Posted on 05/02/2005 1:58:18 PM PDT by Lorianne
A new womens spiritual activist movement that has emerged since September 11 is gathering women across faiths ___ On September 11, 2001, California psychotherapist Kathlyn Schaaf was overwhelmed by a powerful thought. Watching the violent images on television, she suddenly felt the time had come to gather the women. She wasnt alone. Schaaf and 11 others who shared her response soon created Gather the Women, a Web site and communications hub that 5000 women have used to chronicle their local events in support of world peace. As women assembled near the pyramids in Egypt and held potluck dinners in Alaska, staged candlelight vigils and other rituals in countries around the world, it confirmed Schaafs gut instinct that an untapped reserve of energy lays like oil beneath the common ground the women share.
Since then, the group has organized a series of congresses to connect womens groups. Their work is one example of a new kind feminism, slowly growing for a decade and now bursting out everywhere. At its heart lies a new kind of political activism thats guided and sustained by spirituality. Some are calling it the long-awaited Fourth Wave of feminisma fusion of spirituality and social justice reminiscent of the American civil rights movement and Ghandis call for nonviolent change. This phenomenon is most visible in the popular conferences organized by women spiritual and religious leaders. Just as important are those meeting privately to meditate and pray, to study the world, and to support each other in social action. These gatherings share a commitment to a universal spirituality that affirms womens bonds across ethnic and religious boundaries. Theyre also exploring a new feminine paradigm of power thats based on tolerance, mutuality, and reverence for nature that have long been identified with womenvalues they now see as crucial to curing the global pathologies of poverty and war.
Previous advances in American feminism have rarely happened smoothly; the gains of one generation have often both shaped and conflicted with the ambitions of the next. First-wave feminists fought for womens suffrage. Led in the 1970s by icons like Gloria Steinem and Betty Friedan, a second wave pushed for economic and legal gains. Their ideals would eventually clash with the spirited individualism of third-wave feminists, women in their 20s and 30s who still advocate for womens rights while embracing a girlie culture that celebrates sex, men, gay culture, and clothes.
But as never before, todays conservative political environment has united women across the feminist spectrum. The result differs from earlier forms of feminism in several ways. For one, it espouses a new activism based not in anger, but in joy. It also tends to be focused outward, beyond the individual to wider issues, often global in scope. In the words of author Carole Lee Flinders, feminism catches fire when it draws on its inherent spirituality, which means something else can happen as well. When you get Jewish, Catholic, Buddhist, Hindu, and Sufi women all practicing their faith in the same room, she recently said, another religion emerges, which is feminine spirituality.
Though Flinders and other writers have been calling on women to reconnect with the sacred for years, many agree that the tipping point was 9/11. Before then, a womens spirituality conference called Sacred Circles, held biannually at Washington National Cathedral in the nations capital, had focused on personal spirituality. More recently, however, program director Grace Ogden said she felt compelled to use the gatherings to address religious violence. There was this sense of something gone terribly wrong, she said, of communities splitting apart and a growing suspicion of people of Arab descent or other traditions. Her planning committee has since become more interfaith than in the past. Recent Sacred Circles conferences have stressed the role of compassion and tolerance in addressing political, economic, and religious differences.
Appalled by the lack of women in positions of religious authority on 9/11, Dena Merriam, a New York arts writer and public relations executive, joined others trying to form an international network of women religious leaders from the major faiths. On October 2002, they launched the Global Peace Initiative of Women Religious and Spiritual Leaders in Geneva, Switzerland. Associated with the United Nations, the initiative wants to get religious leaders more involved in UN peace-building plans. Specific programs aim to help young woman of different faiths to communicate in places in like Jerusalem that have been torn by conflict.
Merriam, the groups convener, said that one of womens strengths in peace work stems from their greatest weaknesstheir long exile from authority inside mainstream institutions. Suddenly women are beginning to realize that their outsider status is an asset, she said, leaving them free to act directly, outside institutional lines. Many women are following the fate of UN Resolution 1325, which, if passed, will mandate that women be involved in all peace negotiations.
Feminisms new direction was perhaps most striking at the Women & Power conference, sponsored by the Omega Institute and V-Day in New York City last September. The 3000 attendees heard celebrity feminists like Jane Fonda, Sally Field, and Gloria Steinem herself note the shift. Playwright Eve Ensler, founder of V-Day, a movement to stop global violence against women and girls, addressed the need to change the face of power. Today, she said, our power is seen in terms of country over country, tribe against tribe. The new paradigm, however, has to be about power in the service of, collaboration not conquest.
The free-flow of creative expression at these assemblies marks a radical departure from the church coffees of our mothers era. Like making a quilt from bits and pieces, participants often join together in fashioning new rites and rituals from ancient traditions, shaping forms at once old and new. Organizers at the Women & Power conference draped one room in carpets and labeled it the Red Tent area, evoking the Jewish ritual popularized by the book of that name. Elizabeth Lesser, a co-founder of the Omega Institute, said the room was like an ancient gathering place where women were laughing, crying, brushing each others hair, praying, and meditating. It seemed to satisfy womens deepest longings and was spiritual in a very feminine way. At gatherings big and small, many are realizing that putting themselves in the service of the world is feminisms next step. Especially at a time when the United States is viewed with increasing distrust by other countries, feminisms shift cultivating a spiritually informed activism may help to repair our diplomatic ties. No less important is the special depth that comes from quiet reflection closer to home. As Carole Lee Flinders notes, a serious spiritual life with a strong inward dimension is crucial in itself, releasing the energy that can turn visionary feminist theory into action.
Meanwhile, as feminism allows more women to reach positions of power in American culture, increasing numbers have discovered that material success does not satisfy their hunger for meaning and connection. Women are becoming increasingly clear and vocal about the need to integrate an emerging set of feminine-based values into the culture. As the Democratic Party searches for a guiding set of values, they might consider turning to the womens spirituality movement for inspiration.
Written by Pythia Peay. This article originally appeared in Utne Magazine.
Pythia Peay serves on the organizing committee of Sacred Circles in Washington, D.C. She is the author of Mercury Retrograde (Tarcher/Penguin, 2004) and Soul Sisters: The Five Sacred Qualities of a Womans Soul (Tarcher/Penguin, 2002). Visit Pythia Peay's web site at www.pythiapeay.com. For more information on women and spirituality, visit www.utne.com/web_special
A Response to Yasmin Mogahed: Servant of God or Servant of Power?
http://www.muslimwakeup.com/main/archives/2005/04/a_response_to_y.php
Mana Wahine: Mana Whanau
http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/PA0504/S00591.htm
Wow. She's crazy as a loon.
Who would have guessed?
Yikes
Yeah, we can ask the Serbs about the postive effect that Madeline Albright had in avoiding war though her efforts at Ramboullet!
I've met some, worked with others who shared this "spiritual" feminism and renewal. It is so fluid that each group is different.
Some are sincere and open and others are politically charged and disturbing. Some of these women use the spiritual aspect as some global force which I find creepy.
Like everything, discernment has to be used. I'd like to think that woman can effect change, but anytime feminism rears its head, the uglier political aspects interfere.
"Social" justice is injustice; all neologisms which include "social" as a modifier must be read as the negation of their putative object. If you advocate for justice, fine and good. If you advocate for "social" justice you are advocating for something other than justice and dishonestly calling it "justice."
"Women are becoming increasingly clear and vocal about the need to integrate an emerging set of feminine-based values into the culture." Would it be too much to ask that these 'feminine-based values' be enumerated for us common folk, before endorsing the inveigling of our culture?
Well .. since my faith is not included in this "group" - I'd say it's not something I would want to seek out. Obviously, by their choice of "religious" groups, they don't want the Holy Spirit there.
I was overwhelmed by a powerful thought on 9/11, too. I felt it was time to blow up the Middle East.
Moonbat alert, Moonbat Alert. More Doublespeak by the Feminists Nutjobs.
No hanging ten on this "wave" up here in Minnesota......yet.
Maybe it's just a coastal thing.........ya think!?
Reminiscent of pet psychics. "Oh the energy.... I feel the energy...." Great. All I feel is hot air.
Speak for yourself newbie.
You fogot to give a barf alert.
You forgot to give a barf alert.
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