|     Vital Voices Conference on Women and Democracy          Remarks by First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton      Reykjavik, Iceland     October 10, 1999          Good morning. I am delighted to be here again and to see all of you here as     we conclude this important conference. It has been a pleasure being in Iceland,     and it has been an honor hearing so many women's vital voices from across     Northern Europe. These are the voices of education and economic opportunity;     the voices of civil society and human rights; the voices of public life and     political participation; the voices of democracy and freedom and progress.   
 I want to thank the workshop chairs and co-chairs, whom I had the pleasure     of meeting with this morning, for the work they have done, for the reports they     have given, and for their commitments to follow-up activities.    I am very grateful to those who spoke before me. They gave a full overview     of what is possible when people come together, as we have done in this forum,     with a commitment to honest dialogue, to appreciating our differences but finding     common cause together, and ways to work toward the realization of our own aspirations     and dreams.    It is amazing to think that just 10 years ago, this gathering would not have     been possible. Many of the participants here today would not have had the freedom     to talk publicly about their lives or their governments. Many would not have     had the right to create NGOs or start businesses. Many, indeed, would not have     had the freedom to make this journey to Iceland at all. So it is a great tribute     to the many, many of you who were part of the struggle and transformation of     the last 10 yearsand often for many years before thatwhich made     this moment possible.   I want to thank the women who are alumnae of other Vital Voices conferences,     who have been lifting up their voices on behalf of their own aspirations and     reaching out to help others along the way. I want particularly to thank the     Russian delegation, which has sent a very powerful message by being here. I     understand this is one of the largest Russian delegations ever to attend an     international conference. And I think it is fitting that it would be this conference     to which so many would come, as the transformation that is occurring in Russia     is of significant consequence, not only to the Russian people, but to the entire     world. And I thank the members of the Russian delegation for their leadership     and their work.    I am also very grateful to the delegations of the Baltic countries. When I     was in high school, I learned about Lithuania and Latvia and Estonia from people     who had been forced to leave their beloved countries to seek refuge in the United     States. They would often talk about their hardships, but they equally spoke     of their dreams for a strong and independent future. And those dreams are certainly     being realized, and it is a particular pleasure to welcome the distinguished     women from the Baltic delegationsand in particular, the distinguished     President of Latvia.   I want also to thank our partner, the Nordic Council, whose nations are modelsmany     of us believefor women's equality, not only for this region, but     also throughout the entire world. And I especially want to thank our Icelandic     hosts. The government and people of Iceland have done a superb job in putting     together this conference, and Sigridur Duna has been a wonderful leader.    I know we are very honored today to be joined by President Grimsson and Prime     Minister Oddsson, and I want to thank them for being here as well. I want to     thank the students and teachers at Reykjavik Business School who opened their     classrooms to us; and everyone in Iceland who seems to be extremely enthusiastic;     and people who have come here from Northern Europe and have made us all feel     so warmly welcome.    It is only fitting that this discussion about the next millennium take place     in Iceland, a country with such a rich history and one that has a tradition     of building bridges between the East and the West. During my short visit here,     I've had the opportunity to see some of the history and the beauty. This     unique country has not only a great past, but also such potential for the future.     I saw the ancient Parliament. I stood on the deck of a wooden Viking ship that     has been built for a commemorative millennial journey from Iceland to North     America. I looked at the some of the Icelandic Saga manuscripts, which are the     heart and soul of the Icelandic experience. I learned about the central role     that women have always played in the settling and building of this country.   Reading through the Sagas, I even found a new heroine, Gudridur, who grew up     in Iceland at the dawn of the last millennium, and who as a young women sailed     off to America in one of those open Viking shipsone of the very first     expeditions. She gave birth to the first known European child in North America,     returned to Iceland and decided to take a journey to see the Pope in Rome, which     she did. She returned to Iceland, where she lived to be a wise old age and where     she became a very important personage and the mother of many who still live     here in Iceland.    A thousand years later, as I look around this auditorium, I see many women     here who have made their own courageous journeys. You may not have climbed into     a wooden Viking boat and sailed across the ocean, or found your way across thousands     of miles to visit a Popebut you have. I can only imagine the courage it     must have taken for Vilija to come here from Belarusat a time when newspapers     are being closed down, NGOs shut down, people disappearingto speak, as     she eloquently did yesterday, about human rights, political rights, and the     future she would like to be part of in her native land. When we met recently     at the White House, she had been disbarred from her legal profession because     of her work on behalf of human rights. But she has not given in or given up.   And I can only imagine the commitment it must have taken for Vilija to first     enter politics in Lithuania. When she spoke to us at the Vital Voices conference     in Vienna two years ago, she told us how as a student of music, she wasn't     even allowed to travel to a music festival in Poland. And how when she was first     running for office, a famous male doctor told her that he knew quite a lot about     women's hormones and could assure her that there was nothing for a woman     to do in politics. Well, thankfully, she didn't accept that diagnosis.     She was elected to the Parliament, and told us in Vienna that: The vital     voices of women must break this silence.   I have met countless women, as I've traveled throughout this region in     Europe and beyond, who are breaking decades and centuries of silence. I met     them in Estonia, where I visited the first ever clinic offering comprehensive     health care to women. I met them in Russia, where time and time again I have     been so impressed by the strength and courage of the Russian women. I remember     the first time I met Gallina Karelovafirst in Jekaterinburg, then in Moscow,     and now at this conference. Gallina is a deputy minister of Labor and Social     Development, who took the unprecedented step of listening and learning from     the NGOs. She has consistently hosted listening sessions with them, working     with them to make sure that the government is responsive to the citizens on     issues like domestic violence.    And I met women breaking the silence in Latvia, where in 1994 I met two women     doctors who told me, with great emotion, that they were tired of watching children     in their country die from preventable diseases. They later wrote me asking for     help to improve children's health care. And one year later, Latvians and     Americans met at the White House to celebrate a new partnership between a hospital     in Riga and one in St. Louis.   I know each of you could stand up and tell similar stories. And each of you     represents millions of other women in your countries. And each of youand     each of themis part of a never-ending journey that women have taken to     build for their societies and their families a better future, to ensure that     their voices can be heard. It's a journey that continues from generation     to generation, passed on to us from mothers to daughters to granddaughters.     And it is a tribute to the countless women whose names we will never knowwho     will never have attended a conference like thisthat so many have struggled     so hard to keep their unique cultures, their families alive during years of     great hardship, totalitarianism and communism. And it is a journey that is just     as difficultand sometimes even as dangerousas the one that Gudridur     took 1,000 years ago.    I've thought a lot about the women who are not here. In particular, I     think of Gallina Staravotya from St Petersburg, Russia, who I last saw at a     Vital Voices follow-up conference in Bulgaria. She came up after my speech to     tell me what she was doing and the actions she was taking to further political     participation and fight corruption in her country. That was the last time I     saw her. Shortly after that she was assassinated. She, like many others who     fight for justice and democracy, paid the ultimate price. That may be hard for     those of us from Finland or Norway or Sweden or Denmark or Iceland or the United     States even to imagine. But here today at the dawn of a new centuryat     the end of the most violent and bloody century in recorded historypeople     are still giving up their lives and losing all they hold dear to stand up for     democracy.    A conference like this is so critical to give support to the women throughout     this region and throughout the world who have borne the brunt of the changes     and the suffering that has occurred during this transition on the road to reform.     As we've heard during this conference, too many mothers are asking, What     good is democracy when our children don't have affordable child care or     health care? Too many workers are asking, What good is a free market     when we're the first to be fired and the last to be hired? And yet     I also hear in all of these voices at this conference and others like it, that     despite the obstacles which stand in the way, you have not lost faith and you     are committed to continued reform as the way to create the positive changes     that will benefit ourselves and our children in the next century. You are also     committed to the idea that women will be among the leading architects and builders     and champions of democracy and freedom.    The American delegation came here with two important, inter-connected goals.     It is a delegation that consists of government officials headed by Deputy Secretary     of State Strobe Talbott, of private businesses, NGOs, philanthropic organizations,     and individuals. And we are here first to strengthen our friendship with Northern     Europeto help our friends in Russia, the Baltic States and the Nordic     countries create a northern neighborhood. And we are here to advance the causes     of women and of democracy, because we believe that the two are inseparable.     Progress for women and progress for democracy go hand in hand.   That is the promise that was made at the United Nations Fourth World Conference     on Women in Beijing in 1995. The Platform for Action that came out of that conference     very clearly stated that democratic progress depends on the progress of women.     Economic progress depends on the progress of women. Women's rights are     human rights, and human rights are women's rights.          Now I have been amazed by the number of people over the last four years who     asked me what I meant when I said that. I remember in particular being on a     Voice of America call-in radio program when a gentleman called me from a faraway     country to ask me just what I meant when I said that women's rights     are human rights. And I asked him to close his eyes and think of all the     rights men have: the right to food and shelter; the right to a job and education;     the right to be able to vote and to hold elective office; the right to be heard     and valued as members of families and communities. Those are the same rights     women want. And those are the rights we must fight for at the end of this century     wherever they are still lacking.   We have worked to fulfill that promise that was made at Beijing by ensuring     that women's concerns were centralnot peripheralto United States     foreign policy. Secretary of State Albright has shown through words and deeds     that America's international objectives include widening the circle of     democracy and expanding the participation of women around the world.   One of the ways we've done that is by creating this Vital Voices Global     Democracy Initiativea public-private partnership that is dedicated to     ensuring an audience for women's voices, for changing women's lives,     and for transforming families, communities and societies. We are working to     give women around the world the tools of opportunity. Because what does the     promise of a free market mean to the millions and millions of girls who can't     read or write, or to the women who can't plan their own families or their     futures?    We are working to stop the trafficking of women and girls, because what does     an abstract political proposition called democracy mean to the one million girls     who are lured from home with the promise of jobs and security and instead wake     up in a nightmare, trafficked like drugs across national lines and sold into     prostitution, domestic servitude and forced labor? I know that some of the countries     and NGOs represented here have made commitments to do what they can to stop     this tragedy. No government and no citizen should rest until we stop this modern     form of slavery, protect its victims and prosecute those who are responsible.   And we are also working to open up the political process to all women, because     democracy will never be fulfilled while women are still barred by law or tradition     from making their voices heard at the ballot box or on the soapbox, in the home     or the workplace. I was thinking yesterday, as we were listening to Rasha from     Kuwait, that here we are in a great city with a woman mayor, and I just imagine     the talent that could be put to use in Kuwait and in other countries in the     Gulf region if, as Rasha asked, women were allowed to participate.    It is important at a conference like this that we hear from those who do not     yet enjoy the full extent of women's rights, because we all have a stake     in ensuring that they eventually do. At conferences such as this, it is the     stories of women that make the greatest impression, as we meet in a workshop     or in a hallway or over a cup of coffee. I have heard such voices over the past     years in conferences from Vienna to Bulgaria, in Northern Ireland, in Uruguay,     and now certainly here in Reykjavik.    Yesterday, a group of women, like the ones here before, sat around this beautiful     table. I am told that it is shaped like a boomerang because ideas are supposed     to be thrown out and bounced back. And that's what happened. We can still     hear the very telling words that Rasha al Sabah left us with when she said,     We don't want a skim milk democracy. We want a full cream democracy.     I can still hear Pearl Sagar from Northern Ireland saying that politics is a     playground for large children, but a playground that she loves and     urges all women to join. And I can still hear Anita from CitiCorp talking about     the microcredit programs in India and saying that businesses must become more     involved in global philanthropy to create more cooperation, not just competition.   These are among the messages that I hope we will take back from this conference.     I have looked through the reports and there are many, many recommendations to     be acted upon. There are women in rural areas who desperately need computers     to link them to one another, young people who need mentors, workers who need     training, and women who need protection from domestic violence, as Marina reminded     us of.    I want to thank all of the partners who are committed to the follow-up that     will flow from this conference, starting with our long-term Vital Voices partners,     McKinsey & Company and Discovery Communications, for their extraordinary     commitment. I was delighted that Deputy Secretary Talbott announced the U.S.     government and the Nordic Bank will provide $2 million in microcredit to expand     small businesses in Russia and the Baltics.    I also want to thank a group of Washington political consultants who will train     NGOs and legislators from the region on how to advocate for issues and draft     legislation. The magazine Good Housekeeping will create a fellowship that teaches     business skills in publishing.   Akin Gump, an international law firm based in D.C., had come to this conference     originally planning to offer summer associate positions to promising law students.     But after meeting the women here, and hearing your stories, they have decided     to also offer free targeted legal assistance to women in Russia. The Supreme     Court of Iceland will train people from the Baltic States and Russia to understand     their legal and judicial systems. A Swedish NGOWomen CANis already     supporting women NGOs in Lithuania. Now working with the U.S. government and     the private sector, it will offer the same type of support to women in Latvia,     Belarus, and Northern Russia. And people from all over the region will be able     to log onto the Internet and get information in Russian about how to start a     business, thanks to our government's SBA Online Women's Business Center.     I was told this morning that the Open Society Russia has committed additional     resources specifically for Vital Voices implementation of the initiatives of     this conference. And I very much appreciate the leadership role that the Open     Society Institute has played. I hope others will join them in making this partnership     a reality.    This last session of this conference has to be a beginning, not an end. All     the governments involved have agreed to hold a follow-up meeting in Lithuania.     When they come together, they will want to know how far we've come and     how far we still must go. And what they say is dependent on what the rest of     us will do.   The sponsors of this conference can open doors. But only we can walk through     them. And only we can hold them open for others to follow. I am often surprised     when women come to these meetings and meet their fellow countrywomen whom they've     never met before, who are working in the same field or who have a good idea     that they want to be part of. And they often leave here, not only with new friends,     but new ideas, new networks, and new partnerships.    We could see this happening in the last few days, as women talked together     and huddled together in the hallways of the Civic Center and compared notes     in the classrooms of the business schoolwomen in the cyber cafe surfing     the web and sending messages home about the contacts they had made in Iceland.     I hope this conversation continuesin markets and villages and boardrooms     and schoolhouses, in our homes and in our parliaments. Not only among those     who are here, but as many people as we can reach.    Think of the two women who addressed us earlier, Tatjana and Elena. They are     here with energy and enthusiasm, which was clearly conveyed in their words.     They are not alone, because they stand in the wake of many who have come before.     I was told that Tatjana got a great deal of help from her grandmother and her     mother, who never had the opportunities she is enjoying, but nevertheless encouraged     her to follow her own dreams. Isn't that what we want for our daughters     and our sons? Isn't that what this journey we are on is really all about?      At the end of the day, as we look back on an individual life, or the life of     a country, we count how far we have come by many different means. We look at     our accomplishments, we admire our art and our culture, we certainly enjoy the     successes we might have. But perhaps the most telling way is whether, generation     after generation, we have made the journey less difficult and dangerous for     our children.           There are so many women who have explored new lands, risked their lives, and     endured long journeys over the last millennium, all with the hope of creating     a new future better than the past. That was their gift to us. Now it is up to     us to give every girl growing up in the next century the chance to grow up in     a world where she can travel as far as her dreams and hard work and abilities     will take her. And when we do, it will be because the women in this room raised     their vital voices again and again and again.   Thank you very much.   |