online edition

The Student Newspaper of Hopkins School

    • International Women’s Day is celebrated around the world.

International Women’s Day: For All Women

Rain Zeng’26, Op/Ed Editor
March 8 is such an important day for women in other countries — and I’ve always wondered why it isn’t for Americans. My parents and relatives celebrate International Women’s Day through gifts, and women even get a half-day off work every year in China. As a child of immigrants, I know that there are many aspects of American culture that differ from that of other countries; holidays and traditions celebrated elsewhere may not be a commonplace observance here.
The first “Woman’s Day” was organized by the Socialist Party of America in 1909 to honor a strike of female textile workers in New York City. Despite these origins, International Women’s Day is not an official holiday in the U.S. We celebrate Women’s History Month in March with art exhibitions, movie nights, and discussions about women who made history. The protests, marches, panel discussions, and strikes that characterize International Women’s Day in other places are notably absent in the U.S. — though such issues as the wage gap, femicide, domestic violence, and reproductive rights are deeply relevant to Americans as well.

Now more than ever — especially when President Trump’s second term threatens to further weaken reproductive healthcare access — it is vital for American women (and men!) to speak up on these issues. Restrictions on reproductive healthcare already exist and affect women across the country: 12 states have complete abortion bans, nine of them without rape or incest exceptions, and 29 states have banned abortion past certain gestational limits. This has resulted in women, sometimes girls, being forced to carry to term. Abortion bans also endanger women with high-risk pregnancies who require abortion as a life-saving measure. Since his inauguration, Trump has rescinded multiple executive orders protecting reproductive healthcare in the U.S., and a federal abortion ban has been introduced in the House. In the next four years, we can anticipate continued attacks on women’s autonomy.

Back in January of 2017, people worldwide participated in the Women’s March, a protest in direct response to Trump’s first inauguration. At the time, the Women’s March on Washington was the largest single-day protest in U.S. history. The global demonstration sparked conversations and wider movements of resistance against Trump’s policies. In 2025, a Women’s March of the same scale feels even more necessary. Unquestionably, people in the U.S. and beyond have been and still are protesting for women’s rights, but these movements are nowhere near as loud. I can’t help but wonder: Would observing International Women’s Day the same way other countries do make large-scale protests easier to organize? A single day dedicated to advocating for women’s rights now, in the present, would encourage people to congregate and, hopefully, create real change. At a time like this, we should be doing everything we can to make our voices heard.

Moreover, international solidarity can be uniquely powerful. The United Nations’ 2025 theme for International Women’s Day is “For all women and girls.” According to the U.N. website, “This year’s theme calls for action that can unlock equal rights, power and opportunities for all and a feminist future where no one is left behind. Central to this vision is empowering the next generation — youth, particularly young women and adolescent girls—as catalysts for lasting change.” The phrase “all women” includes American women, too.
This is not to say that Women’s History Month activities are unimportant. Women’s history is undoubtedly crucial to understand: We should recognize the historical fight for women’s rights and the untold narratives of women who made the world what it is today. And as members of an academic community, we are more than well-equipped to learn.

Nevertheless, as the hopeful youths who will be the women and allies of tomorrow, we should look towards the future as well. If there’s anything that history has taught us, it’s that lasting change comes from solidarity and organized action against injustice. There’s no reason why we can’t both recognize the history of women and also participate in the global movement for women’s liberation. In should go hand in hand.
Back
Editor in Chief 
Liliana Dumas 

Managing Editor 
Miri Levin 

News
Sarah Solazzo 
Rose Porosoff
Anvi Pathak 
Lena Wang
Sonali Bedi 
Features
Abby Rakotomavo
Elona Spiewak
Becky Li
Ashley Deng
Aurelia Wen
 
Arts
Aerin O’Brien
Saisha Ghai
Veena Scholand
Ellie Luo
Isha Seth
Op/Ed
Rain Zheng
Winter Szarabajka
Anjali van Bladel
Gitanjali Navaratnam-Tomayko
Bea Lundberg

Sports
Samantha Bernstein
Hana Beauregard
Elaina Paktuka
Beckett Ehrlich
Lukas Roberts
Content
Amelia Hudonogov-Foster
Edel Lee
Micah Betts
Ari Mehta
Olivia Yu
Karolina Jasaitis 

Cartoonists
Susie Becker 
Faculty Advisers
Stephen May
Elizabeth Gleason
Shanti Madison
The Razor's Edge reflects the opinion of 4/5 of the editorial board and will not be signed. The Razor welcomes letters to the editor but reserves the right to decide which letters to publish, and to edit letters for space reasons. Unsigned letters will not be published, but names may be withheld on request. Letters are subject to the same libel laws as articles. The views expressed in letters are not necessarily those of the editorial board.
     
The Razor,
 an open forum publication, is published monthly during the school year by students of: 
Hopkins School
986 Forest Road
New Haven, CT 06515

Phone: 203.397.1001 x628
Email: smay@hopkins.edu