Nicholas Kristof: Religion and Women

Religions derive their power and popularity in part from the ethical compass they offer. So why do so many faiths help perpetuate something that most of us regard as profoundly unethical: the oppression of women?

It is not that warlords in Congo cite Scripture to justify their mass rapes (although the last warlord I met there called himself a pastor and wore a button reading “rebels for Christ”). It’s not that brides are burned in India as part of a Hindu ritual. And there’s no verse in the Koran that instructs Afghan thugs to throw acid in the faces of girls who dare to go to school.

Yet these kinds of abuses ”” along with more banal injustices, like slapping a girlfriend or paying women less for their work ”” arise out of a social context in which women are, often, second-class citizens. That’s a context that religions have helped shape, and not pushed hard to change.

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Posted in * Culture-Watch, Religion & Culture, Women

2 comments on “Nicholas Kristof: Religion and Women

  1. Fr. Dale says:

    Maybe Mr. Kristof would also like to discuss the way men are portrayed in the media. It’s cool for liberal men to be feminists and ignore the mutilation directed at men by Madison Avenue and the MSM.

  2. A Senior Priest says:

    Mr Carter managed to winkle a Nobel Peace prize out of the Committee. What’s he doing this for? Is he becoming Unitarian next? All I ever say about him is that he proved that a believing and practicing Christian could be just as absolutely incompetent a President as any non- Christian.