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Maureen Fiedler : ウィキペディア英語版
Maureen Fiedler
Sister Maureen Fiedler, Ph.D., is an American activist and radio host and a member of the Sisters of Loretto (not related to the Sisters of Loreto). She is a progressive, controversial activist within the Roman Catholic Church. She has a long history working with interfaith coalitions on a variety of issues including: social justice, peace, anti-racism work, gender equality, human rights and female ordination in the Catholic Church. She holds a doctorate in Government from Georgetown University. She is the executive producer and host of the radio show ''Interfaith Voices'', which she originated.〔("Meet the Team" ). Interfaith Voices. Retrieved June 17, 2012.〕
==Religious work==
Fiedler finished a doctoral dissertation in 1976 titled "Sex and Political Participation in the United States: A Comparative Analysis of Masses and Elites". It was published by Georgetown University in 1977.〔
In the late 1970s and early 1980s, she was an activist for the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA). She founded and directed Catholics Act for ERA, and in 1982, was one of eight women who fasted for 37 days in Springfield, IL for ERA ratification. In the 1980s, Fiedler was active in movements for peace in Central America, especially in Nicaragua and El Salvador. In the 1990s, she was active in movements to reform the Catholic Church, both in the United States and internationally.
In 1984 Fiedler was one of 97 theologians and religious persons who signed A Catholic Statement on Pluralism and Abortion, calling for religious pluralism and discussion within the Church regarding its position on abortion. The Vatican later reported that she had disavowed the statement, but she responded, "I have never retracted or recanted one syllable... I continue to stand behind every word of it without the slightest reservation."
When Fiedler was involved in an "uncertain venture" regarding women's ordination, Sister Mary Luke Tobin sent her a note saying: "Go out on a limb. That's where the fruit is."〔http://www.nationalcatholicreporter.org/update/nt082506.htm National Catholic Reporter obituary for Sister Mary Luke Tobin〕
With Linda Rabben, Fiedler co-authored and co-edited the book ''Rome Has Spoken: A Guide to Forgotten Papal Statements, and How They Have Changed Through the Centuries'', published in 1998. In 2006, Fiedler provided a chapter in the book, ''Encyclopedia of Women and Religion in North America''; the chapter title was "The Women's Ordination Movement in the Roman Catholic Church".〔 In 2010, Fiedler published ''Breaking Through the Stained Glass Ceiling: Women Religious Leaders in Their Own Words'', a collection of interviews with women who experienced discrimination in religion. The same year, Fiedler wrote an obituary for William R. Callahan, a priest who advocated greater leadership roles for women in the Catholic Church. In 2011, Fiedler wrote an obituary for Iris Müller, one of the Danube Seven who were ordained as women priests by Rómulo Antonio Braschi in 2002. Both of Fiedler's memorial pieces ran in the ''National Catholic Reporter''.

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