Friday, June 6, 2014

Rape and Caste in India

I imagine that many westerners who have just discovered India's huge rape problem must be a bit puzzled. Why does the land of Gandhi and yoga have so many rapes? This is not a random fact, as Amana Fontanella-Khan explains:
When a distressed father is reporting his daughter’s disappearance to a policeman in India, there are some questions he doesn’t want to hear. “What is your caste?” is one of them. Yet, the father, Sohan Lal, said this was the first thing the police asked him last Tuesday, when he begged them for help. After revealing his low-caste background as a Shakya, Mr. Lal said the officers mocked him and refused to lift a finger.

Hours later, Mr. Lal’s daughter, 12, and a female cousin, 14, were found hanging by their scarves from a mango tree in Katra Saadatganj, in the state of Uttar Pradesh. They had been raped. His daughter had last been seen with a group of brothers from the Yadav caste, which is the dominant caste in the village. . . .

For much of India’s history the lower castes, especially the Dalits (once known as untouchables), have been routinely raped by the landowning upper castes. Better legal protections, urbanization and social mobility have helped reduce caste-based discrimination, but not enough. Dalit women are still the most likely to be victims of gang rapes. An analysis of Uttar Pradesh’s crime statistics for 2007 by the People’s Union for Civil Liberties showed that 90 percent of rape victims in 2007 were Dalit women.
Rape has been used systematically as a tool of oppression by India's upper castes for centuries and probably longer. I very much doubt that it can be curtailed by police measures or feminist solidarity until caste prejudice is tackled head on.

2 comments:

Tushar Kumar said...

I am from India and you have argued the right point. I share the same thought but I would like to add a bit more on a more positive note.

Most of the police people or government officials who have the power of tackling such issues grew up in a different India. They grew up in such an India where lower caste people were still called "Untouchables" by majority of Indians.

I am not saying that the next generation will change all that but, in fact, India is getting to a point where people with new improved and open thinking are filling in the positions and thus changing the entire system.

The process takes some time and all that is required is some strict action. I feel sorry for everything bad that's happening in my country.

John said...

I hope your are right and India will continue to move away from caste prejudice. Certainly the Indians I have met in Britain and the U.S. are determined to change this.