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Comments on the article: Suffer, fight, become a saint

12/06/2007

Excelling at submission has often been a way for women to compete with men. By Jolande Withuis

 
goethegirl
(2 comments)
registered on 25/05/2007
Christian mystics = Muslim extremists?
Call me touchy on this point, but I don't see the point of comparign radical Muslim women with a Christian mystic who lived several centuries ago. Plenty of women who are not religious do weird things with their bodies (anorexia?). The Christian mystic you describe was harming only herself. The radical Muslim women, on the other hand, are helping to advance a political program that wil wipe out female emancipation. In the pre-modern period religious communities offered many women an autonomy they did not have in traditional society. If you were more historically informed, you would know that the Church understood to distinguish between women (and men) who glorified in suffering for its own sake and for their own glorification and those whose suffering was truly saintly, for instance, sacrificing one's life for another. Examples of the latter can even be found in the modern period, in the Nazi era, e.g., a nun like Edith Stein.
Created on 13/06/2007 | Reviewed on 13/06/2007
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