From: bcsabha.kal...@gmail.com
To: 

From: Astrid Lobo Gajiwala <asklo...@gmail.com>


I am attaching a link below on the teleconference I spoke at recently. It was 
organised by the US reform group FutureChurch. 
http://ncronline.org/news/global/women-responsible-holding-india-s-bishops-accountable-gender-policy
Women all over the world are now looking to the Indian Church to give the lead. 
It is 5 years since the issue of the Policy and they are asking, "How far has 
it been implemented?" 
​​Astrid


-------Women responsible for holding India’s bishops accountable on gender 
policy
The remarkable thing about a landmark document on gender policy written by the 
Catholic bishops of India is the extraordinary extent to which women were 
involved in the process, says an Indian lay woman who assisted with the 
document.
“Not only did women set the agenda for this meeting, 40 of them were present in 
the [delegation], participating in all the group discussions and plenary 
sessions,” Dr. Astrid Lobo Gajiwala said during a recent webcast lecture on the 
topic, “Creating a Roadmap for Gender Equality in the Church.”
Gaijwala said the staff of the Catholic Bishops Conference of India (CBCI) 
Commission for Women, for which she acts as a consult, worked to allow everyone 
a voice in the issue.
“We had organized right through the year before the plenary assembly grassroots 
meetings and national consultations to propose topics for this plenary assembly 
and to elicit grassroots realities and expectations. All of this was brought to 
the plenary assembly,” she said.
Gaijwala spoke Aug. 26 at a teleconference organized by FutureChurch, the 
Cleveland based organization that works to make changes in the Catholic church 
to allow all Catholics to more fully participate in church life and leadership. 
More than 75 people registered for the event.Visit our sister website, Global 
Sisters Report!Talking about the plenary session with India’s bishops, Gaijwala 
said there were five women speakers, including herself as one of the keynote 
speakers. Her paper was focused on women in the church.
“In another momentous first the bishops nominated three women, SMMI Sr. Lily 
Francis [Salesian Missionaries of Mary Immaculate], who was secretary of the 
CBCI Commission for Women, Dr. Rita Noronha the other keynote speaker, and 
myself, to be on the drafting committee. Many of our recommendations were 
accepted by the bishops and included in the statement on their commitment to 
action. This statement, approved by 163 bishops who were present at the 
meeting, documented the bishops commitment to evolve within a period of one 
year regional gender policies with time bound action plans and monitoring 
mechanisms.”
Gajiwala said the CBCI Women’s Commission studied national and international 
gender policies, taking into account recommendations from the women at the 
grassroots level and those who attended the plenary assembly. A balancing act 
was necessary between the bishops and society.
“Walking the tightrope between what women wanted and what the bishops could 
relate was not easy while drawing up this policy,” she said. “With regard to 
empowering women in society we knew that we would have the full support of the 
bishops. Where we had to tread carefully was with regard to women in the 
church.  It is true that the bishops have made changes to the original draft, 
but for the most part it remains the same.”
Gajiwala answered questions from listeners following her presentation. She was 
asked how it happened that the bishops in India even took up the cause for 
women.
“Initially the bishops took up this challenge of equality for women because 
women are obviously poor, marginalized, and this was the original focus,” 
Gajiwala said. “But the moment they took up the situation of women in society, 
obviously they also had to take it up in the church. There have been a number 
of meetings focusing on this.”
The CBCI has been restructured, and they no longer have a committee to monitor 
the policy implementation. That now falls to the three rites in India — Latin, 
Syro-Malabar and Syro-Malankara. Gajiwala said the women are now looked after 
in their own rites with their own commission. She also said she is trying to 
get the topic back on the agenda for the CBCI Council for Women.
Gajiwala said it has been five years since this policy has been released.
“What is important for women to realize is with this policy, the bishops have 
handed power over to them,” she said. “In effect they have said this is what 
the church is committed to do for women. This is what we are willing to do to 
make resources available for. The bishops have made themselves accountable. 
What remains is for us women and men, priests and religious, to hold them to 
their word.”Gajiwala’s talk was part of an ongoing series of teleconferences 
FutureChurch sponsors to provide, according to its website, “Catholics with the 
opportunity to hear and engage leading Catholic theologians, biblical scholars, 
journalists, activists, ministers and others right in the comfort of your home.”
The next FutureChurch teleconference is Sept. 15 and will feature St. Joseph 
Sr. Elizabeth Johnson. The Fordham University theologian’s address is titled 
“Will the Real Mary Please Stand Up? Understanding the role of Mary, the mother 
of Jesus, in our salvation history.” For details 
visithttps://futurechurch.org/events/teleconference-with-sr-elizabeth-johnson.
[Elizabeth Elliott is an NCR Bertelsen intern. Her email address is 
eelli...@ncronline.org.]








                                          

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