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International Women’s Day

The holiday was celebrated in the Soviet Union since 1919 and was made an official holiday in 1965

MOSCOW, March 8. /TASS/. International Women’s Day is observed on March 8 in Russia and many other countries around the world. The United Nations has supported the celebration of this holiday since 1975.

History of Women’s Day

The earliest Women's Day celebrations were held in the United States on February 28, 1909. The holiday was observed in the US on the last Sunday of February until 1913.

The idea of establishing an annual International Woman's Day belongs to German socialist activist Clara Zetkin. In August 1910, she addressed the International Conference of Working Women in Copenhagen with a proposal to designate a single date for this holiday. Her suggestion was supported by more than 100 women from 17 countries, but no date was specified at that conference.

The tradition to mark International Women’s Day on March 8 emerged in 1914 when women-led rallies of protest and solidarity took place in Russia, the United States, Germany, Switzerland, Denmark, the Netherlands and a number of other countries. The date also commemorated major strikes by female workers at US textile factories that occurred on March 8 in 1857 and 1908.

The United Nations began celebrating International Women's Day in 1975.

The holiday was celebrated in the Soviet Union since 1919 and was made an official holiday in 1965.

March 8 remains a public holiday in all post-Soviet republics except Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia, as well as in Abkhazia, South Ossetia, Angola, Guinea-Bissau, North Korea, Mongolia, Cuba and several other countries. On this day, men traditionally give flowers and small gifts to their mothers, wives, girlfriends, daughters, colleagues and other women in their lives.