
Welcome to the March 2011 Edition of the Laconneau
Monthly Newsletter.
IN THIS ISSUE
• Book of the Month
• Film of the Month
• Feature Article
• Laconneau Spring Festival
• Sentier de Vermont
• Regional News
• Regional Calendars
• Contact Laconneau
BOOK OF THE MONTH
The Frailty Myth
By Colette Dowling
“Can women be equal to men as long as men are physically stronger? and are men, in fact, stronger?”
These are key questions that Colette Dowling, author of the bestselling The Cinderella Complex, raises in her provocative new book. The myth of female frailty, with its roots in nineteenth-century medicine and misogyny, has had a damaging effect on women's health, social status, and physical safety. It is Dowling's controversial thesis that women succumb to societal pressures to appear weak in order to seem more "feminine."
The Frailty Myth presents new evidence that girls are weaned from the use of their bodies even before they begin school. By adolescence, their strength and
aerobic powers have started to decline unless the girls are exercising vigorously--
and most aren't. By sixteen, they have already lost bone density and turned
themselves into prime candidates for osteoporosis. They have also been deprived
of motor stimulation that is essential for brain growth.
Yet as breakthroughs among elite women athletes grow more and more
astounding, it begins to appear that strength and physical skill--for all women--is
only a matter of learning and training. Men don't have a monopoly on physical
prowess; when women and men are matched in size and level of training, the
strength gap closes. In some areas, women are actually equipped to outperform
men, due partly to differences in body structure, and partly to the newly
discovered strengthening benefits of estrogen.
Drawing on extensive research in motor development, performance assessment,
sports physiology, and endocrinology, Dowling presents an astonishing picture of
the new physical woman. And she creates a powerful argument that true equality
isn't possible until women learn how to stand up for themselves--physically.”
~Product Description
FILM OF THE MONTH

Luther
“This epic movie follows the life of Martin Luther (Joseph Fiennes), author of the
then-controversial 95 Theses and founding father of the Protestant church, who,
with the courage of his convictions, faced the wrath of the church in the 16th
century.”
~
Netflix description
FEATURE ARTICLE
FEMINISM'S GLOBAL CHALLENGE: WITH ONE VOICE
By Mariella Strostrup
The Observer, Sunday 6 March 2011
In the western world the greatest triumph of spin in the last century is reflected
in attitudes to feminism. Our struggle for emancipation and equality has been
surreptitiously rewritten as a harpy bra-burning contest while elsewhere, in less
affluent parts of the world, the response is altogether different. From
Mozambique to Chad, South Africa and Liberia, Sierra Leone to Burkina Faso,
feminism is the buzzword for a generation of women determined to change the
course of the future for themselves and their families. At female gatherings all
over sub-Saharan Africa you'll find enthusiasm and eager signatories to the
cause.
Not, they're quick to point out, that they're fans of the strident man bashing we
enthusiastically took part in during feminism's second wave. Theirs is a quiet,
dignified and entirely implacable determination to make equality not just an
aspiration but a reality, in the areas of life where it most counts, from
government to enterprise. And they're achieving it, too. Under the banner of
Gender is My Agenda, with the encouragement of the African Union, which has
named this the Decade of African Women, small women's groups across the
African continent are coming together to lobby, draw strength, learn leadership
and conflict-negotiating skills and support each other in creating and sustaining
small businesses.
Women's role in conflict resolution was highlighted in Liberia, first in ending the
bloody reign of Charles Taylor and then in electing the first ever female African
president, the recent Nobel Peace prize nominee Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf. Johnson-
Sirleaf has also this year won the coveted African Gender Award for helping poor
women send children to school and for developing a female enterprise fund. In
neighbouring Rwanda, women now outnumber men in parliament (by 52% to
48% men).
Conversely, in the UK there are more blokes called Dave and Nick in government
than there are women MPs. Women continue to hover at a steady 19% in the
chamber, put off perhaps by a testosterone-fuelled climate where the last two
prime ministers' wives have given up high- flying careers to support their
husbands or simply to satisfy the perceived demands of middle England.
Meanwhile, deputy prime minister Nick Clegg, instead of receiving praise, was
drowned in a chorus of derision for attempting a degree of shared parenting with
his working wife Miriam.
In the face of such continuing inequities, do a straw poll in a room full of modern
Brits and you'll find that those willing to commit to the F word are few and far
between. But, Top Gear presenters aside, I wonder if members of either sex
actually disagree with what feminism set out to achieve, which is the social,
economic and political equality of the sexes (see any definition for confirmation
of those goals). Better yet, it's a battle we've all but won. Time for a pat on the
back to all concerned, and special thanks to Emmeline Pankhurst, Germaine
Greer and the rest.
The myth of equality, or near enough, was one I fell for like so many others until I
was asked to participate in a debate at the Royal Geographical Society a few years
ago. "We're All Feminists Now" asserted the motion – and faced with the literary
might of the likes of Howard Jacobson and Tim Lott I was initially struck dumb,
fearing it was going to be a tough challenge to argue the opposite. A quick Google
put me straight. Two-thirds of children denied school are girls, 64% of the world's
illiterate adults are women, 41m girls are still denied a primary education, 75% of
civilians killed in war are women and children, causing Major-General Patrick
Cammaert, the former UN peacekeeping commander in the Democratic Republic
of Congo, to declare in 2008: "It is now more dangerous to be a woman than a
soldier in modern conflict."
These are staggering statistics, and yet not powerful enough to make arguing for
women's rights a respectable pursuit, rather than the aggressive histrionics of
popular perception. International Women's Day, the one day a year when we're
encouraged to celebrate what we've achieved and highlight what still needs to be
done, conjures less bile than the F word, but also more apathy. When women are
allowed to vote, work, choose when to have babies and dress in whatever fashion
pleases them, what on earth do they need their own day for as well?
The fact that 700,000 people will experience domestic violence in the UK, and
90% of them are white British females, that there are sex slaves imported daily to
this country who live lives of abject terror, that equal pay is still not a reality
nearly four decades after the act enshrining it was passed, that the conviction rate
in rape cases still hovers around 6.5%, that only 12% of the UK's boardroom seats
(as compared to Norway's 32%) are occupied by women, are just a small
smattering of reasons why women's rights should remain a priority even here in
the UK.
Further afield, the positive impact that gender equality can and is beginning to
make in the developing world can't be underestimated. Recent research from the
International Food Policy Research Unit finds that equalising women's status
would lower child malnutrition by 13% – that's 13.4 million children – in South
Asia and by 3% (1.7 million children) in sub-Saharan Africa. That's a lot of lives to
save by just doing what's right.
Saving women's lives in childbirth and protecting them from HIV infection must
remain a priority, but if those women have no rights or opportunities, you are
also sentencing them to a life of unadulterated hardship. Yet try to tell the stories
of the inspirational groups of feisty femmes currently creating havoc with the
status quo in the developing world, or make a programme highlighting the
quantifiable difference to a country's GDP that comes with educating girls, or
celebrate the small business women across Africa who keep that continent alive,
and interest evaporates.
My email to the BBC requesting some form of support for International Women's
Day didn't get a reply. You could be forgiven for thinking that, in this country,
what matters to women is still not considered a priority. Instead, people ask why
there isn't an International Men's Day – the only response to that being that it
happens on the other 364 days of the year. I'm not being dismissive, but
continuing my quick perusal of feminism's failures across the globe makes the
need to carry on shouting from a soapbox pretty clear.
Gender-based violence causes more deaths and disabilities among women aged
15 to 44 than cancer, malaria, traffic accidents and war. Basically it's safer to
spend Friday nights chain smoking on the M1 with a bag of Congolese
mosquitoes, in fog, than to be a woman in large swathes of the world. It's not
possible to have a daughter (as I do) and ignore the fact that every year, 60
million girls are sexually assaulted at or en route to school. One in five women
will become a victim of rape or attempted rape in her lifetime. One in four women
will be a victim of domestic violence in her lifetime – many of these on a number
of occasions. Women who experience violence are up to three times more likely to
acquire HIV. Indeed, it is now among women and children, not the men
spreading it, that Aids is most prevalent. Among national governments, 29% lack
laws or policies to prevent violence against women. Women hold only 19% of the
world's parliamentary seats, perfectly echoed in our own chamber. Have you had
enough yet? I certainly had.
Rage is a powerful motivating force, I discovered, and I decided to see for myself
what was happening out there. I visited Internally Displaced Peoples camps in
Chad where women refugees from Darfur were being raped daily when they
ventured out to gather firewood so they could cook for their children. In
Mozambique I cried frustrated tears as the 12 women farmers gathered around
me raised their hands in shame and in unison to indicate that every one of them
was a victim of domestic violence, a crime they were campaigning to have
outlawed. And yes, this was only last year.
So forgive me if I struggle to find sexist jokes funny in a country where sex slavery
is on the rise and 16- and 17-year-old girls from countries around the world have
been abducted, raped and forced into prostitution. Though I might chuckle a bit
if those jokes were being told by a Bangladeshi businesswoman celebrating her
daughter's Cambridge degree… Is it triumphalist to applaud when a woman over
50 takes on the discriminatory ageism of a giant corporation and wins, as in the
case of TV presenter Miriam O'Reilly? And we are the lucky ones, living in a
society where the possibility of justice, if not always the reality of it, exists.
There are women all over the world to whom the bounty of our lives is utterly
unimaginable. Until a couple of years ago I was guilty, as many of us are, of
charity fatigue. I just couldn't be bothered to wear one more T-shirt, donate one
more item of clothing, go to one more carol concert or buy one more charity
record. Until the extent of the greatest crime of the 21st century, a crime being
perpetrated against millions of my fellow women denied even basic human
rights, became too much to bear.
That's why a group of us set up Great – the Gender Rights and Equality Action
Trust. That's why individuals like Annie Lennox and President Ellen Johnson-
Sirleaf became active patrons. But it's not just "sisters that are doing it". Bono
and Damon Albarn have joined our ranks – this is not a women's issue any
longer; this is a human issue. There's a new wave of support sweeping from the
developed to the developing world through women joining forces and rolling up
their sleeves to lend a hand. Weareequals.org is a coalition of NGOs large and
small, which have joined forces to pursue gender equality as a tool for economic
empowerment. Countries where girls are educated and women play their part in
government are places where peace reigns and economies begin to flourish, and
women are more interested in ending wars than starting them – there are endless
statistics that prove this to be the reality.
The emancipation of women is the only possible future for the developing world,
as it was and continues to be for us. There are too many people on this planet for
us to be able to afford to leave nearly 50% of them in penury, uneducated and
without a voice. Making women equal partners makes sense for both sexes. My
profound hope is that we can, men and women alike, work together to create the
circumstances in which International Women's Day can become the cause for
celebration it should be. Once that's been achieved we'll work on creating that
International Men's Day, too – promise.
For more information about Great, go to thegreatinitiative.com
Frostrup, Mariella, Feminism's global challenge: With one voice, http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/2011/mar/06/feminism-global-challenge-
one-voice. March 6, 2011.
LACONNEAU SPRING FESTIVAL

Laconneau Spring Festival
Friday, April 29 - Sunday, May 1, 2011
Artemis House
Greenville, NC
Spring Festival marks the beginning of summer. As with the Autumn Festival, this is a time between dark and light, night and day, winter and summer. We are holding the Spring Festival in full accord with the principles of our Tradition. Come join us at Artemis House in Greenville, North Carolina for this wonderful weekend of council discussion, workshops, feminine spirituality and festivities. Lend your voice to the power and love of other sisters such as yourself who feel a burning need to see change in this world.
The fee for the festival is $275.00. Please also budget for $20.00 per day to cover lunches and other expenses. Housing is available in the homes of the Greenville sisters and in hotels in the area. To reserve your place, please contact Elaine at carolinas@laconneau.org for more details.
For more Information on the Spring Festival:
http://www.laconneau.org/festivalspring.html
REGIONAL NEWS

Laconneau Scholarship Fund
The Laconneau scholarship fund has been established to assist women who are unable to afford the cost of classes. If you are in need of a scholarship, please contact your local Laconneau coordinator.
If you would like to make a donation to the scholarship fund, please make your check out to Alex Guyol and send it to P.O. Box 261, Kingston, NJ 08528. If you have questions, please email Alex at alex@laconneau.org.
News from the Carolinas:
On Saturday, February 5, 2011 the Greenville, NC circle hosted The Gospel Of
The Beloved Companion Seminar at Artemis House. The seminar attracted 23
people from the Carolinas and Georgia. Everyone who attended the Seminar
enthusiastically embraced the teachings.
On Sunday, February 6, 2011 the Greenville circle hosted a Level I Beginner's
Course. Students learned the history, background and
philosophy of the
Laconneau Tradition. A total of 20 women attended this course. Some of the
women who attended the Gospel of the Beloved Companion Seminar also decided
to take the Level I Beginner’s Course to complete
a meaningful and insightful
weekend.
The Chapelle is open every Friday evening, from 5:30PM to 7:30PM. You do not
need to contact Artemis House before you come. The Chapelle will continue to be
available for meditation at other times, provided you call Artemis House to let us
know when you are planning to use it.
The Greenville circle continues our community outreach by collecting food at all
Laconneau events to help the First Born Community Development Center in
Grimesland, NC, stock its food pantry. Needy families can come to the Center to
pick up food, and volunteers deliver food to people who do not have
transportation. To continue supporting the First Born Community Development
Center and helping the needy in our community, please remember to bring non-
perishable items to Laconneau events.
The Greenville circle hosts regularly scheduled film screenings, meditations, and
community meals. Through these efforts, we continue to build a community of
strong women dedicated to changing themselves and the communities in which
they live. All women are invited to attend any Laconneau event. For more
information about Laconneau events in the Carolinas, please contact Elaine by
email at Carolinas@laconneau.org or by phone at 252.258.0495.
Georgia News:
The Georgia circle continues its dinner and discussion series, which is held twice a month. The current book study focus is on The Gospel of the Beloved Companion: The Complete Gospel of Mary Magdalene. Please check the Georgia calendar for specific dates and times.
The Georgia circle supports an ongoing food drive in partnership with the Atlanta Community Food Bank and Georgia Mountain Food Bank. The Georgia circle asks women in the community to please bring items for donation to the food bank to any Laconneau events they attend. Members of the Georgia circle also support the local battered women’s shelter, The Gateway House.
The Georgia circle holds meditations on a regular basis in Decatur, Marietta, and Gainesville. We hold Women’s Circles bi-monthly in Gainesville for students who have completed the Level I Beginner’s Course. Please check the Georgia calendar for specific dates and times.
The Georgia Circle continues to welcome all women who desire to work together to heal themselves, our communities, our country, and our world.
Please contact Deb at Georgia@laconneau.org or call 770.718.6078 for additional information about all Georgia Laconneau events and activities.
Pennsylvania News:
The Philadelphia circle continues our discussions of The Gospel of the Beloved
Companion: The Complete Gospel of Mary Magdalene, which focus on the many
facets of the teaching contained in this profound gospel. All women are welcome
to attend. Please check the Philadelphia calendar for the dates and times for our
book discussions. There are extra books available for women who do not have
their own copies.
Continuing in March, the Philadelphia circle is using the time in the evening after
our monthly meditations to discuss strategies for local advocacy to protect child
victims of sex trafficking. We have started our research, are sharing information
and are beginning to come up with strategies for getting involved in fighting
domestic sex trafficking in our city.
The Philadelphia circle looks forward to the screening of Amandla: A Revolution
in Four-Part Harmony on Friday, March 11 at 7:30PM. This is a moving and
inspiring documentary about the important role of music in the anti-apartheid
movements in South Africa. All women are invited to attend the screening and
participate in the discussion that will follow.
In April, the Philadelphia circle will host a weekend of teaching beginning with a
Gospel of the Beloved Companion Seminar on Saturday, April 16 and followed by
a Level I Beginner’s Course on Sunday, April 17. Both men and women are
welcome to attend the seminar. For more information and to register for the
Seminar or the Level I Course, please email Anna at
Pennsylvania@Laconneau.org.
For more information or to attend any Laconneau events or courses in
Philadelphia, please contact Anna by email at Pennsylvania@laconneau.org or by
phone at 301.275.4054.
Washington, DC News:
Early in February, Washington circle members got together for an evening of
conversation and fellowship at our Community Evening. Later in the month,
several circle members attended the Sentier de Vermont, a week of outdoor and
indoor activities and teachings, and sisterhood.
Much interest greeted the rescheduled screening of The Gospel of John (Part 1).
The film's creators, taking the familiar New Testament document as their
shooting script, have vividly portrayed the events of Yeshua's ministry,
crucifixion, and subsequent appearances to his disciples, as told in that Gospel.
Attendees agreed that the dramatization deepened their understanding of aspects
of the history, geography, and customs of first-century Israel. At the same time,
they noted John's obvious and close similarities to The Gospel of the Beloved
Companion, as well as its striking and important differences. This investigation
will continue when the second half of the film screens on March 4.
In addition to our regular Women's Circles, and monthly Meditation and Tea, the
Washington circle will host a Gospel of the Beloved Companion Seminar on
Saturday, March 12, 2011, and a Level II Intermediate Course on Sunday, March
13.
The Washington circle welcomes all women to participate in its classes and
events. For more information, please email Kathy at dc@laconneau.org.
FRANCE: Upcoming Events

Monday, October 3– Wednesday, October 12, 2011
Sentier de Laconneau
Southern France
GEORGIA: March Events

Wednesday, March 2, 2011
Meditation 7:00PM
North Decatur, GA
Friday, March 4, 2011
Dinner & Discussion 6:30PM
Gainesville, GA
Friday, March 4, 2011
Women’s Circle 8:30PM
Gainesville, GA
For students who have completed the Level I Course
Monday, March 7, 2011
Meditation 6:30PM
Marietta, GA
Monday, March 14, 2011
Meditation 6:30PM
Marietta, GA
Friday, March 18, 2011
Dinner & Discussion 6:30PM
Gainesville, GA
Friday, March 18, 2011
Women’s Circle 8:30PM
Gainesville, GA
For students who have completed the Level I Course
Monday, March 21, 2011
Meditation 6:30PM
Marietta, GA
Monday, March 28, 2011
Meditation 6:30PM
Marietta, GA
Georgia Calendar Online:
http://www.laconneau.com/CalendarAtlantaGA.html
Georgia Region Coordinator: Deb - georgia@laconneau.org
NORTH CAROLINA: March Events

Friday, March 4, 2011
Women’s Circle 7:00PM
Artemis House
Greenville, NC
For women who have completed the Level I Course
Sunday, March 13, 2011
Meditation & Lunch 12:00PM
Artemis House
Greenville, NC
Saturday, March 19, 2011
Women’s Circle 8:00PM
Artemis House
Greenville, NC
For women who have completed the Level I Course
Sunday, March 27, 2011
Meditation, Hike & Lunch 8:00AM
Mattamuskeet National Wildlife Refuge
Raleigh, NC
Thursday, March 31, 2011
Meditation, Dinner & Film Screening 6:30PM
Agora
Artemis House
Greenville, NC
North Carolina Calendar Online:
http://www.laconneau.com/CalendarGreenvilleNC.html
Carolinas Region Coordinator: Elaine – carolinas@laconneau.org
PENNSYLVANIA: March Events

Thursday, March 3, 2011
Meditation 7:30PM
Philadelphia, PA
Friday, March 11, 2011
Film Screening 7:30PM
Amandla: A Revolution in Four-Part Harmony
Philadelphia, PA
Thursday, March 17, 2011
Women’s Circle 8:15PM
Philadelphia, PA
For students who have completed the Level I Course
Wednesday, March 23, 2011
Dinner & Discussion 7:30PM
The Gospel of the Beloved Companion:
The Complete Gospel of Mary
Magdalene
Philadelphia, PA
Philadelphia Calendar Online:
http://www.laconneau.com/CalendarPhiladelphiaPA.html
Philadelphia Region Coordinator: Anna - Pennsylvania@laconneau.org
SOUTH CAROLINA: March Events

Thursday, March 3, 2011
Women’s Circle 8:00PM
Florence, SC
For students who have completed the Level I Course
Thursday, March 3, 2011
Women’s Circle 8:30PM
Simpsonville, SC
For students who have completed the Level I Course
Sunday, March 20, 2011
Women’s Circle 8:30PM
Florence, SC
For students who have completed the Level I Course
Monday, March 21, 2011
Women’s Circle 8:30PM
Simpsonville, SC
For students who have completed the Level I Course
South Carolina Calendar Online:
http://www.laconneau.org/CalendarSC.html
Carolinas Region Coordinator: Elaine – carolinas@laconneau.org
WASHINGTON, DC: March Events

Friday, March 4, 2011
Film Screening & Dinner 6:30PM
Gospel According to John, Part II
Washington, DC
Sunday, March 6, 2011
Women’s Circle 7:00PM
Washington, DC
For students who have completed the Level I Course
Saturday, March 12, 2011
Gospel of the Beloved Companion Seminar 10:00AM
Washington, DC
Sunday, March 13, 2011
Level II Intermediate Course 10:00AM
Washington, DC
Sunday, March 20, 2011
Women’s Circle 8:00PM
Washington, DC
For students who have completed the Level I Course
Washington,DC Calendar Online:
http://www.laconneau.com/CalendarWashingtonDC.html
Washington,DC Region Coordinator: Lorely - dc@laconneau.org
CONTACT LACONNEAU
Please contact your coordinator with questions or updated regional information.
In California:Alex - alex@laconneau.org
In the Carolinas: Elaine - carolinas@laconneau.org
In Georgia: Lynn - georgia@laconneau.org
In Pennsylvania: Anna - pennsylvania@laconneau.org
In Washington, DC: Lorely - dc@laconneau.org
Contact Information Online:
http://www.laconneau.com/Contact.html
Please visit our website, http://www.laconneau.org, for the complete calendar, further articles, Laconneau’s history and additional information.
You are receiving this newsletter because you attended a Laconneau course or seminar. If you would prefer not to receive emails from Laconneau, please email Alex at alex@laconneau.org to be removed from our mailing list.
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