We have an exciting project to share with you. If our core of
national volunteers is any indication, a tidal wave of interest
in women's history is sweeping over America. In response, we have
founded the National Women's History Museum in Washington,
DC to preserve and celebrate the story of Woman.
Historians and other scientists have recovered the profound social,
intellectual, and scientific history of women over the past 50
years. How empowering to discover that women originated or were
major contributors in so many fields-from agriculture, medicine,
and mathematics to religion, philosophy, and art. There are untold
numbers of women who have made significant contributions to the
world. In addition to learning of specific contributions, we are
only now gaining a full understanding of how civilization evolves
through the power of feminine values and women's enduring traditions.
Yet, nowhere can one find a repository of those traditions and
contributions. A quick inventory of typical history books, museums,
and public spaces proves this. Typically, only scholars specifically
researching women's history learn of this rich heritage. Even
they are surprised to find that documentation of women's history
has been repeatedly unearthed, reclaimed, and lost. Christine
de Pisan first wrote on women's history in 1405. Aphra Behn recovered
the history of women in 1660; Mary Astell in 1694; Lady Mary Worlley
Montague in 1734; Matilda Joslyn Gage in 1873; Virginia Woolf
in 1932; and Mary Ritter Beard in 1946.
A better world awaits the generation that absorbs what women and
men have to share about life from a joint perspective. Global
discrimination and violence against women will end. We have much
to work toward. Here is the current status of women according
to the United Nations:
· Women perform 33% of all the world's paid work.
· Women perform 66% of all the world's paid and unpaid
work.
· Women receive 10% of the world's salaries.
· Women own 1% of the world's property.
· Women comprise over 50% of the world's population.
· Women hold less than 10% of the seats in the world's
legislatures.
Today, with advanced mass communication and more access to economic
power, we can make women visible. Imagine the world if we had
only built upon Christine de Pisan's work for the past 600 years
instead of having had to rediscover and reclaim the heritage of
women each generation. What would be the current state of our
technology if we had been forced to literally reinvent the wheel
every fifty years? For the sake of our children, both male and
female, we must not allow our heritage to be lost again.
There will be a time when violence against women and children,
and among men, is no longer epidemic. There will be a time when
the people of the world share in its abundance and hunger is not
a form of population control. Women will play an ever more important
role in solving the problems of sexism, racism, poverty, violence,
and environmental degradation. But to get there we need a history
that incorporates the story of both men and women.
If we and future generations are to learn all the lessons of the
past upon which to build the future, we must be aware of the true
experiences and contributions of women. Clearly, men cannot get
there alone. Together, all things are possible.
Sincerely,

Karen K. Staser
Founder, NWHM
__________________________________________________________________
National Women's History Museum
P.O. Box 1296
Annandale, VA 22003
703-813-6209
info@nwhm.org
Copyright © 2008 National Women's History Museum.