Church bells toll in Switzerland as women pray and march for equality with men

(Photo: © Peter Kenny)United Nations intern Salorne Persyn speaks for women in front of the UN in Geneva on June 14, 2019.

When church bells tolled at the 11th hour on June 14, they were signaling solidarity with a national "strike" for women's equality held throughout Switzerland with full backing from the ecumenical community, including the World Council of Churches.

At 11 o'clock, prayers were held in the chapel at the Ecumenical Centre and outside the United Nations in Geneva as women and men gathered in blustery conditions under the three-legged chair to speak about something they said has gone on for too long, paying women far less than men and not treating them equally in the workplace.

Organizers called on Swiss women to join the national demonstration to demand "more time, more money, more respect".

In Geneva, the local ecumenical group of Protestant and Catholic churches are supporting the calls for respect, dignity and equality. From the Temple de Plainpalais people in the march for equality crossed the street to the big demonstration there.

A program of workshops and presentations was held at the Plainpalais church, examining issues such as "#MeToo in the Bible," and providing materials and workspace to produce placards for the afternoon march.

"The World Council of Churches entirely supports the values of equality for women which underpin the actions planned for 14 June. We will accompany the work done by the local churches in Geneva," said WCC general secretary Rev. Olav Fykse Tveit.

Rev. Charlotte Kuffer, a Reformed pastor and the former president of St Pierre Cathedral, was inside the church and she tweeted, "What about the compatibility between the world of work and maternity? This is a real challenge."

Across Switzerland, women took to the streets protesting what they say is the country's unacceptably slow pace to equality, and 28 years after similar action saw half a million women take to the streets in 1991 when there were no women in the Swiss government, and there was no statutory maternity leave.

At 15:24 (24 minutes after three), as a national symbolic moment, many people left their places of work to make their way from Plainpalais, an open square close to the center of Geneva to the nearby Parc des Bastions.

The color was purple, the day after the weekly WCC-led Thursdays in Black, a global movement for a world without rape and violence.

UNDER THE THREE-LEGGED CHAIR

In the afternoon before marching from the UN in Geneva, past the World Trade Organization on the banks of Lake Geneva to Plainpalais, WCC staff members and staff and students from the WCC's Ecumenical Centre in Bossey gathered under the iconic three-legged chair.

They cheered when a speech saying, "For years, unpaid internships have hindered many people's ability to intern for the United Nations, but it has been detrimental to women especially. According to a 2017 survey conducted by the Fair Internship Initiative (the Fill), over 80 of the respondents were unpaid, and 72 of UN interns were female."

Persyn noted, "Division of unpaid labour within households and across societies is already a gendered struggle as well as class-based struggles."

So, they were demanding that internships be paid so that they are accessible to all, regardless of their socioeconomic background.

The organizers said in their manifesto, "We want to promote gender equity and women's rights. We want a society based on equality and solidarity, without discrimination, without sexism and violence against women, regardless of the color of our skin, our culture, our origin or religion, our passport, our sexual and gender identity, our age or social status."

The national broadcaster RTS reported that it could not yet determine if the day's action would gather the tally of 500,000 counted in the 1991 protests.

It said, however, that in the capital Bern, 40,000 people took to the streets as well as in the city of Lausanne on Lake Geneva and in Basel, up to 70,000 marched in Zurich, while in Geneva itself between 12,000 and 15,000 were reported on the streets in gatherings that were all held in a festive atmosphere.

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