This week, a childhood memory comes to mind.
As high school students, we were sometimes asked to help 'mind' small students.
These were toddlers, barely three years old, and already frightened at being
put in strange new uniforms, forced to sit still on benches with dozens of
other kids in the room, crying and screaming. 'Discipline' was definitely in
short supply.
One of the kindergarteners was being
difficult. A young (female) teacher was kneeling in front of her, asking the
child to do something, or else... The teacher was saying: “Do you want to be
punished? I'll take off all your clothes and parade you naked around the
school.”
I was watching the child's face. She was too
little to understand why taking off one's clothes should be a punishment. After
all, she still needed help washing her bottom. But she did understand that she
was being humiliated and threatened. As the teacher began to unbutton the loose
tunic that hung down to her ankles, the child broke into a howl.
It still saddens me when I think of that kid.
I was tweeting about violence against children a few weeks ago when somebody
wrote back to describe the time she was punished in class – made to stand up on
a bench, arms raised, a teacher threatening to strip her. Clearly, the humiliation
has not been forgotten, all these years later. I wonder how many millions of
people in India have been brought up to associate nudity with public
humiliation, or as a negative condition that is worthy of punishment.
And now there's this little to-do about
Congress-affiliated student leader Suraj Thakur being suspended for taking off
his clothes and dancing. He and two other NSUI office-bearers have been accused
of 'indiscipline' and of course, it is the party's prerogative to decide what
it sees as disciplined behaviour. Still, it is so saddening to think that
leaders who fail to keep electoral promises are not punished for
'indiscipline'. Leaders who are corrupt, who live beyond their official income,
who spend hundreds of crores on weddings while their constituencies reel under
drought, who misuse the state's armed machinery against farmers demanding water
or land or seed soverignty, against women demanding their right to be
acknowledged as human beings – none of these politicians have been suspended.
All it took was for a young man to take off
his clothes and look like he's having fun. If they had accused him of ragging,
the suspension would have made sense. That would have been tantamount to
breaking the law. But this whole furore seems to be centred on the fact that he
took off his clothes!
It's such an ordinary, innocuous thing.
Taking off your clothes does no damage to other humans. Even if you take off
your clothes and dance like you've been electrocuted, you still damage no human
being. You come off looking silly. Some colleagues might never be able to keep
a straight face when, in the future, you stand up in Parliament to debate an
important Bill. But there is nothing criminal, nor even indisciplined, about
being naked.
This is the trouble with an attitude of shame
vis a vis the human body. We refuse to look at it for what it is – a body. This
is precisely what is wrong with our nation's attitude to women. We punish women
for having women's bodies. We humiliate and terrorize children. And we squash
all attempts by men, especially politicians, to actually enjoy their bodies.
And what does this accomplish? What,
except keeping us fearful and eternally humiliated?
First published here
2 comments:
Packers and Movers
thanks for sharing this information
nice article great post
Every sunday, I make sure that your column in DNA mag isn't left out:)
Post a Comment