Wednesday, January 23, 2013

A selection of interesting articles

Here's a selection of recent interesting articles that appeared in some of the websites and blogs which are linked to this blogs.


The Struggle Against Rape and Sexual Assault: A View From The Left by Soma Marik on Radical Socialist website presents interesting insights to this contemporary issue.




Woman Bites Dog by Kuffir in the blog Kufr is a satirical commentary on how caste concerns are reported in the media.

The Supposed Virtue of Not Being Offended by Miriam in her blog Brute Reason (in the Freethought Blogs) on bigotry and microaggressions and how these impact us.

Wednesday, January 2, 2013

Why Rape? - 2

Here are some more links which talk about the issue of social acceptance, victim-blaming, silence and several other important issues.

Urvashi Butalia in this Op-Ed in The Hindu ..... 
"First, more than 90 per cent of rapes are committed by people known to the victim/survivor, a staggering number of rapists are family members. When we demand the death penalty, do we mean therefore that we should kill large numbers of uncles, fathers, brothers, husbands, neighbours? How many of us would even report cases of rape then? What we’re seeing now — the slow, painful increase in even reports being filed — will all disappear. Second, the death penalty has never been a deterrent against anything — where, for example, is the evidence that death penalties have reduced the incidence of murders?"


Blind to what, Your Honour?
Indira Jaising in The Times of India ....
"Of all the promises made in the Constitution, the most important are the promises of the 'right to life', the 'right to dignity', the 'right to personal liberty' and the 'right to bodily integrity and health'. However these promises are yet to be redeemed for women. Rape and other forms of sexual assault,domestic violence,dowry death and honour killings — the most brazen violation of these rights — are a real and daily danger for most women."


Why is rape our collective culture?
Annie Zaidi in The Hindu ....
"Once a man in a car followed me in Saket. He asked for directions to PVR, then asked me to come with him, and ended up calling me a bitch. I remember wondering what “provoked” him. I was wearing an off-white sari. When I wore it in Benaras, people mistook me for a grieving widow."

Jason Burke in The Guardian ....
Latest violent sexual attack on a woman convulses India, sparking fierce criticism of police and rows in parliament.

Vandana Shiva in Aljazeera ....
"And while we intensify our struggle for justice for women, we need to also ask why rape cases have increased 240 percent since 1990s when the new economic policies were introduced. We need to examine the roots of the growing violence against women.
Could there be a connection between the growth of violent, undemocratically imposed, unjust and unfair economic policies and the growth of crimes against women?"

Delhi Protests and the Caste Hindu Paradigm: Of Sacred and Paraded Bodies
Madhuri Xalxo in Savari ....
I am a bit shaken by what outrages the mainstream media on rape. The incident is horrifying and yet so very familiar to us dalit, bahujan and adivasi women.
In the same Delhi, hundreds of adivasi girls are taken as domestic slaves and get raped, and go missing…Why doesn’t the mainstream media even consider that newsworthy? Why is there no uproar for the death penalty for these upper caste men from elite backgrounds raping us? Is it because we are born to get justly raped by the others?

Monday, December 31, 2012

Why Rape?



There has been so much in the media about the Delhi bus rape and subsequent death of the 23 year old medical student. The explosive expressions of public anger against it have been covered live 24X7. Rape has never made so much news before. There have been many points of view about rape, sexual violence, safety of women in public spaces, dress codes, western influence, women's demand for freedom etc. Some of it has been shrill, strident and sensational. Some others have been persuasive, reasoned and balanced. Yet others seek to analyse the reasons for the 'culture of rape' that India seems to have inherited. Some have called for democratic solutions, while others have demanded more stringent laws and punishments for rape. 

The whole gamut of institutions, right from legislature, executive and judiciary has to be involved. This whole machinery needs to function efficiently and effectively to prevent such violent crimes against women. The whole process of justice for a raped woman is an ordeal in itself. Trial drags on for years, police are unsympathetic and insensitive, doctors are ignorant, victim-blaming exists at all levels, conviction rates are very low. The concept of 'bodily integrity' of women and violation of this integrity is generally not heard in public discourse. If it is a dalit or tribal woman who has been raped, then this is not taken into consideration at all. It is as if they can be compensated with a few hundred rupees. 

We need a whole paradigm shift in understanding patriarchy, caste, women's rights, the socio-cultural, socio-religious, socio-political history of our country which is based on domination, heirarchy and control. 


Here are links to some of the better reasoned and well articulated concerns by women themselves on the issue of rape and other sexual violence against women. 



Arundhati Roy calls it India's rape culture. The writer tells Channel 4 News she believes rape is used as a weapon in India and that women in the country are "paying the price".
Arundhati-roy-speaks-out-against-indian-rape-culture


Meena Kandasamy says 'This cultural sanction of rape must stop, the state has to speak.  The endless discourses of the elite point fingers everywhere: except at the real cause, which is the cultural sanction of rape in India.'
How Do We Break The Indian Penile Code?


Pubali Ray Chaudhuri asks, 'We can make it happen. But will we? She, her entrails torn from her, had yet the courage to fight till her last breath; do we, our bodies intact and whole, have the stomach for our own fight? For it is a fight that we are facing; make no mistake about it; it is a fight. A battle, a war. Against, as I have said here before, India's hatred of women.'
She is Dead, But Can We Be Said to Live?

Akanksha Mehta says 'We participate when we repeatedly use the words alleged and reported before the word rape and sexual assault. We participate when we mourn and remember one victim of rape but forget and ignore thousands of others. We participate when we ‘other' the perpetrators of sexual violence- when we blame the migrant, the laborer, the uncivilized rural outsider, the constructed rapist from the lower religion/caste/class while we absolve ourselves from the hatred we breed.'
We Are All Responsible, We Are All Guilty

 R.B Sreekumar says 'Lofty ideals of gender equality guaranteed by the Indian Constitution is cleverly nullified by socio-religious conventions in our society, by largely adhering to retrogressive customs glorified in the Smritis, particularly of Manu, Vyasa, Parasara and Vasista. Manu Smriti denigrated women, in chapter IX sloka 2 and 3, to slavish depth as part of divine order (Varnalingadharma).'
Recast Traditions For Gender Justice

Cynthia Stephen says 'The justice delivery to women is most neglected. This has to change. As far as possible, judges and prosecutors should be women to enable victims to speak with comfort, especially in the case of rape and sexual violence.'
Why Rapes Against Women And Girls?



There are several other articles and links which will be covered in the next post. Most of these have raised very pertinent questions that need to be focussed and answered. These also emphasise the areas that we need to cover if we honestly hope to find effective solutions to counter rape and violence on women.

Sunday, December 30, 2012

Back after the Break

Apologies for being away for so long. Had a heavy work load and couldn't keep up with posting as usual. But I missed it a lot. There have been lots to share and talk about. So much has been happening all round the world and country. New political developments in Tamil Nadu, caste violence rearing its ugly head again, the public anger against the Delhi bus rape and so much more. Hopefully, will keep this blog updated regularly now.

Friday, October 5, 2012

Women's Lives


Women living in our society have to bear the patriarchal pressure of being good and virtuous women who live within the boxes earmarked for them. The stereotypes to which Indian women have to conform are clearly spelt out from an early age. Mothers, Grandmothers and other adult female relatives have the job of teaching young girls to live according to roles mapped out by their caste and religious backgrounds.

But women have not always conformed to these codes or led their lives in strict accordance to such social laws. They have broken and challenged patriarchy in myriad ways. Some have paid a bitter price for such  resistance. Others have emerged victorious in defining their lives and living it according to a feminist value system.

We have had innumerable foremothers who forged brave new paths for us to walk on. 

Most of the things that we women take for granted today were not accessible to women just some decades back. Education, jobs, right to vote, political participation and so many things were just impossible to even dream about. Marriage before she reached a double-digit age was the norm for the majority of women. She had to bear children and do the housework from a very young age. Widows were ill-treated by family members themselves but had to live with and depend on them for survival. It was unthinkable for them to re-marry or go out and earn. Concepts like chastity, sati defined a good woman. Prostitution, Devadasi, Dayan etc were concepts created for women who defied the patriarchal order of endogamous marriage that was meant to propogate the caste system.

Women could not study according to Manu Shastras of Sanatan Dharma. Neither could people belonging to non-brahmin castes and those outside the chatur-varna system. Just imagine, Savitribai Phule started the first school for women in India on 1st May 1847 i.e., just about 160 years back. Her life was one of struggle, hope and courage. She was physically attacked by orthodox brahmin men with brickbats, rotten tomatoes, eggs and cowdung on her way to school many times, as they felt that she had broken the religious codes!

Now we take education for granted. It is as if this has been the tradition all along. Let us remember that this was not so! Many of the rights that we have today are the results of struggles of a life-time by many generations of women. Let's salute these women and look back on their lives. We need to know more about their lives, dreams, hopes and struggles, so that we can understand how precious these rights and benefits that we casually take for granted are.

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Two books that I read recently are about such inspiring and courageous women who tried to change the world and make it a better place. 


'The Prisons We Broke' by Baby Kamble (Publisher - Orient Blackswan Pvt. Ltd) is the English translation of her Marathi autobiography 'Jina Amucha'.  Writing about the lives of Mahars of Maharashtra, Baby Kamble remembers how the Mahar society was before Babasaheb Ambedkar arrived on the Dalit horizon. Beautifully written, full of liveliness and verve, sans self-pity, it tells the tale of not just her own life, but that of her community. Please read this excellent review at 




*****


Breaking Barriers by Parvati Menon  (Publisher - Leftword) is another stimulating read about twelve politically conscious women who challenged the exploitative social order and broke many barriers in building up a women's organization viz., AIDWA. 

This book contains short biographies of these twelve women leaders who have been long associated with CPM like Ahilya Rangnekar, Ila Bhattacharya, Kanak Mukherjee, Lakshmi Sahgal, Mallu Swarajyam, Mangaleswari Deb Burma, Manjari Gupta, Moturu Udayam, Pankaj Acharya, Pappa Umanath, Suseela Gopalan and Vimal Ranadive. 

These biographies could have become more meaningful and realistic if these women could have had the space to talk about the political line taken by the CPM from 1990s onwards viz., the age of globalization and struggles like Singur and Nandigram and their identification or discomfort with it. 

But still, the early history of the undivided Communist Party of India is worth reading and learning from. Most of these women were part of the freedom movement and hence their experiences are rich. They give us a glimpse of the social milieu prevailing in 1940s and 50s. 







Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Immersion of idols creates environmental hazards


Ganesh Chathurthi or Vinayagar Chathurthi is a festival that is pre-dominantly north indian in origin. But these days, it is being celebrated in Tamil Nadu with a lot of pomp, glamour and show of money. Just a few years back, it was confined to Brahmin homes who would keep a small Ganesh idol, do puja and then immerse it in the well or tank closeby. 

These days there are huge Ganesh idols kept in public place (reminiscent of western Maharashtra especially Mumbai and Pune), aartis and pujas are done for five days.Then these idols are dumped into the sea, eri or lakes. These water-bodies are polluted with chemical dyes and plaster of paris statues turning them into environmental hazards.

Why did Ganesh Chathurthi suddenly get hyped as a major hindu festival in Tamil Nadu?  Is this newly acquired popularity real or artifical? The five days of celebration require lots of money. Where do funds come from to put up these huge idols, pandals, pujas, aartis and all associated paraphernalia? Who are the persons leading the local mandals created for this purpose? Some groups seem to be pumping huge amounts of money for these celebrations. During the NDA rule, it was noticed that the maximum number of NGOs in India were religious ones aligned to the Hindutva ideology. These were also the ones that got maximum foreign contributions.

The state is also spending huge amounts on keeping security and providing infrastructure etc. In chennai alone, more than 12000 policemen were assigned to the job on that day. More than 500 bigs idols were immersed into the sea off the coast of Chennai as per this report in The New Indian Express, http://newindianexpress.com/cities/chennai/article1238603.ece

The district administrations are reckless in alloting places to immerse these idols without taking into consideration the environmental impact of such moves. Salem Citizens Forum, a group in Salem has adopted a lake called Mookaneri and tried to develop it on ecologically balanced basis. However, the police allowed this lake to be used as a dumping place for Ganesha idols this year. Naturally, this shocked Salem People's Forum who felt their efforts would go to waste. So they decided to do something about it. Here's a report on an unique awareness raising protest in Salem undertaken by Piyush Sethia of the Salem Citizen's Forum....




Here a report in the Hindu about this protest
http://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/tp-national/tp-tamilnadu/activist-surrenders-before-court-to-highlight-pollution-of-lake/article3933994.ece

Our water bodies, ecological system and environment are precious. Why can't religious leaders find out more environment friendly ways to dump their used gods? Our solidarity to Piyush and Salem Citizens Forum. We need a lot more such awareness raising and democratic questioning on this issue.

Monday, September 17, 2012

Remembering an Icon



Periyar  Revolutionary, Humanist, Iconoclast

(1879 - 1973)

 

 Today is his 134th birth anniversary. Periyar is an example of one man’s vision and dream that could bring about a radical change in society. He was a revolutionary leader, great humanist and iconoclast produced by Tamil Nadu. Periyar’s original name was E.V. Ramasami Naicker. He dropped his surname "Naicker" because it indicates caste, and he was very strongly opposed to the caste-system.  

His admirers bestowed the title "Periyar" on him. (In Tamil the word "Periyar" means "the great one''.) He is also referred to as “Thanthai Periyar” (“great leader” or “great father”). 


Early Influences


In his early boyhood, he was exposed to a rigid orthodox way of life strictly governed by traditional prescriptions and scrupulously attached to conventional ritual-ridden activities.

Periyar, recalling his boyhood remarked that “the Hindu orthodoxy practiced by his ancestors and the theological discourses perennially conducted in his house turned him to be an agnostic.” Incidents of caste discriminatory and derogatory treatment experienced by him as a schoolchild seem to have made a lasting impression to his sense of self-respect so as to drive him to be a determined speaker for an egalitarian society.

At the age of nineteen, he married Nagammai who was only thirteen. In 1904, i.e., six years after his marriage and at the age of 25, Periyar left his home without informing anyone and went to Varanasi (Benares).

It seems there were increasing clashes between Periyar and the orthodox ways of his family. Periyar regarded “thali” (a necklace worn by married Hindu women in some parts of India) as a symbol of slavery. Periyar's removal of the "thali" of his wife created a furor in his family. Probably this led to Periyar’s unannounced exit.

He always pictured Varanasi as a holy place, where anybody could go and stay. However, when he went there, he saw that only the Brahmins were taken cared for while non-Brahmins were not allowed to stay in the inn. Being a non-Brahmin E. V. R Periyar was not given any food, even though at that time the temple was offering food for people coming from all over the world. Because of his hunger, he had to fill his stomach from the leftovers.

Freedom means Self Respect


The decades of 20s and 30s saw major upheavals in the socio-political milieu of India as a whole and particularly south India.  Of all the social reform movements in Tamil Nadu, the one movement which was non-religious and secular in its approach to social problems and brought about the maximum change was the Self-Respect Movement (Suya Mariyadai Iyakkam) started by Periyar. 


This movement was quite strong and even militant in its efforts to achieve social equality. It was described from the beginning as “dedicated to the goal of giving non-Brahmins a sense of pride based on their Dravidian past.”

The political philosophy of Periyar is human respectability with an emphasis on economic and social equality, which must be primarily based on rational thinking.

 

 

Forget God, Remember Humans


Periyar was an atheist and rationalist who questioned the hierarchies of domination and suppression created and sanctioned by Hindu religion. Hence he was strongly anti-religion and anti-caste. Periyar was uncompromisingly opposed to Brahminism. Eradication of caste-system including untouchability was the most important aim of the Self-Respect Movement.  Periyar worked for a casteless society based on the value of equality. He believed that this could be achieved only by the abolition of Brahminism.

In his "Manu - A Code of Injustice to Non-Brahmins", Periyar has severely condemned Manu's code as expounded in the Manu dharmashastra or the Manusmriti. According to him, Manu's code is only a weapon in the hands of the "high-caste Brahmins". It enables Brahmins to call themselves high and superior, and to lead a comfortable life at the cost of others.

The non-brahmins (Shudras), on the other hand, have been deprived of their self-respect and decency, and have been reduced to the status of perpetual slaves. Manu's code, as Periyar sees it, is an instrument for Brahmin dominance and monopoly over the society.

Religion and social issues are closely linked. Ritual impurity leading to untouchability means socio-economic degradation, for lower caste and ritual purity leads to social supremacy for the upper caste.

 Champion of Women’s Rights

Periyar was a champion of women's rights and strongly in favour of women’s equality. He saw that oppression of women was deep rooted in our society. The orthodox people justified their attitude towards women saying that they followed Manu dharma. Periyar said, “Any code that advised men to treat their women folk worse than animals is a barbarous code and can be respected only by barbarians.”

He questioned the whole concept of chastity as it was (and continues to be) applied selectively to women only. He felt that character was essential for both man as well as woman. Hence he said, speaking of chastity only with reference to women degraded not merely women but men also.

In several Self-Respect Conferences, which he organized in Tamil Nadu, Periyar advocated women’s equality with men, and equal property and succession rights for women. Among other things, he encouraged and supported inter-caste marriages and widow-remarriages.
Periyar popularized Self-Respect Marriages based on mutual consent and rationalism that was conducted without any Brahmin priest or religious ritual.


Periyar objected to terms like “giving of a maid” and “given in marriage”. They are Sanskrit concepts and come from the brahminical tradition of treating women as objects. He wanted them to be substituted by Vazhakai Tunai, a word for marriage taken from the Tirukkural, which means Life-Mate.

Such self-respect marriages can be successfully undertaken in an atmosphere where the status of women is on par with men. He believed that women’s liberation also depends upon relieving them from the age-old traditions and other irrational chains of bondage and exploitation.

According to Periyar, kindness, desire, love, lust, friendship, attraction and distaste of sex, etc., are private feelings of human beings. These should not be discussed, determined or imposed by any third person. Every one must have the freedom to settle these issues based on his or her taste, attitude and satisfaction. It is unnecessary and uncalled-for anybody to interfere into the private affairs of others.


Periyar - a firm Marxist

Even today, most Periyarists address each other as ‘Thozhar’ without realizing its true meaning. ‘Thozhar’ means ‘Comrade’ and conveys a sense of equality cutting across hierarchies and barriers of religion, caste, gender etc.

Periyar visited the USSR and was greatly impressed by the egalitarian society based on dialectical materialist principles that he saw there. He envisioned a similar kind of classless and casteless society for the whole of Dravida Nadu where people would free themselves from social, political and economic inequalities and create a just and egalitarian social order.




“Where there is despair, Periyar instilled hope,
Where there was darkness, he shed light,
Where there was ignorance, he spread knowledge,
Where there was fear, he gave courage.”




For more online resources on Periyar:
Images courtesy - Internet