Eva Bacon

Eva Bacon (1909 - 23 July 1994), born Eva Goldner, was a socialist and feminist based in Brisbane, Australia, who was most active between the 1950s and the 1980s.[1] Raised in Austria and a member of several leftist political organisations in her youth, Eva Goldner escaped Nazi occupied Austria in 1939, eventually migrating to Australia.[2] Goldner remained involved in local and international politics and joined the Communist Party of Australia (CPA),[2] marrying fellow member Ted Bacon in 1944.[3] Throughout her career Bacon was an active member of the CPA, and the Union of Australian Women (UAW),[4] where she was heavily involved in International Women's Day campaigns, including attending the 1975 UN World Conference on Women in Mexico[5] celebrating International Women's Year. Bacon was also an active member of the Women's Electoral Lobby (WEL), the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF).[6] She was passionate about childcare issues,[1] and through her political work clashed particularly with conservative Queensland Premier Joh Bjelke-Peterson.[6]

Early Life and Young Adulthood

Born in Austria in 1909 to Jewish parents, Eva Goldner was aware of fascism and anti-Semitism from early in her life.[4] She was a Communist militant in her youth and as a member of International Red Aid, a Communist organisation established to provide aid to 'class-war' political prisoners,[7] she worked to help victims of fascism.[1] Goldner and her mother, as leftist Jewish women, were forced to flee Austria in 1939 following the Nazi occupation of Austria, migrating to Australia after some time in England.[6] Goldner, a dressmaker and fashion designer by trade,[2] became involved with the left in her new home where she attended her first International Women’s Day meeting the same year she arrived.[2] She attributed that meeting to inspiring much of her later political activism. Goldner soon became a member of the Communist Party of Australia,[2] where, at a performance by the Unity Theatre Group, she met her husband Ted Bacon, a returned soldier and fellow communist and political activist.[8] They married in 1944 in Brisbane[3] and had one child, a daughter, named Barbara.[4]

Politics

Communist Party of Australia

During her life in Australia, Eva Bacon was heavily involved in the Communist Party of Australia. A communist in her youth in Austria, it was natural for Bacon to seek out like-minded people when she escaped the Nazis for Australia. Through her involvement with the CPA, Bacon met and married her husband Ted,[8] who served as the Secretary for the Queensland Branch of the CPA for some time.[9] Ted and Eva were heavily involved in the CPA as shown by the hundreds of leaflets, pamphlets, typed speeches, and letters from protest, rallies, events, and meetings contained in their personal Archive.[10]

While Bacon insisted that her Communist leanings did not affect her work with other political groups such as the UAW,[6] it is clear that her involvement in the CPA had a negative impact on her reliability in other areas of her life. Right-wing politicians such as Joh Bjelke-Peterson drew connections between her involvement with the two groups to try and discredit the UAW as a Communist organisation.[11]

Bacon was a member of the Central Committee of the CPA since 1948 by her own account,[12] and she and Ted remained committed members throughout their lives.

Joh Bjelke-Peterson

Sir Joh Bjelke-Petersen was the Premier of Queensland from 8 August 1968 – 1 December 1987 who personally objected to Eva Bacon's political activities and her membership of the Communist Party.[11] His attitude towards political activists, and groups such as the Union of Australian Women was paternalistic: “...all these protest groups consist of the hard-core activists who hide behind the gullible, the naive and the well-meaning.”[11] On the subject of Joh Bjelke-Petersen, Eva Bacon has been quoted as saying “I believe Mr Bjelke-Petersen in using my personal political commitment is trying to enlist support for his anti-democratic policies”.[4]

The Bjelke-Petersen government's ‘censorship laws’ were designed to limit the impact of the CPA in Queensland by censoring the publication of positive content about the organisation in the media, instead promoting negative perceptions of the group, and all the organisations with which it was associated.[8] The Queensland government's ‘obscenity’ laws also restricted the promotion or dissemination of sexually orientated information even if it was educational.[13] The Women's Liberation Movement’s pamphlet ‘Female Sexuality and Education’ was considered to be obscene by Bjelke-Petersen, and was confiscated from the Brisbane offices of Communist Party of Australia by the ‘State Licensing Branch’ of the Queensland Police Department at 5 p.m. on Friday 8 October 1971.[14]

Women's Rights

Union of Australian Women

The Union of Australian Women was, and in Victoria remains, a feminist activist organisation that relies on letter writing, petitions, marches and demonstrations to gain its objectives.[15] Some of these objectives were as follows:

As an older organisation, it has had to change some of its goals over time, whilst maintaining its primary aims. This was evident for Bacon during the 1970s as she has spoken of the introduction of the notion that “the ‘personal’ is political”, and ‘sexual politics’ taking three years for the organisation to fully support. Her struggle with this shift was due to the move away from the economic and general political struggles that the UAW had previously focused on as the way to gain equality with men.[6] As a member of the Union of Australian Women, Bacon involved herself in numerous activities including writing for the UAW's magazine, Our Women, as well as working on books such as Uphill all the way: A Documentary History of Women in Australia. Her involvement in the Indigenous rights movement is acknowledged by the National Museum of Australia.[16] Although believed to be a faction of the Communist Party of Australia by the Premier of Queensland at the time, Joh Bjelke-Petersen, the Union of Australian Women has always maintained its independence from the CPA.[6][11]

International Women's Day

Eva Bacon attended her first International Women’s Day (IWD) meeting in 1939, not long after she migrated to Australia.[2] She became heavily involved in IWD activities after her involvement with the UAW began, and acted as the International Women’s Day Committee secretary for the UAW between 1951 and 1974.[1][2][17]

In 1958 Bacon was involved in with the UAW's International Women's Year celebrations which drew a crowd of hundreds to hear speakers Dymphna Cusak and Dame Sybil Thorndyke, a celebration which also addressed women’s influence on history, socialism, and world peace. Eleanor Roosevelt sent a message about this meeting to the UAW, among others.[17]

In 1960 Bacon coordinated a visit to Australia by Madam Chao Feng of the National Women’s Federation of China and Madame Roesijati R. Sukardi, a journalist with the Indonesian Women’s Organisation to attend IWD meetings nationally. As Australia did not recognise China at the time, the UAW set about obtaining visas for the visitors and were delayed to the point that Feng and Sukardi could not attend several of their appointed meetings.[17]

According to personal anecdotes, Bacon was most proud of her involvement in the UWA's program for reviving the IWD celebrations in Australia following World War II. She encouraged women to join marches and demonstrations on IWD's official date of 8 March[4] and 'saw IWD as a campaign, needing work almost all the year round with 8 March as the highlight, rather than a one-day function.'[17]

International Women's Year 1975

The United Nations marked 1975 as International Women’s Year (IWY) and declared the Decade for Women covering 1976-1985.[18] In this year a World Conference on Women was held in Mexico for international government representatives to take part in and a Tribune simultaneously for other groups and interested parties[5] attended by women from all over the world to come together and discuss women’s issues and women’s rights.[18]

As her involvement with International Women’s Day events was so strong at home,[1] Eva Bacon was invited to attend as a delegate to the Tribune by the Australian Government who invested over $3 million into the 1974-1976 budgets for International Women’s Year activities.[19] Bacon was the only representative from Queensland chosen to take part in the Tribune,[2] taking part as a member and on behalf of the UAW according to official papers found in her personal Archive, along with Government documents and documents from the Australian Embassy in Mexico confirming her involvement.[20]

Childcare

Throughout her activist career Bacon lobbied for children’s rights and for the establishment of appropriate childcare facilities through every party she was involved in.[1] During the 1950s Bacon traveled back to Europe to attend conferences on motherhood and childcare,[2][4] and in 1967 through the UAW Bacon lobbied for after school and work based child care for mothers, arguing to the Queensland Government that these were legitimate concerns for mothers and children.[1] Through her work with the UAW, Bacon was involved in the establishment of a childcare centre at The University of Queensland in 1971.[1]

The Eva and Ted Bacon Archive Collection

The Fryer Library at the University of Queensland holds one of the most extensive collections of archival material documenting Left-wing and radical activism in Brisbane and statewide.[21][22] The collection includes publications, literature and personal archives of key groups and figures of the movement including that of Eva and Ted Bacon.[23] The Bacon archive was donated in the late 1980s in the hope of protecting the documents in the face of a still heavily anti-communist public sphere.[10] Additions were continually made until 1999 when Ted's brother, on behalf of the deceased couple, compiled the last of their work and the Fryer archive became officially available for academic use.[10] The Eva and Ted Bacon collection consists of a wide range of publications, photos and other literature as well as a series of hand-written notes, research and drafted political theses.[10]

Selected articles published in Our Women

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Our Women, Our State: Women in Pictures: 1967, retrieved 2011-10-18
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Grant, H. (2005), Great Queensland Women, Brisbane: State of Queensland (Office for Women), pp. 72–76, retrieved 2011-10-18
  3. 1 2 "Marriages", The Courier Mail (Queensland), 12 May 1944, p. 6, retrieved 2011-10-18
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Young, Pam (29 October 1994), "Obituary", The Sydney Morning Herald, p. 16, retrieved 2011-10-18
  5. 1 2 Stevens, Joyce. "A History of International Women’s Day in Words and Images: The Nineteen Seventies and Eighties Continued". Retrieved 2011-10-18.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Young, Pam (1998). Daring to Take a Stand: The Story of the Union of Australian Women in Queensland. Queensland: Wavell Heights. ISBN 0-949861-17-0.
  7. International Red Aid
  8. 1 2 3 Healy, Connie (2000). Defiance: Political Theatre in Brisbane 1930-1962. Australia: Boombana Publications. ISBN 1-876542-04-7.
  9. McGuire, John (1996). "Julius, Max Nordau (1916 – 1963) - Biography". Australian Dictionary of Biography. Retrieved 2011-10-19.
  10. 1 2 3 4 E.A. and E. Bacon Collection, Fryer Archive Library, University of Queensland number UQFL 241, boxes 1-18 (PDF)
  11. 1 2 3 4 Brennan, Frank (1983), Too Much Order with Too Little Law, St Lucia, Queensland: University of Queensland Press, p. 129, ISBN 0-7022-1842-1
  12. Bacon, Eva, The Struggle for Unity in the Labour Movement in the Post War Period (PDF) E.A. and E. Bacon Collection, Fryer Archive Library, University of Queensland, number UQFL 241, folder JQ 4098. C6B3216? Fryer, box 12.
  13. "Leaflet called obscene.". The Courier Mail (microfilm) (Queensland). 7 Oct 1971. p. 12.
  14. Gifford, C. E. (1971), Press Release (PDF), Queensland Located in the E.A. and E. Bacon Collection, Fryer Library, University of Queensland, number UQFL 241, box 6.
  15. 1 2 "Union of Australian Women: History and Background". Union of Australian Women Victoria. 2006. Retrieved 2014-04-14.
  16. "Union of Australian Women". National Museum of Australia. 2008. Retrieved 2014-04-14.
  17. 1 2 3 4 Stevens, Joyce. "A History of International Women’s Day in Words and Images: The Nineteen Fifties and Sixties". Retrieved 2011-10-18.
  18. 1 2 "1st World Conference on Women, Mexico 1975: Resolution adopted by the General Assembly of the United Nations concerning the World Conference on International Women's Year". United Nations. Retrieved 2010-10-18.
  19. National Archive of Australia. "International Women’s Year, 1975 – Fact Sheet 237". Retrieved 2011-10-18.
  20. E.A. and E. Bacon Collection, Fryer Archive Library, University of Queensland, number UQFL 241, box 13. (PDF)
  21. "Fryer Library: Special Collections Library of the University of Queensland". University of Queensland. Retrieved 2011-10-20.
  22. "Online Exhibitions: Radical Politics and the University of Queensland". Fryer Library: Special Collections Library of the University of Queensland. University of Queensland. Retrieved 2011-10-20.
  23. "Online Exhibitions: International Women’s Day, March 8th". Fryer Library: Special Collections Library of the University of Queensland. University of Queensland. Retrieved 2011-10-20.
  24. Bacon, Eva (October–December 1961). "Blue Flowers". Our Women.
  25. Bacon, Eva (June–September 1964). "The Magic Circle". Our Women.
  26. Bacon, Eva (March–May 1965). "Tropical Fruit Salad". Our Women.
  27. Bacon, Eva (June–August 1965). "The Language of Flowers". Our Women.

External links

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