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 with calling me a bitch.
I remember wondering what ‘provoked’ him. I was wearing an off-white saree. When
I wore it in Benaras, people mistook me for a grieving widow.
I drove away that man by noting down the car’s registration
number. But what if I didn’t speak English, or looked poorer than I am? What if
there were three men in that car?
You might say, don’t think about it. But we must. What is it
about groups of men that makes them a grave threat? It must be a shared value
system that helps them draw courage from each other, instead of working as a
check on sexual violence. It must be that deep down, they condone sexual
violence.
If rape is all around, in every state and every caste, then
our collective culture is rape. It’s a horrible thought. But what else do I
think?
The New Year approaches and I think of mobs gathered outside
nightclubs. I think of women trying to enjoy life, instead of just existing to reproduce
sons. But in our culture, we think the problem is the nightclub, rather than
the men outside.
In a village, there was a curfew recently. Some boys tried
to rape a schoolgirl. The tragedy was averted. But the curfew was on account of
the fact that the girl and the boys were from different communities. The local
administration worried that the incident would lead to a clash. People would
die. Women and children would be raped. Because rape is how our culture
expresses anger.
I think of the girl’s classmates. Have their parents talked
to them about the difference between wooing a girl and inflicting violence upon
her? I doubt it. It’s not part of our culture, is it?
I sit with a friend one night on a promenade in Mumbai. I
think of the girl raped by a cop after she was walking with a friend on the
promenade.
I take the train to visit my mother who’s feeling ill. A cop
sitting opposite has dozed off. I’m suddenly sorry for him. We now have cops in
the Ladies compartment at night. But if five aggressive men boarded the
compartment now, the cop would be as helpless as me. I think of the woman raped
in a moving train, several men looking on from the next compartment. Too
shocked or too polite to interrupt an ongoing rape.
I think of the school where I went to kindergarten, in
Lucknow. The girls in senior classes now wear salwars, I hear. There are
rumours that the uniform was changed after a boy tried to put his hand up a girl’s
skirt. Instead of boys being taught that it isn’t appropriate to touch girls
without permission, the girls were asked to cover up. As if their legs were at
fault.
Rape happens because schools and colleges ask girls to cover
up. And because teachers are too embarrassed to talk about sexual justice. And because,
when your sons rape, you look for ways to lessen guilt by blaming their
victims.
Because you tell your daughters to ‘be careful’ instead of
your sons. And because you wouldn’t fix your son up to marry a raped woman. And
because you expect daughters and sisters to stay in marriages even if rape is
part of the deal.
Rape happens because soldiers raped and the kings who led
them in battle were silent. Because mobs rape and politicians are silent. Because
cops rape and other cops are silent. Because, when men from your caste rape,
you don’t testify against them in court.
Rape happens because we believe that some women have it
coming. Like sex workers. Or militants. Rape is all around because if we let it
happen to one person, we cannot prevent it happening to all.
This first appeared in The Hindu.
1 comment:
Problem is that we live in a society of hypocrisy , we need to lose this sham of being a 'democratic' or 'free' country , our laws are not stringent enough , because we want to show that our society is 'humane',which it is clearly not , a 'developed country' is the one where Women prosper , we seem to be too obsessed with making India a developed country on paper, its sorry to say, but men in power and men on streets , both look morally corrupt.......
R.I.P Sister....
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