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Salt Spring Island celebrates International Women’s Day

March 1, 2025

International Women’s Day on March 8, is a global day acknowledging the social, economic, cultural, and political achievements of women. This year’s theme is #AcclerateAction, advancing and celebrating women’s equality worldwide. Here’s how you can participate on Salt Spring Island.

March 8, 12.30-1.30 pm. Centennial Park. International Women’s Day 2025 Opening Ceremony, with poetry, drumming and song, organized by Peace Works. Rain or shine. Bring umbrellas or chairs if needed.  

March 8th, 2-4 pm. Salt Spring Library (Program Room). The Library and the Canadian Federation of University Women collaborate to show the film ‘The Story of the Coast Salish Knitters’ (52 minutes) by local producer Christine Welsh.

For almost a century, the Coast Salish knitters of southern Vancouver Island have produced Cowichan sweaters from handspun wool. These distinctive sweaters are known and loved around the world, but the Indigenous women who make them remain largely invisible. Combining rare archival footage with the voices of three generations of woolworkers, The Story of the Coast Salish Knitters tells the tale of unsung heroines–resourceful women who knit to put food on the table and keep their families alive. Written and directed by Métis filmmaker Christine Welsh, this is a story of courage and cultural transformation–a celebration of the threads that connect the past to the future.

Christine Welch, local producer, and Jillian Harris, a Penelakut Elder and one of the featured knitters will be in attendance.

March 8th, 3 – 4.30 pm: The Fritz Movie Theater. The Circle Education, co-hosted by the Salt Spring Film Festival, is celebrating International Women’s Day 2025 with the screening of the documentary ‘The Day Iceland Stood Still’ on March 8th.

Almost fifty years ago, on the morning of October 24, 1975, 90 percent of Iceland’s women walked off their jobs and out of their homes. Fed up with the gaping inequity between the value of women’s labour and women’s wages, female employees, wives and mothers just stopped working, cooking, cleaning and looking after their children. The country came to an abrupt standstill, but a revolution had begun.

Join for a Saturday matinee at The Fritz to watch this gripping and gleeful story about women fighting for equality and transforming their position in society. ‘The Day Iceland Stood Still’ was recently voted best documentary at the Victoria Film Festival.

Tickets ($5) available at the door. Cash only.  Film Rating (PG for course language).

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