Leticia Ramos-Shahani: Her journey to women’s rights for the women of the world
Diana G. Mendoza
Reprinted from Women Writing Women
https://womenwritingwomen.org/2017/03/20/leticia-ramos-shahani/
Reprinted from Women Writing Women
https://womenwritingwomen.org/2017/03/20/leticia-ramos-shahani/
20 March 2017
(Image: A cheerful group shot of The Forum Board by Kevin De
Vera, cropped for space)
“A practice is accepted as valid until you challenge it.”
Career diplomat, senator, critic, and up to her last years,
a farmer mulling over a better agricultural method to produce carabao milk and
cheese, Leticia Ramos-Shahani showed her stance on how to question the status
quo to young women journalists and writers in March 2015.
The event was an intergenerational forum to celebrate the
20th year of the Fourth International Conference on Women in 1995 held in
Beijing, China that produced the Beijing Platform for Action (BPfA), considered
the landmark document that prescribed a framework in advancing women’s rights
that has become the guide for countries in formulating policies for women.
But before all of these milestones and monumental outcomes
came into reality, there was Shahani who started it all in the Philippines and
in the global arena, when it was tough to be a woman even if she was already in
the United Nations.
“In the beginning, there was very little interest in women’s
rights at the UN,” she said, as majority of high-ranking UN officials were men
and there were only a few women ambassadors in the 1960s and 1970s. “But we fought for a niche that did not yet
exist. People laughed and thought it was a joke to raise certain awareness
about women’s rights because there was hardly any,” she said.
Shahani’s career in diplomacy and international relations
continued to stand out when she chaired the UN Commission on the Status of
Women in 1974 and, under her leadership, recommended that 1975 should be
celebrated as “International Women’s Year” and that there should be an
international women’s conference.
The UN declared the “International Decade for Women” from
1976 to 1985 and adopted the theme, “equality, development, peace.” Shahani
always referred to these three words as her “favorite trilogy” – “equality
encompasses equal rights between women and men, development covers economics
and social issues, and peace deals with the political aspect.”
Her favorite words would figure in UN deliberations,
legislative and societal discussions and all forms of discourses on gender
parity and equality for many years even up to today.
The first world conference in women was indeed held in
Mexico City but it was headed by a man. The second was held in Copenhagen in
1980 but it was marred by the Arab-Israeli conflict.
In 1985, Shahani was appointed secretary-general of the
Third World Conference on Women in Nairobi, Kenya while concurrently holding
the post of UN Assistant Secretary-General for Social Development and
Humanitarian Affairs.
She led preparatory meetings and conferences that produced a
policy document that became the basis for the Nairobi Forward-Looking
Strategies that reversed the thinking about women’s issues solely as welfare
concerns that did not consider women in the economic and political agenda.
In Nairobi, Shahani was able to wrestle the changes she
wanted for women, reversing the unequal thinking to one that reaffirmed the
equality of rights of men and women and for women to be given the opportunity
to participate in political and economic development.
Shahani is also the first co-author of the UN Convention on
the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW), the first
human rights treaty to affirm the reproductive rights of women, define
discrimination against women and set up an agenda for action by governments to
end discrimination. CEDAW made rape become a crime against a woman’s right as a
human being and not merely a crime against her chastity. It officially
recognized women’s work with remuneration and value.
These were products of hard negotiations on difficult issues
that started in Nairobi, when Shahani even had to ask the UN to hold cocktails
daily so that women could meet and discuss, as she saw the international
feminist movement already looming at that time. She also disregarded protocol
by barring clearance from the Philippine government to finish the draft with a
mostly Filipino UN staff.
She also collaborated with the then Union of Soviet
Socialist Republics, the only state willing to support the Philippines in filing
the draft CEDAW (the first working draft was known as the Philippine-Soviet
Draft) for UN consideration at the height of the Cold War. She led women in
fighting fundamentalists, traditionalists and religious conservatives led by
the Vatican in lobbying for the draft treaty.
As one of the few top-ranking women of the UN, Shahani also
served as chair of the UN Commission on the Status of Women and the Seventh
Congress on Crime Prevention and Treatment of Offenders. She held various
positions in the Philippine Foreign Service and the UN. She was the first
Philippine ambassador to Romania and was later appointed ambassador to
Australia.
After serving the UN, she returned to the Philippines to
become the deputy minister for foreign affairs after the 1986 EDSA People Power
Revolution. In 1987, she won the elections as senator and chaired the Senate
Committee on Foreign Relations and vice chair of the Committee on Justice,
Welfare and Development, and Women and Family Relations. She also headed the
Senate Committee on Education, Culture and Arts. In 1993, she was elected
Senate President Pro-Tempore, the first female to hold the position in the
history of the Philippine Senate.
She introduced laws that address gender discrimination at
work, the Anti-Rape Law of 1997 and the Gender and Development law that
directed government agencies to provide for five percent of their budget
allocated to gender and development.
Shahani graduated in 1951 at Wellesley College in
Massachusetts with an undergraduate degree in English Literature. She finished
her graduate studies in Comparative Literature at the Columbia University in
New York, and was awarded a doctoral degree in Comparative Literature with
highest honors from the University of Paris in Sorbonne. She spoke several
languages. She was also dean of the College of International, Humanitarian and
Development Studies of Miriam College.
Before she passed on from colon cancer at age 87, she ran
her carabao milk and cheese business in Pangasinan, where she was born, and
where she turned her thoughts on helping improve the country’s state of
agriculture.
In the history of the UN and in international diplomacy,
Shahani was one of the women stalwarts besides Helena Benitez, Rosario Manalo
and Patricia Licuanan who made history by presiding over four world conferences
on women and led negotiations to craft the world’s agenda for the human rights
of women and girls.
During the March 2015 Media Workshop and Intergenerational
Forum organized by the now defunct Women’s Feature Service that celebrated the
20th year of the Beijing conference, Shahani exhorted women in media to “be
students of history” and “to stand and help the heroines who made this possible
because that is your duty to the past and your obligation to the future.”
“Women have to make men stronger by raising sons who will be
strong to honor their mother and to be able to do the housework,” and reminded
that “equality should not be at the expense of the men.”
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