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El 8 de marzo, conocido como el Día Internacional de la Mujer, es una fecha que conmemora la lucha histórica de las mujeres por la igualdad de derechos y oportunidades. En la actualidad, el 8M se ha consolidado como una jornada para visibilizar los desafíos que aún enfrentan las mujeres en diversos ámbitos.​ En Las Igualadas, salimos a las calles a preguntar por esos feminismos que practicaban de niñas sin saberlo, destacando cómo, desde temprana edad, las mujeres enfrentan estereotipos de género, roles impuestos y desigualdades estructurales.

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00:21I think since I was a feminist, I've had feminist practices for my mother and my grandmother,
00:26who have been my family together with my sister, and I think that the vocation of care to my sisters
00:33who are not of blood has always been.
00:35What feminism is practiced when I was little, I think that my struggle has always been legal anti-racism,
00:41so the feminism that I always lived and felt and was present in me was the black feminism, and I
00:48continue to implement it.
00:49And as an anecdote, I remember that when I was little, in the house of my grandmother,
00:56sometimes they were sent to me to give me the dishes, and I said that one day when I gave
01:00me the dishes to no man,
01:02my grandmother was enojado and me hit my tía.
01:04But still, I was learning that feminism is not about the academy,
01:09not about the hegemonia that is imposed on feminism.
01:11Well, I think that the feminism that we practiced in my house is that my grandmother was always the one
01:17who was lidering,
01:18she was always in her kitchen, bringing us food and adding to that,
01:22because of the violence that my father had in another way,
01:25I also decided to put these marches and be part of the movement,
01:31because in another way, I was also with the figure of my mother, with my sister.
01:37So, that's it.
01:39I think that part of a feminism that we didn't realize,
01:42was a bit of protecting ourselves between us, being primas.
01:46We had a family that was always full of love,
01:48but we also grew up and faced with the society,
01:51and it's not like what our family is full of love,
01:54so I think that that was what we taught us to take care of
01:58and what we have here, Marchando.
02:11When I was a feminist, I practiced from very little,
02:14I defended women and I defended the injustice in society.
02:19I didn't like it when man was like,
02:22you have to do it and I don't do anything.
02:24Also, the issue that I didn't like to always relate,
02:28like the issue of cooking roles with the women,
02:30which is only for women.
02:32When I was young, when I didn't know anything about feminism,
02:36I always questioned me a lot,
02:38because the kids of my house, my dad, my grandparents,
02:42my grandparents, my grandparents,
02:43they never did anything.
02:44We were always the ones who had to do the work of the house,
02:48so I always put the rest to that.
02:50So, if they didn't do anything, I didn't do anything.
02:53Well, I think that since I was little,
02:54the feminism that I practiced in my house was to question me,
02:57because in my house we were three women and a man,
03:00because my dad didn't and because we didn't.
03:02I think that was the first one,
03:03and then in the school, more than anything,
03:05because I have to wear a shirt and a pantaloon.
03:08I think that was the one that was the most impact.
03:10Really, I think it gave us a lot of problems,
03:12I think, to all of us that we were asking.
03:14My anecdote is that I was little,
03:15I said to my grandmother that I wanted to be president,
03:18so I always had to be clear that I wanted to study.
03:20My family is conservative and from the field,
03:23so I always had to be clear that I wanted to be president
03:25or in any part of the political part.
03:26Well, how could we do it?
03:32Well, before that was,
03:38If you were in a group of teachers,
03:39Thanks.
03:40Let's go.
03:41Let's go.
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