Feminist Happy Talk in India
March 28, 2012
PAULURAI writes:
I would like to bring to your website’s readers’ attention the feminist indoctrination that is happening currently in India. For example, International Women’s Day has been used as tool over the years to indoctrinate millions of gullible women into socialist and feminist ideology.
The messages and events that we are bombarded and flooded with during Women’s Day celebration from media, government and corporations are designed mainly to honor and recognize the achievements of women working outside home. We hear lots of articles and stories extolling multi-tasking and work-family balancing skills of women. We do not read a single story of stay-at-home mothers acknowledged and praised in the news media for her God-given domestic role. But we read lot of stories about professional achievement of women as fire officer, railway driver, MTC bus driver, army officer, police officer and air pilot.
Please read here, here, and here for examples.
Thus media and society brainwashes women that they are worthless if they do not work outside home and their fulfillment and happiness lies only in a professional job or a career. The sad part is that the majority of Christian Churches in India have been corrupted by feminist and socialist ideology with little or no opposition. I pray that God should raise strong Christian families in India to stop the onslaught of feminism and family breakdown.
Laura writes:
Thank you for writing. Hindu culture has produced so many beautiful and conscientious mothers and wives. It is chilling and truly devastating to see the steady progress of Western-style feminism in India.
— Comments —
Art writes:
It seems that in many countries Christianity, particularly Protestant Christianity is used as a means of spreading liberalism. In Imperial Japan the WCTU (Women’s Christian Temperance Union) was an active promoter of feminism. This article is written from a left wing perspective but it is useful to demonstrate the importance of organizations like the WCTU to Japan’s early feminist movement.