Quantcast
Channel: The Paperclip – Youth Ki Awaaz
Viewing all 243 articles
Browse latest View live

‘Kyunki Gender Aur Genitals Mein Faraq Hai': Moments From The ‘Happiest’ Delhi Pride Parade

$
0
0

By Indra Shekhar Singh:

Kaun sa kanoon sabse battar, teen sau sasattar, teen sau sasattaar (Which law is the worst, it’s 377, it’s 377)! This was the mood of the 7th Delhi pride parade which marched from Barakhamba – Tolstoy road to Jantar Mantar. This event was historic, as this was the first time thousands have marched in solidarity for LGBT rights since the Supreme court judge G.S. Singhvi upheld article 377 last year.

Picture credits: Kacho Fayaz Yabgo

Picture credits: Kacho Fayaz Yabgo

The grey roads turned rainbow as thousands of people, dressed up, holding placards and shouting slogan marched for their right to live. Mario da Penha, a Mumbaikar had come all the way to Delhi to show the courts that LGBT community is not a “minuscule minority” and he, along with all people in the world, deserves a life of dignity.

“This is the happiest parade I have been to,” says Naina, a 46 year LGBT activist. The ecstatic desi drumming, wild dancing and witty sloganeering kept the parade charged up. The march was lead by a rainbow balloon arch, followed by the marchers who carried a very long rainbow flag over their heads. Spread all over the parade were piquant placards, “my mother is searching for a husband for me,” was held by a young man. Kyunki gender aur genitals mein faraq hai, spread love, and Hindu Muslim Sikh Isai homo hetro bhai bhai were other popular ones.

The Delhi Pride Parade is organised by the Delhi queer pride committee, which is composed of only volunteers and runs on individual funding. Why does this stands out? It is because “Delhi has not succumbed to large corporate funding and still is a people’s movement,” Sonia, a volunteer, emphasized.

At Jantar Mantar, the organiser had set up a stage where poetry, singing and dances were performed. Akhil Katyal teaches literature at the Shiv Nadar University but is a poet at heart, he recited his poems on “Love” and “Narendra-Amit affair”. He was at “Jantar Mantar for love,” he says,“from the regressive policies of the government (Love Jihad, anti Kiss of love), it is evident that they do not want people to love, whether it be homo or hetro sexual love.” He estimates that about “three thousand people were marching today.” The most interesting thing about this year’s parade, he mentions is,“many people who came to parade wrote about it and promoted it were not just gay people but our straight allies.”

“Why Pride? It is to celebrate the LGBT way of life and to rejoice the legal recognition of the transgenders. It is to tell the world that 377 is unnatural and it is to tell all our suffering brothers and sisters, that there is hope,” adds Sonia.

Rakesh Kumar, from the Delhi Police, who was in-charge of the movement of the parade, says “Everyone likes colour and festivity. Orientation is a personal matter and everyone has the right to decide.”

Parade profiteering

Roji John, National President NSUI, who was at the parade, said “gay rights are not a non political matter and we have come in to support it.” He had come with his party activists with placards saying, “I support gay rights, but I am not gay,” with an enlarged “NSUI”. He said “we know many people who are gay actually and love has no politics.”

Other members in the parade were irked by the slogans of NSUI. Udit Mehera, 25, spoke against it saying,” ‘I support gay rights’ was enough to send the message across. The ‘I am not gay’ part confirms their homophobia and hypocrisy.”

The post ‘Kyunki Gender Aur Genitals Mein Faraq Hai': Moments From The ‘Happiest’ Delhi Pride Parade appeared first and originally on Youth Ki Awaaz.


[VIDEO] Exposing An Unnatural Disaster: Thousands Left Crippled In A Chhatisgarh Village

$
0
0

By Video Volunteers:

“The government took our land and made us homeless,” says Bhan, noting that the government took their farmland to build the dam. As a result, her community has lost their main source of livelihood. “The government is turning us into daily wage laborers in the same land where we grew our food.”

Bhan has been an active part of public protests against the dam and continues to work among the affected people to demand compensation and rehabilitation. Without the reports of Video Volunteers Community Correspondents like her, few outside of these displaced communities would ever have known about them. Your support makes it possible.

We feel a proper introduction is necessary. Meet Bhan Sahu. She’s a Community Correspondent with Video Volunteers from Rajnandgaon. She’s worked extensively with the Dodke community as a land rights activist. Sadly, this land was flooded, leaving more than 15,000 people displaced and homeless. But this flood was not a natural disaster — her own government caused it.

Bhan is dedicated to supporting her community’s struggle until they succeed. Will you stand with her as she faces powerful forces of government corruption and corporate greed?

The Mogra dam in Rajnandgaon District was planned in 1967 and was finally built by early 2006. The dam is situated on the Seonath river in Rajnandgaon District, Chattisgarh which affect a total of 56 villages situated around its trajectory. The project saw heavy resistance and displaced more than 15000 people as per the government figures. Bhan Sahu, our Community Correspondent from the area has witnessed the struggles of the residents of Dodke village for the past ten years. It is one of 25 villages where lives of residents have been considerably hampered by the dam.

After the construction of the dam, Dodke village and surrounding areas of Ambagrah Chowki area are flooded almost throughout the year. Their agricultural land has been ruined and there is always a shortage of drinking water. The main problem however is the fact that the constant flood like situation has made travelling to and from Dodke near impossible. The area had once connected the villages to larger cities.

With no bridge on the river, residents have to use planks and boats to travel even to nearby places. Even to get to the local school 2 km away, children have to take a long-winded route through forest areas. When they don’t find friends to go with, they’ll have to skip school.

Bhan Sahu had been an active part of the protests against the dam and now continues to work among the affected people to get them rehabilitation and compensation. Her video from 2010 is evidence of the havoc it caused then.

Four years have passed and not much has changed. Bhan Sahu, who is still trying to help the community recover from the trauma of displacement and landlessness, feels that such kind of apathy from the government only makes villagers feel more and more like outcasts.

The villagers have submitted applications to the District Collector a number of times. They have taken their appeals to build a bridge to the Chief Minister of Chhattisgarh. They want to be able to travel, to work, to eat, to study, to live. Even the regional media’s reportage on this issue has failed to get a response from the government.

The people however carry on, determined and are STILL hopeful that one day their Government, the one that promises them development will listen to them. Will you make sure that the Government of Chhattisgarh takes note of this?

The government claimed that the dam was built to provide irrigation, but instead has been used to support industrial units. This project perpetuates the common pattern of so-called “development” projects benefitting big businesses while further impoverishing already marginalized communities.

Call to Action: Please call Ashok Agarwal, the District Collector of Rajnandgaon on 9425203199 and ask to make sure the bridge in the flood area of Dodke village is built immediately.

The post [VIDEO] Exposing An Unnatural Disaster: Thousands Left Crippled In A Chhatisgarh Village appeared first and originally on Youth Ki Awaaz.

“Main Obama Se Milna Chahti Hoon”

$
0
0

By Gauravi Saini:

I am a very regular girl who always wanted to meet Mr. Barack Obama and the recent Rohtak Sisters incident just made my dream of meeting him become all the more possible.

Now all I need is the cooperation of two brilliantly besharam actors (who will of course be paid by me). I will be honest and not hide that this article is nothing but an effort to make this dream of mine into a reality with the help of those two actors I am desperately searching for. So all you guys who want to eke immense public attention, get super famous, and of course earn a hefty amount of money, this is an offer of a lifetime. Those interested, I suggest that you read till the end.

Oh by the way the reason for me penning down this plan is a video (embedded below). I started off writing this as a post with 4-5 lines on Facebook but then decided to reach out to the best of the talent, and that too through a better platform.

Just to make it a little clear, I never saw the first Rohtak Sisters’ video in the first place because I could imagine the sisters doing their act of bravery in the moving bus with on-lookers seated on shredded seats of the Haryana Roadways bus just inches and feet away with the sisters’ relentlessly performing their drill. I could also see myself saying “I swear had I been in their place I would have done the same, may be worse- my friends and family know I would have; I may doubt myself for once, but I vouch that they won’t”. Anyways, this is just not the reason why I am writing all this here.

But I did see this second video (provided above – you may see it, well please do, I insist). Now after I saw this video, I was compelled to see the first video, just to verify a few facts listed in the second video, particularly one about the girl having a men’s belt with her and the second claim that she had been looking again and again at the camera just to check whether the video is being recorded or not.

Now after having seen both the videos, of course with utmost honest intentions, I was again compelled to think of the following:

This video of the Rohtak Sisters episode has definitely taken the internet by frenzy. People have gone crazy at the guts showcased by these two sisters, who upon being eve-teased decided not to let go of the three men in a bus and thrashed them straight away with belts, kicks, slaps, punches and what not.

Whoa! Great guts. These two sisters are definitely the modern Indian girls who are not scared of men who harass them and decided to take a stand and have them punished, then and there, that too face-to-face. Yes. The Indian woman, let’s call her “Shakti” and bestow some more respect towards her, has finally arrived. I am calling her “Shakti” because long back in a school assembly speech I started a speech on female empowerment with the lines “I call her Shakti” and just to brag a little, I did receive accolades later. Thank you, Thank you.

Anyway, coming back to the Rohtak Sisters again, since I saw the second video before the first, my mind was again and again coming back to the point that what if it’s true? What if that bus ticket the lady shows in the beginning of the video is true? What if? What if?

I know 8 out of 10 times the guys are to blame, but this still could be true. After all this is what I see in Delhi Metro. Girls sometimes unreasonably complain in the metro. I thought about all the possible incidents/arguments I have witnessed between men and women in the Delhi Metro. I could recall a man saying – “Men today have made their plight so much worse that even if someday some guy really would be innocent then too no one would ever believe him and it will only be the woman who will be supported and believed”.

So what if the act of bravery of the Rohtak Steel Sisters (as Barkha Datt addressed them in her interview) was a mere stint for publicity? But at the same time I thought what if this second video is some sort of paid news too? It’s not that I am saying it is, but it could be, right? There is no denying the fact this too holds a strong possibility, unless anyone comes out with another sting operation video claiming it to be the truth. You must be thinking Oh god! Give me a break. Too many videos to deal with. Right?

Well just like you, my brain too was struggling with the possibilities that if the first video is a publicity stunt as claimed by the second video (link above) then we should not reason out the possibility of this video itself being paid news coverage. Oh! Now please don’t you dare blame me for over-thinking because with all the paid news propaganda doing the rounds these days, being a very mango person, I am bound to get confused between the two versions of the incident.

In fact, a gentleman’s comment on the video link too says that this is a paid video by the Khap to save their ‘boys’. Yes it could have been recorded purposely by the Khaps to save their ‘boys’ from the shame that they have been openly bestowing upon girls by saying things like mobiles and denims are making the girls crazy and uncultured. Well, if this is true then only Lord help western garment conglomerates like Levis and Lee.

And it was from here that I stumbled upon the idea that why in the world should one worry about Levis & Lee? Saving them was never on my agenda. In fact all that we are always taught is to think about our own benefit. “Bas apni socho. Apna fayda dekho, doosron ka kya hai,” bas phir kya tha, I got such a rapchik plan for making my dream of meeting Mr. Obama come true.

So, now I am on a lookout for two-three guys and a camera-person so that we could do a similar stunt, get a bravery award by Modi government (since they do not believe in thinking) and then receive it on 26th January in the august presence of Mr. Obama. Brilliant, isn’t it?

Well honestly, I am open to brain storming and innovating about the whereabouts of the location, like to do it in a bus or a train, or Delhi metro would be even better, right? So the eligibility requirements for the boys will be decent actors in order to enact an eve -teasing/molestation/harassment scene, and we will definitely capture the teasing part too, unlike the Rohtak sister’s video where only the poor guys are shown being beaten up. So my dear boys, you will have to be brave enough to tackle the public shame which will be coming your way after we upload the video on YouTube. But don’t you worry; you will be rightfully paid for the same.

Also be assured that I am one hundred percent going to be a public hero after the upload, and I am really anticipating Barkha Dutt interviewing me for the same, like she did with the Rohtak Sisters. Barkha Mam, we could even do a studio interview because I am located in Delhi, if you are reading this, you are most welcome to thank me later when we finally meet, for being so considerate and thinking of you in the best possible means. I may then give credits to my parents and teachers, who have always taught me to be considerate enough and think of helping anyone and everyone possible. After all, I am very proud of my Bhartiya Sanskriti and sanskars. And, we have to make this interview a success. After all the only thing I am eyeing from this entire stint is that bravery award in the grand presence of Mr. Obama. Did I tell you that I always wanted to meet him? Since he will be here next month in my own Dilli, at humare apne President’s House, why should I go through the tedious task of obtaining the US ka visa shisa and travel miles to meet him at his White House? OMG I just cannot stop congratulating myself on concocting such a great plan, which has the least chance of going unsuccessful.

After all who would ever doubt a woman’s plea for justice when she has, with so much of effort, publicly fought two-three men and even has made the proof available electronically. I am even dead sure no onlookers would ever come forward and take the boys’ side, which again makes my plan foolproof. Yayyiiee. Awesome plan it is. So all you boys who need to get famous and do not mind getting it through public shame may get in touch with me. Wondering why such rounds of interviews, well it is a big task after all, and I only want the best two-three of you out there.

The post “Main Obama Se Milna Chahti Hoon” appeared first and originally on Youth Ki Awaaz.

Why Has A Film That Questions Religion Made The ‘Hindutvawadis’ So Uncomfortable?

$
0
0

By Sanya Malik:

Mahatma Gandhi once said “God has no religion”. The need to challenge religious divisiveness and understand Gandhi is greater than ever in the present scenario. From the Peshawar killings to the religious conversions at home, religion is being used as a tool to instigate violence and oppress the minorities. The film PK exposes the manipulations of organized religion and it does that exceedingly well. It unmasks the hypocrisies inherent in the idea of religion, unlayering it only to discover there is no true essence of religion.

PK poster

We as a nation seem to have dumped the secularism of our constitution and are moving towards religious conservatism. Religion has become the centre of heated discussions where anyone/anybody who attempts to pull the curtains off religious orthodoxy is seen as anti-Hindu. In light of the current political mood, high on Hindutva rhetoric, PK seems to be extremely well timed to explore the hypocrisy of the institution of ‘religion’.

A day into its release, Twitter was set ablaze with cries of #boycottPK, criticising the movie for being “offensive” to Hinduism. However, quite soon, Aamir fans and secularists took to Twitter to show their support for the movie with the #WesupportPK hashtag. What this boils down to is the fact that as a group, we have started taking offence easily. Even a simple piece of art seems to “hurt” our religious sentiments. We have reached what one would call “The state of Hurt”. Hindutva supporters have gone as far as to filing a PIL against the movie director. These same Hindutvawadis protested demanding a ban on Haider earlier this year, or the ban of books like Wendy Doniger’s “The Hindus: An Alternative History”, creating another religion-centric discourse. The so called “gharwapsi” by conservative Hindus adds to the woes of the nation. At home, we have ministers like Niranjan Sadhvi walking free of regret even after instigating the “haramzada/ramzada” discourse.

The film has been criticised on grounds of showing Hinduism in a negative light. The movie critiques certain Hindu rituals as “symbols of irrationality and superstition”. According to some, it makes fun of Hindu Gods. Here, one must step out of the foggy vision of religious divisiveness and begin to consider the attack on Hinduism as a metaphor for an attack and unlayering of all religious blindness and superstition.

One must also consider that the movie attacks all blind faith irrespective of religion – conversions by Christian missionaries, and fatwas against education of girls by Islamic fundamentalists. It highlights the irrelevance of certain customs associated with each religion. In the role of a Shakespearean fool, this wide-eyed alien PK, unaware of religious customs, raises a simple question against poojas in temples, baptism in churches and rituals in dargahs – “if God could speak, would he rather you pour litres of milk on him, or instead give that same food to millions of starving children across the country”. As the alien, PK finds it hard to accept the ways of religion. He creates a ruckus at a temple and a church. However, the scene at a mosque shows him being shooed away as he tries entering with wine bottles in his hand. The movie shows a desperate Aamir Khan questioning every religion, maybe Hinduism gains greater prominence in the movie. However, as Kamlesh Singh notes, “It attacks Hinduism more directly than other religions because the story is based in India, 80% of which is Hindu.”

PK doesn’t give you answers served on a platter. It raises questions that make you think – the wide eyed alien PK (Aamir) questions everything, challenges the foundation of every concept you believed was unshakable. As the alien who lands naked from his planet, it is difficult for PK to understand the basis of the religious classification. He checks babies for a stamp, assuming they must be marked with the seal of their religion at birth. Failing to find one, he then derives that religion must be all about fashion. After all it is by the clothes and appearance that those around determine if a certain person is a Hindu or a Muslim.

Another allegation against the movie has been that it mocks Godmen and certain Hindu Gods. What the movie propagates instead is that God exists, Godmen shouldn’t. PK doesn’t question God and his existence but he does strongly condemn the farce marketed by the Godmen. In light of the recent Rampal and Asaram issues, the attack becomes even more interesting. These self proclaimed messengers of God find a sharp critique in the image of the “tapasviji” in PK. The movie exposes the distinction between a God-fearing and a God-loving society. The fear of God, espoused by religion finds echo in the statement “Jo darr gaya woh mandir gaya.”

Saffron ideologues like Francois Gautier have urged audiences to boycott the film because it depicts an inter-religious relationship. The plot line resonates with the fears that Hindutva groups have been expressing about the so-called love jihad theory: they claim that Muslim men are waging a campaign to court Hindu women, so that they can convert them to Islam. Even as Love Jihad remains a touchy subject in the country, PK depicts a Hindu girl falling in love with a Muslim boy from Pakistan.

The crux of the issue becomes obvious when one looks at the following Twitter comments. Even after decades of Aamir being a part of the Bollywood fraternity, he is seen as an outsider, “the other”. Our xenophobia towards Muslims becomes obvious when we question how Aamir, despite having married a Hindu, never dared to target Islam in the way he has attacked Hinduism.

The war between #BoycottPK and #WesupportPK continues. Hindutva supporters will continue to use religion as a weapon of violence. However, demanding a ban on works of art that question stereotypes and make you think beyond the normative defeats the whole purpose of a democracy. Every time a movie is banned, an artist dies, a democrat dies, a secular dies. But the fact that filmmakers continue to make such films is a clear sign of protest against religious orthodoxy. PK does not deserve to be banned, it is thought-provoking in its content, a departure from conservatism.

Also Read: PK Is Not An Extraordinary Film, But Here’s Why You Can’t Afford To Miss It In Times Like These

The post Why Has A Film That Questions Religion Made The ‘Hindutvawadis’ So Uncomfortable? appeared first and originally on Youth Ki Awaaz.

“Sulemani Keeda”- The Refreshing Pain In My Rear

$
0
0

By Rohan Seth:

In the time of corporate bonded labour, targets, presentations, appraisals, Dabangs, Singhams, Happy New Years, love jihad, VHP and RSS feeds – I discovered the perfect albeit transient mode to zone out from insanity in the form of Sulemani Keeda.

Sulemani Keeda

Sulemani Keeda isn’t a movie; it’s a refreshing way of life. The kind we led before we became 9 to 5 jacks. It was simple.

Dulal and Mainak, the boys from Delhi, now living in the mecca of bollywood aspirants – Versova, are scriptwriters and traverse the roads of the film kingdom in Mumbai to get work. Except all they manage is to ambush a seemingly indifferent Amrita ‘Vivah’ Rao and obtain existential musings from Mahesh ‘Arth’ Bhatt. A string of uninteresting days transmogrify into a circus of obfuscated script briefs when they encounter Big Producer Sweety Kapoor’s Andrei Tarkovsky-fan boy son ‘Gonzo’, who has a cat called Fellini.

Plot aside, Sulemani Keeda is a collection of familiar experiences.

Poetry recital at a bar – a perfect place to socialize, the girl is borderline interested, makes conversation and now you’re invited to a house party at her place. Too familiar right? The shanty looks like the fluorescent shanty I’ve been to for a house party. The picturesque kitchen, the only get away from the music, is fertile for the most profound conversations.

The movie is about you and me. Two friends living together in a dishevelled apartment, peering through marijuana vapour and old monk, wanting to make it big in the big city. About procrastination. About choices. About slackerdom. About the beauty of bonding over slackerdom. There’s no real ambition; the characters in the movie mirror our generation; confused, aching for the larger life yet not really sure.

Oh and the Colaba song gets stuck in your ears and makes you fall in love with the ever populated city of Mumbai and its local trains all over again.

It’s the best movie of the year for me. Make sure you watch it.

The post “Sulemani Keeda”- The Refreshing Pain In My Rear appeared first and originally on Youth Ki Awaaz.

Watch As This Guy Demolishes The Fake ‘Science’ Behind Astrology In Under 6 Minutes!

$
0
0

Presenting Youth Ki Awaaz TV, the first batch featuring four brand new web shows from your next YouTube sensations that will be unraveled over the next few weeks, stay tuned!

Introducing first, The Breakout with Rajat Bhateja, a fortnightly YouthKiAwaaz TV show where Rajat will rant and reason about everything from Religion to Pop Culture. In this video, Rajat talks about Astrology, its rampant use and problems associated with it. In addition to discussing the idea of Astrology, Rajat also presents a very simple and seemingly effective solution!

The post Watch As This Guy Demolishes The Fake ‘Science’ Behind Astrology In Under 6 Minutes! appeared first and originally on Youth Ki Awaaz.

“I Had Blood Clots In Parts I Was Ashamed To Show”

$
0
0

Anonymously Submitted:

My pillow was perpetually soaked in tears. For a week, my entire body was frozen. I had blood clots in parts I was ashamed to show. This is what he did on a recent Sunday morning – I was beaten black and blue, again, for not booking movie tickets. The price I paid for not watching a movie was rampant swearing and a lot of physical abuse.
I am an unnamed victim of domestic abuse by my ex-boyfriend. I do not have the courage to tell the world who I am. But nonetheless, I do have the courage to warn the rest. I have a smile stuck on my face, and my heart bleeds every time I look at myself in the mirror.

domestic violence in india

Everybody thinks that domestic abuse happens to women who do not have a say, may be have an alcoholic husband or just the inability to say what happened. I am an educated woman, have a corporate job, and am someone who by normal standards is quite aware of what is happening. I still don’t have the courage to say what happened.

As a person who was never hit by her own father, I was regularly beaten up for even things like not waking him up on time. I did not book tickets to a movie because I slept off. My now ex-boyfriend tried to physically manhandle me only because I loved him at one time. For three years, I silently kept bearing with these “minor” incidents. My friends were unaware of the real deal. They thought we had verbal fights. Barely did anyone know that behind the close doors, I was told that I was a prostitute and kicked in the stomach for the silliest things. And just because I believed in the stupid connotation of love, I let him be. He walked all over me. I did have other men who liked me, but I stood by him. I was trying to re-instate my love, he probably laughed in his head. And if you think the physical intimacy was a savior, well it was one sided.

I dated a man who, from social interactions, is called quite lovable. I commit the mistake to love him. And then it started. After dating for a couple of months, the abuse started. He told me that he takes me to places on his vehicle and that was his contribution to this relationship. I did everything for him. He just sat back and enjoyed. When he lost all his money on gambling, I stood by. When he had to take someone for coffee, random girls from college were the first option. I was promised fancy dinners , fancy gifts. Well, I obviously got nothing. He said that his love should be enough. I believed.

A few days ago, my now ex-boyfriend beat me up again. Even though we buried our relationship, we tried being friends. On a recent Sunday, he still thought he had the same authority. Over the years, I have been told that I had an ugly face because of a birthmark, how I should be beaten so much that I cannot walk again, that I am a home breaker and that it was because of people like me who incite men that women get beaten up. I was told once by my ex-partner that I deserved being beaten up because of who I am. I let him stay with me in my house for a year during college because he did not want to go through the entire process of finding a house. Like a blind girl, I welcomed him in my apartment.

Well yes, I bore it all. From being beaten up in a narrow lane in Delhi because I did not come to pick him up late evening, or because I was late in ordering food. I did it all. Even cooked food at odd hours because he was hungry. I surpassed every possible definition of love because he meant that much to me. He said he loved me back. But I paid a heavy price. Every time. Over and over again.

I have tried to slice my wrist once. I did so because he beat me up just because I apparently incited him. I started leaving behind my own friends because I wanted to be with him. I was blinded by the hollow definition of love.

After every such event he would feel bad, then maybe apologize, touch my hand and for him it was all fine. Not this time. I cannot do this. My ego and self esteem has been ruined by a man who has a pea sized brain. For weeks, I could not walk properly. I have had my head banged on the wall so many times that I even fainted once. He just kept beating me up. He told his friends another story. Walked like a hero without an ounce of shame.

A few days ago, he messaged me saying that I should not make a scene of what happened. I was advised by him that I should accept his fake apology because there was improvement in his attitude as time had gone by. He reinstated that talking about the past incidents does not make sense.

It has been over two weeks, and endless attempts by him to apologise. If I let him come back to me this time, I will lose myself in the process of loving this shallow man. Whatever little I have of myself will wash away.

To all the women out there, please judge the man before you fall in love. I did the wrong thing with the only man I ever dated. And now I have no trust. Love for me is meaningless. Yes, this feeling may exist for some, for me it finished the day I tried slicing my own wrist because I was madly in love.

Men do not have a right to assault you. If you let them they will, I learnt it the hardest way possible. It is a choice as to when to speak. Either you do it now or later. I regret every moment when I did not speak up. I should have, but I didn’t. For all those who think that you will speak up against these men, now is the time. Now, all I am going to do is to erase every memory from my head and start afresh. Love is something I don’t want. EVER. For those who have found the right one, you are lucky. I wasn’t, unfortunately.

The post “I Had Blood Clots In Parts I Was Ashamed To Show” appeared first and originally on Youth Ki Awaaz.

What The Internet Gave The Kerala Man (Apart From Porn)

$
0
0

By Sandhya Menon:

I am often at the receiving end of, “Oh but you are a Malayalee. You come from a matriarchal society,” when I talk about anything from Feminism to food preferences. I take great pains to correct that statement. I patiently start with correcting the term (matrilineal, and not matriarchal), then I gently point out there’s just one community in Kerala that was so, and that Kerala has many communities, along with the usual mix of religions. I then ask, what does that have to do with the price of fish. Because, while in some ways it might be empowering and perspective ­altering to receive your mother’s name, and her property (technically, traditionally it is the maternal uncle’s property that used to get passed down to his nephews and nieces among Nairs), for all practical purposes, a household used to be run by a man, usually the maternal uncle, who decided everyone’s fate. Matrilineality, therefore, in my observation helped with one aspect of independence and liberation: financial security. But it did nothing to empower Nair women with self confidence, that is needed to get out of an oppressive relationship that she could be enduring in the domestic sphere.

Laying that down as a context, I shall zoom out a little, and look at the larger Kerala with its rich, textured, and varied ethnic groups, and communities. With a society that’s arguably progressive and educated, ­ Kerala is a place where this structure sustains patriarchy. At an immediate glance, this is as surprising and confounding as it is deep rooted. In a state where Communism (whatever its avatar today) thrives, where women work just as hard as men, ­if not harder, to sustain their families, the incongruity of the existence of male chauvinism and blatant patriarchy worries and fascinates me. If educated and financially independent women struggle for justice, safety and equality, then what hope do those without the above­ mentioned privileges have?

The evidence of a sexually repressed and frustrated people is all over Kerala. On the streets, on TV, and online. Take the streets, for instance. Young women, and sometimes not-so-young-women get flashed at regularly. I bet a whole lot of women in Erna-­flasher­central-­kulam, have seen their first erection right in the middle of a busy street, on a dreary old work day. Fathers still decide how the women in their family will behave, husbands still stay a mile away from child care, and running a home. I regularly hear women in my age bracket say if they wear a (moderately) low­cut blouse with their sari, their husbands will “pack them off”. It is said with laughter and camaraderie, but it isn’t a joke at all. ‘Decent’ married women don’t do things their husbands don’t like. ‘Decent’ single women don’t do things their fathers and brothers don’t like. Anyone who decides to not be ‘decent’ has then crossed over to the slut territory. I suppose this could be said for the rest of India.

Enter TV presenter and actress Ranjini Haridas. A 30 ­something presenter, who very successfully anchored a reality talent show for six years, on Asianet, a Malayalam TV channel. Haridas is possibly little known outside Kerala, and so is the hate that she inspires. People of both genders criticise what they see as inauthentic – her heavily anglicised Malayalam, which is Haridas’ trademark, a chip she wears proudly on her shoulder. She is quoted as having said in an interview that the few years she spent in the U.K. as a Masters student were responsible for her forgetting her Malayalam (I can’t verify the authenticity of this statement). That may have been a young woman’s knee jerk reaction, wet behind the ears, as she was, to the criticism she received (in droves) when she first began hosting the show. But over time, more and more interviews quoted her as saying that she didn’t care for what people said, this is the way she chose to speak and that was the end of it.

She wasn’t spared, pilloried on mimicry shows (a still ­hugely popular genre in Kerala); blatantly and publicly told off, by respected senior actors; guests on her own show, and other women anchors, have all taken potshots at her. She’s a classic template for poking merciless fun at girls who decided to be ‘modern’.

Men hated her. But the women, ah, here was a fascinating story unfolding. Young women, ripe for rebellion and finding their wings, all over Kerala, felt here was something they could point to in case of a crisis – “If she can, I can”. Haridas wore sleeveless clothes, body­con dresses, knee­length shifts, off the shoulder blouses, see­-through ensembles, stuff that no anchor had worn on Malayalam T.V. hitherto; she experimented with her hair with high glamour; she didn’t shy away from adventurous make up; she wore exactly what her free little heart desired, and she did it with confidence, not letting criticism against her clothing, or her speech, cramp her style in the least bit. Men kept hating, she kept working, laughing all the way to the bank in her designer high heels.

She was in stark contrast to the Malayalee TV presenters, who had bored the hell out of viewers till then. These women wore a look of innocence, a certain freshness one associates with the ‘untouched’. Their makeup was traditional, with pink (ish) lipstick, and kohl-­lined eyes, made up and yet not so much that it would make an impact. Their hair was tucked away in demure braids, or in a little bun at the nape of the neck, and imprisoned in jasmine. These presenters didn’t use their hands much, and smiled idiotically a lot. They were a vision, a girl-­you-­gawk­-at-­in-­a-­temple vision. Beautiful, efficient and tameable; completely devoid of impact, a threat to none of the men who ogled, and aspirational for none of the women these men lived with.

If a channel was targeting a younger crowd, you’d find young women dressed in jeans and a perfectly unremarkable top, with requisite hair and makeup, and a personality that was even more unremarkable than the T-shirt. Usually, there was a guy who co­-hosted, and hogged all the air time.

You see, us Malayalee women look down on those who wear make up, although we secretly wish we could carry it off too. We think we are natural beauties (and I must admit some are), and to do anything with a tube of lipstick is to enter the slut category. So, most girls from middle class homes will wear lipstick on an occasion, and blot it till it very nearly disappears, because ‘good girls don’t wear lipstick’. (For those of you who are going to come at me saying “but I have Keralite friends who aren’t like that,” I am going with a middle class majority here. Not those who have lived in cosmopolitan places, or cities outside Kerala.) Until a few years ago, we didn’t wax our limbs; not because we believe in our feminist right to do what the hell we want with our body hair, but because salons are the dens of the devil. You could end up in a porn video on the internet if you went to a salon. I suspect that isn’t the case in the bigger places in Kerala, like a Cochin or Trivandrum, or Trichur, but most of Kerala still believes a salon will sell you off to pimps. And even those who do go to a salon, and get all smooth, tend to do it very quietly. It’s not a thing we’re comfortable talking about.

It was into the households of these women, that Haridas with her open hair, loud laughter, gender­ irrespective hugs reached. With her ‘beauty ­contest­ winner’ title, her U.K. masters degree, and a sense of fashion that was more confidence than style ­which, I suppose, is true style. Suddenly, there were Haridas clones all over Malayalam TV. Open hair, clothes that edged away the ornate salwar kameez, or the graceful sari. Suddenly, and hilariously, perfectly ordinary girls were speaking Malayalam like it was a foreign tongue; and men were mercilessly skewering them over it; women were touching and hugging boys on screen, and bantering with celebrities without the usual deferential tone. Just like Haridas. Just like normal young women do off camera. And men hated it.

Till my mother recently pointed it out to me, I didn’t realise how much of a Haridas non-­supporter I am. My mother, a woman of great wisdom and gentle confidence, is pro-­Haridas. My objection is simple: I don’t like that she has distanced herself from her mother tongue, but that comes only second to the fact that she does it in the most inauthentic way. My mother’s reasons are also simple: she loves the show, and says no one can carry it off as engagingly as Haridas. And that she lives exactly how she pleases, no matter what the rest of the world says.

This conversation led my mother to direct me to a Haridas fan page on Facebook. A regularly updated, selfie­ heavy, hate­ filled page. If that woman (Ranjini Haridas I mean, not my mother) reads the comments on a regular basis, and still continues to post as she does, she has all my respect and then some. Because, OMG, there’s an army of perverted, hateful and angry men, spewing venom there, doing whatever they can – from calling her a slut in different ways (I had no idea how many words Malayalam had for slut) to offering her a screw, so she’d ease off.

They abuse her ancestry, they call her a slut, a corpse, a cunt, a eunuch, ugly. I was repulsed by almost 700 comments collectively, in the first few posts on her page. (I didn’t see any threats of rape, the favourite hate­ tool men use to intimidate women online, thankfully.) But the sheer volume of hate, and all from men, was appalling, and fascinating. Why were all these men hating her? A middle aged man called her the South Indian Sunny Leone (because a porn star is not an actor but a whore, correct?), going on to abuse her in Hindi, English and Malayalam, so great was his objection. Another one posted a picture of a firecracker, the Malayalam word for which is apparently colloquialism for, guess what? Yep, whore. They leave no aspect of her untouched – ­her makeup, who she is with in the picture, her clothes, her smile, teeth, even her being single, or being raised by her mother, having lost her father early. She’s ripped apart like a carcass in a butcher’s shop would, if you let a hungry mob in.

This one, for instance, has a misspelt speech bubble to make it sound like Haridas’ Malayalam. It basically says, “I know very little Malayalam.”

monkey

Or this, where the insults are heaped high, all basically tiresomely calling her a whore (or a variation of it), or old, or ugly, including a comment with a picture of her with an African person, an intended insult I am afraid to explore.

racism-001

This one below basically asks her to die, now that she’s old (she isn’t 35 yet.) The comment below that is captioned “who is prettier?”

ugly

And this below is our firecracker guy. Under which is a private photo of Haridas that went viral a few years ago, and brought her under another deluge of filth.

vedi

 

In reply to this, and much much more such harassment, Haridas posted this on voting day recently, telling her detractors exactly what she thought of them, in classic tongue-in-­cheek Ranjini style. (The comments on this one heap more abuse, more firecracker, more I’ll fuck you, more ‘you ­ugly­ whore’ hate.)

vote-001

I decided to explore a little and checked out the pages of other presenters/actors/professional celebrities who are women in other places. I found very little abuse, very little misogyny, addressed to those in the public eye. My observation is that harassment and misogyny are directed more at regular, non-celebrity folk. Posting numbers, abusive language, lewd comments, direct hate are all directed mostly at women, who aren’t in the public eye. But in the fan pages of actresses/models/TV personalities, there was more empty adulation, than outright misogyny. There’s the odd deviant pimping his services, or some creep posting a name and number of a girl, but this kind of rampant bile, this kind of utter disrespect was rare, if not almost absent.

To me, it says many things, this hatred from men in Kerala – young and old, educated and not, married or single. The insults are almost always sexual in nature, the language is highly disrespectful, (apart from being abusive itself): the use of nee, the informal word for ‘you’ in Malayalam is the only way she’s addressed. Her lack of hypocrisy is another source of anger. Unlike many women who care about their reputations, Haridas tends to live life rather candidly, and if that threatens the Malayalee men, then so be it.

The way I see it, the anger these men feel is directed at her for being happily single, even though she’s … gasp… nearly 35! Anger at her being unfazed by the barrage of biting criticism, at her completely normal way of behaving even on screen (she hugs, touches, gesticulates, and uses her body freely the way you and I do). The anger is towards her success – six years of calling her a whore and she’s still the top rated, and possibly the highest­ paid anchor in Kerala. The anger is towards her completely ignoring the very men that hate her; they just can’t seem to get a rise out of her. But I think the thing that threatens them most is that she is an inspiration. She is what a lot of their daughters, sisters and wives would like to become – glamorous, articulate, successful, confident and assertive. Everything that these men don’t want in their women, lest they get left behind; lest they get dragged to a police station for raising a hand; lest their women leave them after finding self ­worth.

If I were to say just the way that Haridas dresses and talks is what’s causing the outpouring of misogyny, to anyone who looks at it superficially, I might be right. But if you look around, and see another instance of hate, I’d be proved wrong. Manju Warrier, arguably one of Malayalam cinema’s best actresses, returned to acting after 14 years of staying away from the industry. She had a daughter with her actor husband who incidentally continued to act with women half his age. She made a home and never gave a single interview in all the years she was in the background.

Last year, she has separated from her husband, and has made no public statements about her marital situation. Her husband, actor Dileep, has gone on record to say he doesn’t like women working after marriage, while all these years he insisted it was Warrier’s choice to give up acting at the height of her successful career. Their daughter, a teenager, lives with the father.

Warrier, too, has a Facebook page that updates her fans about her news. She posts happy personal pictures, pictures of her shoots, travels and messages about causes, and yet the hate spews. As she fits better into the mould women are expected to fit in Kerala, the language is a lot more toned down. Clearly, having been married and proving to the world you are fertile is a cause for people to be more respectful when they talk. And because Haridas dresses the way she does, and talks more English than Malayalam, and basically flips everyone off, she deserves to be spoken to disrespectfully.

The hate on Warrier’s page manifests itself differently; she’s called a bad mother on the basis of the interview her husband gave in a woman’s magazine. She is wished ill ­luck with her come­back film; she is condemned for leaving her marriage, and her husband, a man whom much of Kerala adores and considers a great actor. Outside of these three things, apparently, Warrier doesn’t exist or rather, shouldn’t exist. Women too join this criticism of her, openly posting judgemental comments on what they think of her decision to leave her husband, criticising her bitterly for being ‘negligent’ of her daughter, for seemingly classifying fame, career, and money, higher than her daughter and husband. Mind you, all this while not knowing anything else, but that the two are separated.

There’s scores of advice on the page of this 36­ year­ old artiste, urging her to go back to her husband, to stop being selfish, to ‘realise’ that beauty, fame and wealth won’t last forever. The denigration is endless, and by the looks of it, hugely one ­sided. You see, Dileep’s fan pages are full of people kowtowing to his talent, looking forward to his new films, and the usual fanboy drivel. No advice to him on his personal life at all. Even newspaper reports have been inherently sexist in reporting any developments on the divorce/separation.

This duplicity emerges repeatedly in Kerala, in conversations and in the mainstream media, and now internet hate. It’s okay for a woman to work, bring home money and support, either single ­handedly or as a second income, her family. But the minute she decides to pursue a career, as opposed to keeping a job, and chooses to go after it ambitiously, she’s just turned into the devil. The second income (in some cases the only income), she brings in is very welcome, but not the success, or the sacrifices that she has to make. Among all the different kinds of men I’ve met, no one hates a woman’s success more than a certain kind of Malayalee man.

I started this off as an internet hate piece against men in Kerala, the internet as a new place to flash and wave figurative penises at women they cannot go anywhere close to. Successful, dignified, articulate women who threaten their glaringly obvious chauvinistic attitudes. Internet hate towards women in the public eye isn’t particularly new, and takes on different forms, as Amanda Hess’s explosive essay earlier this year in the Pacific Standard illustrated. But the issues in Kerala that lead to what is clear misogyny, are so much more, that I had to digress a little.

The truths that this kind of internet misogyny reveals to me are scary: Malayalee young men continue to be sexually frustrated; traditionally thought to be a sexually permissive society, Kerala, in the last few decades, has seen a huge change in morality, with patriarchal attitudes towards sex becoming more prevalent, where virginity as a virtue is priced highly, and sex is seen as corruption.

If these men are a sampling of most men in Kerala, then it would seem that Malayalee men are inherently crude, disrespectful, and have no finer sensibilities with regard to equality, individuality, racism or sexuality. But perhaps the most disturbing thing of all, to me, is the fact that all this is juxtaposed with education. That it exists in a society that for decades has upheld socialist values of equality and respect between genders. How does one reconcile the two? What is the point of an education if it hasn’t helped you cultivate a respect for the girls you go to school with? How badly has education failed us, if men still consider sex and sexual insults the best way to attack a woman? Authors and artists, both male and female, have stood at the forefront of progressive feminist attitudes, writing, art and debate.

Why has education failed to integrate their work and contribution towards building a society, that is more respectful towards women?

NOTE: This article was originally published in the author’s personal blog.

The post What The Internet Gave The Kerala Man (Apart From Porn) appeared first and originally on Youth Ki Awaaz.


No, Kashmiris Didn’t Vote To Be An ‘Integral Part’ Of India. Here’s The Real Picture

$
0
0

By Atul Dev:

The Prime Minister said he saw people’s faith in democracy in the voter queues in Kashmir last month, and the Defence Minister claimed that Pakistan was unnerved by the 72 per cent voter turnout in the state.

There was unusually high voter turnout in the recently concluded Kashmir state elections, as compared to previous elections. In the past, separatists would boycott elections, because they didn’t want Kashmir to be part of India. Thus, people in the media and the government have said that the high voter turn out in 2014 is a sign that the people of Kashmir now want to be part of mainstream India, and that the separatist agenda is much weaker than before.

But high voter turnout should not be understood as Kashmiris’ decision to become an integral part of India. Media analysts are plagued by far-fetched theories, all of which obediently signal the end of a decades-old conflict. This white noise concerns itself selectively with Delhi’s vision for the crown jewel of India and has very little do with the realities of Kashmir. What comes out of it, louder than anything, is the fact that Kashmir is a contentious outpost in the collective conscience of the country. Attempts to understand electoral patterns are drowned in desperate assumptions of assimilation and severance.

The mighty voter turnout of 69 percent (up from 45 percent in 2002 and 60 percent in 2008), resulted in a fractured mandate. This forced the political parties, which have been at loggerheads with each other for so long, to form a coalition. The possible picture of administrative instability is particularly troubling at a time when the damage caused by floods hasn’t let life come back to its natural rhythm.

Video Volunteers has long recognized that there is a problem with the media coverage of Kashmir, and in response, we decided to bring our model of community video to Kashmir in September 2013, when we trained 11 Right to Information (RTI) activists as video reporters. The timing was fortuitous, because on the day the training ended, the floods began, and our network was there to document it. Since then, they have produced 35 videos and innumerable photo reports. These reports provide ample evidence that the main issue in this election was people’s development needs. When a village’s residents haven’t had electricity for eight months, it can only be a case of amnesia to see their votes implying anything else than the need for a better power grid. When people have to walk miles to fetch water, could they be voting for anything else than a hand pump?

In a recent blog on Huffington Post, Sajad Rasool, a Community Correspondent for Video Volunteers has said the elections should have been postponed until relief work was more complete. “Thousands of people who lost their homes during floods are still living in makeshift tents,” he writes. When the priority should have been rehabilitation after floods, a month has been consumed by electoral procedures. It’s a revolt against sensibilities to not see the need of basic facilities by people, being channelled in voting machines. What this denial suggests is that the state of Jammu and Kashmir is more of an idea than a reality in Indian politics.

We asked our Community Correspondents to video-document these elections. The people interviewed clearly say that ‘yes, we are voting in this election. But don’t assume this means we want to be an integral part of India’. There are also interviews in that series telling us why some people abstained from voting. Says Sajad, “the mainstream media has not carried one single interview of this nature. I wish the media would cover the motivations of voters in their true complexity.”

To be sure, the record turnout in the latest assembly elections, highest since 1989, does indicate that boycotting elections isn’t as appealing to Kashmiris as it was years ago, and the BJP did avoid nationalistic rhetoric. Let us hope this means the BJP itself is ready to avoid nationalism.

The people of Kashmir embraced democracy. They should be rewarded with better roads, water supply, electrical grids, jobs, and safety and security — with justice and development.

Also Read: ‘Azaadi’ Lives: The Tumultuous Tale Of Elections And Boycotts In Kashmir

The post No, Kashmiris Didn’t Vote To Be An ‘Integral Part’ Of India. Here’s The Real Picture appeared first and originally on Youth Ki Awaaz.

India Will Never Become A Superpower

$
0
0

By Lawrence Saez, SOAS, University of London

The end of the Cold War and the era of “unipolar” US dominance that followed has led many to wonder about the future of international power. Who will rival, or perhaps even replace, the US?

At least one obvious candidate has emerged. Although it would be premature to categorise China as a global superpower, it is quickly developing into the US’s most plausible challenger. But in discussions of globally important matters – Syria, financial crisis, the NSA fallout and so on – one name is curiously absent: India.

When the dust settles on a rearranged global system, might India also become a global superpower? My answer is no.

To understand why, we need to look at what it means for a state to have “power”. Some international relations scholars, known as neorealists, suggest that nations are able to enhance their power by building up a range of demographic, economic, and military capabilities. John Mearsheimer, a leading theorist in this school, has identified two types of power: military and latent.

If we borrow Mearsheimer’s framework, military power can therefore be measured using existing armed forces and supporting naval and air forces. In his view, dominance over land is essential because success is defined by the ability to conquer and control territory.

Over the past two decades, India has demonstrated its ability to carry out underground nuclear tests and its capability to deliver nuclear warheads using intermediate ballistic missiles. However, it has not yet utilised these newly acquired capabilities to project power effectively. Regionally, a large percentage of India’s armed forces are stationed along the country’s extensive border areas with Pakistan and China. This inefficient allocation of military resources has limited India’s power projection beyond its borders.

Domestic poverty

In addition, the focus on India’s modest nuclear capabilities has detracted attention from weaknesses in India’s conventional forces. For instance, India does not have a strong weapons manufacturing industry, so it imports an overwhelming amount of its sophisticated military hardware from abroad, mostly from Russia. Moreover, India’s existing conventional military equipment is in severe need of modernisation.

Given the massive challenge of domestic poverty and underdevelopment, India simply has not had the resources to enable the development of a modern military arsenal. As such, it has been unable to assert itself on the international stage. In international conflicts, India’s military has only been active in humanitarian assistance and ancillary non-combat roles.

Although other countries, notably Russia and China, have been able to act as veto players on the international stage, India’s presence is of little consequence. For instance, few people would know or care to know what India’s position is on, say, the conflict in Syria.

Clearly India is not at present a global power. The question that remains to be answered is whether India has the potential to become a one in the future. Once again, academic theory guides us to think about a country’s latent power, which is the state’s ability to translate assets of population and wealth into mobilisable power.

Viewed in this way, India is also unlikely to gain a foothold as a major global player. To be sure, it has demonstrated an impressive ability to galvanise the information technology and business process outsourcing industries. However, these growth sectors are the exception, rather than the norm. In a largely agricultural country, there are huge internal wealth and income disparities across India.

Given that India is a democratic state, the government has to be responsive to the demands of its citizens. As such, the existing pressure for the redistribution of wealth limits growth in military expenditure and consequently inhibits the ability of the state to turn India into a global power. It is not surprising to note that India’s military spending as a proportion of GDP has declined since the late 1990s.

Signs of stagnation

At the core of the argument that India will not become a global power is the fact that it faces an insurmountable demographic challenge. From my point of view, as a result of this, there is little expectation that India will grow exponentially wealthier over time.

What is this demographic challenge? Well, an analysis of global population trends shows that over time, most likely by 2025, India will become the world’s most populous nation. But much of this growth is taking place in two states: Uttar Pradesh and Bihar. These two states are India’s largest and third largest states (with a combined population of 302m), but also India’s two poorest states (with a per capita income ranging from US$347 to US$450 a year). In this light, vibrant economic growth is unlikely to be sustainable in India. We are already witnessing the first signs of stagnation in the Indian economy.

In order for India to be a global power in the 21st century, it would need to develop its military capabilities and diminish its dependence on natural resources. The country would also have to devote substantial fiscal resources towards military expenditure.

Given the burden of a rapidly growing poor and unskilled population, it is hard to fathom how the Indian state will be able to allocate scarce resources into making it a militarily and economically powerful nation.

The Conversation

This article was originally published on The Conversation.
Read the original article.

The post India Will Never Become A Superpower appeared first and originally on Youth Ki Awaaz.

An Open Letter To World Leaders By Aamir Khan, Malala And 29 Other Global Influencers

$
0
0

Dear World Leaders,

There are moments in history that become turning points. In our view, 2015 will be such a moment. It is the most important year for global decision-making since the start of the new millennium.

We believe it’s just possible that we could end 2015 with a new global compact – an agreed pathway to a better, safer future for people and planet that will inspire all the citizens of the world. We can choose the path of sustainable development. Or we might not – and regret it for generations to come. Which side of history will you be on?

There are millions of voices you can’t afford to ignore – the voices of the people you represent. They are voices of all ages from every corner of the planet – the voice of a young girl currently deprived an education… of a pregnant mother deprived healthcare… of young people deprived decent work… of a family from a minority group fearful of discrimination from corrupt officials… of farmers forced to migrate to cities as climate refugees… and of billions of other people. Their voices will roar ever louder against the inequality and injustice that keep people poor. They – and all who stand with them – are calling on you to come up with a grand new global contract for our one human family – and then deliver on it together. The great news is that in 2015 you have a historic chance to do just that.

Two critical United Nations summits will take place this year. The first in September, where the world must agree new goals to eradicate extreme poverty, tackle inequality and ensure a more sustainable planet. The second is the climate summit in December where we must ensure the wellbeing of people today doesn’t come at the expense of our children’s futures.

Together with critical discussions on financing, these opportunities are the biggest of our lifetime. We know from past efforts against AIDS, malaria, preventable diseases and saving the ozone layer that when we come together, so much can be achieved. Yet, with just months to go before these summits, few leaders are playing the leadership roles we need. We see climate progress but not yet of the scale that is needed, and a set of goals that are hugely ambitious but will be meaningless without brave financing and implementation agreements led from the very top.

If this does not change, we fear you and your fellow leaders could be sleep-walking the world towards one of the greatest failures of recent history. It’s not too late to rise to the occasion. We’re asking you to help lead that change.

Let’s be clear: the actions we take in 2015 will decide which way the world turns for decades to come. Please take the right path.

Yours

  • Aamir Khan, Actor & campaigner
  • Angelique Kidjo, Singer songwriter & activist
  • Annie Lennox, OBE, musician & activist
  • Ben Affleck, Actor, Filmmaker & Founder of Eastern Congo Initiative
  • Bill Gates, Co-Chair of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
  • Bono, Lead singer of U2 & cofounder of ONE and (RED)
  • Dbanj, Musician & activist
  • Emeritus Archbishop Desmond Tutu
  • Gro Harlem Brundtland, Former Prime Minister, Norway
  • Hugh Jackman, Actor
  • Kid President – Brad Montague & Robby Novak
  • Prof Jeffrey Sachs, Director of the Earth Institute & author of The Age of Sustainable Development
  • Jimmy Wales, Founder of Wikipedia
  • Jody Williams, 1997 Nobel Peace Laureate & Chair of Nobel Women’s Initiative
  • José Padilha, Film Director
  • Leymah Gbowee, 2011 Nobel Peace Laureate
  • Malala Yousafzai, Co-Founder of the Malala Fund & 2014 Nobel Peace Laureate
  • Mary Robinson, President, Mary Robinson
  • Foundation – Climate Justice
  • Matt Damon, Actor & Founder of Water.org
  • Melinda Gates, Co-Chair of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
  • Mia Farrow, Actor & activist
  • Mo Ibrahim, Philanthropist & campaigner
  • Muhammad Yunus, 2006 Nobel Peace Laureate
  • Queen Rania Al Abdullah
  • Richard Branson, Founder of the Virgin Group
  • Ricken Patel, President and Executive Director of Avaaz
  • Sharan Burrow, General Secretary of the International Trade Union Confederation
  • Shakira, Singer-songwriter, UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador
  • Sting, Musician, singer, songwriter, and activist
  • Ted Turner, Chairman, United Nations Foundation
  • Wagner Moura, Actor
  • Yvonne Chaka Chaka, President of the Princess of Africa Foundation

This post is a part of the Action/2015 Campaign. Find out more here.

The post An Open Letter To World Leaders By Aamir Khan, Malala And 29 Other Global Influencers appeared first and originally on Youth Ki Awaaz.

This Election, Here’s What Women In Delhi Are Demanding From The Political Parties

$
0
0

By Kalpana Viswanath:

Across the spectrum, parties are talking about women’s safety this time. It is important to understand that creating safer communities and cities is a holistic process that must address response to violence, prevention and creating the conditions whereby rights can be realised. It cannot be stressed enough that programs that deal with ending violence against women must be multi pronged and must involve a wide range of stakeholders. Without a strong political commitment, it is not going to be possible to bring about long term and systemic change that addresses the actual causes of the problem.

Picture Credits: New Delhices

Picture Credits: New Delhices

First, the work of addressing violence and crime is an issue of policing. We demand a robust police and legal system. From the time of any incidence of violence, there needs to be quick, efficient and non judgemental responses from all actors. The case must be dealt with swiftly by the legal system so that perpetrators of violence have a fear of the repercussions of their actions. We believe that more efficient systems that ensure the surety of punishment are the most important.

But other stakeholders also need to part of the solution. Better urban design and planning can go a long way in ensuring safer public spaces. Safety audits done across cities have shown that what is needed is better lighting, better streets, well maintained sidewalks and other infrastructure. In addition, cities and towns need to be planned to make streets more active, lively, and usable by a wide variety of people, including women, children, people living with disabilities and others.

There is a dire need for more and better managed public toilets that are severely lacking in our cities and the ones that exist are often in bad condition and are barely usable. In slums and resettlement areas, community toilets need to be kept clean, well maintained and safe. Cases of women facing harassment while going for open defecation is not uncommon.

Good and safe public transport is essential for women’s mobility. We demand all forms of public transport to be safe for women and girls to use at all times. Why is it so unsafe for women and girls to be out after dark? The fear of harassment and violence results in rights being denied to them. Protecting women or teaching them self defence is not going to create a safer world. The language of protection must be transformed into a language of rights.

Kalpana Viswanath is a researcher who has been working on issues of violence against women and safer cities for women for over 20 years. She is the co-founder of Safetipin, a mobile app developed to support community and women’s safety. She has led research studies on violence against women in public spaces in the city. She spearheaded the Safe Delhi for Women campaign led by Jagori since 2005 and led the research work that included conducting women’s safety audits and surveys and played a role in creating partnerships with key stakeholders.

The post This Election, Here’s What Women In Delhi Are Demanding From The Political Parties appeared first and originally on Youth Ki Awaaz.

Engineers And Bankers – You Can Be The New Climate Activists That India Needs

$
0
0

By Shradha S:

In Naomi Klein’s recent book This Changes Everything’, she quotes Yotam Marom, an organizer with Occupy Wall Street in New York, who wrote in July 2013 – “The fight for the climate isn’t a separate movement; it’s both a challenge and an opportunity for all of our movements. We don’t need to become climate activists, we are climate activists. We don’t need a separate climate movement; we need to seize the climate moment.”

Climate protest in Dublin

Everyone is, or ideally should be, a climate activist; if not the out-on-the-streets-shouting-slogans type, at least the kind who is aware and advocates the need for addressing the issue of climate change. This however is not the current reality in our country where most people fall in distinct socio-economic classes and are on a rat-race for survival. To preach activism and climate change to this lot is definitely a dead pitch.

Yet, you encounter amazing statistics that make you hopeful of an underlying opportunity in India’s engineering and B-school graduates. Numbers show that India rolls out about a million students per year from various engineering and polytechnic colleges, and 4-5 lakh graduates from various B-schools including the IIMs. Out of this numbers, hardly 10-40 % are employed in proper pay jobs with any relation to their field. What the rest do is not much of a mystery.

Thanks to the trend of engineering students being fed up of the field being shoved down their heads and wanting to indulge their creative sides, as well as our mediocre education system, everyone wants to be a Chetan Bhagat now. While whether that is a good or bad call is a judgment I’d keep away from making, the fact is a lot of talent is being untapped or lured away into other menial every-day distractions.

We need writers and we need artists, but that is why there are some of us who go against the set norms and join places that train us to better in the fields we want to. If every engineer decides to give up their training and join these sectors, we are depriving trained personnel from their right to get employed at where they strived to be in. This is not the survival of the fittest.

Coming to the original theme of this rant is however quite different from the debate that I might have stirred up from the idea above. India’s current climate change stance is dictated by two main agendas – development and energy sector. That is quite an opportunity for young engineers and MBAs if they are actually passionate about making a difference in today’s world. How? Here’s the thought.

In spite of all the technology revolution, India’s power projects are still mostly conventional with excess pressure on generating power to satisfy electorates and zero focus on the environmental or landscape deterioration it causes. In one of my interviews with a senior engineer from the department of Power in a landslide prone state with over 60 upcoming hydropower projects, he points out how engineers are engineered to just build what the government asks of them; what happens to the ecology or the climate as a result is not their business.

As far as I know, every engineering course (apart from software and IT) is mandated to have an environmental education module in their learning system. What good does it do if they actually don’t make good use of this? I feel that every engineer who’s involved in various construction and power projects that significantly alter our landscapes has a responsibility to safeguard the interests of what the future generation might face as a consequence. If our engineers (and architects) step up to take responsibility for a climate-smart working style and not just shy away from what ignorant bosses ask them to, just because they are uninterested in the field their parents forced them to take, it will be a giant leap for all the climate activists out there in the world.

The same goes for all investment bankers and money people. If you could create markets and convince shareholders to invest in renewable energy in local markets (after of course, finding a way to go around without violating any of the WTO’s grandiose free trade regulations), you are helping the society to take a positive step towards building a green future. The market dictates that currently leave most of us still stuck to conventional fossil fuels and mining activities can be slowly brought to a minimum without having to suffer from serious economic losses.

The fossil fuel divestment campaign has been active around the globe, more recently endorsed by the Stanford professors in a call to ask the University to cut off its direct investments and endowments to coal mining companies. This is what is happening around the world slowly, and something we in India need to bring attention to.

If they can, why can’t we?

The post Engineers And Bankers – You Can Be The New Climate Activists That India Needs appeared first and originally on Youth Ki Awaaz.

[Video] Hindu Mahasabha President Bares All – On V-Day, Love, Homosexuality And More

$
0
0

By Kanika Katyal and Amit Kumar:

It seems that it is not just Cupid, but also Hymen (the god of marriage), that is coming to town this Valentine’s Day, to bless couples with holy matrimony.

The Hindu Mahasabha, with all its saffron paraphernalia, had issued an official statement which decreed that couples displaying their affection in public would be married off. “We are not against love as we are the country which has spread love all over the world. But we are against the western influence on our society. It is the exhibition of love that we dislike,” said Chandra Prakash Kaushik, President of the Akhil Bharat Hindu Mahasabha.

“What difference remains between animals and humans if we start doing it in public?, somebody has to keep up the morality quotient. Humari jama-punji sirf yehi to hai”, he told us in an interview at the party’s Delhi office. “Azaadi ka matlab ye to nahin hai ki, sare aam suhaag raat sadkon pe manane lagein”, he further argued when asked if he didn’t see their initiative as a violation of privacy and individual agency.

To carry out their plan successfully, they have chalked out a nationwide strategy, under which their teams consisting of boys and girls carrying white roses would visit malls, parks, historical monuments and other places frequented by young couples on Valentine’s Day in major towns and cities in the country, to deter the youth from what they believe to be “the advertisement of love”.

We decided to cut through the media clutter and let you hear directly from the horse’s mouth, about the party’s plan of action on Valentine’s Day. We recommend you watch till the very end, where the party president enlightens you on how homosexuality is a disease just like Cancer and AIDS!

Featured image and video shot by Amit Kumar.

Also Read:

Marry Your Sweetheart This V-Day – ‘Shuddh Desi Romance’, Brought To You By Hindu Mahasabha!

Move Over Tinder, Hindu Mahasabha Presents ‘Jai Hinder’ – A ‘Sanskaari’ App For ‘Hindu Rashtra’

 

The post [Video] Hindu Mahasabha President Bares All – On V-Day, Love, Homosexuality And More appeared first and originally on Youth Ki Awaaz.

‘Degrowth’ is Cool Because We Cannot Drink GDP Or Eat Money!

$
0
0

By Brototi Roy:

It’s that time of the year again. The annual Rail Budget is already out, and the Union Budget of the new government is just hours away from being presented by Arun Jaitley. The common man is geared up to talk figures and percentages, of deficits and inflations; all set to listen and comment about the growth of the world economy, the national gross income, the growth percentages per sector in India, and the changes that the budget will bring. I remember, as a little child every year on the day the budget was presented, I would come back from school and every television in the block would be tuned in on the same channel. I remember my dad calling home during lunch hours to ask about the highlights (this was the era before smart phones), and I remember the lengthy debates on the growth targets and prospects of the new financial year over dinner with family and friends. And I don’t think I would be much out of track to say that the situation is more or less the same in most Indian homes.

GDP growth

We start valuing GDP and the economy’s growth long before we have any formal knowledge about what GDP actually stands for, what it consists of or what its limitations are. And believe me, GDP has a lot of limitations, which any first year undergraduate economics student in India could elaborate on. But, it has been so ingrained into us that we are unable to even consider that growth in GDP is not the ultimate answer to all our economy’s problems. Sure, we applaud Bhutan for developing the happiness index, but we still claim that a “double digit” growth by the Modi government will solve all our problems.

Hence, it was very refreshing for me to attend a conference last September that spoke of the new, but rapidly spreading concept of “degrowth”. The Degrowth Movement, started as a social movement in France in 2001, and accepted as an academic research area in 2008, has been gaining impetus over the years. It was very inspirational to realize that many stalwarts of our society, from academia, civil society, the corporate world and media, are questioning the relevance of the power given to GDP.

However, it is essential to note that “degrowth” doesn’t imply “negative GDP”. Degrowth can be defined as reduction in the production and consumption processes to increase human well-being and reduce environmental and ecological degradation.

According to Dr. Vandana Shiva, an eminent environmental activist and recipient of the prestigious Sydney Peace Prize in 2010, GDP is a narrow concept which excludes the services of homemakers, and subsistence farmers, and does not take into account externalities.

Dr Jayati Ghosh, a renowned economist from JNU, stated that we must look for a new indicator that captures the policy maker’s attention, as an alternative to GDP, whose consumption and work patterns do not disrupt ecological systems. Ashish Kothari, founder of Kalpavriksh, discussed the concept of “radical ecological democracy”, which is a grassroots concept of local self-governance in villages, taking decisions based on social justice and equity.

As I heard more and more speakers put up alternative perspectives, I realized GDP growth is one of those terms that we all talk about, but don’t really seem to grasp the concept. In today’s world, where climate change cannot be disputed any longer and global warming is causing such natural disasters all over the world, do we really need to hunger for “double-digit” growth without looking at the consequences it will have on the environment and the ecology? Shouldn’t we instead be looking for alternatives that increase the well being of the society and result in holistic development of the citizens without compromising the planet? I live in the world’s most polluted city, which is also the heart of the world’s largest democracy, and I wonder why can’t we shift our focus to a more sustainable way of progress; what is the growth for anyway?

The post ‘Degrowth’ is Cool Because We Cannot Drink GDP Or Eat Money! appeared first and originally on Youth Ki Awaaz.


This Is Not The Bangladesh I Grew Up In – On The Brutal Killing Of Atheist Blogger Avijit Roy

$
0
0

By Sabhanaz Rashid Diya:

I am in shock since Avijit’s murder. A Bangladeshi engineer, writer and blogger, Avijit Roy was best known for his outspoken religious discourse, atheism and science. He founded the online platform Muktomona to encourage others to engage in liberal thinking and religious questioning. He lived in the US with his family and was traveling to Dhaka since two of his books were released at the Amar Ekushey Book Fair this February. Last week, assailants caught him and his wife on their way back from the fair and hacked him in public. His wife remains severely injured.

Avijit Roy killed

Hours after the incident, the Twitter handle Ansar Bangla 7 claimed responsibility for the murder on grounds of Avijit’s ‘blasphemous‘ writings against Islam.

In a similar incident in 2013, blogger Rajib Haider was brutally murdered by Islamic fundamentalists. The writer and poet Professor Humayun Azad was stabbed in 2004 just outside the Amar Ekushey Book Fair – he was widely known for his outspoken voice against religious fundamentalism. In each incident, a team of extreme Islamic militants by the names Ansar Bangla or Ansarullah Bangla claimed responsibility, and openly challenged anyone who offended their religion.

What is alarming in these murders from the past, and most recently Avijit’s, is the rise of Islamic fundamentalism in Bangladesh. Over the past decade, very little has changed – on the contrary, the gap between non-practicing believers or atheists and practicing Muslims have widened. I was mortified to see people across social media ‘celebrating’ Avijit’s murder; some proclaimed it to be ‘just’ and ‘about time.’ Being conservative is a personal choice, being outright vengeful is frightening.

How is hate born? Or, how does hate acclimatize? Does hate breed more hate? As I reflected on the string of incidents over recent years, I began to see how we have handed over a silver platter of hatred to our young generation – present and the next. In the Shahbagh Movement two years ago, I remembered how people ‘rejoiced’ the death penalties. The movement that originally began to seek justice for war criminals and in the process, separation of religion from mainstream politics, eventually transformed and (mis)interpreted itself as a stark separation between believers and nonbelievers. I remember my own involvement in it – furtively writing about how it is our only shot at freeing our judicial system from political expediency, how it is the beginning of freeing our country from religious fundamentalism, and how our politics can be removed of any one religious doctrine and become secular. In our desperate search for justice, we formulized exactly what that justice should be – and used our democratic rights to swallow down that one interpretation of it. Consequently, our victories came in the form of the very death penalties we chanted for, rather than an enlightened, apolitical, non-religious and people-backed judicial system.

Of course, the war criminals needed to be tried and nothing short of a death sentence would do. The people of Bangladesh understand how the courts work and do not trust it to deal with a crime of this magnitude justly. Yet, as we chanted and cheered – across the television screen and outside of the immediate movement, it became the death of secularism. While true secularism respects the differences around us and opposes fanaticism, this freshly perceived version of it shunned anyone who felt differently. We labeled every one who questioned our secularism, we poked fun at the pious, we cornered the believers. We began to suspect our friends who prayed five times a day, we began to suspect our friends who didn’t pray five times a day. We transformed whatever compassion remained into a vengeful match between two sides.

It is easy to pick a side and hate someone. The Bangladesh I grew up in did not preach hatred. Our fundamentalists and conservatives weren’t known for their tolerance towards atheism, but allowed the practicing and non-practicing ones to share a dialogue. The Bangladesh I live in now has no room for it. Avijit’s murder and subsequent reactions is a crude warning of how we have moved back into darkness. We are all equally afraid – atheist, conservative, pious, radical, liberal and non-practicing.

What I deeply admired about Avijit, and what endangers many today, was his erudite and constructive criticism of all religions – not just Islam – and his commitment to science. Avijit is the embodiment of you, I, and anyone who thinks differently. We respectfully agree and disagree – and we all are proponents of free and liberal thinking. When we fail to protect this virtue to free thinking, we become targets to one another. Avijit’s murder is a reminder of why we need to push for inclusiveness, why religious fanaticism must be eradicated, and why moderate Muslims in a Muslim-majority country like Bangladesh is needed to defeat the hostility, extremism, nonsense and misinterpretations around us. The darkness we live in can be overcome with enlightenment and compassion, not hate speech.

In solidarity, #IAmAvijit.

Sabhanaz Rashid Diya is a writer, journalist, activist, mother and social entrepreneur based in Dhaka, Bangladesh. She is a One Young World Ambassador, Asia 21 Fellow and Laureate Global Fellow, and has worked extensively to advance opportunities for young people and women through her organization, the One Degree Initiative Foundation. She founded the organization when she was 15 years old and since then, has mentored over 10,000 activists, change makers and social entrepreneurs to transform their ideas to actions. Her teaching interests are in leadership and design thinking.

She has written extensively for several national and international magazines, and has worked and written columns for the leading English daily in Bangladesh, The Daily Star for 14 years. She has authored two books and contributed to numerous anthologies.

The post This Is Not The Bangladesh I Grew Up In – On The Brutal Killing Of Atheist Blogger Avijit Roy appeared first and originally on Youth Ki Awaaz.

What Women Want: Celebrating Female Desire With ‘Clay Taurus’!

$
0
0

By Shruti Angiras:

Desire is a strong sense of longing – a longing for a touch, for a person, for an object. It is also a topic often hushed up and discussed behind closed doors. The concept of desire – specifically female desire – has sometimes perplexed, sometimes baffled, and often shocked the society. Some even believe it to be a myth. So, even though it is not talked about openly, let’s begin with acknowledging that it is a concept that has been at the helm of our actions, politics and civilizations.

Or lets go a step further – lets do something different today. Let’s talk about it.

While desire in itself does not have a place in our civil discourse, even more invisible is the idea of women’s desire. Desire for power, success, self-actualization, sex, control or acceptance. A group of women at the Clay Taurus Collective seek to articulate and emphasize the existence of the sexual beyond restricted structural binaries. The plan is to let desire out of the closet so that no individual is shamed into the damp depths of self-doubt for acknowledging this feeling. The idea is to celebrate the idea of desire – in any, every form.

Cri De FemmeAs a part of this initiative, The Clay Taurus Collective is hosting the The Cri De Femme festival, an Indo-French collaboration, in the Capital for the first time. The Cri de Femme International Poetry Festival (Grito deScream) is a worldwide cultural non-profit chain of events coordinated by the Movimiento Mujeres Poetas Internacional (MPI/ Women Poet’s International Movement), based in the Dominican Republic. India’s first festival is dedicated to the discussion of desire. To bring desire to the observation table. To observe it under the microscope. To dissect it. To interrogate it. To investigate it. To weave it into a thread and spin a yarn with it. To carve it into sculptures, and paint murals of it on the walls which will stand testimony to our civilizations.

This March, the focus for Women’s day will not be on the glorified projection of a woman who sacrifices her needs, but the woman who embraces her needs. Not the image of a woman as a submissive, all-giving nurturer who is a victim of this society, but as an individual who is unabashed in accepting her ‘desires’. The desire to do as she pleases, and feel as she pleases without being shamed for it.

On the 14th of March, ‘Kartoos – A spoken word poetry and rap event’ featuring artists from India, Nepal, Malaysia and the United States will commence this week-long celebration. This will be followed by an exhibition and a Sex-Positive spaces workshop with Jasmine George. The following day will be devoted to the screening of independent films by women filmmakers. The build-up will lead to a conference – Cri De Femme: The Becoming of a Sexual Feminine, Searching Desire and Pleasure. Finally, the week will conclude with a networking meet for participants, independent business owners and startups.

The Clay Taurus Collective is inviting you to join them in embracing what each woman knows, feels and questions.
Come join them for the week long festival from 14th March – 18th March’ 15. This is just the beginning, there is a long way to go from here.

The post What Women Want: Celebrating Female Desire With ‘Clay Taurus’! appeared first and originally on Youth Ki Awaaz.

The Selective Amnesia Of ‘India’s Daughter’– What The Film Conveniently Ignores!

$
0
0

By Shivani Nag:

I finally got around to watch the much talked about documentary ‘India’s Daughter‘, and have been mighty troubled since. A few days back, a video had gone viral on social media – the video had a stand up woman comedian taking dig at victim blaming and rape culture in our republic. Soon after, there were blogs, and comments, of angry men arguing that only some men rape and yet all men get needlessly vilified. Their argument was ‘all men are not rapists‘. What they missed was that all men may not be rapists, but the blatant misogyny at home and at workplaces (which may not always result in rape) nonetheless forces most women to live their lives as lesser citizens, having to choose between safety or freedom! The problem is not just rape, but the culture that makes rapes possible; a culture that forces women to live in fear of being raped, a culture that often enough legitimises the use of rape as a tool of showing women ‘their places‘ be it at home or on the road at night, a culture that refuses to grant women rights on their own bodies so much so that rape by husbands is not even considered rape, a culture that forces women’s bodies to become a repository of family, community, and even the nation’s honour so much so that while all of them try to keep women indoors to ‘protect their honour’, the ‘enemy’ outside remains determined to ‘rob’ it by dishonouring the body that carries all the honour. Leslee Udwin’s movie, unfortunately, fails to challenge any of these.

India's Daughter

Seeking to create a connect with the victim and disconnect with the perpetrator cannot be an effective tool for encouraging introspection of mindsets.

The documentary rests on the use of a tool that movies often rely on while trying to create an emotive impact. Most movies often make us identify with the protagonist, and create an emotional-intellectual distance between the audience and the villain. We identify and we ‘otherize’. We associate with the aspirations and qualities of the protagonist and dissociate with the actions and ideas of the villain – the terrain is black and white.

While talking to a friend (Ashis Roy) quite a few years back, when the Nithari case had just come to light, I remember that he was working on a write up on a psychoanalytic understanding of the case and in the course of discussing his analysis, we had begun questioning as to why did Surender Kohli fascinate us more than Pander. Was it because it was easier to ‘other’ him as not belonging to ‘us’ - brutal, beastly, monstrous? No, it isn’t about humanizing the perpetrator to evoke sympathy for them, but about humanizing the perpetrator so that it becomes easy for us to realize that in our thoughts, attitudes, and actions, we are sometimes not all that different from them. If we indeed want the mindsets to change, the challenge is to make people realize that these mindsets do not rest in the heads of some uncivilized beasts who, in the understanding of Sheila Dikshit, have grown up witnessing violence, and in the understanding of some others, have been denied an education. The challenge, as Javed Akhtar articulated in his speech in Rajya Sabha yesterday, is to force us to recognize that on most occasions we are not different in terms of our thinking, no matter how many educational degrees we acquire, or how sanitized our upbringing is (in terms of perhaps not having witnessed brute violence at homes).

So, how does Udwin respond to this challenge? On the basis of the trailers, one might be led into thinking that by getting Mukesh to talk about what was in his head, the documentary would perhaps make a whole lot of us uncomfortable when we find that we too have similar thoughts. But for that to happen, it was important to enable the audience to see the similarities between the convict’s mindset, and of course our own. The similarities could have been established by focusing less on the virtues of the victim or the extremely impoverished conditions of most of the convicts. However, what the movie (I am finding it difficult to use the word ‘documentary’ here) attempts is

1) To try and depict victim blaming as an act specific to the rapist or his legal defenders, and

2) To create an outrage over victim blaming not because victim blaming per say is problematic, but through building a narrative of the victim as one who did not deserve blaming because she had ‘proved’ herself to be the normative ‘good girl’.

Is victim blaming an act that only a rapist or his lawyers indulge in?

Let us begin with the first point. Following most incidents of rape, the statements of victim blaming that we get to hear are not from the rapists, but from their legal and other defenders – from our lawmakers, our police, and from the various ‘well wishers’ of mothers, sisters and daughters, determined to protect their dignity at any cost. Most of these statements are presented to us as being well meaning, and with an intention to prevent rape. In the movie, however, only a rape convict and his sensationalist lawyer are shown as mouthing these statements in their most crude form. The convict at one place says – “Boy and girl are not equal. Housework and housekeeping is for girls, not roaming in discos and bars at night doing wrong things, wearing wrong clothes. About 20% of girls are good”. When the convict says it in this form, and the convict alone is heard as saying it, does it allow us to relate to it to the famous “girls should not be adventurous” statement of Sheila Dikshit, who by the way in the same movie is instead shown as one trying to provide an insight into the understanding of a rapist! A woman who herself advised women to not be out during the night is shown as one having a profound understanding of how men who grow up witnessing violence and are denied education end up becoming rapists. Leslee Udwin interviews Sheila Dikshit, the Chief Minister of Delhi at the time this incident happened, not with an intention to ask her uncomfortable questions about her own questionable statements and brutal actions on the protesters, but as an informed member of the civil society who can help us understand the issue better! Thus, only a rapist has a mind of a rapist, and the rest of us are of course ‘civilized’, ‘well raised’ and ‘well educated’ individuals whose only reaction can be of an outrage and never of introspection.

How can introspection be encouraged when a divide is created between how Mukesh thinks and how Sheila Dikshit thinks, and where the audience have the easy option to identify with the latter, whose uncomfortable articulations have been cleverly ‘unselected’! There is no attempt in the movie to also show excerpts from the infamous statements of Abhijit Mukherjees, Mohan Bhagwats, Asarams, Adityanaths, Mamta Banerjees and Tapas Pals and create links between the mind of rapists and the ‘rape speech‘ that non rapists also often indulge in. Instead, the impoverished backgrounds of the convicts are brought into focus every now and then to create a comfortable distance between them and the audience of the film. Leslee Udwin’s admiration for the civilized and disdain for the non-civilized is evidenced not only in the movie but also in her subsequent blog on the NDTV website where she appeals to the civilized in us to come out in her support. Unfortunately, in doing so, she only tries to undo a core component of the women’s movement which is that rape and rape culture are deep seated parts of our civilized worlds and that most women encounter abuse and assaults not by the uncivilized demons outside, but the civilized men in their homes or work places. She conveniently forgets that the culture of ‘silence’ around incidents of rape is more a construction of the ‘civilized world’.

How exactly do we expect an insight into the mind of a rapist to help us?

As a student of Psychology, I have had a considerable exposure to researches examining the minds of rapists, serial killers, and sociopaths. The researches aiming to understand the minds of rapists tried to provide an understanding of what provokes a rapist, what deters a rapist, and go on to suggest what the potential victims could thereby do to prevent themselves from becoming the victims. The ‘potential rapists’ were never a concern. Figuring out the minds of rapists was important, not to examine what goes into making of a rapist and thereby preventing people from becoming rapists; rather, such researches were, and still are, mailed en mass to females to suggest them on how not to become a victim. The way the movie has been made does appear to follow a similar pattern. It does not in any way invite men to engage with the mind of Mukesh, instead I can almost imagine men in middle class, upper middle class, and rich homes say to the women related to them – “See we don’t have problem with short skirts or your going out at night, but you see all men don’t think like us… Now you know how a rapist thinks… it is up to you to decide whether you want to be safe or risk rape”! In one clever stroke it does not only provide the society with more justifications for imposing restriction on women’s freedoms, but also allows most of us to distance ourselves from the mindsets the movie claims to expose. There is a difference between enabling someone to reach a realization that ‘I too sometimes think like that’ and between allowing people to justify their similar thoughts in terms of “when I restrict my wife or sister or daughter from going out at night, it is not because I think women who go out at night deserved to be raped, but because I intend to protect them from men who think like that”.

Is victim blaming more problematic in case of some victims than in the case of others?

Coming to the second point, even as the movie tries to portray itself as one against victim blaming, it still feels the need to eulogize the victim. In order to have the audience cry out in outrage over the victim blaming that the convict and his lawyers indulge in, there is a juxtaposed narrative of the victim as a nice girl, who was studious, kind to the underprivileged, very particular in her selection of movies (preferring Life of Pi as opposed to action movies) and as one who had obtained the permission of her parents before going out with a male friend. There is no denying of these as facts, but why the need to constantly reiterate them? Do we need to know that a victim is a woman of virtues before we can feel justifiably outraged by acts of victim blaming? What if there was a victim who was not so studious, who preferred action movies, who perhaps was not as sensitive to the plight of the less privileged, or who had perhaps sneaked out of her house without informing her parents to watch a movie with a boyfriend? Would it then have become difficult for Leslee Udwin to make us feel angered at the statements of Mukesh and his lawyers? Is the purpose of the movie to make us feel angry with just Mukesh and his accomplices for having committed this particular act of brutality against a victim whom we can find no faults with, or to make us feel angry with misogyny that breeds rape culture in general?

Two of the core issues raised during the December 16 movement were

1) Rape culture was an outcome not merely of the acts of rapists but of all those who provide similar justifications for rape, and

2) Recognizing that all women had an unconditional right to not be raped. The movie, by failing to focus on rape speech that we encounter daily in our socio-political context, and by its determined efforts to extol the virtues of the victim, goes against the protest slogans that were raised during the movement.

Does the movie at all capture the essence of the movement it claims to have been inspired by?

Leslee Udwin, in her blog on NDTV website had written – “I came here out of love for India, and because India had led the world by example in the unprecedented protests of its courageous men and women who came out on the streets to fight for my rights as a woman”. I will not delve much into the loving India part, though to me it sounds irritatingly patronizing, but jump straight to the mention of the 16 December movement. Yes it is a movement that all of us who were, and continue to be a part of, are immensely proud of. Proud, because from exclusive demands for justice in one particular case, we saw the movement evolve and raise demand for ‘unconditional freedom for women’. We saw a shift in an understanding among a whole lot of us who were new to the women’s movement, when we learned to recognize rapes not as crimes of lust but of power, we talked not only of one victim but forced people to get used to hearing the names of Soni-Sori, Asiya, Nilofer, Manorama Devi, Meena Khalko, Tapasi Malik, women of Kunan Poshpora and Khairlanji and many others, every time ‘rape’ was mentioned we argued that justice be demanded for all, we fought to get the definition of rape broadened, in our slogans we challenged patriarchy, we demanded that we wanted azaadi not merely from rapists who are strangers, but from the dictates of the khaps and also our fathers, and brothers, and husbands, who seek to control our bodies and agency. Where is any of this in the movie barring a few glimpses of some slogans being raised and brief bytes from activists who were part of the movement? Where is the engagement with rape as a structural problem? And how does Ms. Udwin show her respect for the movement – by making the woman who let the water cannons loose on the protesters who were demanding accountability from her as one who can help us understand why rapes happen? By showing the policemen who routinely fail to file F.I.R.s in the cases of rapes, bully the victims into taking back complaints, and who lathicharged the protesters, as being most efficient in catching the culprits in record time! Forget about the larger context, where are the difficult questions pertaining to this particular case – why was there no patrolling by the police at night? Why was the bus allowed unchecked at the road, and why did it not come to the notice of the police stationed at various check posts? Why wasn’t any politician who indulged in defending rape culture brought to book? Why did Sheila Dikshit refuse to speak to the protestors? Why was the then Police Commissioner routinely allowed to get away with arguments that put onus of the safety on women? How did Ram Singh die in custody? How were such buses with suspicious track records allowed to be on roads in the first place? Where are any of these questions?

The sensitivity of the context in which the telecast is being sought.

Leslee Udwin writes – “This was an opportunity for India to continue to show the world how much has changed since this heinous crime; sadly, the FIR and the banning of the film will see India isolated in the eyes of the world.” Yes, the Justice Verma Committee Recommendations were an important outcome of the movement, but where does the movie really engage with the recommendations? There have been a few, but significant, changes in some of the laws since the movement, but at what point does the movie elaborate on those changes and tries to “educate” the masses about them? It shows none of the positives and also fails to show how patriarchy continues to assert itself through various ways. Where are the voices of women and their opinions on how their life has or has not changed? Where is the examination of structural changes in the institutions? The only trajectory that the movie does capture for the world to see is of an unrepentant culprit, and that is nothing new – here, or even in her part of the world. How exactly will violators repent if the core assumptions of patriarchy remain unchallenged? A number of activists have rightly pointed out the problem with the title of the film, which again reveals a deep disconnect with the movement. I wish to go a step further, my problem with the title is not only that it tries to force on us the exclusive identity as ‘daughters’ that we have been strongly trying to resist, but a more sinister attempt to disown the ‘sons’ who rape as demonic ‘others’ unrelated to us! The last part of the movie, where it almost appears to be upholding the sentiment that the juvenile offender got away with very little sentencing, and repeatedly focuses on slogans demanding hanging of the rapists, only confirms this attempt. Hang them because they are not us! While Mukesh’s own statement that death penalty will be more harmful for the future victims is pertinent, juxtaposing it with cries of ‘hang the rapist’ reduces the significance of this argument by positing it as a convict’s reactionary threat. A more nuanced engagement with this particular statement, by involving women’s rights activists, would have been more helpful.

Activists like Kavita Krishnan and Vrinda Grover have already directed our attention at the legal aspects and repercussions of screening the movie now when the appeal of the convict is about to come for hearing in the Supreme Court. Though ban is not what any of us seek, my last question to Ms. Udwin is that just as she implores us to “see the film and then come to a conclusion”, why such resistance to our pleas – that wait for the judicial process to be completed. We have no fear of the damage that the movie might cause to India’s image, but your ill-guided enthusiasm over your film should not be more important than a fair judicial process! Yes we understand that you spent two years away from home to make this film, but a judicial process must be allowed to continue and be completed as freely and fairly as possible!

Shivani Nag is Asst. Prof. Psychology, Ravenshaw University. She was active in the 16th December movement, and has been an activist with AISA during her student days.

The post The Selective Amnesia Of ‘India’s Daughter’ – What The Film Conveniently Ignores! appeared first and originally on Youth Ki Awaaz.

5 Common Internship Interview Questions And How To Answer Them

$
0
0

online internships

By Punyaslok Rath:

Summer internship season is here, and the race to seize the best opportunities has begun. An early window to the professional world, internships have always served as a great learning curve for students. Companies are realizing the importance of well-implemented internship programs and students, purported by their curriculum needs, are eager to grab a chance in the best of them. Not only is it a very worthy addition to the CV, it also gives invaluable experience. It goes a long way to prepare yourself for work in your chosen field or, at many times, helps in deciding what field you should choose.

online internships

With benefits galore, it has become very important to be adept in facing internship interviews. Most interviews revolve around the same set of questions. Let’s have a look at the most common ones, and how to answer them -

1. Tell us about yourself.

The employer wants to know more than what your resume already states. This question serves as an opener and the things you say will be used to constitute further questions. Try making a short and condensed career summary for an answer. For example, ‘About my education, I did my schooling from XYZ School in Dehradun and I’m currently pursuing B.Tech in Civil Engineering from ABC University. My hobbies are writing and reading novels.’

You could, in addition, briefly establish a connection between your educational background or your interests and the internship you are applying for: ‘I designed a website during my college-fest and started working as a freelancer after that. I have the know-how to take up this course development internship, and I expect to enrich my knowledge further through this program.’

2. Why do you want to intern here? What do you know about the company/industry?

The employer wants to know how much you have researched about the company, and how much you know of the related field. Say you’re interviewing for an internship with RBI, and if you can talk confidently about the recent financial trends and the decisions that RBI took - it will give a huge boost to your chances of getting in.

Highlight the aspects of the company that you considered when you decided to apply there. Absolutely avoid mentioning that you’re doing it only to fulfil your curriculum requirement. Instead, add what you expect to learn from your position and the company, and include a bit on how you could contribute. For example, ‘I have always wanted to own a start-up, and an internship with Internshala will help me take the initial step. I was always intrigued by the unique business model at work here and would love to learn all about it. I feel that I can prove to be an asset on the product-marketing front, given my previous internship experiences at ABC and XYZ.’

3. What makes you a good candidate for this internship?

There are two facets of this question – educational and personal.

Read the job description and make sure that you are a perfect fit for the position. Tie your educational background to the responsibilities that you will have to handle during. If you are applying for a cross-stream profile (mechanical guy applying for a coding internship), then bring forth and elaborate on the experiences that piqued your interest in the field related to the internship.

‘Even though I study mechanical engineering, being at the fore-front of the organizing teams for many events in my college has exposed me to the management field. I would like to do an MBA in the future and this program would help me garner relevant experience.’

Highlight your personal characteristics and reinforce them with examples. A lot of students use pointless platitudes as an answer, something they should never do. Saying ‘I am very innovative’ doesn't have the same effect as saying ‘I marketed my college fest for the first time through websites with target audience was a college-going crowd. That proved to be very effective.’

‘What are your strengths and weaknesses?’ or ‘Why should we hire you?’ – are some other questions that fall in this category. While highlighting your personal characteristics along with practical examples speaks well of your strengths, answering the weakness part can be tricky. Make sure that you do not project anything negative. Try voicing your weakness as a learning experience, as something that is a sort of a challenge, and how you overcame it.

‘Socializing used to be a challenge for me but I joined various clubs in college, and now I can safely say that I have overcome it.’

4. What are your future goals? or Where do you see yourself 5 years down the line?

Employers ask this to understand your aspirations better, to check if this internship aligns with your future goals and thus, it ensures that you will be motivated to learn.

‘After my Bachelors I am planning to do an MBA, and the experience of working at an NGO, where a lot of ground work is involved, will help me understand the nuances of working on the field better.’

A few employers use this question to ascertain whether or not you will continue with the company if offered a permanent position.

5. Do you have any questions for us?

Yes. Always say yes. Not asking a question will mean that either you have not researched about the position/company, or you are not very keen on the internship. After all, the interview is also meant to facilitate your learning of the company and its employees. Here are a few sample questions –

Can you give me an example of a project that I could be expected to work on?

What is the typical career path of the interns or the employees of this department?

What will be my day-to-day responsibilities?

Is there any sort of training that I will be receiving?

However, you need to avoid certain questions like –

What salary, vacation time and benefits do I get?

Did I get the internship?

Most of the internship interviews are telephonic, and now that you know the expected questions, you can write the answers and refer to them during the interview.

Sometimes though, there could be questions which can very well be described as ‘out-of-the-world’!

Read how to tackle the 8 types of weird interview questions here. If you have ever given an internship interview and have something more to add - we would love to hear about it in the comments below.

Note: This article was contributed by Internshala - India’s leading internship portal.

The post 5 Common Internship Interview Questions And How To Answer Them appeared first and originally on Youth Ki Awaaz.

How A Group Of Girls In Mumbai Is Breaking Menstrual Taboos And The Silence

$
0
0

menstruation

By Reetika Subramanian:

As the sound of the afternoon prayers begins to fade away, mats are rolled out in the inner room of Rehnuma Library Centre in Mumbra. The echoes of giggles from the room begin to get louder as young girls arrive at its doorstep.

While Zarin preps for asking “comfortable questions”, Khushbu sits in one corner, ready to take down observatory notes. Rehenaz, on the other hand, quickly scans through a pile of sheets that have notes on ‘taboos’, ‘menstrual healthcare’ and ‘myths’ scribbled on them. The young girls are gearing up for their first focus group discussion as a part of the Youth Movement for Active Citizenship (YMAC) fellowship program.

menstruation

The year-long project, which was initiated in July 2014, has motivated this group of women to undertake research on the existing knowledge and perceptions about menstruation amongst women in Mumbra. At present, they are in the dissemination phase of the project, wherein they are conducting awareness workshops based on their study. Their findings bear testimony to the silences fostered in the neighbourhood with regards to the monthly cycles. According to data collected by them, nearly 50% of the women surveyed were completely unaware of the very existence of menstrual cycles until they first spotted blood stains on their skirts as adolescents. “Some girls thought that they had accidentally cut themselves or ended up with a broken boil,” says Rehenaz. “There were a few others, who actually thought that they had cancer.”

“The women here are very afraid to express their pain and fears. They do not have adequate agency and spaces to do so,” says Zarin, adding, “menstruation, in particular, is considered to be a very contentious subject that is never spoken about.” The group of girls includes students, school drop-outs and employees alike. They decided to question and unearth these silences. Backed by skill-based training, the young cohort channelled their inner researchers to undertake literature review, field research, and evaluate their findings to publish in a bound report, which is now helping them in generating awareness.

Another interesting finding that further reiterates the silences in this suburb includes the number of women using cloth instead of sanitary napkins.

The reason?

They were afraid or uncomfortable to go to the chemist shop and ask the salesman for a packet of sanitary napkins. “Some of them revealed that they wrote it down on paper chits to show it to the shopkeeper. In certain cases, they would also return home if all the salespersons were men,” says Khushbu. Hence, they decided to work on the subject of taboos and health problems associated with menstruation drawing upon their own individual experiences.

“We are all expected to follow a certain diktat at home when it is that time of the month. We are told to stay away from pickles, potted plants, and not partake in household chores,” rues Rehenaz, a class 12 pass out. “However, most of us were unaware of the logical reasoning behind it. None of us had questioned - or for that matter - even discussed these beliefs,” she adds.

menstruation

As the clock begins to tick, a large group of girls begin to sit on the rolled out mats. These girls, who are affiliated to the Rehnuma Library Centre, are the chosen respondents for the Focus Group Discussion. “Since we share a rapport with the young girls affiliated with the centre, we felt that it would be easier for us to initiate a conversation with them on a subject that is silenced from everyday life,” says Lubna.

Seated in a semi-circle, the young female respondents are first asked about their understanding of menstruation. While some women feel awkward and continue to remain silent, a few begin to warm up to the discussion. “I get to know that my mother has got her monthly period only when she complains of stomach cramps and doesn’t chant her daily prayer,” says one of the girls seated in the corner. “We don’t really mention it to anyone,” adds another.

In the next few minutes, the decibel levels in the room soar.

“Is it true that the body produces chemicals that can cause pickles to get spoiled?”

“I get my period only once in three months. Is it normal?”

“Is it hygienic to use cloth instead of sanitary napkins?”

The fellows patiently respond to the queries or at least, share their own experiences with the young lot. “Make sure you use only sanitary napkins. Keep yourself well hydrated and eat nutritious food. In case of any irregularities, do visit a gynaecologist,” the young fellows explain from the knowledge that they have gained through the workshops, interviews, and literature they were provided as part of the program.

“Do not blindly follow these myths. Question them, and seek a logical reasoning behind them,” they echo.

The questions and personal experiences tone down the once audible silence in the room. The room, they hope, will soon reflect the world that lies outside its four walls.

Note: This post was originally published here.

The post How A Group Of Girls In Mumbai Is Breaking Menstrual Taboos And The Silence appeared first and originally on Youth Ki Awaaz.

Viewing all 243 articles
Browse latest View live


<script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596347.js" async> </script>