Series: #visiblewomen: You Can’t Be What You Can’t See: Primary Pictures

I teach Primary Sharing Time.  I love it.

I love the teaching, the stories, the kids, and the fun.  When we talk about Jesus, I tell the children the stories of His life and the men and women He lived and worked with.  When we talk about the courage to do what is right, I read from “Girls Who Choose God”.  When we talk about faith, I tell them of both Nephi and Abigal.

I tell them stories from my own life and any stories of President Wixom that I can find.

I use pictures a lot.  Aside from the pictures I bring myself, there are few pictures of women.  I will be writing a letter to President Wixom and her counselors, asking them to consider including more pictures of women and girls in packets / manuals provided to Primary teachers.

I believe this will be a great advantage to both girls and boys.  They will learn that both women and men can be examples of faith, courage, and service.  And they can strive to be like them.

Read more posts in this blog series:

4 Responses

  1. I also teach Sharing Time, and I wanted to share what I do. The Sunday after the women’s broadcast I show pictures of the women who spoke, share a quote and sing a song around their topic. I’ve found this helps the sr. Primary girls feel like they get something special, and we show the boys that the voices of our female leaders are important and worth repeating and studying.

  2. Great thinking, Suzette. A point I love that y’all who are writing for this series have made so well is that patterns teach. When we have a pattern of showing only (or almost exclusively) pictures of men, it teaches that men matter, that men are the default, that women aren’t important. I love your pushing back to try to get this imbalance corrected!

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Managers of the LDS Church are consciously well-intentioned and convinced of their moral uprightness. Yet they suffer from distorted thinking about women’s spiritual autonomy that is comparable to that of the clergy hundreds of years ago. Hundreds of years from now, will Latter-day Saints look back at patriarchal rhetoric as irrational, anxiety-driven and oppressive? Will feminists be exonerated like Joan of Arc, who was canonized in 1920? Or, will the Saints still be convinced of the divinity of misogynistic thinking for centuries to come and dwindle in numbers? All I know is that there is a lot of cautionary content for our Church in the European history of witch trials.

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