Rapistan all the way : Shame on you India

aglaeca9 thumbnail
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Posted: 10 years ago
#1
Feeling ashamed to call myself an Indian.

Original Article


Two sisters ordered to be raped? Shame on you India

Why don't perpetrators of these heinous crimes against women ever get castigated, chastised or even castrated?


Raksha Bandhan, an ancient festival which falls on a full moon day (Shravan Poornima) was recently celebrated. Folklore has it that the occasion originated with Rajput queens, who practised the custom of sending rakhis to neighbouring rulers as a symbol of brotherhood.

To this day, all over in India, on this auspicious occasion, sisters tie a rakhi on their brothers' wrists, pledging devotion while the brothers' vow to protect them. Popular culture, Bollywood and our prime time soaps also go gaga over the innate sentimentality and sacredness of the sibling relationship, with the projection of a brother taking up the role of the father in a woman's life - protector, patriarch, part parent.

Rakhi even features in the Mahabharata - legend has it that Krishna once cut his finger while whirling his Sudarshana Chakra and Draupadi immediately tore a strip from her silk sari and wrapped it around his finger to stop it from bleeding. Krishna, moved by her dedication, declares her as his sister and promised to repay the debt. Later, when Draupadi faces humiliation at the hands of the Kauravas, Krishna indefinitely extends the drapes of her sari to save her from being disrobed.

Do modern Indian women need a powerful, potent male saviour to protect their modesty, given the alarming rates of sexual violence? Or do festivals like Raksha Bandhan, Bhratru Dwitiya, Bhai Dooj, Bhai Beej, Bhai Phonta, Karaka Chaturthi (Karwa Chauth), Ashok Shasthi and other Shasthivratas (celebrated mostly in Bengal), reinforce a time-tested misogynistic model? Where women are left to praying and observing rigorous fasts for the well-being of their husband/children. The goal of such practices is to wish for the long life of the beneficiary, while women are conditioned to suffer pain and strict physical penance, self-sacrifice built into our DNA - a life-long, pervasive guilt. The way we must be made to pay - even if it means to be raped brutally or threatened with molestion on social media - fostering a coercive, corrective model of gender-biased punishment.

Recently, international media brought to light the case of of 23-year-old Meenakshi Kumar, one of two sisters sentenced to be raped after their brother had eloped with a married woman from a higher caste.

Meenakshi and her younger sister were with their family in Delhi for a wedding when a neighbour called them, telling them not to return to their village as a village council, Khap Panchayat, dominated mostly by upper caste Jat men, had ordered the two young women to be raped and paraded naked with their faces blackened as punishment for their brother's misdeeds.

Meenakshi was quoted as saying, "I can't sleep, I'm very scared."

Their brother, Ravi Kumar, 25, from a Dalit caste was romantically involved with 21-year-old Krishna, a Jat, for nearly two years. When both families discovered this, they did all they could to keep the lovers apart.

Rapistan all the way

In a country where 92 women are reported to be raped every day, perhaps Meenakshi will soon turn into another bloodied footnote when statistics of sordid sexual exploitation are compiled.

Is this how we train our daughters to look up to men for validation? It is shameful that the highest court of the country seems to be impotent when it comes to taking a stand on issues like marital rape. So even though we may pride ourselves for having abolished Sati and Jauhar, we continue to burn our women for dowry, throw acid on their faces, molest little girls in moving school buses.

Why are our wombs, vaginas, breasts, buttocks and lips stained, shamed, stigmatised? Our suffering caricatured? Why don't the perpetrators of these heinous crimes ever get castigated, chastised or even castrated?


A legacy of sexual violence

In August this year, a 16-year-old Dalit girl, who got pregnant after her father allegedly raped her in Kanpur, was denied an abortion by her doctor who said that it could pose a threat to her life. She was later shifted to a government shelter home in Kanpur after her 18-year-old elder brother expressed helplessness over taking responsibility for her since he was not financially well off. The girl has three brothers and a younger sister and lost her mother two years ago.

Why does our fate eventually rest with men?

Let's look back in time, further.

In 2005, Imrana, a 28-year-old Muslim woman and mother of five, was raped by her 69-year-old father-in-law Ali Mohammad in UP's Charthawal village. Elders in the village and some proponents of Islamic law claimed that she should treat her husband Nur Ilahi as her son, declaring her marriage as null.

The country's foremost Islamic seminary, Darul Uloom Deoband, was quick to issue a fatwa as the Sharia regards sexual relations with both the father and son as incestuous.

Does our religious sacrilege thrive on primordial s**t shaming? Must women always be the first to be shunned by society, instead of being rehabilitated and rescued - our brandished and bruised bodies soft targets - with national leaders sparing no chance to belittle us in political rhetoric? How long will we remain a sexual tool, an object of perverse male lust, a crucifying medium?

Dented and painted?

#Rapistan, #Baghpat Khap rape

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ChotaBheem thumbnail
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Posted: 10 years ago
#2


I don't know much about this but I read somewhere that the Khap rape story was found to be false news.
Edited by ChotaBheem - 10 years ago
St.T thumbnail
Posted: 10 years ago
#3
Why do you need to be so extreme. There are laws in India which can handle these issues. However the courts need to have more speed, which is ultimately the problem.
The public emotions are really not regulated unfortunately. There are other more reasonable areas where this energy can be channeled. The Police, Judiciary, Legislative Body and the Defence should be improved not just for one factor, but in a way so that no one gets abused by it. That is supposed to be the common sense.


ChotaBheem thumbnail
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Posted: 10 years ago
#4

U criticized both Muslim and Hindus equally.Ok.

Religious extrimisim is not good but you criticized Rakshabandhan a lot.Many sister wait for this festival to celebrate not that they are weak,not that they need a protector but it give them joy,happiness to celebrate brother and sister relationship.
maha2us thumbnail
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Posted: 10 years ago
#5
Most of the rape cases filed are false. Look at this link:

https://xpressionsdpka.wordpress.com/2015/09/22/rape-case-inside-taxi-in-delhi-wasnt-rape-but-an-ugly-fight-over-rs-500-taxi-fare/

Definitely shame on you India. Not because there are a lot of rapes taking place in India but because in India males are considered to be disposable entity and no body cares about the comfort of males.
Edited by maha2us - 10 years ago
373577 thumbnail
Posted: 10 years ago
#6

Originally posted by: maha2us

Most of the rape cases filed are false. Look at this link:

https://xpressionsdpka.wordpress.com/2015/09/22/rape-case-inside-taxi-in-delhi-wasnt-rape-but-an-ugly-fight-over-rs-500-taxi-fare/

How does one such case or some such false cases make you reach the conclusion in bold?


Definitely shame on you India. Not because there are a lot of rapes taking place in India but because in India males are considered to be disposable entity and no body cares about the comfort of males

Not sure what made you reach this conclusion again----- but I will cite the article in TOI today that brings out the social mentality that is in direct contradiction to what you stated in bold.

"BJP ruled Chhattisgarh has went a step further with its class X social science textbook quoting that "working women are one of the causes of unemployment" in the country"
According to Hindi textbook of social science of Class X, published by Chhattisgarh Board of Secondary Education, holds working women as one of the causes of unemployment in country. In one of the chapters of economic problems and challenges, it is explained that percentage of unemployment after independence has increased as women in all sectors have started working.
"Does it mean that percentage of unemployment is measured on parameters keeping only men in mind? "
Ojha said the content was originally written way back in 2006-07 which has been re-produced as it is. It cannot be removed immediately and could be considered for review in the next academic session.

How is that for gender discrimination Mr Maha2US?
maha2us thumbnail
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Posted: 10 years ago
#7
Probably they will do the needful to make change in the text book.

But then patriarchal mindset is deep rooted in the minds of Indians. Are both the genders considered equal? A man who is not able to find a job is ridiculed. A woman who is not able to find job is not ridiculed. This point itself is gender discrimination. There are many men who whole heartedly accept to marry a woman who is not employed and her future is thus secured. But for an unemployed man? The society laughs at him. Probably that is the way in Chattisgarh. Thus one can see there is gender discrimination in many ways.
373577 thumbnail
Posted: 10 years ago
#8

Originally posted by: maha2us

Probably they will do the needful to make change in the text book.

But then patriarchal mindset is deep rooted in the minds of Indians. Are both the genders considered equal? A man who is not able to find a job is ridiculed. A woman who is not able to find job is not ridiculed. This point itself is gender discrimination. There are many men who whole heartedly accept to marry a woman who is not employed and her future is thus secured. But for an unemployed man? The society laughs at him. Probably that is the way in Chattisgarh. Thus one can see there is gender discrimination in many ways.


Of course there is gender discrimination in our country but it is skewed against the women and not against the men as you like to state in almost all your posts. Marrying an unemployed woman and not ridiculing her for being unemployed does not in any way mean that her future is secure! How can a life of dependency ever be considered to have a secure future? I am sorry but I fail to understand how you keep drawing erroneous conclusions time and again. Only a long standing deep rooted bias could explain it - huh.
Edited by zorrro - 10 years ago
Madhura.. thumbnail
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Posted: 10 years ago
#9
It is the easiest thing to play the blame game, than to go at the actual cause, think about the solutions. Yes courts should give a speedy decision.
Each country has some flaws, but unfortunately Indians tend to magnify the country's flaws a lot more. India will really be a proud country when all people have pride in being Indians..
Why are we so ashamed of the country? It has thousands of other great reasons, be it the longest constitution, natural beauty, diversity, strangers helping you in calamities, abroad even neighbours rarely do..why can't we for once think about solutions than just blame? Not doing work and blaming person who does is easiest and why be ashamed if you have not made a fault, people who do wrong are rarely ashamed...and people who can do things right get ashamed more and half battle gets lost there.
Edited by Madhura.. - 10 years ago
Starwalkers thumbnail
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Posted: 10 years ago
#10
Well, it wouldn't be right to castrate all Indian men. I believe there are more non-rapists than rapists in India, because if all men were rapists you know...
Rapes do not only happen in India, it happens everywhere else too. I guess this situation or dilemma is more significant to be debated upon in India because we are a patriarchal society.



As you mentioned India doesn't give women the respect they deserve, we are proud of our Bharat Mata but not of a woman ruling the country {We've only had one woman president and one woman prime minister till date.}

Courts are definitely time consuming and not to mention the fact the victims are harassed by lawyers. The real problem with our society is women are never provided the equality they are entitled to. Moreover, the fear of punishment does not stop rapes from happening. If it did then rapes would have been over a long time ago.

The change should start from the families. Both boys and girls need to grow up seeing their father respect their mother and the other way around. If all parents can treat their kids equally in every single way possible then they'd grow up to be a different society. A society where a boy and a girl are not discriminated on any basis. This is the only way to reduce rapes.

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