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- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive,soc.women,alt.activism
- Path: sparky!uunet!haven.umd.edu!darwin.sura.net!ukma!mont!pencil.cs.missouri.edu!daemon
- From: harelb@math.cornell.edu (Harel Barzilai)
- Subject: Poll: Life is Worse for Ex-GDR Women
- Message-ID: <1992Sep15.194234.16653@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
- Followup-To: alt.activism.d
- Originator: daemon@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Sender: news@mont.cs.missouri.edu
- Nntp-Posting-Host: pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Organization: ?
- Date: Tue, 15 Sep 1992 19:42:34 GMT
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Lines: 152
-
- [Via misc.activism.progressive from PeaceNet's glasnost.news]
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- [Inquiries by email, please, to harelb@math.cornell.edu, for more
- information about PeaceNet/EcoNet or about misc.activism.progressive]
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- In 1990 most GDR women supported unification. ``Only now are women
- realizing how male-dominated the western society actually is,''
- German psychologist Joerg Richter told the Post. ``This is a
- tremendous shock for them.''
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- Topic 287 AGL:LIFE WORSE FOR WOMEN IN EX-GDR
- christic Political Change in Eastern Europe 2:05 pm Sep 12, 1992
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
-
-
- ======================================================
- LIFE IS MUCH WORSE FOR EX-GDR WOMEN AFTER UNIFICATION
- ======================================================
-
-
- A recent poll by the Allensbach Institute says that 81 percent of
- women who live in the former German Democratic Republic believe
- the ``situation of women in eastern Germany has deteriorated
- since unification.''
-
- Before the GDR was absorbed by West Germany in 1990, most East
- German women were needed by the economy. Now unemployment rates
- are high for both men and women. The social benefits that allowed
- working women to combine family and career--including affordable
- day care and a full year of parental leave at full pay--have been
- abolished by the new system.
-
- ``With unemployment rates in the east still soaring, women make
- up two-thirds of the jobless but only half of the population,''
- the Washington Post reported on Sept. 9. ``Day-care costs--which
- were only a symbolic 35 cents a day under the communist
- government--are rising dramatically, and other support systems
- for working mothers are disappearing.''
-
- The bleak outlook for families in the former GDR has taken a toll
- on the birth rate in the new eastern states, the Post reported.
- ``Birth rates have plummeted 40 percent in the past year and are
- likely to decline even more this year as women become more unsure
- about their future and decide against having children.''
-
- Birgit Druse, a 34-year-old mother of two young children who
- worked 13 years as a bank teller before losing her job, told the
- Post that in the former GDR ``women were very self-supportive and
- financially independent.''
-
- But no more. In the old GDR, state policy tried to help women
- reconcile careers with family responsibilities. During the ``baby
- year,'' new mothers could care for a child at home at full pay,
- with their place on the job guaranteed when they returned to
- work. After Erich Honecker fell from power in 1989, the reform
- socialist government that briefly ruled the GDR proposed
- liberalization of the law to allow either the father or mother to
- choose the ``baby year'' option. Instead, the entire social
- program was swept away by unification.
-
- Other social benefits for the family included universal day care
- for the children of working parents, a liberal leave policy that
- allowed parents to care for sick children and the monthly paid
- ``Haushaltstag''--household day--for shopping, cleaning and other
- family chores.
-
- ``As a result of a supportive government system, 95 percent of
- East German women worked, double the percentage in the western
- part of the formerly divided country,'' the Post reported. ``The
- state needed the contribution of women in the work force to
- offset a drastic labor shortage.''
-
- Although the GDR's abortion law was one of the most liberal in
- Europe, economic necessity did not force single women to
- terminate their pregnancies. In July the Berliner Zeitung
- reported that nearly one-third of the 192,000 families in the
- eastern wards of Berlin were headed by single parents--mostly
- women.
-
- In 1990 most GDR women supported unification. ``Only now are
- women realizing how male-dominated the western society actually
- is,'' German psychologist Joerg Richter told the Post. ``This is
- a tremendous shock for them.''
-
- ``The Allensbach poll shows wide differences in the experiences
- of women who lived on opposite sides of the heavily fortified
- border,'' the Post said. ``An average East German woman married
- early and had more children at a younger age but always worked;
- West German women, on the other hand, often worked first, married
- later, had fewer children and typically did not go back to a
- full-time career.''
-
- Petra Falkenberg, a single mother of a nine-year-old girl, said
- that single working mothers faced no social or economic pressures
- in the old GDR. ``I used to collect a lot of respect for being
- single and working and being a mother,'' she said. Now, she told
- the Post, she feels completely drained by her new life. ``Now I
- feel that a lot of people think they have to pity me. . . .''
-
- The Post described a seminar for unemployed East German women who
- ``retained a self-confidence from their careers . . . [and]
- proudly recited their decades of job experience.''
-
- ``I was economically better off'' in the GDR, an unemployed 56-
- year-old salesperson told the Post. ``Things I could afford
- before . . . I can't anymore.''
-
- However, Renata Koecher of the Allensbach Institute insisted that
- the majority of eastern German women ``feel they have profited
- enormously from unity with better possibilities, more freedom,
- growing incomes.''
-
- But Regine Hildebrandt, minister for social affairs for the
- eastern German state of Brandenburg, said that ``[m]any women
- have not yet realized how much their situation has worsened, and
- I am afraid of what will happen to them when they do.
-
- ``We need to fight the situation in the east with all possible
- measures, or else the psychological damage will be permanent.''
-
- [Story summarized by Andrew Lang.]
- Conf?
-
- ##################################################################
-
- [Note: Here again the "conservative" net.reactionaries can point to
- misc.activism.progressive saying the "like/d" East Germany. In fact,
- it follows *logically* that this is the only possible conclusion for
- them, since the alternative -- that this is clearly not praise for
- Communism but a *criticism* that needs to be made regarding *capitalism*
- (many social services worse even than those undera system which, in
- other respects, was horrible) -- is incomprehensible, impermissible
- thought. --HB]
-
- [Of course there is a whole can of worms here, e.g. the famous lie
- about "Communism" or our "capitalist" system being "the only
- alternatives" -- so that society can only have the choice of being
- ruled by a small elite of CP officials and bureaucrats of by a small
- economic and corporate elite; similarly for who controls the press,
- etc -- sentiments echoed by the "conservatives" ideological brothers,
- the CP officials who similarly claimed that the only alternative to
- "Communism" was the U.S. or worse Latin American etc models; the
- self-serving lie that to give up the Party's yoke one would have to
- accept the corporate yoke and the misery and starvation so common in
- "free market miracles" encouraged by Washington; similarly those who
- more or less own the U.S. (including the media) tell us that the only
- way to remove the corporate yoke is to replace it with a bureaucratic
- (if not Stalinist) yoke.
-
- But of course Big Biz and the C.P. officials are just disinterested
- observers...--HB]
- ##################################################################
-