Julie Clawson

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Category: Articles

Article in RELEVANT

Posted on March 2, 2010July 11, 2025

I have an article in the March/April issue of RELEVANT Magazine – “Everyday Justice: 10 Lifestyle Choices that Can Tangibly Help Others”

In it, I list ten very tangible ways people can be aware of the injustices in the world and do something about them. The list includes ideas from the book, Everyday Justice, but it also expands to topics beyond the book. I’ve had a couple of people comment though that they wished the article included more links and resources of where to find ethically sourced items. If people are interested, I’d direct you to the Everyday Justice site where I link to online organizations and stores that seek to promote justice and carry ethical items. I’ve also been trying to compile a list of where in Austin one can find fairly traded and ethical goods. It’s still being formed (and there is no way I could list all the coffee shops in town that serve fair trade), but here’s the list for now. I know this only helps Austin friends, but it’s a start –

In Austin
Austin Baby (S. Lamar) – baby items, personal care, and home goods
American Apparel (Guadalupe, S. Congress, Round Rock Outlets)- fairly made clothing
Central Market and select HEB stores (Lamar)- fair trade chocolate, sugar, teas, coffees, and spices
Costco (183) – select fair trade food items
Eco-Shoppe (Great Hills Tr)- environmentally friendly home goods, clothing, jewelry, and cleaning supplies
Ecowise (S. Congress) – home goods, cleaning supplies, clothing
Ten Thousand Villages (S. Congress) – all fair trade home goods, gifts, and select food items
UT Co-op (Guadalupe)- limited selection of fair trade logo wear
Wheatsville Co-op -(Guadalupe) fair trade food products, beauty supplies, and limited home goods
Whole Earth Provision Company (N.Lamar, SanAntonio, 290) – select fairly made clothing and shoes
Whole Foods (N. Lamar, 183) – fair trade food options, home goods, beauty products, and gifts
World Market(multiple locations) – limited selection of fairly traded food and gift items

Various Coffee shops and restaurants – like Austin Roasting Company, Kerbey Lane, Ruta Maya, Genuine Joes, Tacodeli, Cafe Pacha, Fair Bean Coffee, Terra Burger, Progress Coffee, Zhi Tea, Texas Coffee Traders

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Go and Do Likewise

Posted on November 22, 2009July 10, 2025

So the November edition of Next-Wave Ezine is out and I have an article in it called Go and Do Likewise. It’s based on a meditative exercise we did in church recently on Luke 4:40-44 and is my somewhat snarky realization of how we let our vision of Jesus get in the way of Jesus. I originally titled it, “Go and do likewise or else get the hell out of my way,” but for some odd reason that was changed. So if you’re interested in a ranty re-interpretation of scripture in which I make Jesus cuss (among other things), check out the article.

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‘Indecent’ Clothing and Abusive Control

Posted on September 22, 2009July 11, 2025

My most recent post over at the God’s Politics blog –

Over the past couple of months, I’ve followed the unfolding story of Lubna Hussein, the Sudanese woman who was arrested for wearing pants and who decided to not be quiet about her arrest. The facts of the story are that Lubna Hussein and 12 other women were arrested in Khartoum, Sudan’s capital, in July for wearing pants at a local café. Sudan’s penal code states that up to 40 lashes and a fine should be assessed of anyone “who commits an indecent act which violates public morality or wears indecent clothing.”

Most of these women quietly paid the fine and received their lashings, but Lubna Hussein decided to plead not guilty. She sent out invites to journalists to attend her trial and dared the Sudanese authorities to whip her publicly so the whole world could see how Sudan treats its women. She was eventually sent to jail, but was released after a government official paid her fine in order to remove her voice from the spotlight.

To Hussein, this was not just about wearing pants. The law is unevenly applied, and in some areas of the country women wear pants without fear of punishment. The pants were merely a symbol of the trend to suppress the voices of women. And as even her critics have pointed out, this wasn’t about gaining simple political advantage for women, for in Sudan women have won the right of equal pay to men, and occupy leading positions. Specific instances of equality matter less than the general atmosphere women have to face every day. As Hussein points out, the indecency law “targets just women–I’ve never heard of a man arrested for indecent clothing, and furthermore the law doesn’t even define ‘indecent.’ It’s left up to the police officer’s whim.” Women’s bodies are shamefully being used against them as a means of control.

Having experienced the conservative Christian version of this obsession with so-called “indecency,” I too have witnessed how clothing is simply a pretense for control. I’ve been disciplined for wearing the “inappropriately casual and therefore indecent” choice of a denim skirt and Keds at church camp. I’ve been on the youth trips where more time is devoted to discussing what sort of swimsuits and tank tops are allowed than to Bible study. I’ve had my youth pastor give me the long lingering look and tell me to go home and change because if it rained my white t-shirt would be too indecent. And I’ve heard students at Christian colleges within the last few years brag about how relevant their school is now because women can wear jeans to class. I’ve also read of the communities in the U.S. that pass laws banning clothing styles common in African-American communities. Or schools that insist on dress codes where all students must look like middle-class white men stepping off the golf course in their khakis and polos.

In America, we are not strangers to controlling people through rules about clothing. We may not physically beat people, but if there are people that we want controlled — be they women, or youth, or racial minorities — we have no problem fining or otherwise punishing them for their personal choices. Often, this has very little to do with any real indecency, but is simply an excuse to silence the voices we might fear. Lubna Hussein found herself in a position where she could challenge that use of women’s bodies as a means to control them. Unlike Hussein, most women didn’t have the legal and monetary resources to stand up to the government, so she became their voice. The pants were merely a symbol of a larger issue.

It is disappointing but not surprising that the Sudanese government decided to avoid dealing with this issue. It is easy to let specific instances slide as long as they can retain the right to forcibly control women when they desire. And it is easy to think that issues like these are restricted to other religions or other countries. But the use of fear and shame to control others still runs rampant in our country as well. Women all over the world remain silent daily out of fear of what men may do to them. When even their clothing choice can be punished by a fine or lashing; by a stoning or a rape; or simply by the reminder that they are less important than men or even that they are merely objects that men can use; it is easy for their voice to dwindle away. So I applaud women like Lubna Hussein who get at the roots of injustice and challenge even the small parts of a system that deny women a voice or full personhood.

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Afghanistan’s Anti-Woman Law

Posted on April 3, 2009July 10, 2025

I have a new post up at the God’s Politics blog about Afghanistan’s new Anti-Woman Law and I ask why we don’t do more to help bring freedom to oppressed women around the world.

–

Last month Afghanistan’s Parliament passed a new law that severely restricts the rights of women.  Although the Afghan constitution calls for equal rights for men and women, this new law imposes standards that some say are worse than what the Taliban demanded.  This law forbids women to leave their homes except for emergencies; it forbids them to work or receive education without their husband’s express permission; it strips mothers of custody rights to their children in case of divorce; it makes it impossible for wives to inherit land or houses from their husbands; and it even permits marital rape, saying that women cannot refuse sexual relations unless they are sick.

And if those violations of women weren’t enough, it appears that President Karzai approved the law in an attempt to win more votes during an election year.  Apparently guaranteeing men the legal right to rape their wives scored high on the felt needs survey for his key swing demographic.  This isn’t simply cultural, or a way to “protect” women, as defenders are saying.  Expressions of conservative Muslim faith do exist that don’t treat women as pawns to be used by men for their own selfish ends.  This is about stripping women of their identity and humanity – controlling all aspects of their lives, including (especially) their bodies.

I’ve heard similar reports out of Iraq.  Since the fall of Saddam and the creation of the U.S. approved government, the rights of women have been restricted.  Many say that things are worse for women these days in Iraq than they were under Saddam.  This seriously bothers me.  In all of our attempts to spread freedom and democracy we seem to actually be making things worse for women.  And while the U.N. is calling for a repeal of this human rights violation and the British press is reporting on the outrage surrounding the law, I’ve heard very little about it in the U.S. press.  Why aren’t we outraged?  Why aren’t we standing up to defend the rights of Afghani women?

I have to wonder if we have been so indoctrinated by the anti-feminist rhetoric of pulpits and politicians that as a culture we instinctively shy away from doing anything that might make us seem like man-hating, bra-burning activists.  Women in our country can be educated, vote, have a bank account and a job, and yet somehow still think the term “feminist” is a bad word.  Freedoms and human rights were fought hard for by our predecessors, who didn’t fear the negative attitudes or hurtful words thrown at them by those who disapprove of equality.  We reap the benefits of those pioneers, but are too constrained by cultural ideologies to help bring those same freedoms to other women.

Sometimes though, outrage and activism are exactly what is needed.

 

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Porpoise Diving Life – March 2008

Posted on March 3, 2008July 11, 2025

Happy Monday all. Although it is sleeting outside I am quite happy that I can actually look out my window and see something other than snow on the ground for the first time in a couple of months. We actually found newspapers that we thought had never been delivered – they were just buried. The hint of a thaw is quite refreshing. There is still the “native Texan” part of me that believes that the arrival of March heralds the start of spring (silly me, I know, but I can’t help it). Oh well, I’m pretending to ignore the forecast for more snow tonight.

Anyway the real point of this post is not to discuss the weather, but to mention the March issue of The Porpoise Diving Life (in which your’s truly has an article). John Smulo served as this month’s guest editor and pulled together a fantastic collection of articles, songs, and photos on the theme of “Be Like Jesus.” My article is called Creating Jesus in Our Image and focuses on our tendency to do just that. Just wanted to share – enjoy!

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Julie Clawson

Julie Clawson
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Writer, mother, dreamer, storyteller...

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"Everything in life is writable about if you have the outgoing guts to do it, and the imagination to improvise." - Sylvia Plath

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