Hello all. I am Shruthi and people who know me will know that I am a hardcore fan of Indian Mythology and its interpretations.
It has been my long standing wish to see Ramayana from a woman's perspective( you can call me feminist 😆😆 and I am proud to be one) because I have always felt the portrayal of Sita as a weak woman is at the root of many evils.
And it is also one book where the role of husband is sidelined against role of a son and brother. In other words wrong interpretation of this book and its characters have reeked patriarchy in India.
To keep the promise his father gave to Kaikeyi, Ram went to jungle. But what about the promise he gave to Sita in front of the sacred fire. What about his promise as a king to protect the weak. Both these aspects were thrown into air when Ram without telling Sita send her to jungle with Lakshman. The dharma of sending out a pregnant wife and a pregnant subject of Ayodhya has left an undeniable mark on me. And Sita was never at fault in that situation. Yes Lakshman Rekha is suggested as a remedy to what happened to Sita. But she was duped. She went to give alms to a sanyasi. How was she supposed to know it was Ravan. Another say it is because of the words she used for Lakshman. Put yourself in her shoes as a wife. You hear your husband's loud cry for help calling your brother in law. What will you do. Don't you panic and if your brother in law not listening to you, wont you shout at him. A mistake that can happen to any woman, how can it be a woman's fault, how can that incident affect her purity. That banishment of Sita I have always felt at the root of calling crimes like rape a mistake of boys. Carelessness of girls. The crime where the perpetuator should be punished, the victim gets punished. All this goes to the mute suffering of Sita the abandonment. Because she suffered, every woman should suffer. The assumption woman is born to suffer even for the mistake of man comes from this abandonment and Sita's stand.
Now leave Sita, come to Urmila. Lakshman is an excellent brother, but what about the wife he married. How she should have felt when her husband leaves her for 14 years to accompany his brother. To do his brother's duty. The young wife lead a lonely life and no one asked about her. Because she was expected to do that. Her husband's first duty was towards family, not towards her. And in the end what does Lakshman get for all the selfless sacrifice he has given. To uphold his word Ram sacrifices Lakshman. No wonder in the textbook I studied in 9th named Urmila, Urmila tells in the end the waters of Sarayu runs from the tears of women of Ayodhya.
Basically my expectation from Siya Ke Ram is how the CVs are going to address these raging issues. As a woman I am not expecting a butchering of Ram's character, what I am looking at is how Sita took it, was she as mute as she made out to be, is there a much better justification for Rams action than what the popular culture believes or understands.
Because I have great respect for both Ram and Sita. Even greater respect for Lakshman , Urmila and Bharath. And as an ardent lover of Ramayana the eternal love story of Ram and Sita I want the show to address my concerns. Rather than the divine, I want to see the characters as humans, their actions and their justifications.
Because Ramayana and Mahabharatha are our culture, our legacy and a treasure house of knowledge which can really help us lead a good life in right way.
Edited by shruthiravi - 9 years ago