Reviews of Habibi Funk 031, Kayatibu, and The Good Ones
No longer satisfied with playing second fiddle
		John Green talks to EMILY INGRAM whose moving documentary charts the remarkable resilience of Doncaster women at the time of the miners’ strike of 1984
	 
			THE national miners’ strike of 1984/85 was probably, apart from the 1924 General Strike, the most traumatic and iconic working-class struggle of the 20th century.
Although a number of films have been made about that strike, the role women played in it has not been given the coverage it deserves.
Women in the past have always been there supporting men in their struggles, for the first time during this strike they set up their own parallel organisation, Women Against Pit Closures (WAPC) and what became known as “the fight for jobs.”
	Similar stories
	 
               STEVEN ANDREW is moved beyond words by a historical account of mining in Britain made from the words of the miners themselves
 
               HEATHER WOOD pays tribute to a champion of working-class women and a fierce voice of solidarity
    
               Women have been celebrating the 40th anniversary of the miners’ strike against pit closures, and there’s more to come writes HEATHER WOOD
   
 
               


