How we deny differently-abled women their sexual rights

The assumption that sexuality and disability are mutually exclusive
denies that people with deviant bodies experience sexual desires like
everyone else.

Anita Ghai

For disabled women, the most difficult discussions are centred around
sexuality. Mostly the issue of sexuality does not appear on their
horizon as significantly as their disability does. Like most Indian
women, sexuality was defined within the parameters of marriage. Most
disabled women found themselves without words to express their
sexuality. In a culture where any deviation from a norm is seen as a
marked deviation - the impaired body becomes a symbol of imperfection.
The myth of the beautiful body defines the impaired female body as
unfeminine and unacceptable. Within the normative society there has
been a conspiracy of silence about the sexuality of disabled people;
it is not accorded the attention it deserves. Specifically women with
disabilities are marginalised in a patriarchal society in India. This
social and cultural apartheid is sustained by the existence of a built
environment, which lacks amenities for the disabled and solely caters
to the needs of the more complete and able-bodied. This social
disregard coupled with experiences of social, economic and political
subjugation deny the disabled a voice, a space, and even power, to
disrupt these deeply entrenched normative ideals that deprive them of
their social presence and any semblance of identity.

To my mind, disability does imply broken persons, as an inadequate
society is neatly tuned to the workings of normative structure serving
political and economic ends. Unfortunately such incipient
stigmatisation against women who carry the insidious label of
"disability" with them results in an exclusion that creates both a
sense of despair and distress. This feeling of seclusion often leads
to suppression and non-recognition of the "lack" that marks them
initially as different.

As I wrote elsewhere, the roots of such thinking are found in Indian
mythological instances, where Lakshmana, the brother of lord Rama,
cuts off the nose of "Shurpanakha", sister of King Ravana, who is
interested in him. That Lakshmana can only respond to what he defines
as non-acceptable behaviour by disabling the ugly female monster
indicates how disability and desexing are equated in the Indian
psyche. The ramifications of such historical rendering are to be found
in the North Indian Punjabi culture, where, for instance, girls though
allowed to interact with their male cousins, are not allowed to sleep
in the same room. Disabled girls, on the other hand, are under no such
prohibitions, as they are considered sexually safe, or rather asexual.
The assumption is that they will not conceive of the interaction as a
"come on signal" nor invite a sexual encounter. It is almost, as if a
disabled girl is perceived not like other girls but is "above all
that", which has the effect of freeing the other to imitate any
action, which in more cases than most turns out to be exploitative.
Sarla who shared a similar experience, says at first she would be
thrilled at being allowed to sleep in the same room as Adarsh, who was
her first cousin, but later realised that this benevolent gesture of
her family stemmed from her family's complete denial of her sexuality.

Later, when the same cousin propositioned her and said that he was
willing to satisfy her sexual desires, provided this would be kept
secret, she felt being "asexually objectified". Paradoxically, it
highlights a complete disregard of the dangers of sexual violation to
which disabled girls are exposed on an everyday basis. Familial abuse
is one such example where the possibility of disabled women
experiencing subtle abuse and being controlled are prominent. Most of
the women who have shared their experiences with me feared abuse and
violence more from the extended family and acquaintances. In this
sense, though the family is directly responsible, it does lead to a
"fear psychosis" as many of their accounts are treated as overactive
imagination. As she recounted this to me, Neelima repressed her
disgust. "I tried telling my mother about my uncle. She had such a
look of disbelief as she said to me, "Arre who tumhe kyon tang karega?
Usko ladki ki kami hai? Tumne kabhi apne aap ko shishe mein dekha hai?
(Why would he be interested in you? Is he short of girls outside? Have
you ever looked at yourself in the mirror?)"

The assumption that sexuality and disability are mutually exclusive
also denies that people with deviant bodies experience sexual desires
like everyone else and thereby refuses to recognise them as sexually
typical, despite their differences. For that is the essential fact: An
understanding of the self mandates an understanding that we exist only
as fully embodied beings. However, the cultural devaluation and the
extent to which the juxtaposition of sexuality and disability is
silenced, makes it all the more difficult for disabled people to have
a positive self-identity. The issue is not only that the disabled
person must fight to be the author of their own sexuality but also
must establish sexuality in the first place. What is wrong here is
that a disabled woman in this society is considered to have no
sexuality at all. Disabled women are seen as "childlike" and aren't
supposed to be sexual, any sexual desire they express is seen as
perverted or "too much".

An interpretation of Rohtak rape case is where the disabled woman is
herself responsible for her abuse. The fact is that they are
considered as soft targets as the perpetrators assume that they can
get away easily. Clearly, this is not understood by our society. Since
disabilities are multiple, many women are unable to comprehend or
communicate about such acts of violence or assault they face in the
family, neighbourhood and society at large. I think it is critical
that we can understand the experiential reality of a woman with
disability.

I would like to conclude in Eli Clare's words: "Gender reaches into
disability; disability wraps around class; class strains against
abuse; abuse snarls into sexuality; sexuality folds on top of race...
Everything finally piling into a single human body".

Source:

http://www.dailyo.in/lifestyle/disability-differently-abled-women-denied-sexual-rights-gender-sexuality/story/1/2414.html

-- 
With best regards,
Sanchit Katiyar.

Mobile No.:
+91 9013816320.
+91 9716967258.

E-Mail ID:
[email protected]



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