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Irish Examiner
2 days ago
- Politics
- Irish Examiner
Book review: IWU members' essays offer first-hand accounts of activists on the Contraception Train
The vast accomplishments of modern Irish feminism would look very different without the courageous, yet often overlooked, efforts of Irishwomen United (IWU) activists in the years following the Contraceptive Train. This phenomenal collection of 20 essays offers first-hand, historical accounts of on-the-ground activities during this period, shining a light of neglected truth on the history of how Ireland was changed. In this book, writer and IWU member Evelyn Conlon together with academic Rebecca Pelan, ensure the impact of the organisation will no longer be forgotten. The collective memories of these women describe everything from pickets to sit-ins, self-questioning to dancing, the development of feminist ideas and publishing despite the restrictive laws and attitudes surrounding them. Through relentless, difficult discussions, publications, marches, and allyship with the global feminist and civil rights movement, the ideas of IWU were transformed into action for the sake of reproductive rights, sexuality, representation, and rape crisis work. The foreword from former Irish president Mary McAleese contextualises the collective labour of IWU within a not-so-distant past in Ireland This book also features an archive of original art, flyers, photographs, and memorabilia of the movement. A glimpse at the long-winding track of history behind us reminds us how far we've come. Irishwomen United and its allies set the precedent for change for the next generation. The stories of these women campaigners are not only representative of past movements, they also a call to action for future social justice activists in the fight for liberation and equality for all. Foreword by Mary McAleese The position of women in Irish society in 2025 bears little resemblance to that which existed in 1975, the year Irishwomen United came into existence, though what is clear from these essays is that the changes and improvements gained did not come about without a great deal of effort on the part of women themselves. This collection attests to what can be achieved when goals and pathways to essential egalitarian reforms are collectively prioritised, regardless of political and ideological differences. Irishwomen United drew on successes from the recent and distant past, by bringing together women from vastly different backgrounds in education, class, sexual orientation, and politics. Irishwomen United picketed at Dublin Airport picket over the X Case. Picture: Evelyn Conlon Extraordinarily, their mission thrived on allowing space for these differences to be expressed whilst, at the same time, retaining a clear focus on what needed to be done to improve the lives of Irish women. There was a lot of apathy to be overcome, resistance to be faced down, doubters to be persuaded, and time to be invested over and above the demands of busy everyday lives. That time had to be reinvested over and over again, for this was the work of decades not days. That such a representative group from the 1970s and 1980s has contributed to this collection 50 years after the events is testimony to their commitment to a cause that changed the country in significant ways. For some, the commitment continued as a life-long passion and a central part of who they are. For others, Irishwomen United was a moment in time — an exciting, stimulating, even dangerous one — that set them on a path of personal discovery about themselves and the world around them. The recurring description by contributors of the anticipation, excitement, joy, and satisfaction felt around 4pm on Sunday afternoons in a run-down flat on Pembroke St, Dublin, is palpable and shines bright in memories captured here. Make no mistake, though these meetings were stimulating and enjoyable, they were primarily about planning and strategising on how to change Ireland, in whatever ways were necessary. The equally strong, determined voices from organisations that were part of that change — from Cherish to women's publishing — is fascinating to read. In 1976, I became legal advisor to and co-founder with David Norris of the Campaign for Homosexual Law Reform. The battle then was for decriminalisation, and it was fought tooth and claw with meagre resources, but fierce moral integrity, through the courts of this land and Europe When the fledgling Dublin Rape Crisis Centre (RCC) was being set-up, they requested advice as to the legal issues involved, and I was privileged to be able to give that. A great deal of thought and research went into the establishment of the RCC, with initial meetings taking place from 1977 until the official opening in 1979 and thereafter. The RCC remains one of many enduring success stories from that period. Along with other service agencies from the period — such as Cherish, The Well Woman Centre, and the Irish Pregnancy Counselling Centre, the development of women's publishing and women's studies, the creation of space for the development of lesbian and gay rights, as well as Irish reproductive rights — Irishwomen United and the network of women and groups who changed this country in so many ways, did so from the ground up, building on what had gone before, and changing course only when enough had been achieved to ensure that there would be no going back. 'After the Train: Irishwomen United and a Network of Change' also features an archive of original art, flyers, photographs, and memorabilia of the movement. There were minds to be changed, attitudes to be challenged and, in fairness to the Irish people, the evidence is in that a profound change of hearts and minds is now embedded in civic society. Séamus Heaney wrote perceptively that: "What looks the strongest has outlived its term. The future lies with what is affirmed from under." (From the Canton of Expectation III) From under the centuries-old layers of sexism, misogyny, patriarchy, exclusion, dismissal, and condescension, a new future has emerged and not by accident or coincidence! The 'how' of it you will read here. I heartily commend the contributors to this collection, all of whom have so generously shared their first-hand experience of Irishwomen United and the times of change, and I congratulate the editors on putting together such a fine example of Irish women's voices and history, and in creating a body of work that will continue to be relevant and exist as documentary evidence of just what can be achieved, what grace can fill the voids, when women gather to change their world.
Yahoo
5 days ago
- General
- Yahoo
IWU hosts NCAA Div. III Softball Championship games this week
BLOOMINGTON, Ill. (WMBD/WYZZ) — The NCAA is in central Illinois and it's a good thing. Illinois Wesleyan is hosting the NCAA Division III Softball Championship this week. Eight teams, from coast to coast, are in Bloomington to compete for the national title at Inspiration Field. The double-elimination tournament runs from May 29-June 4. 'It's an opportunity to host teams from all over the country and to showcase Bloomington-Normal and see what we are all about. And, of course, Illinois Wesleyan,' said IWU athletics director Mike Wagner. The eight teams playing in the 2025 Div. III Softball World Series are Virginia Wesleyan from Virginia Beach, Randolph-Macon College of Ashland, Virginia, Linfield University of Oregon, Saint Mary's in Minnesota, Rowan University of Glassboro, NJ, Texas Lutheran, Trine from Angola, Indiana and Redlands College of California. IWU made the NCAA field and won two games in the regional but fell short of getting home to play for the national title. Nonetheless, the Titans hope to provide a championship experience for everyone as the tournament host. 'We'll try to make this experience the best we possibly can for the student-athletes and the teams that are in town here for this week,' Wagner said. IWU will host the NCAA Div. III volleyball national tournament in November. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Yahoo
12-05-2025
- Sport
- Yahoo
'My teammates are amazing.' IWU senior thanks friends after breaking HR record
BLOOMINGTON, Illinois (WMBD) – Illinois Wesleyan softball clinched yet another conference title on Saturday, and one senior made school history in the process. IWU softball sets program record set in 2nd straight CCIW title win, Titan baseball falls in championship game Ava Khoury hit her 34th career home run in the second inning, breaking the all-time record for the Titans. It was made even more sweet celebrating with Normal U-High graduate Jen Kuhn, the team's best hitter. The two have been inseparable since they met as freshmen. It felt good. It was really exciting. I like I said, my teammates are amazing. It was so fun to run home to them. So it was it was the best feeling. I love Jen so much. She's going to be a forever friend. She's the best. Ava Khoury It was absolutely amazing. I love her. She's been my best friend all four years here. And I'm not surprised at all. She's more than deserving of that and she's just going to keep hitting them I know it. So she's just so awesome. I love her.> Jen Kuhn Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Yahoo
11-05-2025
- Sport
- Yahoo
IWU softball sets program record set in 2nd straight CCIW title win, Titan baseball falls in championship game
BLOOMINGTON, Illinois (WMBD) – Illinois Wesleyan softball senior Ava Khoury set a Titans program record Saturday morning as the team won the College Conference of Illinois and Wisconsin tournament title 4-2 over Augustana. In the bottom of the 2nd, Khoury broke a scoreless tie with a homer to left field. It was the 34th long ball of her career and broke the all-time record for the Titans. Her day wasn't finished either. Khoury broke a 1-1 tie in the 3rd with a base hit which scored Normal U-High grad Jen Kuhn along with Ella Hermes. The win punches the Titans ticket to the DIII national softball tournament for the second straight year. As if they needed extra motivation to advance, IWU will host the DIII World Series later in May. The Titans CCIW tournament title is their second straight, third in the last four years, and 17th overall. Amazing. I knew this team was more than capable of it all season long. So just being able to produce and be there for each other and execute when it matters is just amazing. I'm so excited to see what we do the rest of the season. Jen Kuhn So good. I'm so proud of this team and everything we've accomplished. More to come, but feels very good, especially as a senior. It just feels so good to be here again and having a successful season. My senior year has been really exciting. Ava Khoury It's super special and, you know, I think the experience kind of showed through there and I just thought they did a great job of competing each pitch, staying focused, just continuing to stay in the moment and be with our feeder and just enjoy the ride. Tiffany Prager, Titans head coach IWU will await the selection show Monday to see if they will host a regional. With the campus already hosting the national championship, it is likely the NCAA will award the Titans with a regional. Meanwhile, across the street, Illinois Wesleyan baseball was going for their first CCIW tournament title in 11 years. They came into Saturday needing to win twice against North Central after losing earlier in the week. On the second at-bat of the game for the Titans, Justin Gadomski set a two-run homer to dead center to them up 2-0 early. However, the Cardinals rattled over seven straight runs and held IWU to just one hit over the next several innings. In the 6th, the Titans put together a rally. They pushed across five runs on seven hits to tie the game 7-7, including a two-run single by Jimmy Gurgone. But, North Central answered immediately with three runs of their own in the bottom half of the inning and the Titans could not recover. They would go on to lose 11-7 with North Central winning the CCIW championship. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


BBC News
17-04-2025
- Entertainment
- BBC News
Meta AI: Irish wolfhounds join writer's protest
Irish wolfhounds have joined a protest by writers, who are protesting about what they describe as "any piracy" of their works being used by Meta's AI protest at the Dáil and Government buildings in Dublin was led by the Irish Writers Union (IWU).The union, which is coordinating a campaign with Irish publishers, screenwriters, and poets, is demanding that Meta "complies with Irish and EU copyright laws in the training of its AI model".Members say the protest follows "the revelations arising from a court case in the US, that Meta used millions of copyright-protected works in order to train its AI model, Llama 3". Writer's work used for AI training Audrey Magee, an award-winning author whose publications include The Colony and The Undertaking told BBC News NI she was shocked when she discovered that her works had been used for AI author said she's concerned that her works have been accessed and "used in a way you have no control over". She also said the presence of Irish wolfhounds at the protest today was a powerful symbolic gesture because of their ancient links to Irish literature, poetry, mythology, and members of the Irish Writers Union who claim their works have been harvested for AI training purposes include Ruth O'Leary, author and The Weekend Break and Sam Blake, author of The Killing Sense. The Chairman of the IWU, Conor McAnally said: "It is difficult enough to make a living as a writer without billionaires deciding it's too inconvenient to pay for our work."The Irish Writers Union will robustly defend our members, and their right to fair compensation for any use of their work. We call on the Irish Government to support those writers whose work has been pirated and hold Meta to account."A petition, with 1500 signatures, has been presented to the Irish Department for Trade Promotion, Artificial Intelligence and Digital a statement, Minister Niamh Smyth TD, said: "Given the rapid advancement of AI technologies, EU and Irish policies and legislation are adapting to address emerging challenges."The IWU is encouraging its members to make a formal, legal complaint to Meta demanding the immediate cessation of any use of their copyrighted material in the company's AI training processes until appropriate permissions are also want Meta to negotiate "fair and reasonable licensing terms" if it wants to use their work, as well as the offer of compensation for any past unauthorised use of their work in AI model training investigation by The Atlantic magazine, external revealed Meta may have accessed millions of pirated books and research papers through LibGen - Library Genesis - to train its generative AI (Gen-AI) system, Llama.A spokesperson for Meta said: "We respect third-party intellectual property rights and believe our use of information to train AI models is consistent with existing law."