The Clara Lemlich awards for social activism celebrate the lives of incredible women whose many decades of brilliant activism have made real and lasting change in the world.
Join us for the 2026 Clara Lemlich Awards
The 2026 honorees are – organizer Scotty Embree, multifaceted artist and educator Shirley Kaplan, Harlem literacy guru Dawn Harris-Martine, community activist Dana Minaya, and migrant rights leader Eva Richter.
Monday May 4, 2026
6-7pm
Reception followingNew York Society for Ethical Culture
2 West 64th Street
New York, NY 10023
In person and live streamed
Presented by LaborArts and the Remember the Triangle Fire Coalition with the New York Ethical Culture Society
The 2025 Lemlich Awards were held on Monday, May 6, 2025, at the New York Society for Ethical Culture on 64th Street and Central Park West. View the video of the event here, click on the photos below for honoree pages, find the program here, and and see photos from the ceremony here.
Inspired to support the Lemlich Awards? We could use your help. Donate here, and/or volunteer to help by emailing info@LaborArts.org.
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I want to live the rest of my life,
however long or short,
with as much sweetness as I can decently manage,
loving all the people I love,
and doing as much as I can of the work I still have to do.
I am going to write fire until it comes out my ears, my eyes, my noseholes–everywhere.
Until it’s every breath I breathe.
I’m going to go out like a fucking meteor!
Audre Lorde, an excerpt from A Burst of Light, 1988
“I’ve got something to say!” shouted the 23-year old Clara Lemlich in her native Yiddish during a tense, crowded meeting of garment workers in Cooper Union’s Great Hall in 1909. Rising from the audience, she interrupted Samuel Gompers and the other union leaders on stage. Her speech inspired the crowd, leading to an unexpected vote to strike, and to what would become known as the Uprising of 20,000.
Born to a Jewish family in the Ukraine (then part of the Russian Empire), Lemlich migrated to the U.S. in 1903, found work in the garment industry, and soon became active in the International Ladies’ Garment Workers Union. The 1909 strike led to reforms, but the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory was a hold-out, and refused to implement safety improvements.
The fire that took 146 lives on March 25, 1911 was seen across the country as a tragedy that could have been avoided, and it sparked a movement that pushed politicians to accept a new notion about the responsibilities of government. Lemlich continued to be active in the labor movement until she was pushed out for her leftist politics. She continued to work for women’s suffrage, led a boycott of butcher shops to protest meat prices, campaigned for unemployment relief, and fought for tenants’ rights.
One hundred and fourteen years later we are proud to honor her legacy and to honor those who follow proudly in her footsteps.