The author has brought forth multiple discrimination here me thinks.
Handedness, gender discrimination towards women, and spatial nature of certain 
discriminations.
If disability is added to the plathora of discriminations and biases, the scene 
becomes ridden with unmanageable dificculties.

I think left hand was chosen for not performing tasks and associated with 
uncleannliness or religious impurity mainly because one hand had to be used for 
performing hygenic tasks and there was no good way of getting rid of germs etc 
then.
So, the use of that hand for other tasks must have promoted disease and so the 
discrimination got roots and now manifests in form of preferred nay, insisted 
handedness in favor of right handedness.
Religion as a  rule makes certain practices supernaturally sanctioned to 
promote adherence.
And, so it has systematically denigraded disability as a symbol of distortion, 
evil and so on.
the Whole welfare approach towards disability is supernaturally sanctioned and 
promoted by religion.


-----Original Message-----
From: accessindia-boun...@accessindia.org.in 
[mailto:accessindia-boun...@accessindia.org.in] On Behalf Of Asudani, Rajesh
Sent: Monday, April 23, 2012 2:12 PM
To: accessindia@accessindia.org.in
Subject: [AI] Facets of bias

The Hindu open page:

I send this article to emphasize the biases of our society which comes in 
various shades...

How is being left-handed not right?
C. Deepalakshmi



I fail to understand why the left hand is considered so inauspicious although 
it is very much an important part of our body. Can we imagine a body or life 
without the left hand? Why can't the use of the left hand be justified the way 
we use our left eye, left ear or left leg? In fact, the most vital organ - the 
heart - is also on the left side! Then why this discrimination against 
left-handedness?

I remember the day when my mother was dumbfounded to see my daughter (who was 
then around two years old) invariably using her left hand for most of her 
activities. My poor mother reminisced the days when she struggled to convince 
the elders of the house that her daughter (myself) was left-handed and that 
there was nothing opprobrious about it but she failed miserably. She was 
sternly advised to change my natural inclination to use the left hand and 
fearing the repercussions of defying them, she coerced me into making me a 
right-hander. How unfair!

Why is it that the same people who consider using the left hand taboo are 
diehard fans of left-handers? Whistles blow when Amitabh Bachchan, the famous 
left-handed superstar, blows up the villain's head by pulling the trigger (of 
the gun) with his left hand. Every single soul on earth looks up to the man who 
changed the world - Bill Gates, the left-handed computer geek (the second 
richest person in the world, 2011).

Can people still believe that the left hand is unlucky or being left-handed is 
ill-fated? The answer is 'yes,' as I have observed that whenever my daughter 
offers gifts or just anything to her friends/relatives with her left hand (as 
she is a leftie), people instantly say: "Give it with your right hand, not with 
your left," and she wonders why this bias? "Why is it wrong to use my left 
hand, amma," she asks innocently, now five years old. Little does she know that 
many people consider it an insult to be offered anything with the left hand.

Why this abhorrence for the left hand? Aren't we all amused by the acts of 
Charlie Chaplin, the left-handed comedy king, even today? For years together, 
the world has applauded when Allan Border, Yuvraj Singh, Brian Lara and Sanath 
Jayasurya hit fours and sixes with their left hands, producing centuries and 
double centuries; millions of men and women have been bowled over by the overs 
bowled by the left-handed Wasim Akram, Ravi Shastri, Bruce Reid and Irfan 
Pathan, who have won crucial matches.

Many right-handed Tennis players have been knocked out by left-handed opponents 
Martina Navaratilova and Raphael Nadal, to name just two. Apart from these 
achievers, we remember left-handed scientists like Albert Einstien, Marie Curie 
(Nobel Prize winner) and Isaac Newton for their invaluable contribution to 
science. And who has not admired the works of famous artists such as Leonardo 
Da Vinci, Pablo Picasso or Michael Angelo who have left an ineffaceable 
impression across the globe. On top of these, we have had great left- handed 
rulers and leaders, especially Alexander the Great, Napoleon Bonaparte, Rani 
Laxmibai and U.S .Presidents John F. Kennedy, Ronald Regan and now Barack Obama.

In spite of the fact that left-handers have achieved so much, in India there is 
a pre-conceived notion that the left hand is inauspicious. I feel that men can 
still be left-handed but not girls and women as they have to cook and serve 
food. In some religions, serving food with the left hand is considered a sin. 
Why this prejudice?

I am combating with my family and the outside world to let my daughter continue 
being a leftie, because many of the tools, equipment, musical instruments are 
designed keeping in mind the right-handers causing much discomfort to the 
left-handed people as in using cameras, computer mouse, guitar, the fridge 
door, the mixie regulator switch and many more. And not only that when I take 
my daughter to the temple, her natural tendency to extend her left hand for 
prasadam earns her only scorn, "Hmmn.., show your right hand." These are the 
priest's words, not God's. Even the left-handers are God's creations. I read in 
a consumer magazine that a team of the Foetal Behaviour Research Centre, U.K, 
studied the scans of 1,000 foetuses and concluded that handedness develops in 
the womb when the foetus is just 10 weeks old.

The hand the foetus favours in the womb is the hand he/she will use for the 
rest of his/her life. But the hardcore fact is that most of the rituals cannot 
be performed with the left hand, the reason being superstitious sentiments 
attached to the left hand.

After my hue and cry for the past three years in my family, my daughter has at 
last been permitted to use her left hand for most of the activities like 
writing and playing, barring a few like eating and serving. I feel it is very 
unfair to compel a left-handed child to eat with her right hand as having food 
is such an important activity of our daily life which is done with our heart 
and soul, relishing morsel by morsel, but my daughter is pressured and is not 
able to enjoy her food wholeheartedly. What a punishment for being a 
left-hander?

A creative lot

It is believed that left-handers are creative and have good linguistic skills 
as their right brains predominate various abilities in them but in India 
(especially south India), it will take ages for people to acknowledge these 
facts and give the left hand its share of due importance and to accept 
left-handers (especially girls and women) without any inequity.

(deepuse...@gmail.com)


With thanks and regards



                                (Rajesh Asudani)
Assistant General Manager
Reserve Bank of India
Nagpur
Cell: 9420397185
o: +91 712 2806846
R: 2591349

(In youth you want things, and then in middle-age you want to want them.)


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