- Quiet Power, Profound Change
-
189017 Mark Choi [mychoi1960] 2026-04-11
-
Quiet Power, Profound Change — Women in War and Governance (April 2026)
The world remains engulfed in conflict — from Ukraine to Gaza, Sudan, and Myanmar. Yet one data-backed reality is becoming clear: when women lead, governance stabilizes and peace becomes more sustainable.
At the highest level, Susie Wiles exemplifies this leadership. As the first female Chief of Staff, she operates through trust and influence rather than force, helping maintain stability within the White House. Her strength lies in discipline, discretion, and earned authority.
On the battlefield, Ukrainian women represent another dimension of leadership. Female medics and volunteers save lives, document war crimes, and support survivors. Yet despite their frontline role, women receive minimal humanitarian funding and are largely excluded from peace negotiations.
The data is unequivocal. According to UN Women, women’s participation leads to stronger recovery and more durable peace. Still, women remain a small fraction of negotiators worldwide, even as hundreds of millions live near active conflict zones.
In particular, among women leaders—especially lay leaders—within the Catholic Church in Korea, there is a growing need to expand participation and leadership, grounded in the principles of human dignity and the common good, as a pathway to peace and justice.
Conclusion: Women’s inclusion is not symbolic — it is strategic. From political leadership to conflict zones, evidence shows that peace processes without women are less effective and less lasting.
† 성부와 성자와 성령의 이름으로 아멘.
-






