The Denver Post

Women strive for larger roles in male-dominated religions

- By David Crary

Women have been elected heads of national government­s on six continents. They have flown into space, served in elite combat units and won every category of Nobel Prize. The global #MeToo movement, in 15 months, has toppled a multitude of powerful men linked to sexual misconduct.

Yet in most of the world’s major religions, women remain relegated to a secondtier status. Women in several faiths are still barred from ordination. Some are banned from praying alongside men and forbidden from stepping foot in some houses of worship altogether. Their attire, from headwear down to the length of their skirts in church, is often restricted.

But women around the world in recent months have been finding new ways to chip away at centuries of male-dominated traditions and barriers, with many of them emboldened by the surge of social media activism that’s spread globally in the #MeToo era.

Millions of women in India this month formed a human wall nearly 400 miles long in support of women who defied conservati­ve Hindu leaders and entered an important temple that has long been off-limits to women and girls between the ages of 10 and 50.

In Israel, where Orthodox Judaism has long restricted women’s roles, one Jerusalem congregati­on has allowed women to lead Friday evening prayers. Roman Catholic bishops, under pressure from women’s-rights activists, concluded a recent Vatican meeting by declaring that women, as an urgent “duty of justice,” should have a greater role in church decision-making.

Many feminist scholars are challengin­g the rightfulne­ss of long-standing patriarcha­l traditions in Christiani­ty, Judaism and Islam, calling into question timehonore­d translatio­ns of verses in the Bible, Torah and Quran that have been used to justify a male-dominated hierarchy.

Social media is seen as a big catalyst in boosting activism and forging solidarity among women of faith who seek more equality. The #MeToo movement has been evoked — even in the ranks of conservati­ve U.S. denominati­ons — as a reason why women should expect more respectful treatment from male clergy, and a greater share of leadership roles.

“Women are looking for opportunit­ies to have their voices heard and be more effective in their religious traditions,” said Gina Messina, a religion professor at Ursuline College in Ohio who describes herself as both a feminist and a Catholic theologian. “Using social media is an opportunit­y to say what they think.”

She co-founded a blog called Feminism and Religion that has scores of contributo­rs around the world and followers in more than 180 countries.

For example, in Buddhism, women’s status varies from country to country. In Thailand, a Buddhist stronghold, women can become nuns, but only in 2003 won the right to serve as the saffron-robed full equivalent­s of male monks, and still represent a tiny fraction of the country’s clergy.

India’s Sabarimala temple had long banned women and girls of menstruati­ng age from entering the centuries-old house of worship. Some Hindus consider menstruati­ng women to be impure.

The Supreme Court in September lifted the ban, and violent protests broke out after women entered the temple.

“The Hindu temples at present have almost 99 percent male priests,” said women’s rights activist Ranjana Kumari. “Things have to improve.”

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