colonialists, Japanese fascists
and unpatriotic Vietnamese... Break down the unjust regime, which has sunk
women in a life of hardship for ages... When the newspapers were published,
these articles encouraged women to participate in the revolutionary struggle,
becoming an essential force in the general uprising to seize power in August
1945.
Conclusion
When the Vietnamese Communist Party was first founded, it
accurately assessed the important role of Vietnamese women in the revolutionary
movement. Women were enlightened and drawn into most of the struggles led by
the Party. Many women were leaders in strikes and demonstrations showing
strength. Many actions by women became the catalyst for larger movements like
the Xo Viet Nghe Tinh movement, etc. Women were always present at
demonstrations, strikes for demands, demanding freedom and democracy, freedom
of trade union, protesting colonial reactionaries, etc., in the 1936-1939
movement of democratic mobilization. Especially, in the 1939-1945 movement of
national liberation, women played an important role in the pre-uprising
struggle as well as the general uprising of the August revolution. The victory
of the August revolution affirmed the correctness of the Vietnamese Communist
Party’s policy of mobilizing women, which was to clearly perceive the essential
role of women and to inspire and mobilize the patriotic tradition of fighting
foreign aggression in the historical spirit of “When the enemy comes to the
home, even the women fight”. The victory of the August revolution was also the
victory of closely linking the objectives of liberating the nation, liberating
the classes and liberating women; it was the victory of using newspapers and
revolutionary propaganda leaflets effectively. Meanwhile, the victory of the
August revolution also expresses that the Vietnamese Communist Party’s policies
about women fulfilled women’s aspirations in a way that was compatible with our
nation’s tradition of respecting women.
Dang Thi Van Chi
* Sources: Vietnam Journal of Family and gender studies
Dec 2007, volume number 2
from p24 to p39
Notes
(1) The Vietnamese Communist Party, founded on 3 February
1930, was renamed the Indochinese Communist Party in October, 1930.
(2) This is an informal way to refer to the work of changing
toilet-bins in the city previously.
(3) Meaning Lenin, Lepneck and Luxemburg
References
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Source: http://chuyencuachi.blogspot.com/2010/01/vietnamese-communist-partys-policy-of.html
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