List of religions and spiritual traditions and Dorothy Height: Difference between pages

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=== Religions, sects and denominations ===
{{Infobox Biography
|subject_name=Dorothy I. Height|120px
|image_name= DorothyHeight_Book_Nordstrom_VA_15feb97.jpg
|image_caption= Dorothy Irene Height
|date_of_birth=[[March 24]], [[1912]]
|place_of_birth=[[Richmond, Virginia]] {{USA}}
|date_of_death=
|place_of_death=
}}
'''Dorothy Irene Height''' (born [[March 24]], [[1912]]) is an [[African American]] [[Public administration|administrator]], [[educator]], social [[Activism|activist]], and a recipient of the [[Congressional Gold Medal]].
 
Height was born in [[Richmond, Virginia]]. At an early age, she moved with her family to [[Rankin, Pennsylvania]]. While in high school, Height was awarded a scholarship to [[Barnard College]] for her oratory skills, but upon arrival was denied entrance. (At the time, Barnard admitted only two African Americans per academic year and Dorothy had arrived after the other two admittees.) Years later, at its [[1980]] commencement ceremonies, the college awarded Height its highest honor, the [[List_of_Barnard_College_people#Recipients_of_the_Medal_of_Distinction|
==== Monotheistic religions ====
Barnard Medal of Distinction]]. She later pursued studies at [[New York University]], where she earned her Master's Degree in psychology.
*[[Bahai|Baha'i Faith]]
**[[Orthodox Bahai Faith]]
 
Height started working as a caseworker with the New York City Welfare Department, but at the age of twenty-five, she began her [[civil rights]] activist's career when she joined the [[National Council of Negro Women]]. She fought for equal rights for both African Americans and women, and in [[1944]] she joined the national staff of the [[YWCA]]. She served as National President of [[Delta Sigma Theta]], Incorporated from 1946-1957.
*[[Christianity]]
**[[Christianity - Trinitarianism vs. Oneness|Trinitarian]] Sects
***[[Catholicism]]
****[[Roman Catholic Church]]
***[[Celtic Christianity]]
***[[Coptic Christianity]]
****[[Coptic Christianity|Ethiopian Orthodox Church]]
***[[Orthodox Christianity]]
***[[Protestantism]]
****[[African Independent Churches]] (AICs)
****[[Anabaptist]]
*****[[Amish]]
*****[[Church of the Brethren]]
*****[[Hutterites]]
*****[[Mennonites]]
****[[Anglicanism]]
*****[[Episcopal Church]]
****[[Calvinism]]
*****[[Baptists]]
******[[General]]
******[[American]]
******[[Southern]]
*****[[Dutch Reformed Church]]
*****[[Presbyterian Church]]
****[[Lutheran Church]]
****[[Messianic Judaism]]
****[[Methodist|Methodism]]
*****[[African Methodist]]
******[[Methodist Episcopal]]
******[[Methodist Protestant]]
*****[[United Methodist]]
****[[Wesleyan|Wesleyanism]]
*****[[Holiness]]
*****[[Pentecostalism]]
******[[Assembly of God]]
****[[Seventh-day Adventist Church]]
****[[Religious Society of Friends]] (aka Quakers)
**[[Christianity - Trinitarianism vs. Oneness|Oneness (Non-Trinitarian)]] Sects
***[[Church of Christ, Scientist]]
***[[Jehovah's Witnesses]]
***[[Molokan]]
***[[Mormon|Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints]]
***[[Unification Church]]
 
She remained active with the organization until [[1977]], and while there she developed leadership training programs and interracial and ecumenical education programs. In [[1957]], Height was named president of the National Council of Negro Women, a position she held until [[1997]]. During the height of the [[American Civil Rights Movement (1955-1968)|civil rights movement]] of the 1960s, Height organized "[[Wednesdays in Mississippi]]", which brought together black and white women from the North and South to create a dialogue of understanding. American leaders regularly took her counsel, including [[First Lady]] [[Eleanor Roosevelt]], and Height also encouraged [[President of the United States|President]] [[Dwight D. Eisenhower]] to desegregate schools and President [[Lyndon B. Johnson]] to appoint African American women to positions in government.
*[[New Thought Movement|New Thought Churches]]
**[[Divine Science]]
**[[Religious Science]]
**[[Unity Church]]
 
[[Image:dorothyheight.jpg|left|thumb|225px|Dorothy Height]] Height has served on a number of committees, including as a consultant on African affairs to the Secretary of State, the President's Committee on the Employment of the Handicapped, and the President's Committee on the Status of Women. She has received the [[Presidential Medal of Freedom]], the ''[[Franklin Delano Roosevelt]] [[Freedom From Want Award]]'' and the [[Spingarn Medal]] from the [[NAACP]]. She has also been inducted into the [[National Women's Hall of Fame]].
*[[Islam]]
**[[Sunni]]
**[[Shiite]]
**[[Ismailis]]
**[[Sufism]]
 
In [[2004]], she was awarded the [[Congressional Gold Medal]] by President [[George W. Bush]] on behalf of the [[United States Congress]].
*[[Judaism]]
**[[Conservative Judaism]]
**[[Orthodox Judaism]]
***[[Hasidic Judaism]]
**[[Reconstructionist Judaism]]
**[[Reform Judaism]]
 
Dr. Height is currently, at age 95, the Chairperson of the Executive Committee of the [[Leadership Conference on Civil Rights]], the largest civil rights organization in the USA.
*[[Rastafarianism]]
 
The musical stageplay ''If This Hat Could Talk'', based on her memoirs "Open Wide The Freedom Gates", opened in the summer of 2005 and is currently on tour. It showcases her unique perspective on the civil rights movement and details many of the behind-the-scenes figures/mentors who shaped her life, including [[Mary McLeod Bethune]] and [[Eleanor Roosevelt]].
Other and related
*[[Deism]]
*[[Druze|Druzism]]
*[[Mandaeanism]]
*[[Manichaeism]]
*[[Universal Life Church]]
*[[Zoroastrianism]]
 
==References==
==== Religions of Indian Origin ====
*Height, Dorothy. ''Open Wide the Freedom Gates: A Memoir.''
*[[Buddhism]]
**[[Theravada]]
**[[Mahayana]]
**[[Vajrayana]]/[[Tantrayana]] ([[Tibetan Buddhism]])
*[[Hinduism]]
*[[Jainism]]
*[[Sikhism]]
 
[[Category:1912 births|Height, Dorothy]]
==== Religions of Far Eastern origin ====
[[Category:Living people|Height, Dorothy]]
* [[Confucianism]]
[[Category:African Americans|Height, Dorothy]]
* [[Mohism]]
[[Category:Congressional Gold Medal recipients|Height, Dorothy]]
* [[Shinto]]
* [[Taoism]]
* [[Tenrikyo]]
* Other -- [[Caodaism]]
 
==== Other Religions/Spiritual Cultivation ====
* [[Spiritualism]] ([[Spiritism]])
* [[Unitarian Universalism]]
* [[Falun Dafa]]
 
==== New religious movements and cults ====
 
Some of the following groups are considered cults; a few are even considered dangerous by their opponents. Read the entry on [[cult|cults]] for more information on this controversial topic.
* [[Children of God]]
* [[ISKCON]]
* [[Process Church|Process Church of the Final Judgement]]
* [[Raelism]]
* [[Scientology]]
* [[Thelema]]
 
==== Pagan and polytheistic faiths ====
*[[African Religions]]
*[[Cargo cult]]s
*[[Druidism]]
*[[Goddess Worship]]
*[[Paganism]] and [[Neopaganism]]
**[[Asatru]]
**[[Dievturiba]]
**[[Wicca]]
*[[Santeria]]
*[[Shamanism]]
*[[Voudun]] (Voodoo)
*[[Satanism]]
*[[Temple of Set]]
*[[Yezidis]]
 
==== Mythologies ====
*[[Aztec Mythology]]
*[[Celtic Mythology]]
*[[Egyptian Mythology]]
*[[Greek Mythology]]
*[[Norse Mythology]]
*[[Roman Mythology]]
*[[Sumerian Mythology]]
*[[Sun Mythology]]
 
==== Mysticism ====
*[[Christian mysticism]]
*[[Hindu mysticism]]
*[[Kabbalah]]
*[[Spirituality]]
*[[Sufism]]
 
==== Non-religious, anti-religious or Meta-Religious ====
*[[Agnosticism]]
*[[Atheism]]
*[[Humanism]]
**[[Secular Humanism]]
**[[Religious Humanism|Religious (Spiritual) Humanism]]
**[[New Humanism]]
*[[Pantheism]]
 
==== Mock Religions ====
*[[Church of Emacs]]
*[[Church of the SubGenius]] (The cult of Bob Dobbs)
*[[Discordianism]] (some Discordians maintain that their religion is not wholly without an element of seriousness)
*[[Fieldism]] and its various sects
*[[Jedi|Jediism]]
*[[Kibology]]
 
==== Religious texts ====
*[[Bhagavad Gita]]
*[[Bible]]
**[[Old Testament]]
**[[New Testament]]
*[[Book of Mormon]]
*[[Book of the SubGenius]]
*[[Book o fields]]
*[[Kitab-i-Aqdas]]
*[[Koran]]
*[[Pali canon]]
*[[Principia Discordia]]
*[[Talmud]]
*[[Tanach]]
*[[Tao Teh Ching]]
*[[Torah]]
*[[Upanishads]]
*[[Vedas]]
 
=== External Links ===
* Statistics on religious belief or adherence - http://adherents.com