Women's Rights & Issues
Related: About this forum'Still work to be done': Iceland marks 50 years since Women's Day Off protests
Some wonderful photos of that day, which, for some reason, are not linking)
Still work to be done: Iceland marks 50 years since Womens Day Off protests
President says country is not free from feminist backlash being seen around world
Miranda Bryant Nordic correspondent
Fri 24 Oct 2025 02.42 EDT
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/oct/24/icelandic-women-urged-to-strike-on-friday-to-mark-50th-anniversary-of-seminal-protest#img-1
Iceland is the only country to have closed the gender gap by more than 90%, according to the World Economic Forum, and, for the first time in its history, every national leadership position including president, prime minister, bishop and police chief is now held by a woman. But as people go on strike on Friday to mark the 50th anniversary of kvennafrí (Womens Day Off) strike, the protest that kickstarted a global equality revolution, the Icelandic president warned that her country was not immune to gender-related red flags and a global backlash against feminism. Halla Tómasdóttir, who last year became Icelands second female president in an election in which 75% of the population voted for female candidates, put her countrys world-leading success at improving gender equality down to five decades of work that followed the 1975 strike.
Womens Day Off on 24 October 1975. Photograph: Icelandic Womens History Archives
Iceland, she told the Guardian, was powered by two sustainable energies: geothermal power and girl power. But, she warned, the country still had work to be done. Gender based violence is still a problem here. We still need to lift the floor for women who do the lesser paid jobs, the caring jobs in our economy, she said. So there is still work to be done. And we are of course not free from seeing some of the red flags and the [feminism] backlash that we are starting to witness around the world. Half a century ago, on 24 October 1975, 90% of Icelands women stopped work in protest at gender inequality and 25,000 women descended on Reykjavík city centre.
. . . .
A big crowd of women holding placards
The Womens Day Off on 24 October 1975 was a monumental moment in Icelandic history. Photograph: Icelandic Womens History Archives
Thousands of demonstrators in Reykjavík, Iceland, on 24 October 2023.
Demonstrators take part in a rally for equal rights in Reykjavík, Iceland, on 24 October 2023. Photograph: Reuters Tv/Reuters
Amid a global rise in gender-based violence and violence in general both on and offline, she said the next step in the countrys fight for gender equality was dependent on the inclusion of boys and men. I dont see how we can finish closing the gender gap without greater involvement from boys and men, she said. There are particular problems with boys and men that I hope we in Iceland will have the courage to confront the way that we have had the courage to confront the issues that have held women back. Calling for an inclusion revolution, she said she wanted to enable every citizen to unlock their full potential in order to avoid unnecessary backlash.
According to multiple indexes, Iceland has come further than anywhere else in the world in closing the gender gap.
I do think we are in a better position because for five decades, closing the gender gap has been making our economy stronger, making our society stronger, said Tómasdóttir. There is a general recognition in Iceland that closing the gender gap is a strategic priority for this country and it has delivered a better world for all of us,. Currently, she said, there were more women in leadership positions in Iceland than ever before in the countrys history possibly in the world.
One could say this is a beautiful outcome of five decades of womens solidarity and empowerment taking place since the womens day off 50 years ago, she said. But, she added, she is in favour of gender balance: Im not sure that overwhelmingly women is necessarily better than overwhelmingly men. Next, she hopes that Iceland can inspire a shift in leadership norms as well as gender norms. There is a huge appetite for more sincerity, more authenticity, more humanity from political leaders and business leaders alike, she said.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/oct/24/icelandic-women-urged-to-strike-on-friday-to-mark-50th-anniversary-of-seminal-protest