sacw.net  - 11 February 2009
http://www.sacw.net/article642.html

UNDERSTANDING AND RESPONDING TO THE MANGALORE ASSAULTS

by Sumi Krishna, Bangalore: 11 Feb. 2009

How should we in the women?s movement understand and respond to the
cluster of assaults by the Rama Sene, Bajrang Dal and other
fundamentalists; the targeting of minorities and their places of
worship; the harassment and molestation of women of all classes in
the name of nation, culture and religion; the fear and anger
spreading through villages and towns in southern-coastal Karnataka?

As Sandhya Gokhale of  the Forum Against Oppression of Women, Mumbai,
says in The Hindu, on one level the horrific abuse of young women in
a pub is ?a morality issue?, but it is also about the space and
decision making power for which women have fought for years. Arvind
Narrain of the Alternative Law Forum, Bangalore, writing in the
Indian Express, sees the abuse of religious and sexual minorities as
the ?saffron? challenge to ?the legacy of the women?s movement in
India? and ?the thin end of the wedge? in re-establishing male
dominance.

Indeed, enhancing the freedom and autonomy of individual women has
been one of the cornerstones of the women?s movement.  In a gender-
equitable democratic polity, matters of dress, behaviour, mobility
and personal life choices are not less important than people?s rights
to livelihood, dignity and an empowered citizenship. Not
surprisingly, in protests all over the country, whether by students
and teachers in Mangalore or at the Tata Institute of Social
Sciences, Mumbai, by Vimochana, Hengasara Hakkina Sangha and other
women?s groups in Karnataka, by activists like Nirantar, Saheli,
Jagori and INSAF in Delhi, by organisations of dalits and slum-
dwellers, or of young designers, IT professionals and academics in
Bangalore, there is a common refrain: ?What happened to our
freedom??, ?Where is democracy??

For the Rama Sene the issue of ?morality? is subsumed into an attack
on westernisation and so-called ?pub culture?. This has been helped
along in no small measure by National Commission for Women member
Nirmala Venkatesh (formerly a Congress MLA in Karnataka, elected
unopposed in a bye-election) who deviously attempted to shift the
debate from the criminality of the assault to the legality and
functioning of the pub. Commenting in the Deccan Herald on a counter-
protest in Mangalore by college girls shouting, ?Pub culture: Down!
Down!?, TV journalist Vasanthi Hariprakash  says she asked their
leader what was meant by pub culture. ?Adhu American
samskriti? (that?s American culture), the girl said. When she
persisted with the query, the girl replied ?I don?t know what it is?
but I have been told it is bad?. Vasanthi writes, ?I realised that
anguished Indians some of who happen to be proud Hindus like me, have
a long battle to fight ? against mindsets, not just a fringe group of
maniac men.?

Is this then all about deeply embedded sexual politics, about using
women?s bodies as the repositories of an imagined homogenous Indian
culture? Journalist Ammu Joseph urges a debate on what Indian culture
is and who has the right to enforce it. Our cultures are after all
dynamic, not set in stone and, as some litterateurs at the Kannada
Sahitya Sammelan at Chitradurga asked, ?Why should women alone be
targeted as guardians of culture??. In a ?Joint Statement on the
Brutal Assault in Mangalore?,  a cross-section of over 600 citizens
from India and beyond, have pointed out that there ?can and should be
dialogues on what constitutes ?Indian-ness?, but  regardless of the
interpretations of Indian culture and traditions, beating and
molesting women cannot be condoned?.

Indeed, the bustling port town of Mangalore and the adjoining rural
areas along  the Konkan coast were formerly known for the remarkably
peaceful admixture of  cultures and languages (Tulu, Konkani, Kannada
and Beary), with diverse communities including the Hindu Billavas,
Mogaveeras, Bunts and Saraswats,  the Muslim Bearys, the Catholics,
Jains and several others. A century ago, Christian missions brought
education and health care to Christians and non-Christians alike. In
the decades since, banking and commerce flourished, as did a distinct
melded Mangalorean cuisine. Despite differences of religion, caste
and class, everyday life was not marked by deep social discrimination
or religious prejudice.

Some of the Tulu-speaking communities like the Bunts and the Jains
are matrilineal and matrilocal. In the past, Mangalorean women have
had a relatively better social position; leaders such as Rani
Abbakka, a Jain who fought the Portuguese in the 16th century, and
the Gandhian social reformer Kamaladevi (nee Dhareshwar)
Chhatopadhyay, a Saraswat Brahmin, are much acclaimed. In keeping
with the region?s pioneering and egalitarian heritage, in 2006,
Mangalore University became the first in South India to introduce
?Gender Equity? as part of the foundation course for every
undergraduate student in some 125 affiliated colleges in Dakshin
Kannada, Udipi and Coorg districts.

As in other regions on the West Coast, however, emigration and large
cash remittances from the Middle East have transformed the social
fabric, creating pockets of great wealth, growing consumerism, new
aspirations and social fizzures. During the 1990s, the sandy shores,
the groves of betel and coconut, the old tiled houses on meandering
streets, and the tolerant attitudes changed rapidly with a boom in
construction, multiplexes, malls, even hospitals for ?health
tourism?. Disputes between merchants of different communities,
between fisher people and traders, incidents involving young Hindu
and Muslim girls and boys, all this was exploited by  the Bajrang Dal
and the Hindu Jagran Vedike to incite violence against the Muslims,
as in Suratkal in 1998-99. Most Hindus and Christians remained silent
observers at that time.

A decade later, the Hindutva elements had grown powerful enough to
control a subterranean economy of extortion from newly rich hoteliers
and pub owners, even as different groups on the saffron fringe began
to fight for the same terrain. In 2008, churches across Mangalore
were attacked and ransacked with impunity, ostensibly on the issue of
religious ?conversion?, while the BJP government in Karnataka took
its own time to restore law and order. But the Mangalore Catholics,
an organised and educated community, did draw support from the rest
of India.

In recent years, taking a leaf out of the Shiv Sena?s book, the
leaders of the Rama Sene are reported to have begun recruiting poor
young men from villages in the vicinity, luring them with petty jobs
in Mangalore. It is this cadre of youth, bound by ties of gratitude
if not ideology, that is said to make up the Sene?s strike forces. It
is easy for Hindutva propagandists, or for any pseudo-religious
political grouping, to prey on the anxieties and aspirations of
people pushed to the edge by poverty and unemployment. These young
men must bear the consequences of their brutal televised assault, yet
we need to recognise that to some extent they are also victims of a
mafia.

The ?pub attack? has aroused widespread anger and debate, across
class, age and social groups. Karnataka has earlier seen unspeakable
atrocities against dalit women, horrendous ?acid attacks? and other
kinds of violence against women of all communities, but never before
have the media and the middle class empathised with such spontaneity
and vehemence.

The women?s movement needs to take advantage of the unprecedented
coalition of civic groups to counter the attitudes and mind-sets that
tacitly or directly accept gender-based violence in the family, the
community and society. This is not just about ?pub drinking? by
urban, elite upper caste women but about communalism and gendered
violence at all levels.  We need to foster rational dialogue between
cultures and affirm our commitment to the human rights and civil
liberties of all classes of women threatened by religious
fundamentalists, be they Hindu, Muslim or Christian, in Karnataka,
Tamil Nadu, Maharashtra or elsewhere. For these are rights that have
been so hard won by so many women across religion, caste and class
through decades of struggle for gender justice.

o o o

Minister targets academic
by S R Ramakrishna      Date:  2009-02-09, MID-DAY
http://www.mid-day.com/news/2009/feb/090209-Pattabhirama-Somayaji-
College-of-Mangalore-University-English-Professor-Amnesia-mob-
violence.htm

The Rediff Interview/U R Ananthamurthy
Apply anti-terror laws against Mangalore attackers: Ananthamurthy
http://www.rediff.com/news/2009/jan/29-apply-anti-terror-laws-for-
mangalore-attackers.htm

Movements that protest attacks by Sri Ram Sene, but with love
by Priyanka P. Narain
http://www.livemint.com/2009/02/12224436/Movements-that-protest-
attacks.html

_____



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