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Roma
Gilchrist 1909 - 1983 peace activist
Roma
Catherine Gilchrist (1909-1983), feminist and peace activist, was
born Tuffin in England on 1 September 1909. The family emigrated
with little money, moved to the south-west of Western Australia,
where they lived in tents and a bark shelter, before returning to
Perth where her father worked on the trams. He bought a farm near
Perth but failed to make a living from it and after six years moved
back to the city.
In 1931 Roma married John Gilchrist, son of a miner and a politically
committed mother. They had four daughters and a son. John became
an organiser for the Movement against War and Fascism, president
of the Unemployed Workers' Association and a member of the Workers'
Art Guild, all Communist-influenced. He was also Maddington branch
president in the Labor Party. After Labor forbade membership of
the Movement against War and Fascism, Katharine Susannah Prichard
(q.v.) and some friends formed the Modern Women's Club which Roma
joined. With a room in the city where light meals were available
and a good library, the Club was a congenial meeting place both
for members and similarly minded societies. A women's theatre group
met there for some years and there, in 1946, Don McLeod launched
an appeal for support for striking Aboriginal pastoral workers.
The Club remained active though some members left in 1947 to join
the New Housewives Association and in 1950 others, including Roma,
joined the Union of Australian Women, of which she was vice president,
1954, and president, 1957-71. It provided a monthly forum where
speakers from Perth, interstate and overseas found an eager audience.
Members campaigned for peace, Aboriginal rights (many Aboriginal
women were members), child care, kindergartens and improved conditions
in maternity hospitals. They were a constant little pressure group
which could be counted on to lobby the government in matters likely
to benefit the working class woman and her family. In its heyday
the club was staffed every weekday between 11 am and 2.30 pm but
high rents made it difficult to maintain and in 1973 it disbanded.
In Europe in 1955, Roma represented the Peace Council of Western
Australia at the Assembly for Peace in Helsinki, and was invited
to the Mothers' Conference in Lausanne, where she made contact with
women from behind the Iron Curtain. Her son won a scholarship and
danced with the national Czech ballet company. The Gilchrists were
hosts to Jessie Street (q.v.) on her visit to inspect living conditions
for Aborigines. Roma continued to work for peace, organising a novel
protest in 1957: women, wearing aprons and scarves printed with
peace slogans, walked through the streets and were arrested, charged
with unseemly propaganda and convicted. They appealed and their
appeal was upheld. In later years Roma organized peace marches from
Fremantle to Perth.
In 1970 Roma was appointed a justice of the peace. She visited Japan
for Expo 70 where she met members of the Japanese women's movement.
In ill health and living on a pension with her husband, she was
awarded $200 in 1981 by the Women and Labour Conference Trust Fund
to assist her to write the history of the Union of Australian Women
in Western Australia. Her manuscript is in Battye Library, Perth.
She died on 29 October 1983; John died in December. They were working
class activists, learning from each other and from people they met
as they worked for what they hoped would be a more just and peaceful
future for all.
Michal Bosworth
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