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March 8 as International Women's Day traces back to the powerful struggles of working women in the early 20th century. It began in the labor movements of North America and Europe, sparked by demands for better wages, shorter working hours, voting rights, and an end to exploitation.
In 1908–1909, thousands of women—especially garment workers—marched and protested in New York City. The Socialist Party of America declared the first National Woman's Day on February 28, 1909.
In 1910, at the International Conference of Working Women in Copenhagen, German activist Clara Zetkin proposed an annual International Women's Day to unite women worldwide in their fight for equality. The idea was unanimously accepted.
The date March 8 became fixed because of a historic turning point: On March 8, 1917 (February 23 in the old Russian calendar), women textile workers in Petrograd (now St. Petersburg), Russia, launched a massive strike for "bread and peace" amid food shortages, war hardships, and oppression. Their courageous action spread rapidly, igniting the February Revolution that helped topple the Tsarist regime and paved the way for profound social change.
In 1922, Vladimir Lenin officially recognized March 8 as International Women's Day in honor of these revolutionary women. The United Nations later embraced and globalized it in 1977.
From those factory floors, streets, and revolutionary sparks, March 8 was born—not as a gift, but as a day forged in struggle, solidarity, and unbreakable will.
And from those days to today, women have grown stronger, shattered more chains, built new worlds in technology, finance, creativity, and leadership—and they will grow even stronger still.
To every woman reading this:
You carry the fire of those who came before you.
The courage that once demanded bread and peace now builds freedom, innovation, and futures without fear.
Keep rising. Keep creating. Keep changing everything.
The world is brighter—and will be even brighter—because of you.
Happy International Women's Day. 🌹💪