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BOOKS ON CULTS & RELIGION
  • Cults in Our Midst: The Continuing Fight Against Their Hidden Menace
    Cults in Our Midst: The Continuing Fight Against Their Hidden Menace
    by Margaret Thaler Singer
  • Bounded Choice: True Believers and Charismatic Cults
    Bounded Choice: True Believers and Charismatic Cults
    by Janja A. Lalich
  • Take Back Your Life, 2nd Edition: Recovering from Cults and Abusive Relationships
    Take Back Your Life, 2nd Edition: Recovering from Cults and Abusive Relationships
    by Janja Lalich
  • Cults Too Good to be True
    Cults Too Good to be True
    by Raphael Aaron
  • Misunderstanding Cults: Searching for Objectivity in a Controversial Field
    Misunderstanding Cults: Searching for Objectivity in a Controversial Field
    University of Toronto Press
  • Jesus Freaks
    Jesus Freaks
    by Don Lattin
  • Not Without My Sister: The True Story of Three Girls Violated and Betrayed
    Not Without My Sister: The True Story of Three Girls Violated and Betrayed
    by Celeste Jones, Kristina Jones, Juliana Buhring
  • Heaven's Harlots: My Fifteen Years As a Sacred Prostitute in the Children of God Cult
    Heaven's Harlots: My Fifteen Years As a Sacred Prostitute in the Children of God Cult
    by Miriam Williamd, Miriam Williams
  • Forced Into Faith
    Forced Into Faith
    by Innaiah Narisetti
  • Deadly Doctrine
    Deadly Doctrine
    by Wendell Watters
  • Sectarian Song: Cult Escapist
    Sectarian Song: Cult Escapist
    by Michael Klein
  • Worship and Sin: An Exploration of Religion-Related Crime in the United States
    Worship and Sin: An Exploration of Religion-Related Crime in the United States
    by Karel Kurst-Swanger
  • Justice Denied: What America Must Do to Protect its Children
    Justice Denied: What America Must Do to Protect its Children
    by Marci A. Hamilton
  • God vs. the Gavel: Religion and the Rule of Law
    God vs. the Gavel: Religion and the Rule of Law
    by Marci A. Hamilton
  • Cartwheels in a Sari: A Memoir of Growing Up Cult
    Cartwheels in a Sari: A Memoir of Growing Up Cult
    by Jayanti Tamm
  • Out of the Cocoon: A Young Woman's Courageous Flight from the Grip of a Religious Cult
    Out of the Cocoon: A Young Woman's Courageous Flight from the Grip of a Religious Cult
    by Brenda Lee
  • I'm Perfect, You're Doomed: Tales from a Jehovah's Witness Upbringing
    I'm Perfect, You're Doomed: Tales from a Jehovah's Witness Upbringing
    by Kyria Abrahams
  • God's Brothel: The Extortion of Sex for Salvation in Contemporary Mormon and Christian Fundamentalist Polygamy and the Stories of 18
    God's Brothel: The Extortion of Sex for Salvation in Contemporary Mormon and Christian Fundamentalist Polygamy and the Stories of 18
    by Andrea Moore-Emmett
  • Stolen Innocence: My Story of Growing Up in a Polygamous Sect, Becoming a Teenage Bride, and Breaking Free of Warren Jeffs
    Stolen Innocence: My Story of Growing Up in a Polygamous Sect, Becoming a Teenage Bride, and Breaking Free of Warren Jeffs
    by Elissa Wall
  • Lost Boy
    Lost Boy
    by Brent W. Jeffs, Maia Szalavitz
  • Church of Lies
    Church of Lies
    by Flora Jessop, Paul T. Brown
  • Escape
    Escape
    by Carolyn Jessop, Laura Palmer
  • The Sixth of Seven Wives: Escape from Modern Day Polygamy
    The Sixth of Seven Wives: Escape from Modern Day Polygamy
    by Mary Mackert
  • Shattered Dreams: My Life as a Polygamist's Wife
    Shattered Dreams: My Life as a Polygamist's Wife
    by Irene Spencer
  • Cult Insanity: A Memoir of Polygamy, Prophets, and Blood Atonement
    Cult Insanity: A Memoir of Polygamy, Prophets, and Blood Atonement
    by Irene Spencer
  • The Secret Lives of Saints: Child Brides and Lost Boys in Canada's Polygamous Mormon Sect
    The Secret Lives of Saints: Child Brides and Lost Boys in Canada's Polygamous Mormon Sect
    by Daphne Bramham
  • Under the Banner of Heaven: A Story of Violent Faith
    Under the Banner of Heaven: A Story of Violent Faith
    by Jon Krakauer
  • This Little Light: Beyond a Baptist Preacher Predator and His Gang
    This Little Light: Beyond a Baptist Preacher Predator and His Gang
    by Christa Brown
  • Quiverfull: Inside the Christian Patriarchy Movement
    Quiverfull: Inside the Christian Patriarchy Movement
    by Kathryn Joyce
  • Breaking The Spell
    Breaking The Spell
    by Daniel Dennett

    Religion as a Natural Phenomenon

  • End Of Faith
    End Of Faith
    by Sam Harris
  • The God Delusion
    The God Delusion
    by Richard Dawkins
  • Varieties Of Scientific Experience
    Varieties Of Scientific Experience
    by Carl Sagan
  • Man's Search for Meaning
    Man's Search for Meaning
    by Viktor E. Frankl, Harold S. Kushner, William J. Winslade
  • God Is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything
    God Is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything
    by Christopher Hitchens
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Friday
03Jul2009

Does God Hate Women? A directory of divine misogyny [book review]

New Statesman - UK July 2, 2009

Does God Hate Women? by Ophelia Benson

Reviewed by Johann Hari

After all the arguments for subordinating women have been shown to be self-serving lies, what are misogynists left with? They have only one feeble argument that is still deferred to and shown undeserving respect across the world, even by people who should know better: “God told me to. I have to treat women as lesser beings, because it is inscribed in my Holy Book.”

Ophelia Benson and Jeremy Stangroom are the editors of Butterflies and Wheels, the best atheist site on the web. In Does God Hate Women? they forensically dismantle the last respectable misogyny. They argue: “What would otherwise look like stark bullying is very often made respectable and holy by a putative religious law or aphorism or scriptural quotation . . . They worship a God who is a male who gangs up with other males against women. They worship a thug.”

Every major religion’s texts were written at a time when women were regarded as little better than talking cattle. Their words and commands reflect this, plainly and bluntly. This book starts with a panoramic sweep across the world, showing – with archetypal cases – how every religion has groups today thumping women down with its Holy Book.

In Zamfara State in northern Nigeria, a pregnant 13-year-old girl called Bariya Ibrahim received 180 lashes of the cane in 2001 after being pimped by her father. The state’s attorney general said: “It is the law of Allah, so we don’t have anything to worry about.” In Jerusalem, ultra-Orthodox Jews have set up “modesty police” who terrorise young women who talk to men or show ordinary parts of their bodies. They break into their homes if they are seen with men; they force them to sit at the back of the bus, away from the men; and they even, in one recent instance, sprayed acid in the face of a 14-year-old girl.

In the areas of India still dominated by orthodox Hinduism, a widow is still expected to commit suicide when her husband dies, or go into isolation in an ashram. One – a septuagenarian woman named Radha Rani Biswas – fled and now begs on the streets of Vrindavan. She said: “My son tells me: ‘You have grown old. Now who is going to feed you? Go away.’ What do I do? My pain has no limit.” And on the directory of divine misogyny goes, running through Catholicism, Mormonism and more. Benson and Stangroom note: “Religion doesn’t necessarily originate ideas about female subordination, but it lends them a penumbra of righteousness, and it makes them ‘sacred’ and thus a matter for outrage if anyone disputes them.”

Methodically, they go through the excuses offered for these raw abuses of human rights by the religious, and their apologists.

The first – especially beloved of the Vatican and Islamists – is that women are not being treated worse, just “differently”. They claim that it accords a woman special “dignity” to trap her in the home. But this is an abuse of language. As the authors note: “Permanent consignment to a limited and lesser role in the world is not what ‘dignity’ is generally understood to mean . . . The smallness and intimacy and relatedness of home are fine things, but not if one is confined to them permanently.”

The religio-misogynists then claim that it is “racist” or “imperialist” to oppose such abuses. This merrily ignores how women within these cultures protest against their treatment – very loudly. They aren’t objecting to being imprisoned in their homes, or having their genitalia cut, or being stoned for having sex, because a white person told them to. Benson and Stangroom put it well: “Multiculturalism by definition makes a fetish of cultures, and it is almost impossible to do that without treating them as monolithic. As soon as you admit that all cultures have internal dissent and nonconformity, the whole idea of protecting or deferring to particular cultures breaks down into incoherence.”

Then the gentler, nicer apologists for religion arrive. They say that misogynists are simply misinterpreting the holy texts, which are in fact about love and compassion and kindness. But the authors point out this is certainly not the God of the texts who orders his followers to commit mass murder, including of women and children, and explicitly says women are inferior beings.

So, in order to defend their God, the apologists often have to lie about what He and His Prophets “say” in the texts. Cherie Blair, for example, claimed in a lecture: “It is not laid down in the Quran that women can be beaten by their husbands.” But it quite plainly is. The Quran says: “If you fear high-handedness from your wives, remind them [of the teachings of God], then ignore them when you go to bed, then hit them.”

Karen Armstrong – one of the most egregious defenders of superstition – repeatedly claims that Muhammad was an emancipator of women. Yet it is explained in the Hadith (the sayings and traditions of the Prophet) that he married a prepubescent child, and that when he was given two slave girls he gave the ugly one away to a friend and kept the beautiful one, Maryam, to use sexually. It is a strange model of female emancipation, to sleep with children and slaves.

There are people in all religions who have – through theological contortions – managed to leave behind literal readings of the text and invent a less foul God to believe in. It is not for atheists to say that one group of believers is right and the other is wrong, as we think they’re all wrong. We can note that the less literalist a believer is, the easier he is to live beside, but we will only discredit literalism and force reform if we are honest about the words of the texts, rather than trying to soft-soap believers.

By the end of this book-length blast, Benson and Stangroom have left religious hatred of women in rubble. Anybody not addled by superstition will have to conclude that such bigotry deserves neither respect nor deference. It does not deserve the taboos that today surround it. It deserves the opposite: contempt – and relentless, unyielding opposition.

Does God Hate Women?
Ophelia Benson and Jeremy Stangroom
Continuum, 208pp, £14.99

This article was found at:

http://www.newstatesman.com/books/2009/07/women-god-stangroom-benson?mxmroi=8820414/1741185/false

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