III.
THE IMPORTANCE OF FEMININE
VALUES IN THE LIFE OF SOCIETY
13.
Among the fundamental values linked to women's actual lives is what has been
called a “capacity for the other”. Although a certain type of feminist rhetoric
makes demands “for ourselves”, women preserve the deep intuition of the
goodness in their lives of those actions which elicit life, and contribute to
the growth and protection of the other.
This intuition is linked
to women's physical capacity to give life. Whether lived out or remaining
potential, this capacity is a reality that structures the female personality in
a profound way. It allows her to acquire maturity very quickly, and gives a
sense of the seriousness of life and of its responsibilities. A sense and a
respect for what is concrete develop in her, opposed to abstractions which are
so often fatal for the existence of individuals and society. It is women, in
the end, who even in very desperate situations, as attested by history past and
present, possess a singular capacity to persevere in adversity, to keep life
going even in extreme situations, to hold tenaciously to the future, and
finally to remember with tears the value of every human life.
Although motherhood is a
key element of women's identity, this does not mean that women should be
considered from the sole perspective of physical procreation. In this area,
there can be serious distortions, which extol biological fecundity in purely
quantitative terms and are often accompanied by dangerous disrespect for women.
The existence of the Christian vocation of virginity, radical with regard to
both the Old Testament tradition and the demands made by many societies, is of
the greatest importance in this regard. 17 Virginity refutes
any attempt to enclose women in mere biological destiny. Just as virginity
receives from physical motherhood the insight that there is no Christian
vocation except in the concrete gift of oneself to the other, so physical
motherhood receives from virginity an insight into its fundamentally spiritual
dimension: it is in not being content only to give physical life that the other
truly comes into existence. This means that motherhood can find forms of full
realization also where there is no physical procreation. 18
In this perspective, one
understands the irreplaceable role of women in all aspects of family and social
life involving human relationships and caring for others. Here what John Paul
II has termed the genius of women becomes very clear. 19
It implies first of all that women be significantly and actively present in the
family, “the primordial and, in a certain sense sovereign society”, 20
since it is here above all that the features of a people take shape; it is here
that its members acquire basic teachings. They learn to love inasmuch as they
are unconditionally loved, they learn respect for others inasmuch as they are
respected, they learn to know the face of God inasmuch as they receive a first
revelation of it from a father and a mother full of attention in their regard.
Whenever these fundamental experiences are lacking, society as a whole suffers
violence and becomes in turn the progenitor of more violence. It means also
that women should be present in the world of work and in the organization of
society, and that women should have access to positions of responsibility which
allow them to inspire the policies of nations and to promote innovative
solutions to economic and social problems.
In this regard, it
cannot be forgotten that the interrelationship between these two activities –
family and work – has, for women, characteristics different from those in the
case of men. The harmonization of the organization of work and laws governing
work with the demands stemming from the mission of women within the family is a
challenge. The question is not only legal, economic and organizational; it is
above all a question of mentality, culture, and respect. Indeed, a just valuing
of the work of women within the family is required. In this way, women who
freely desire will be able to devote the totality of their time to the work of
the household without being stigmatized by society or penalized financially,
while those who wish also to engage in other work may be able to do so with an
appropriate work-schedule, and not have to choose between relinquishing their
family life or enduring continual stress, with negative consequences for one's
own equilibrium and the harmony of the family. As John Paul II has written, “it
will redound to the credit of society to make it possible for a mother –
without inhibiting her freedom, without psychological or practical
discrimination and without penalizing her as compared with other women – to
devote herself to taking care of her children and educating them in accordance
with their needs, which vary with age”. 21
14. It
is appropriate however to recall that the feminine values mentioned here are
above all human values: the human condition of man and woman created in the
image of God is one and indivisible. It is only because women are more
immediately attuned to these values that they are the reminder and the
privileged sign of such values. But, in the final analysis, every human being,
man or woman, is destined to be “for the other”. In this perspective, that
which is called “femininity” is more than simply an attribute of the female
sex. The word designates indeed the fundamental human capacity to live for the
other and because of the other.
Therefore, the promotion
of women within society must be understood and desired as a humanization
accomplished through those values, rediscovered thanks to women. Every outlook
which presents itself as a conflict between the sexes is only an illusion and a
danger: it would end in segregation and competition between men and women, and
would promote a solipsism nourished by a false conception of freedom.
Without prejudice to the
advancement of women's rights in society and the family, these observations
seek to correct the perspective which views men as enemies to be overcome. The
proper condition of the male-female relationship cannot be a kind of
mistrustful and defensive opposition. Their relationship needs to be lived in
peace and in the happiness of shared love.
On a more concrete
level, if social policies – in the areas of education, work, family, access to
services and civic participation – must combat all unjust sexual
discrimination, they must also listen to the aspirations and identify the needs
of all. The defence and promotion of equal dignity and common personal values
must be harmonized with attentive recognition of the difference and reciprocity
between the sexes where this is relevant to the realization of one's humanity,
whether male or female.
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