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Episcopal Church names first woman bishop
FIRST LADY:
In the Cuban city of Matanzas on Sunday, the Reverend Nora Cot Aguilera was named suffragan bishop, saying she was `honored' but still faces `a great challenge'
AP, HAVANA
Thursday, Feb 08, 2007, Page 7
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The Reverend Nora Cot Aguilera prays in an altar at the Holy Trinidad Cathedral in Havana on Tuesday. Cot was named a bishop of Cuba's Episcopal Church for the first time in a ceremony in which her daughter also was ordained as a priest.
PHOTO: AP
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The Episcopal Church has named a woman as bishop in Cuba, the first such appointment by the church in the developing world, church officials said on Tuesday.
The Reverend Nora Cot Aguilera was named suffragan bishop on Sunday during a service in the Cuban city of Matanzas, said Robert Williams, director of communications for the US-based Episcopal Church.
"Nerva will also be the first woman bishop outside the First World, and her appointment is a wonderful reminder that in some nations, leadership is primarily about gifts for service and not about gender," said US Presiding Bishop Katharine Jefferts Schori, who in November of last year took office as the first female leader of the Episcopal Church.
Cot will be consecrated in Havana on June 10 along with the other newly named suffragan bishop, Ulises Mario Aguiera Prendes.
Cot, 69, said that she was "tremendously honored" but also faces "a great challenge" as the church, with some 10,000 members, moves toward greater national autonomy.
Cuba was a diocese of the US church until 1967, when it was forced to break away because hostility between the US and Cuban governments made contacts difficult and at a time when Cuba's communist leaders were embracing official atheism -- a stance abandoned in the early 1990s.
The diocese has operated under a Metropolitan Council now chaired by the archbishop of Canada, Andrew Hutchison. It also includes Jefferts Schori and the archbishop of the West Indies.
Cuba's interim bishop, Miguel Tamayo, is also bishop of Uruguay.
As suffragan bishops, Cot and Aguiera will serve under Tamayo.
Cot said she will be responsible for western Cuba with Aguiera heading the church in the east -- a step toward possible establishment of two full dioceses within a few years.
Cot was a secondary school teacher before church reforms permitted her ordination as one of the first three Episcopal women priests in Cuba in 1987. She said her daughter Marianela, who is now studying in Brazil, is the first Cuban woman ordained since then.
Cot's husband, Juan Ramon de la Paz Cerezo, is dean of the church's Holy Trinity Cathedral in Havana. One son is a priest and another daughter is an administrator with the church.
Cot said she had not seen the sort of divisions over the ordination of women within Cuba's relatively small church that Anglican communities elsewhere have experienced in recent years.
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