http://www.tehelka.com/story_main34.asp?filename=Ne271007OURINHERITED.asp


CURRENT AFFAIRS   special report

Our Inherited Brutalities

In India, tradition is a mask for tyranny. Collective violence is
unleashed upon all those who defy it

S. ANAND
New Delhi

Most people do not realise that society can practice tyranny and
oppression against an individual in a far greater degree than a
government can. The means and scope that are open to society for
oppression are more extensive than those open to the government; also,
they are far more effective. What punishment in the penal code is
comparable in its magnitude and its severity to excommunication? — BR
Ambedkar


 Willing cops In Bihar's hagalpur, policemen tied a man to their
motorcycle and dragged him in front of live television cameras. The
crowd egged them on.
A CONSERVATIVE SOCIETY, enforcing its dictates with an iron hand —
that is who we are, us Indians. Men and women who do not fall in line
are routinely persecuted — and killed — under antiquated norms of
honour and right conduct. Each day, violence is unleashed by society
in its various manifestations — the family, biradari, caste, village,
religion. Governed by unwritten rules, the "world's largest democracy"
seems to be doing little better than a theocratic dictatorship.

A spate of incidents testifies to this. The mysterious death of
Rizwanur Rehman in Kolkata for the crime of loving and marrying
Priyanka Todi, a Hindu; the September 10 lynching of ten people of the
Kureri community in Vaishali, Bihar; the ostracisation of HIV-positive
Jayalakshmi Bhovi, a midday-meal worker in Thombattu in Karnataka's
Udupi district; the televised mob attack on August 27 on Salim Ilyas,
an unemployed youth in Bhagalpur, Bihar, which inspired a similar
attack on a "gypsy" woman and her children in Kerala on October 3; the
forced expulsion in September of 62 families of Pardhis — an itinerant
tribe — from Chothiya village, 165km from Bhopal, and the razing of
their homes built on authorised land; the killing of 30- year-old
Natarajan, tied to a coconut tree by mill workers in Salem, Tamil
Nadu, on September 23; the regular persecution of men and women who
prefer to choose their own partners anywhere in the country. Life in
India's village republics can indeed be nasty, brutish and short. An
urban location may offer relative relief, but not necessarily. As
popular television actor Aamir Ali, who plays a Hindu protagonist in
the serial Woh Rehne Wali Mehelon Ki, would testify. He was recently
denied the right to buy a house in Springfield Co-operative Housing
Society in the upmarket Andheri suburb of Mumbai — a city that passes
for India's most cosmopolitan even when it nurtures caste and
community-specific housing societies.

Ali filed a public interest litigation petition before the Bombay High
Court this August, but lawyers are already citing the 2005 Supreme
Court judgement by Justices BN Agrawal and PK Balasubramanyan in the
Zoroastrian Co-operative Housing Society case. The court upheld "the
right of the Society to insist that the property has to be dealt only
in terms of the bye-laws of the society, and assigned either wholly or
in parts only to persons qualified to be members of the society in
terms of its bye-laws." Meaning, there is nothing illegal if a
registered society seeks to restrict membership and exclude the
general public. In Chennai, a magazine called Dalit Murasu was denied
space and hounded out. Having moved several offices, its editor
Punitha Pandian says, "People would receive us well and be nice to us
till we mentioned the name of our magazine."

In India — rural and urban — what passes for tradition and collective
wisdom acts as a regulatory mechanism more powerful than the laws of
the land. Those who transgress boundaries are either excommunicated or
ghettoised, or sometimes simply executed. Everyday societal violence
is rendered invisible, for much of it is "constitutive of Indian
society, particularly in the maintenance of a hierarchical Hindu
society," ashistorian Dilip Menon sees it. "The State in India is like
Dhritarashtra: blind, ineffective, idealistic."


 Hated love Priyanka Todi with Rizwanur Rehman, who was killed because
he married the girl he loved
IN THE HINTERLANDs, women who assert their individuality are paraded
naked, branded witches and often killed. In Assam, in the past five
years, 59 people have been killed — 22 in 2005 alone — in 47 reported
cases of witch-hunting. Six months ago, in the Chennai suburb of
Pallavaram, a woman suspected of infidelity was tied to a tree and
lynched. In most cases, the police blame it on mob fury and no action
is taken. Under the ruse of maintaining law and order, the police, and
sometimes the judiciary, invariably take the view that society's
diktats must be respected. In several instances, such as in Kherlanji
where a year ago four members of a Dalit family were tortured to death
for defying caste rules, the police, even when alerted, took its own
time to arrive. When it did, it just pleaded helplessness. Says Menon,
who teaches at Delhi University, "Bollywood satirises the police force
and exalts the vigilante. As in the Hindi film, justice is not the
preserve of the State; it is the right of the people. The police
always arriving late in films is a metaphor for the irrelevance of the
State apparatus. The perception is that you need to take the law into
your own hands, as the Thakur did in Sholay. Of course,such heroism is
prohibited for the Dalit and the Muslim."

In Edappal, Malappuram district, Kerala, a mob at a busy market area
descended on 41- year-old Jyoti and her two children when a customer
raised an alarm saying her child's gold anklets had been stolen. Jyoti
was a suspect only because she belonged to a denotified nomadic
community from Karnataka and was found "loitering" in the area. Public
spaces in India are demarcated on such basis: there are legitimate
occupants and then there are loiterers.

According to J. Devika, historian with the Centre for Development
Studies in Thiruvananthapuram, when Jyoti was strip-searched and
manhandled by a mob, progressive intellectuals and the political class
were quick to re-emphasise the difference between (uncivilised) Bihar
and (civilised) Kerala. "But the state government and the
intelligentsia remain blind to other forms of mob rule that are part
of everyday life in Kerala. When sex workers are pushed out of their
homes by moral vigilante "mobs", when HIV infected children are thrown
out of school by well-educated parents, when the "Gulf wife" is
publicly punished for alleged "straying", why is Kerala's enlightened
civil society so slow to respond?" asks Devika.

Ravikumar, writer and Dalit Panthers MLA in Tamil Nadu, says universal
adult franchise and other ornamental aspects of parliamentary
democracy do not ensure social democracy. "Most Indians, especially in
rural India, are outside the purview of citizenship. Basic rights that
many urban Indians take for granted do not exist for millions.
Authoritarianism in Indian society is not vested solely in the
centralised authority of the State, it is vested more within society.
Hence the urban middle-class' passive acceptance of the Emergency."

The increase in the physical manifestation of violence also owes to
hitherto-subordinated communities asserting their rights. It is only
when subaltern communities seek to transgress boundaries drawn by
society that we see erruptions. K. Satyanarayana, who heads the Kula
Nirmoolana Porata Samiti (Forum for Annihilation of Caste) in
Hyderabad, says the spurt in brutality should not be read merely as
collusion between civil society and the State. "The widespread
violence inflicted on Dalits across the country, particularly in the
North, owes also to their assertion in the public domain — especially
in the wake of Mandal and the Ambedkar centenary in 1990. A Dalit who
goes to college and falls in love with an upper caste girl would be
beaten up or even killed for asserting his humanity," he says.



 Targeted The "gypsy" woman facing the mob's fury in Kerala
BESIDES DALITS, several communities — sub-castes, religious
minorities, tribes — are organising themselves as identity movements.
"The secular and liberal intellectuals are uncomfortable with such
assertions of caste and religious minorities, but these struggles are
significantly reshaping democracy in India. The violence we see today
is a result of these contestations," says Satyanarayana.

Even chilling statistics — 13 Dalits murdered every week, 3 Dalit
women raped every day — do not evoke a response. "We are inured into
thinking India is not racist and fascist even if society murders 2,000
Dalits over a year, witch-hunts 500 women, and kills a few hundreds in
mob violence. Our civil society does not seem to react as long as a
pogrom like in Gujarat does not happen," says Ravikumar.

It's a society that also comes down heavily on marriages which defy
the system. A look at matrimonial columns and websites shows how most
Indians prefer to find comfort in "arranged" subcaste and
denomination-specific marriages. Despite the State providing Rs 50,000
as cash incentive to marriages involving a Dalit partner, there's
widespread persecution of couples who marry out of choice. Says
Sharmila Rege, professor of sociology at Pune University, "Denial of
the freedom to love a person — who does not belong to the same
religious and caste group into which one is born, or a person of the
same sex — is so naturalised in our caste-based patriarchal society
that it does not even appear as denial until someone is brutally
murdered for challenging this denial." Rege says, "Women are the
gateways of the caste system. Endogamy or marriage within sub-caste
becomes essential to maintaining hierarchy and caste status in Indian
society. Family, community and the State collude to punish young
people who transgress these boundaries, for at stake is the
reproduction of gender, caste and class inequalities."

The haemorrhaging in society is historically linked to two
perspectives that have dominated views on development in
post-Independence India: the Nehruvian liberal State that stood for
technocratic governance and which was criticised for oppressive
homogenisation of society, and the communitarian perspective
represented by Gandhi that has, since the 1980s, resulted in the
NGO-led critique of the Nehruvian paradigm. Gandhi put forth the
concept of a society based on sanatana (eternal) dharma, emphasising a
non-secular, communitarian logic. The performance of duties was prio -
ritised over the exercise of individual rights. However, Ambedkar
spoke the secular language of rights of individuals, especially of
minorities, and championed liberty, equality and fraternity. Reacting
to Gandhi's romance with villages, Ambedkar had told the Constituent
Assembly: "I hold that these village republics have been the ruination
of India. What is the village but a sink of localism, a den of
ignorance, narrow-mindedness and communalism?"




Of no fixed address Punitha Pandian's magazine was forced to
move several times
Such ruination unleashed by a militant society sits surreally
juxtaposed to an Incredible India that the Dhritarashtra State prefers
to showcase through malls, a soaring Sensex and nuclear muscle.

with inputs from Teresa Rahman in Guwahati, PC Vinoj Kumar in Chennai,
Shalini Singh in Mumbai, M. Radhika in Bangalore, KA Shaji in
Thiruvananthapuram and Anand ST Das in Patna [For case studies from
across India, visit www.tehelka.com]

WRITER'S E-MAIL
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


Oct 27, 2007


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