Weds, March 11, 7pm – In 1971, classified ads for employment were still segregated by gender, battered women’s shelters did not exist, abortion was illegal, and a married woman couldn’t open a bank account without her husband’s permission. Left on Pearl is about the movement that changed all that.
Left on Pearl is a 55 minute documentary about a highly significant but little-known event in the history of the women’s liberation movement, the 1971 takeover and occupation of a Harvard University-owned building by hundreds of Boston area women. The ten-day occupation of 888 Memorial Drive by women demanding a Women’s Center and low income housing for the community in which the building stood, embodied within it many of the hopes, triumphs, conflicts and tensions of Second Wave feminism. One of the few such takeovers by women for women, this action was transformative for the participants, and led directly to the establishment of the longest continuously operating Women’s Center in the U.S.
Through television news from the time, newspaper headlines, found footage, and extensive interviews with participants and eyewitnesses of varied sexual orientations, racial, class and ethnic backgrounds (including both supporters and opponents of the takeover) Left on Pearl provides a riveting and often humorous look at a fascinating historical moment. More information can be found at http://leftonpearl.org/.
Susan K. Jacoby, Executive Producer, was active at the early Women’s Center as a founding member of the Emotional Counselling Group, which responded to women in crisis, and with the Coalition to Stop Institutional Violence, which successfully organized to stop the construction of a super-maximum women’s prison unit.