Ecumenical Task Force on Women and Religion
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The National Organization for Women's Ecumenical Task Force on Women and Religion was created by feminist theologian Elizabeth Farians.[1] The group played an important role in the creation of a Catholic feminist movement in the 1960s and early 1970s and worked for the ratification of the Equal Rights Amendment.[2]
The National Organization for Women was created in 1966, the same year the Ecumenical Task Force on Women and Religion was founded.[2] It was founded by notable Catholic feminist, Dr. Elizabeth Farians. Regarding women in the church, Farians was famous for saying, "It's all right if they come with a cake with their hands, but if they come with an idea in their heads."[3] In the late 1970s, Georgia Fuller served as the head of the task force.[4]
In the early years of NOW, the role of religion was emphasized as many activists identified as faith based feminists.[5] Scholars such as Karen Bojar have emphasized the religion was foundational to the founding of NOW since it was so important to Americans in general.[6] The task force consisted not only of Catholics, but Protestants and Jewish women as well.[7]
Support for the Equal Rights Amendment
Many of the members of the task force, including Farians, supported the Equal Rights Amendment.[citation needed]