Women’s Day reminder
It’s a happy International Women’s Day (IWD) for safe and free American women. But for other women across the world, it’s another day chronicling abuse, oppression and pain.
IWD inspires women to “achieve their full potential” and “celebrates the collective power of women past, present and future.” Yes, IWD has socialist roots, and CNS News quotes Eagle Forum President Phyllis Schlafly condemning it:
The radical feminists know that they can’t complain about American women because we are the most fortunate class of people who ever lived, so they search the globe for oppression in other countries using taxpayer dollars.
At least they’re searching, and they don’t have to look long.
In Afghanistan, women set themselves on fire to escape forced or abusive marriages. Up to 80 percent of women face forced marriages and two-thirds marry before the age of 16. There are no laws against domestic violence. Rape victims are punished instead of defended.
In Saudi Arabia, women are life-long dependents and may not vote, drive a car or travel by themselves. The virtue police jail women for sitting with men, and they may soon execute a woman accused of witchcraft.
In Sudan, women fear abduction, rape, police beatings and sexual slavery. Unless unmarried pregnant women can prove rape, they face execution for adultery. Some women marry rapists to avoid the social stigma.
In Basra, Iraq, fundamentalists beat, torture, maim, strangle, and behead women who violate Islamic law.
In Iran last IWD, police attacked and beat IWD participants. Buses and public spaces are gender-segregated. In court, one man’s testimony equals that of two women.
In Israel, honor killings are becoming more prevalent. Male relatives kill women for offenses like talking on a cell phone or laughing with a man.
In Congo, gang rape is a weapon of war.
Across the world (yes, in North America, too), 3 million girls are at risk for female genital mutilation each year.
International Women’s Day is a reminder that Christians have a responsibility to defend all life, including the lives of maimed and wounded women worldwide.

















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back to top9 Comments to “Women’s Day reminder”
WOW. With this being the state of the world, is it really possible that the land of the free and home of the brave has none of this?
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Here in West Africa I see women every day who are abused by their husbands and it’s just called discipline. It is considered completely normal and necessary. Many young girls marry men that they don’t know because the family has arranged the marriage and without the help of their family, they are powerless to leave the marriage. So although we don’t have honor killings or some of the more extreme offenses against women, there is no doubt that women are second-class (or third)citizens here. We know that abuse happens in America too, but a woman does have some recourse through the law without needing her father, older brother or uncle to speak for her.
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I hesitate to celebrate IWD because many of its supporters think that rights for women include the right to kill off what would have been part of the next generation of women (and men) through abortion. Also, I wonder if its supporters support the right of other women not be be forced into an abortion by husbands, boyfriends, parents or government (as in the case of China.)
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Feminists seldom say a bad word about Red China. Come to think of it though, neither do all those R politicos who lobbied to call the ChiComms our Most Favored Nation (back when the blood hadnt even dried on the Tiananmen Square!)
If you go to the us(dot)army(dot)mil website you will see a US general and a female Afghan general celebrating women’s day. Cant help but recall how our urging feminist reforms on Iran in the 60s/70s only drove more folks to embrace That Old Time Religion (TOTR) as elucidated by Ayatollah Khomeini and his minions.
If USA policy is seen as a vehicle to bring radical feminism to backwoods muslim mountain men/ good old boys in the 3rd world, is it any wonder we see a Taliban resurgence?
For all its commitmt to TOTR I’m told that Iran actually has women parliamentarians (Presumably they have no real power in the regime, but at least the regime recognizes the importance of keeping up appearances,no?)
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I would like to agree with you Reg, but we’ve had honor killings (and cases of female circumcision) taking place here in the US. Surely you remember the two girls shot by their father in Texas? And they are not the first.
I think we have to start small in those countries such as the one’s Sawgunner mentions. The Taliban will even kill girls going to school. The last missionary to be kidnapped and killed there was teaching women how to support themselves with sewing. Radical feminism isn’t going to take hold there any time soon, but if we teach them to be able to support themselves so that they are less dependent on the husbands who beat them, etc., things will change. Mostly they need to be educated. We should pray for that.
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#5
NJLawyer,
I took Reg’s post #1 as sarcasm. As I remember, she has suffered abuse of some kind herself, though from professed Christians, not Muslims. My impression is that she was trying to remind us that sometimes abuse of women takes place “under our noses” so to speak, although in less obvious ways which is why people don’t get up in arms about it.
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#6 Pauline, NJL, and Reg,
I also took it as sarcasm. Abuse of women does indeed take place under our very noses. So does abuse of little boys, girls, and even men. I share the concern about whether the people who support IWD also support abortion, but I think I’ll celebrate it anyway. And continue to condemn abortion and all other abuses not mentioned herein, like elder abuse, for example. We humans are indeed a depraved lot without God’s grace!
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I think it’s interesting (and sad) that most of the places listed above reference institutionalized, systematic oppression of women that’s perpetrated overwhelmingly by Muslims. Even the “honor killings” in Israel are treated as an “Arab problem,” according to the article.
It’s sad to think that the more prevalent Islam is in a given population, the more women are treated like property. One need only to be reminded of the increased occurence of hijab related killings in the West to see how widespread the problem is becoming.
An example that I witnessed just recently:
Last Friday I went to Universal Studios in Orlando. It was a nice day, but it was still Florida and the weather usually hovers in the very humid low to mid 80’s this time of year. While standing in line for one of the rides, I saw a man being followed by a woman being completely covered by a Burqa, with a large pair of sunglasses covering what little flesh that was still exposed by her all-encompassing garmet.
If she wasn’t just uncomfortable (to say the least) being completely covered from head to toe in what most people would consider “smothering” weather, her husband seemed to have no problem with oggling the women who didn’t hold to Muslim standards of modesty.
It just seemed hypocritical.
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International Women’s Day is a reminder that Christians have a responsibility to defend all life, including the lives of maimed and wounded women worldwide.
Really? Where’s that in the Bible? If such a teaching is in there, it means the Bible is even crazier than I thought, and Christianity is even sillier than I thought.
It sounds like something Martin Luther King said, but it sounds like nothing I’ve ever read in the Bible.
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