Sisters Indoctrinating Girls
with Radical Feminism
By: Margaret C. Galitzin
Vatican II sisters were well represented at the United Nations conference hosted by the 59th Session of the U.N.’s Commission on the Status of Women,
or CSW, (1) held from March 9-20 in New York. To make a good
impression, they brought with them a number of their students, young
women from Catholic high schools and Colleges.
They were all there – the Daughters of Charity, Good Shepherd Sisters,
Dominicans, Maryknoll Sisters, Passionists, Salesians, Sisters of
Charity, Sisters of Mercy, and others – making the Catholic presence
felt and heard on the topic of women empowerment and gender equality.
Also present was the Permanent Observer of the Holy See to the UN,
Archbishop Bernardito Auza, who delivered an address on advancing the status of women through economics.
Notre Dame Sr. Eileen Reilly, right, leads her students to the Women's Equality March in Manhattan |
Where once the purpose of Catholic teaching sisters was to educate and
form young women in Catholic doctrine and morals, now we find a new
goal. These girls, the best and brightest from the Catholic school
system, hand-picked as future leaders, are not receiving Catholic
doctrine, but being indoctrinated in feminism. The United Nations and
post-Vatican II sisters are working hand in hand to promote the
revolutionary equality between women and men as well as homosexuality.
Consider the official goal of this year's Commission on the Status of
Women (CSW): “to address challenges that affect the implementation and
the achievement of gender equality and the empowerment of women and
girls.”
Now look at a mission statement
of the School Sisters of Notre Dame, who sent a large delegation to the
U.N. session on women: “To empower women, youth and persons who are
poor or marginalized and strive to change systems of poverty and
injustice.”
My point is that the goals and aims of these sisters and the U.N.
Commission on Women are essentially the same, turned toward the
promotion of the Revolution, not toward teaching Catholic doctrine and
converting others to the true Faith. Sister Eileen Reilly, SSND,
summarized the target well: “It’s my job to bring my constituency [her
students] to the U.N., and to bring the U.N. to my constituency.”
This is what formation in a Catholic women's school or college has
become: an indoctrination of young women to become feminists and to
imbibe the spirit of the One World Order that promotes a Pan-religion.
What went on
Let me give my readers an idea of what these young women experienced at
the CSW meeting. This year was an especially gala affair since they were
celebrating the 20 year anniversary of the Fourth World Conference on
Women and the Beijing Declaration, one of the most radical blueprints
for advancing feminism.
Jane Fonda presented as a role model for girls at the CSW meeting |
After orientation, the delegates participated in the U.N. Women March
for Gender Equality & Women’s Rights in downtown Manhattan. Then,
the U.N. women and girls held an event called “Planet 50-50 by 2030:
Step it up for Gender Equality,” which called for stepping up the
egalitarian revolution so that all women and girls will reach full
equality with by 2030.
At the opening ceremony, the girls listened to Lydia Alpizar
of the Association for Women’s Rights in Development (AWID): “Today, I
celebrate the women – lesbian, black, indigenous, urban and rural women
living in conditions of poverty, workers, disabled, trans & intersex
people, leaders from different generations … who are transforming our
world.” This message resonates with the compassion and inclusion of the
Conciliar Church...
traditioninaction.org
Then, there were speeches from U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon,
Hillary Clinton, Melinda Gates, Patricia Arquette, Jane Fonda and many
more radical feminists, presented to Catholic young women as models to
be followed.
The students actively participated in the six days of workshops, panels
and presentations on girls’ human rights, universal girls’ education,
violence prevention, etc. They spoke out and moderated panels. In other
words, they were not just sitting on the sidelines, but were fully
engaged in all parts of the conference.
Feminism Is a form of Jewish Control
Empowerment & feminist activism
It is revealing to hear the reactions of the young Catholic women who
attended the CSW Conference. Empowerment of women and admiration for the
U.N. came up over and over again in their comments.
The School Sisters of Notre Dame brought a large group of faculty and
students from Notre Dame of Maryland University. “I learned how
effective the U.N. is as an organization, and how it helps women,” said
student Jenny Ashwell in her testimony (here and here).
“We learned how we can organize in our communities to address issues
that face women ... and put pressure on governments ... so we can
empower ourselves.”
A student panel led by sisters studies girl equality issues |
Beth Hancock, another student, praised the Mexican speaker that taught
how to “enable and empower the child in the classroom to see things in a
non-discriminatory way so the children are empowered not only to change
themselves but their environment as well.”
Hayley Robinson said that she was moved by the serious injustice that
women face in the work place where, even in the U.S., they still do not
receive equal pay for doing the same job as a man. “Over a lifetime,
women are losing hundreds of thousands of dollars,” she said.
Tiyara Townsend summed up her experiences of the week: “I've learned what power I hold as a woman.”
Sara Poirier, 15, Political Science Club president at St. Joseph's run
by the Sisters of Mercy, expressed her enthusiasm for the U.N. meeting
on the
school website:
“It was a high-energy, almost electric atmosphere. It was empowering to
be a part of a global, collaborative effort with women from around the
world who all gathered for a common cause.” That cause was the rights of
women.
It goes on and on: empowerment, equality for women, education, ending
sexual violence and genital mutilation. This is what inspired the young
Catholic women at the U.N.
The official girls’ statement
The Loreto Sisters brought a large delegation of students from three high schools |
Loreto Community sponsored students from three of its high schools. One
of its St. Louis students, Megan, was part of the delegation who wrote
the official CSW Girls’ Statement, delivered to the Commission during
the second week. You can read the statement here.
It begins by stressing the importance that “all girls – regardless of
race, religion, sexual orientation, gender identification, ability,
socio-economic status or ethnicity – feel empowered.” So we have another
bad fruit: a Catholic girl co-writing and signing a pro-homosexual
statement.
The compromise with bad doctrine continues: “We demand an accurate and
comprehensive sexual education in all learning environments to ensure
that no girl’s sexual health is put at risk.” What is more: “Regardless
of cultural and religious stigma, reproductive and mental health must be
treated as a right, not a privilege.”
Again, the sisters look on proudly and smile as a Catholic student
demands sex education at all levels and, so it appears, the right to
contraception. Would a woman's right over her reproductive health also
include the right to abortion? The document does not say it explicitly,
but it is certainly implied.
Prior to Vatican II the Catholic Church was the main obstacle that kept
the Revolution from reaching its final goal, which is the implantation
of a One World Order with a Pan-religion at its service.
Since Vatican II, we have seen that the Revolution has succeeded in
silencing inside the Church the teaching of the true Catholic doctrine
on moral principles and religious dogma. Today, we have teaching sisters
from all the major Orders taking their students to the U.N. to be
influenced by its errors, imbued with a radical feminism, and permeated
with the notion that co-existence with all religions and beliefs is not
only possible, but desirable.
This is the orientation the progressivist sisters formed by Vatican II
are giving their students with full support from the Church authorities.
The concilar Popes themselves have accepted the tenets of the
Revolution.
Students join the Equality March demanding the egalitarian revolution 'step up' its pace |
As we know by now Feminism isn't about equality, it is about Female Superiority where women hold all the privileges a Patriarchal society had to offer without any of the responsibilities that came with it. That is what is meant by Women's Liberation, they don't want to be held accountable for any of their actions. Men in turn are not supporting this new Matriarchal ruled society by dropping out of it. All the shaming directed at men telling them to "Man Up" and do this, that or the other thing for society / women isn't working because there is no longer anything in it for them. A man throwing his life a way into the meat grinder of the Family / Divorce court industry all for the "privilege" of serving women isn't all it's cracked up to be the way women feel that it is.
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