I think that this documentary stands up for the first time and shows 16 women who did a wonderful work by breaking the silence after the war. But they just said that nobody was looking at their faces or listening to actual voices to protect their identities. Only the court 's people can see and hear them. I believe this will increase documentary success. Because it adds to the seriousness of women's idea of breaking the silence and their lives are still in danger. Illegal act was committed.
In the first months of the First World War, among the UK chaitic followers, the women trade union poet Dorothea Hollins proposed 1,000 unarmed "Women Peace Exploration Corps" Europe I crossed my teeth. Intervention between guns and fighting power in war. The magnificent plan of Hollin was not realized, but it did not show up in a vacuum, which was brought up by a century-long activity mainly based on maternal love. Or, as a peace activist Helena Swanwick wrote, people are worried that women will die and kids will die during the war, but their glory is not theirs. I can not describe fear and shame. "
Women's Peace Movement Model of the 20th Century The Women Peace Organization was a Women Peace Party (WPP) established during the First World War and later renamed Women's International Peace and Freedom Alliance (WILPF). WPP was born from the international female campaign campaign. It was catalyzed by Hungarian women traveling the United States in the fall of 1914 and British women (from the enemies in the new war). Women of WPP have poured a lot of energy into the voting rights, but they did not give up on resolving the cause of war and treatment.
During the First World War, women have made a great contribution to war through labor and volunteer efforts. Female activists further encourage voting rights using the newly discovered economic highlights by women during the war. Activities like the National Women's Sex Rights Association (NAWSA), which have pursued women's suffrage since 1890, have linked permanent peace issues to women's voting rights. As NAWSA exercises through an established political channel, the National Women's Party (NWP) is engaged in civil disobedience in Washington, DC. In 1918, the NWP conducted hangar strikes and protests everyday in front of the White House. NWP activists called President Woodrow Wilson 's democratic struggle in Europe hypocritical and denied women' s voting rights in the United States. This well-known protest of NWP made Wilson feel embarrassed all year round.