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Our Bodies Ourselves, Our Purses

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  • Our Bodies Ourselves, Our Purses

    OUR BODIES OURSELVES, OUR PURSES
    By Diana Heil, Courtesy Photo

    The Santa Fe New Mexican (New Mexico)
    September 10, 2005 Saturday

    Co-author's visit to Santa Fe will raise money for several projects,
    including health guide for Latinas

    Judy Norsigian, co-founder of the Our Bodies Ourselves organization
    in Boston, is coming to Santa Fe.

    She will visit her sister Lisa, who also goes by her Tibetan Buddhist
    nun name Rinchen Lhamo. And Norsigian will speak about women's health
    issues at a house party, which is open to a limited number of guests
    from the public.

    Norsigian, 57, is on a fundraising tour through the Southwest.

    "We've been facing difficult times financially in the last few years,
    and so we've instituted this house-party routine, which is a wonderful
    way to talk about issues and get support and get people to understand
    how the book is certainly a source of income but it is never more
    than 10 to 15 percent of our total budget," she said in a telephone
    interview this week.

    The nonprofit's operating budget is about $500,000.

    Through its books, workshops and activism efforts, the group provides
    information about health, sexuality and reproduction from a feminist
    and consumer perspective. Our Bodies, Ourselves, the book's founding
    text, is now in its eighth edition. Tibetan and South Korean versions
    are in the works.

    The Latina Health Initiative, a special outreach effort of the group,
    produced Nuestros Cuerpos, Nuestras Vidas. But the Spanish-language
    edition hasn't been updated since 2000.

    "We're hoping to create a collaboration with some institutions because
    we don't have the funds to do it ourselves, and the publisher is
    very small," Norsigian said. "I would love to see that begin next
    year. It's badly needed."

    The initiative also is translating a booklet called "Journeys of
    Parenthood," written by the Maternity Center Association in New York
    City. It will offer practical guidance to pregnant mothers while
    staying sensitive to Latina cultural practices.

    In 1971, when Norsigian first met the Boston Women's Health Book
    Collective at age 23, she didn't know much about feminism, but she
    was interested in nutrition. The college graduate had been living on
    a commune in upstate New York for a year, where she learned how to
    rebuild Volkswagen engines and grow organic food.

    Meanwhile, the dozen women she met in the collective had challenged
    the medical establishment by writing a 193-page booklet called Women
    and Their Bodies. Soon after, Norsigian worked on the first chapter
    on nutrition for Our Bodies, Ourselves, the book's new title. It sold
    250,000 copies.

    "I became very interested in reproductive-health issues, midwifery,
    childbearing ... and trying to keep the effect of the profit motive
    down to a dull roar in health and medical care," Norsigian said.

    In 1973, the year abortion became legal, Simon & Schuster published
    the first commercial edition.

    Norsigian came from an Armenian-American family. Her father ranted
    against religion and psychiatry, and her mother was a lab technician.

    Norsigian's mother always wanted to be a doctor. But Norsigian's
    grandfather thought it was a waste for a woman to get an education;
    her role was to be a mother.

    So what did her mother think of Our Bodies, Ourselves?

    "Though she never really read it that carefully, she was proud we
    did it," Norsigian said. "My mom was a feminist in her own way."

    Today, at age 83, Norsigian's mom still teaches yoga classes in Boston.

    GRAPHIC: 1. Judy Norsigian, second from left, along with the other
    staff members who worked on Our Bodies, Ourselves. Norsigian will be
    in Santa Fe on Wednesday.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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