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| | ONE COUNTRY 13.3 October-December 2001 |
 | | A Woman's Place: Religious Women as Public Actors is a compilation of 11 essays by women representing a wide variety of religious traditions, specifically: African traditional spirituality, the Bahá'í Faith, Buddhism, Chinese traditional religion, Christianity, Hinduism, Islam and Judaism. |
 | | Taken as a whole, A Woman's Place offers a powerful counterweight to those who might say that the historic oppression of women by male religious leaders cannot be reversed. |
 | | Bahá'ís believe, of course, that humanity has entered a new era, one in which the equality of women and men has been fully revealed as a spiritual principle and in which its social practice will ultimately be fully realized. |
| www.onecountry.org /e133/e13316as_Review_A_Womans_Place.htm (1022 words) |
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