Saturday, March 09, 2013

Women's role in choosing Pope? Cooking, cleaning and sewing

This photo provide by the Vatican newspaper L'Osservatore Romano shows restorers touching up an area on the wall which normally is behind a glass as the stoves where the ballots will be burned during the conclave are seen in the foreground, inside the Sistine Chapel, at the Vatican, Friday, March 8, 2013.  Cardinals have set Tuesday March 12 as the start date for the conclave to elect the next pope, signaling that they were wrapping up a week of discussions about the problems of the church and who best among them might lead it. The conclave date was set on Friday afternoon during a vote by the College of Cardinals. Tuesday will begin with a Mass in the morning in St. Peter's Basilica, followed by the first balloting in the Sistine Chapel in the afternoon.   ( Photo: L'Osservatore Romano, HoTHE Vatican's spokesman came to his press briefing bearing flowers for female journalists to mark International Women's Day.
"On behalf of all of us men, congratulations and happy Women's Day!" said a beaming Rev Federico Lombardi.

A heartfelt gesture, to be sure, but one that came a day after an awkward acknowledgement: 

The upcoming election of the Pope will be an all-male affair – except for the women who cook for, clean up after and serve the 115 cardinals who will pick the leader of the world's 1.2 billion Catholics, half of them women.

Rev Lombardi's admission came when a reporter noted that one of the video clips the Vatican had provided of preparations in the Sistine Chapel featured a woman making the skirting for the tables where cardinals will sit. Aside from the seamstress, the reporter asked, how many women are involved in the conclave process?

Rev Lombardi said the total number wouldn't be known until all Vatican personnel involved in the conclave take their oath of secrecy. 

But he noted that several women work at the Vatican's Santa Marta hotel, where the cardinals will eat and sleep during the conclave, which begins on Tuesday.

For many observers, Rev Lombardi's comment was a tacit acknowledgment of what many consider to be women's second-class status in Catholic Church, despite the fact they take a leading role in staffing Catholic schools, hospitals and other charitable institutions that are the cornerstone of the church's social outreach.

"It is fine to sew and be a seamstress, but women have much to contribute to the political . . . health and well-being of the people on the planet," said Janice Sevre-Duszynska, of the Roman Catholic Women Priests movement, who says she was ordained a priest in 2008.

Rev Lombardi noted that women's role in the church was discussed yesterday during the pre-conclave meetings that cardinals have attended this week to discuss the problems of the church and who should lead it.

But the Vatican's spokesman didn't provide any details.