Calls for more equality in Church
on International Women's Day
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| A view of the Vatican's Apostoliv Pakace from St Peter's Square- AFP |
Jesuit Fr Luke Hansen shares concerns about the lack of
women in leadership roles in the Roman Curia
By Philippa Hitchen
Thursday March 8th marks International Women’s Day, an event
marked in countries around the world to celebrate progress in moving towards
equality for women in all areas of political, social and economic life.
The event is also being marked here in Rome with a number of
events, sponsored by embassies and other groups seeking to bring women’s voices
to the fore.
Fr Luke Hansen is a Jesuit priest and former associate
editor of America magazine. As a deacon, he worked at a women’s federal prison
in California, a ministry which, he says, significantly affected the way he
sees the role of women in the Church.
Fr Luke says his long Jesuit formation brought him into
contact with women as spiritual directors and university professors. Women, he
says, have already taken on leadership at parish and diocesan level, but one
place where they have a less prominent role is in the Vatican. It is an
important issue, he adds, “for me to see a greater presence of women in
Vatican”.
Incremental progress
Commenting on the recent appointment of two new female
undersecretaries at the Dicastery for Laity, Family and Life, Fr Luke says
there has been incremental progress. He mentions also the director of the
Vatican museums and the first female rector of a pontifical university, but
adds these examples “should never be used as an excuse to think we’ve done
enough or that the presence of women in strong enough in Curial leadership”.
We have to remain persistent, Fr Luke says, and ensure that
qualified women are considered and hired when employment opportunities open up.
It’s a process that we must keep moving forward, he says.
Women in ministry
Fr Luke also speaks about his experience serving as a deacon
in the federal women’s prison near Oakland in California, an all-female
Catholic facility. That experience, he says, “gave me the opportunity to see
women ministering to each other, consoling each other, supporting each other in
really powerful ways, in ministerial ways”.
He also talks about the stories of sexual violence that he
heard, bringing home the reality of how women are treated differently and “are
oppressed in every country in the world”. Such inequality, he says, has
terrible consequences in women’s lives, and has impacted his views about women
in society and the Church. We have to think about the messages we’re sending
when women are systematically excluded from certain roles in the church”, he
concludes.

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