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Vida
Goldstein 1869 - 1949 feminist
Vida
Jane Mary Goldstein (1869-1949), feminist political activist, was
born on 13 April 1869 at Portland, Victoria, eldest of five children
of Isabella (born Hawkins) and Jacob Goldstein, store-keeper and
army officer. In Melbourne from 1877, the family moved in progressive
intellectual circles and attended Dr Charles Strong's Australian
Church. The Goldsteins encouraged economic and intellectual independence
in their daughters and Vida was well-educated, by a governess and
at Presbyterian Ladies' College, from which she matriculated with
honours in 1886.
Shortly after leaving school, Vida began working with her mother
in the anti-sweating movement and in Strong's housing and prison
reform campaigns. She developed an anti-capitalist perspective on
social questions and took her fight for social reform into the public
sphere, seeking political solutions linked with wider movements
rather than confining herself to private charitable works. She became
involved increasingly in the movement for female suffrage, working
closely with labour organiser Lilian Locke in the United Council
for Women's Suffrage, and with Annette Bear-Crawford (q.v.) who
became her political mentor.
Vida became a forceful public speaker and developed her political
education by reading widely while frequenting the Victorian parliament
and campaigning for legislative reform. The bank crashes in the
1890s reduced the family's income and from 1892-98 she and her sisters
ran a fee-paying co-educational school, 'Ingleton'. After Bear-Crawford's
death Goldstein took over the organisation of the United Council
for Women's Suffrage, and in 1900 she became its first full-time
paid organiser. From 1900-05 she produced a monthly feminist journal,
Woman's Sphere, in which she articulated key issues relating
to women and relations between men and women. She also founded the
Women's Federal Political Association (later the Women's Political
Association) to organise the women's vote in the 1903 federal elections.
Vida Goldstein gained an international reputation for her feminist
work; she was elected corresponding secretary to the newly-formed
International Women's Suffrage Alliance, campaigning for female
suffrage in the United States at the invitation of the National
American Suffrage Association in 1902. While in the United States
she inquired into social and industrial conditions on behalf of
several Victorian organisations, including the Trades Hall Council.
She returned from the United States with an abhorrence of the political
party system. She was shocked by the attitude to negroes. In explaining
her own support for 'White Australia' she stated 'the remedy lies
in equal pay for equal work'.
In 1903 Goldstein was nominated by the Women's Federal Political
Association as a candidate for the Senate. Amid much controversy
and despite a hostile press, she polled 51,497 votes but was not
elected. Subsequent attempts to gain a parliamentary seat, in 1910,
1913, 1914 and 1917, in which she again stated her policies in principally
feminist terms, were similarly unsuccessful. Though her program
of reforms had much in common with the Labor party she refused to
join it. Her article 'Socialism of Today - An Australian View',
published in September 1907 in Nineteenth Century and After,
dealt with the provision of a living wage and is believed to have
influenced Mr Justice Higgins's formulation of a basic wage.
After state suffrage was won in 1908, Goldstein launched a new journal,
Woman Voter (1909-19), in which she campaigned for equal
marriage and divorce laws, equal pay and employment opportunities
for women and a wide range of legislation aimed at redressing discriminatory
practices and laws. She visited Britain in 1911, where she worked
as a political organiser for the militant Women's Social and Political
Union. She wrote suffrage articles for British and international
distribution, and formed a London-based committee to protect the
rights of Australasian women (notably the nationality of married
women) under imperial legislation.
Though never a Marxist, Goldstein became a convinced socialist.
On her return, she was involved increasingly in anti-militarist
activism. She campaigned against conscription from 1912, and in
1915, while chairperson of the Australian Peace Alliance, she founded
the Women's Peace Army, with Cecilia John and the expatriate English
suffragettes Adela Pankhurst (q.v. Walsh) and Jennie Baines. Unlike
other female pacifist groups, the Peace Army was militant, influenced
by both socialist ideology and the tactics of the English suffragettes.
She was uncompromisingly anti-militarist, maintaining women were
most affected by war conditions. The Women's Peace Army organised
projects for the relief of women experiencing unemployment and poverty
- until government intervention forced their closure. By the time
of her 1917 election campaign Goldstein's writings were censored
heavily and her activities monitored constantly.
In 1919 Goldstein and Cecilia John travelled to Europe, where Goldstein
represented Australia at a Women's Peace Conference in Zurich. She
was away three years. On her return she continued to lobby for feminist
social reforms, but her days of high profile political activism
were over. Living with her sisters Aileen and Elsie, she devoted
much of her time to the Christian Science religion, to which she
had converted in about 1899. With Aileen, she became a practitioner,
or healer, in the Church. She died from cancer at her South Yarra
home on 15 August 1949.
Jennifer Mulraney
Leslie M. Henderson The Goldstein Story 1973.
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