View Single Post
  #69  
Old 03-26-2008, 12:24 PM
laylo laylo is offline
GreekChat Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 269
Quote:
Originally Posted by AOII Angel View Post
I agree with you in theory, but this thread had gotten a little dismissive of the NPC.
This quote in particular was offensive, "On an organizational level, it isn't enough to just exist. It isn't even enough to just be able to boast that one of your chapters was able to get equal ironing and smoking rights on campus."

While stronger activism got women the right to vote, it did not automatically give us the respect of men as peers. Education, however, has proven to men that women are equal to them academically. NPC organizations were founded by women bent on getting an education. Many were in teacher's colleges because this was the only "appropriate" profession for women at the time. Later founders were the first to break into the male only facilities of higher education. They founded our groups to empower the women looking for equality to stand up for themselves against the all male faculty who often were not receptive to their appearance on the scene. Just because as groups we worked at the level of the individual woman does not mean that we were not activists in the equality movement. Marching and signing up for initiatives doesn't do the enitre job and you know it. There are many people in the women's rights and civil rights movements that worked for equality at home on the local level without marching in washington (for civil rights) or boycotting the White House (for women's rights.)
Yes, I do know it, which is why I never claimed that it was. In fact I stated that all of the work you are talking about was critical. I'm simply saying that NPHC women did everything you are talking about as well, not instead.
__________________
Love is an action, never simply a feeling.
Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc.
Reply With Quote