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Monday, November 7, 2022

Women’s rights fight ‘continuous struggle’: Pope

The Catholic Church teaches that only men can become priests because Jesus chose men as his apostles.

• November 7, 2022
Pope Francis
Pope Francis (Photo Credit: Crux Now)

Pope Francis said the fight for women’s rights was a “continuous struggle” and condemned male chauvinism as deadly for humanity and female genital mutilation as a crime that must be stopped.

Speaking to reporters on Sunday on the plane, while returning from a four-day trip to predominantly Muslim Bahrain, he also praised women he has appointed to managerial jobs in the Vatican, saying they have improved things there.

He made no mention of campaigns to let women move on beyond that and become clergy. The pope and his predecessors had said the question of women priests was closed.

Francis was responding to a question about women protesting in Iran but turned to the topic of women’s rights in general.

“We have to tell the truth. The struggle for women’s rights is a continuing struggle,” he said, listing historic struggles such as the fight for the right to vote. “We have to continue struggling for this because women are a gift. God did not create man and then give him a lapdog to play with. He created both equal, man and woman.”

“A society that is not capable of allowing women to have greater roles does not move forward,” he added.

Francis, however, denounced male chauvinism, acknowledging there was still too much of it around the world, including in his native Argentina. 

“This chauvinism kills humanity, he said.

He also condemned as a “criminal act” female genital mutilation (FGM), repeating a major call he made in February on the UN International Day of Zero Tolerance for Female Genital Mutilation.

According to the UN, FGM is concentrated in about 30 countries in Africa and the Middle East but is also practised by immigrant populations elsewhere.

According to the UN, no fewer than four million girls are at risk of undergoing FGM this year.

He spoke of women he has appointed to managerial roles in the Vatican, mentioning by name Sister Raffaella Petrini, a nun who, as the deputy governor of Vatican City, is effectively the most powerful woman there.

“I have noticed that every time a woman is given a position of responsibility in the Vatican, things improve,” he said.

He also cited the impact of five women he appointed to a department that oversees Vatican finances.

“This is a revolution in the Vatican because women know how to find the right way to go forward,” he added.

Francis has also appointed women as deputy foreign minister, director of the Vatican Museums, deputy head of the Vatican Press Office, and four women as councillors to the Synod of Bishops, which prepares major meetings.

The Church teaches that only men can become priests because Jesus chose men as his apostles.

(Reuters/NAN)

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