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Showing posts from September, 2019

Gendering Immigration

This article was originally published in   Engage , a resource of the Institute for Youth Ministry at Princeton Theological Seminary. The face of immigration at the U.S. southern border is becoming increasingly Central American – and increasingly gendered. Though poverty and lack of economic opportunity are factors for migration from the entire region, these immigrants are primarily concerned with survival – as women facing brutal and widespread gendered violence, and as mothers sending their children and teens to escape extreme violence, murder, or recruitment by gangs and drug trafficking rings. [1] And if migration has become gendered in terms of the compounded burdens on women, so also must our theological response become gendered. In her book From Feminist Theology to Indecent Theology , Argentinian feminist theologian Marcella Althaus-Reid critiques the Church and traditional forms of theology for destroying “the sacrality of daily life” of indigenous women: Latin Am...