Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
International Women’s Day Is No Cause To Celebrate in China
International Women’s Day Is No Cause To Celebrate in China
Jan 26, 2026 7:42 AM

It’s no secret that the Chinese “one-child policy” has been brutal. Forced abortion and forced sterilizations have mon for decades. The policy has also left China will a dearth of females, causing issues with men finding suitable spouses and an uptick in human trafficking.

Reggie Littlejohn, President of Women’s Rights Without Frontiers, says that while many women around the world are celebrating International Women’s Day, it is not cause for celebration in China. Littlejohn:

I find it impossible to celebrate any advancement of women’s rights anywhere on earth, when one out of five women in the world is subject to a regime that will strap them down to tables, thrust its hands into their wombs and rip their little ones out, as these women scream and plead for the lives of babies they desperately want. The women’s movement can claim no real victory so long as this scourge against women continues to blight the face of the earth. Chinese women cannot stand up against forced abortion without risking detention, for themselves and for their families. It is time for all women to rise up for our sisters in China and be a voice for the voiceless.

Read “International Women’s Day a Travesty for Chinese Women and Baby Girls” at Women’s Rights Without Frontiers.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Hong Kong officials pressure journalism group to reveal list of members
The public pressure placed on the Hong Kong Journalists’ Association is the latest in Hong Kong’s crackdown on freedoms of press and speech. Since the city’s implementation of the National Security Law, or NSL, in June 2020, the media industry has been continually critiqued and crippled by the city’s leaders. Read More… On Sept. 15, Hong Kong’s Secretary of Security, Chris Tang, called for the Hong Kong Journalists’ Association, the city’s main press group, to reveal to the public who...
God doesn’t need your good works (but your neighbor does)
What can the “great theologian of vocation” teach us about the meaning of calling in an individualistic age? Read More… In modern America, our view of vocation has e increasingly narrow and individualistic, focused only on economic action and our own preferred paths to self-actualization. As David Brooks explains in his book The Road to Character, vocation is now mostly imagined as a journey of self-discovery and wish fulfillment, a way to satisfy inner longings so we can put up...
The impact of church attendance on child development and family life
Religious attendance is critical not only in the development and raising of children, but for society as a whole. Read More… Only 47% of Americans belong to a church of any faith. This matters, especially for families and children, as well as munities, as church attendance and religious adherence not only benefit family life, but also the development of children, as both church and a strong family life positively form children and help them e productive members of society. For...
Should morality be legislated?
An act’s immorality is not sufficient to justify prohibition or regulation through state coercion. A moral government aimed at mon good will recognize its basic purpose, scope, and limitations. Read More… Should governments legislate morality? It depends on how we define our terms. If “legislate morality” is simply defined as “making laws that are moral,” then it is obvious that we should legislate morality. But if “legislate morality” entails basing laws solely on an act’s morality or immorality, then we...
For nature and neighbor: A Christian vision of work and the economy
We are routinely told that work is just a tool for our survival – that if purpose is to be found, it’s in personal provision and personal success. Thankfully, the Christian vision is far richer than this. Read More… Abounding in freedom and plenty, Americans continue to grapple peting forms of workism and careerism, struggling to find meaning and identity in an increasingly secular age. In response, many Christians have rightly taken a renewed interest in vocation and calling, reflecting...
Cardinal Urosa: Venezuelan freedom fighter loses final battle against COVID-19
Even though Cardinal Urosa lost his final battle against a disease that only further crippled his nation, he leaves behind a generation he inspired to fight the good fight until the very end. Read More… On Sept. 24, the Archdiocese of Caracas announced the passing Cardinal Jorge Urosa Savino of Venezuela. The Sept. 24 press release stated he was “one of the most influential people” in a majority Roman Catholic nation ravished by a Marxist political economy, widespread military corruption,...
Next Digital headquarters raided by Hong Kong government
pany Next Digital has had its financial records seized in Hong Kong’s latest move to stifle an independent press and pro-democracy activism Read More… Clement Chan Kam-wing, an inspector appointed by the Hong Kong government, raided the headquarters of Next Digital pany in a search and seizure of financial records on Sept. 28 as part of an investigation into pany. The raid came a day after the Hong Kong Eastern Magistrate authorized a search warrant of Next Digital on suspicion...
9 Hong Kong activists sentenced to 10 months over participation in Tiananmen Square Massacre vigil
The sentences are the latest in the Chinese Communist Party’s, or CCP’s, relentless pursuit of absolute control, which simultaneously smothers any hint of dissent, including freedoms of speech and assembly. Read More… Nine Hong Kong pro-democracy activists were sentenced Sept. 15 to 10 months in prison for their participation in the annual vigil for memoration of the Tiananmen Square Massacre. Twelve defendants total pled guilty earlier this month to their involvement in the vigil memorates the 1989 Tiananmen Square Massacre,...
Hong Kong court limits Jimmy Lai’s Next Digital voting rights, citing “national security”
The National Security Law is being used again to punish the pro-democracy Lai, but fear that Next Digital’s forfeitable assets could be diminished appear to be what’s driving this latest attack on basic property rights. Read More… On Sept. 17, a Hong Kong high court ruled that the Security Bureau maintains the power to restrict jailed media tycoon Jimmy Lai’s voting rights as the major shareholder of his pany, Next Digital. The high court did not specify whether Lai was...
For religion to be national, it must first be personal
As vibrant personal faith in a Christian creed has been replaced by a vague spirituality or “harmless” universal ethic, the American public square has e more divided and self-obsessed, not less. Do we need a Third Great Awakening? Read More… What does it mean for a nation to be Christian? Does the United States of America fit the description? At its founding, the United States was undoubtedly a Christian nation. To foster a society of religious freedom and pluralism, the...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved