When the Sisterhood Rules the World: The Sad Tale of UNICEF
by Carey Roberts --show me more like this


Women often swap jokes that start with the line, âWhat if women ruled the world?â Hereâs one of my favorites: âIf women ruled the world, men would learn phrases like, âYouâre beautiful,â âIâm sorry,â and âOf course you donât look fat in that outfit.ââ
So letâs ask the more serious question, What if the Gender Warriors ruled the world?
I could take numerous cases where that scenario has already happened, where the Sisterhood has swept into power and recast entire organizations. Examples that spring to mind are the New York Times, National Public Radio, the American Psychological Association, Amnesty International, the National Institutes of Health, and others.
But letâs take one example where feminists have been around long enough to really leave their mark: UNICEF.
When I was a kid, people knew there was inefficiency and waste at the United Nations. But everyone would still look to UNICEF as the one agency that was really making a difference, helping children to stay healthy and get a grade-school education.
That was true until the day Jim Grant, visionary UNICEF leader, died.
So in 1995, President Bill Clinton â no doubt at the urging of Hillary -- nominated Carol Bellamy as Grantâs replacement. Bellamy is as doctrinaire a feminist as you will find. While serving as a state senator in New York, Bellamy had voted against a bill that would have granted legal rights to an infant who managed to survive a botched abortion.
Once she settled into her tony digs on New Yorkâs Upper East Side, Bellamy quickly became bored with UNICEFâs mundane programs that doled out measles vaccines and oral rehydration tablets. She wanted to launch UNICEF into the uncharted realm of gender ideology and social engineering.
Feminist dogma teaches that correct ideology should prevail over good science. Take the breastfeeding issue, for instance.
Breastfeeding is known to be healthier and safer than bottle feeding, especially in low-income areas of the world where sanitation is poor. But the feminists charged the UNICEF breastfeeding program portrayed women âas the human equivalent of milking cows.â So no more of âbreast is best.â
Bellamy advocated favoring girls over boys, a practice the United Nations euphemistically refers to as âpositive discrimination.â She pushed through her pet Go Girls! program, which ignored the fact that in some parts of the world, the schooling of boys lags behind girls.
At an April 3, 2003 press conference, a hyper-inflated Carol Bellamy issued this chauvinistic claim: âWomen are the lifeline of these southern African communities. They put food on the table, and theyâre the ones that keep families going during such crises.â
But four months later, Bellamy had her comeuppance [http://mensnewsdaily.com/archive/r/roberts/03/roberts082803.htm].
In August 2003 the Catholic Family and Human Rights Group (C-FAM) issued its explosive report, âWomen or Children First?â The exposeâ documented how UNICEF had become involved in back-door support for abortion programs around the world. The account concluded that under Carol Bellamy, âRadical feminism has come to define the current UNICEF, even to the possible detriment of UNICEFâs original mandate to help childrenâ [www.c-fam.org/pdfs/unicef.pdf].
The Americans werenât the only ones disturbed with UNICEFâs new direction.
Earlier this month the leading British medical journal Lancet landed another direct hit. The editorial highlighted UNICEFâs failure to develop a coherent strategy for child survival, and how this shortcoming was contributing to the 10 million child deaths each year [www.medicalnewstoday.com/medicalnews.php?newsid=17686].
Taking aim at UNICEFâs new-found obsession with promoting girlsâ and womenâs rights, Lancet leveled this blistering critique: âThe most fundamental right of all is the right to survive. Child survival must sit at the core of UNICEFâs advocacy and country work. Currently, and shamefully, it does not.â
Thankfully, Carol Bellamyâs term of office will expire in 2005.
The fact of the matter is, we will never know how many children around the world became the collateral damage of radical feminism. And there is no doubt it will take many years to restore the luster to UNICEFâs once-lofty reputation.
Radical feminists argue that men have run the show for too long, and now itâs their turn to rule the roost.
But they would be well-advised to not showcase Carol Bellamyâs UNICEF, where the feminist dream turned into a childrenâs nightmare.

Copyright © 2004 FatherMag.com, a trademark of Fathering Enterprises, Inc All rights reserved. FatherMag.com authors retain their right to republish elsewhere.

Disclaimer
|