*The roots of rape in India by Kancha Ilaiah
*

*Rape has, of late, become an acute disease in the Indian society. Prima
facie, this is a problem arising out of a mental disorder, but there is
also a larger cultural context that, to an extent, explains how the Indian
male became so brutal.*

*Our cultural upbringing conditions male minds to behave in a cruel fashion
with women. Family upbringing, societal conditioning, religious sagas and
political animus, all construct our men and women into being what they are
— men as aggressive and women as submissive. Which is why men here, in
India, are different from men in other countries. *

*Their cultural milieu is different. Their spiritual systems train them
differently. It’s not that only Indian men rape and kill children aged
three or five. This happens in other countries too, but they are the rarest
of rare cases. Daily reports of infants being raped across the length and
breadth of a country is a phenomenon unique to India, a society that’s
otherwise highly conservative. Clearly, the institutional upbringing,
including that in family, needs to undergo change.*

*Every time a gruesome rape gets reported, we all are ashamed and angry.
That’s one thing; but working out ways and means to eradicate such evil is
another thing. We cannot leave it entirely to the police or the judiciary
to tackle such heinous acts. For, rape is also a cultural problem; and it
is a more serious problem because of the extermination of the victim. We
need to treat the malaise from its very roots.*

*We are a society that derives its sense of good and bad from our
mythologies and spiritual ethics. Our gods and goddesses are not only
worshipped but also adored. And it is our lifelong endeavour to emulate
them. This is the cultural environment that shapes the lives of most people
in India. So it’s natural that what gods do influences us much more than
the moral lesson at the end. Now consider this: we have gods who, for
instance, have cut the nose and ear lobes of a woman who approached them
professing her love (Lakshman is depicted as having done this to
Shurpanakha), and yet we adore him and see him as a symbol of loyalty,
sacrifice and righteous indignation.*

*Lord Krishna stole the clothes of women while they were bathing in the
Yamuna river. He did so to tease them and for the pleasure of watching the
beauty of their naked bodies. We hang miniature paintings of the same act
in our homes proudly. The young men who grow up seeing this, or listening
to the story told in an amused tone are bound to not find such an act
abhorrent. *

*We also have a god, Shiva, who insisted on entering the bathing arena of
Goddess Parvati and did so by eliminating a child who was keeping guard at
the open door. Lord Ganesha is said to have emerged out of such a union. Is
this right or wrong? Our mythology tells us that what a husband does is
right, that his will is greater than the woman’s. If a mythological hero is
praised for his acts of killing, drinking and fornicating with multiple
women (like Indra did with Rambha, Urvashi, Menaka, Tilottama and so on),
it is glorification of such behaviour.*

*When such stories are a part of the mythological texts, they should, at
least, be critically evaluated and given a more contemporary, political
reading which is rooted in the concept of equality. Instead, the tendency
is to not question what our gods did, but simply admire such acts.*

*Barring a few exceptions, there is no appreciation, per se, of a healthy
man-woman relationship which is rooted in the concept of equality. Indian
women are shown as lathangi (a person of delicate body), never strong
enough to resist her dehumanisation. Though Durga and Kali are shown as
strong, in real life such militancy is not seen as feminine. *

*Now let us turn to the political spectrum. We have had many great men —
Mahatma Gandhi, Jawaharlal Nehru, Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan etc — who got
married at a young age with girls of much younger age, went abroad for
higher studies, leaving their wives at home totally illiterate or
semi-literate. We do not know how these men, or Gokhale and Tilak, treated
their wives. *

*But we know that they were all devotees of the deities mentioned above.
The only man who treated his wife as a friend and educated her right from
the first day of his marriage, Mahatma Jyotirao Phule, is not taught as an
example to be emulated in our texts.  Somehow, in our patriarchal cultural
milieu, unkind and inhuman treatment of women has never been a matter of
concern. It’s considered sacrilegious, for example, to question Lord Ram
for leaving his dutiful wife on the random outburst of a dhobi. *

*And Sita’s action, in turn, to not question, but to commit suicide, is
considered the epitome of all that is pious. Even Gautam Buddha left his
young wife, with an infant child. Questioning such acts has never been part
of our public discourse.*

*Or, look at our cinemas. Ever since the industry came into being, silent
or talkie, it has used woman’s body as a money-making object. The song and
dance sequence that it has adopted as an art form falls into a common
pattern — every hero is licensed to misuse the body of the heroine. The
romance in our film industry is not romance; it is vulgarity bordering on
the criminal.
So is it a surprise that men of this country see it as their right to
violate women in all spheres of life?*

*The writer is director, Centre for the Study of Social Exclusion and
Inclusive Policy, Maulana Azad National Urdu University, Hyderabad*


-- 
Kt Hafis

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