The End of Feminism
by Genevieve S. Kineke
While
hysteria swirls around Sarah Palin, wife and mother of five,
everyone would benefit by taking a large step back from the
pandemonium in order to better perceive what is really happening.
Her supporters rightly point to her affirmation of life and
her ability to juggle family with wider commitments as the
cause of a nearly unhinged backlash from liberals, but this
is wide of the true mark. The actual cause of international
outrage is not her motherhood, but the fact that she does
not reject fatherhood. There has been a deliberate blurring
of these two facts in recent decades, and it is essential
that we restore our critical focus. We have been tricked
by a clever charade.
For forty years, we have witnessed incalculable energy being
spent on the questions surrounding human reproduction, and
most of the capital has been used to promote the separation
of stable conjugal relations from nurturing subsequent generations.
The terrain in these battles encompasses the right to contraception
and no-fault divorce, the glorification of sodomy and same-sex
marriage, an unprecedented assault on the purity of children,
the degradation of traditional family values in the entertainment
industry, and the insidious establishment of the mass media
as primary communicant with the young which undermines parental
authority. The result is moral anarchy and sexual chaos,
which have confused so many impressionable souls about the
very meaning of family life and sexual intimacy.
Most pro-family advocates over the decades have pointed
to the attack on motherhood as an integral weapon in this
war. When a mother turns on the child of her womb as a competitor
or even enemy, many rightly presume that civilization is
in great peril. It is true that Satan approached Eve in order
to bring about our fall from grace—and that diabolical
strategy has had its successes ever since, but we cannot
lose sight of the subsequent means of restoration. Motherhood
was key to salvation and always will be, not only because
of the life it fosters but because of the bridge it creates.
The motherhood of Mary is instructive for all mothers, in
that she received the seed of God and that she restored our
relationship with the Creator, thus placing motherhood within
a constellation of family of relationships. The enemies of
motherhood strategically attack it—not primarily because
of its capacity for life but because of the truth it contains:
motherhood is the bridge to fatherhood, and fatherhood is
the icon of God Himself. The war on motherhood is of a transitive
nature: fatherhood is the true enemy.
Many have asked whether Sarah Palin is a feminist. This
brings to the forefront the lively debate among women of
faith about whether secular feminism, in its ideal sense,
can be a vehicle for the beautiful truths about authentic
femininity. Sincere and admirable women have taken both sides
of the issue, whose primary component seems to be semantics.
Some find the word “feminism” so burdened with
misunderstandings that it takes too much time to unburden
it; others demand the right to use the word in its purest
sense out of principle.
The National Organisation for Women (NOW) has tipped its
hand in this debate since the success of Sarah Palin in the
national arena. Truly, she seems to have embodied their long-standing
mission statement, “Our purpose is to take action to
bring women into full participation in society—sharing
equal rights, responsibilities and opportunities with men,
while living free from discrimination” This ripe claim
worked as long as Hillary Clinton was in her ascendancy,
but the reality of applying it to the Republican vice presidential
nominee rankled NOW to its core, and their keyboards must
have overheated.
The result was a hot new mission statement, parading down
the feminist runway: “NOW works to end discrimination
and harassment in the workplace, schools, the justice system,
and all other sectors of society, secure abortion, birth
control and reproductive rights for all women.” This
new creation—wobbling on shaky syntax and wrapped in
a hasty cobbling of goals—nevertheless reveals the
feminist view of men, who discriminate, impregnate and otherwise
harass women as a matter of course. The veil is dropped,
revealing more clearly their Marxist dialectic: the new oppressors
are men (who make motherhood possible); therefore women must
control the means of reproduction as a weapon to free themselves.
Feminists don’t hate motherhood—as long as it’s
on their own terms and disengaged from fatherhood. Sperm
banks, in vitro fertilization and lesbian adoptions are touted
as hip and brave choices, and cloning is the Promised Land
on the horizon. Their true hatred is reserved for fatherhood—for
the Todd Palin’s of the world—who love and support
the women in their lives and collaborate for the good of
their shared offspring.
Sarah Palin has forced their hand for two reasons: she
allows her children to live and she collaborates with
men. While
neither is conducive to the NOW worldview, the first is
an irritant, the second is the real outrage. As the nation
struggles
to understand how feminists could possible not appreciate
this example of hard work, courage, balance and brains,
we are invited to look beyond feminism into the back
rooms of
strange bedfellows.
Why are feminists silent about radical Islam, which habitually
oppresses and demeans women around the world? Why do
homosexuals collaborate with environmentalists, whose
appreciation
for pristine beauty would seem to exclude bathhouse orgies
laced
with unnatural substances? Why do Wiccans and New Agers
turn a blind eye to fascistic atheists whose material
world view
would crush their spiritual longings in a heartbeat?
Why does every radical parade host this hodge-podge of
elements
of as the most unlikely diaspora?
The answer is found in their shared hatred of all manifestations
of fatherhood. The widespread contempt for legitimate
authority thus devolves into a collective tantrum ultimately
pointed
at the Father-God of all. Behind every raging feminist
is a wounded heart that blames the patriarchy. Hence
the giddy
embrace of queer-eyed metrosexuals; the love affair
with Gaia and perverted theology; the scornful interpretation
of patriotic gestures as shallow jingoism, the drive
to castrate the military through social experiments
that
distract
the
soldiers from their mission; and the ramped-up government
programs that undermine the principle of subsidiarity
which is the very source of fatherly strength and oversight
within
the family.
The goal of feminism is to destroy fatherhood by destroying
the links inherent in traditional family life. This
scheme allows only two options for men: either excessive
brutality
to remind the world of the dangers of too much testosterone
or the abdication of responsibility through feckless
self-interest. Any deviation from these models is
discouraged or ridiculed.
Women wield an extraordinary influence in this realm
because fathers can only know their children when
the mothers cooperate,
and male authority finds its legitimate voice only
when women bring themselves and their children
to submit to
it. Given
the widespread contempt for masculine strength
and legitimate authority among the youth of the West,
we would have
to conclude that the diaspora has had tremendous
succeed thus
far.
Pope Benedict has alluded to this state of affairs
in his recent address at Lourdes: “My greatest concern is
for young people. Some of them are struggling to find the
right direction or are suffering from a loss of connection
to family life.” The disintegration of the family,
he notes, is alarming. “Sometimes on the margins and
often left to themselves, they are vulnerable and must come
to terms on their own with a reality that often overwhelms
them.”
How is it that reality itself is incomprehensible
to these young people? It is because the enemies
of God
have collaborated
to make motherhood and fatherhood themselves
alien notions. While this is the end of feminism,
it
is most assuredly
not the end of the family, and women are key
to the resurgence of truth. The family is not
subject
to
redefinition, nor a playground for innovation.
Strong, well-grounded
women
are critical because they are the essential
bridge to
fatherhood, they are the guiding lights for
these children struggling
to know reality.
Any environmentalist can explain the dynamic
interactions among living creatures, and
the family is the most
important eco-system of all. When the Vatican
organized a congress
earlier this year to honour the Church’s finest document
about women, Mulieris Dignitatem, it called the event: “Man
and Women: Humanity in its Entirety,” highlighting
the need for collaboration between the sexes. Even the survivors
of Lost know that we “live together or die alone.” The
problem with feminists is their zero-sum game, in which “grrl
power” must be achieved at the expense of boys and
men—and babies.
While we fight to defend
motherhood, let us always remember that it is the link
to something
greater—the Father
from Whom all fathers take their name.
The strategic deconstruction of fatherhood
makes it increasingly difficult for children
to understand the natural order and to
find God—indeed,
to find their way to their ultimate home.
Motherhood is not an abstract but the solution.
Just as Mary’s fiat “magnified
the Lord,” authentic femininity is
a pole star pointing to the One who makes
all life possible, primarily by loving
and supporting masculinity in all its richness.
Defend motherhood—for
the sake of fatherhood. That’s the
ultimate target in these turbulent times.
Mrs. Kineke is the author
of The Authentic Catholic Woman (Servant Books).