Wednesday, 5 December 2012

Speaking Up: You are not allowed to stare!


Open any newspaper in today’s age and time, a constant report which always resides is Crime against Women. Naming them will be disturbing because the human mind has a habit of visualizing whatever it reads hence I will save you the discomfort. Being a media student I have to read several newspapers each day. And like a ritual I see these reports sitting in the middle pages of the papers staring me in the face and screaming ‘this space is mine, I will never leave’.
But today something happened of which I am very proud of. Girls all around Bombay and other cities either live in flats or as paying guests. As me and my friends are also from outside we reside in a PG. There are five to six guards who sit outside our block and building guarding the compound. There were several instances of these guards trying to misbehave with me and my friends by passing sidey remarks, singing songs when we pass, laughing after we cross them and in one totally shameful incident pushing each other on us!  Preposterous.
While returning from the gym today these guards again looked at me and passed comments. I told and my friends and we paraded right in the middle of their animated conversation and asked for their master. As soon as we started to raise our volume their head approached us asked us our grievance. We related the whole episode. He scolded the guard in question and asked him to be in his limits. He also promised that an incident like this will not repeat in the future.
Though in the end he remarked that in all the five years that that respective guard was in duty they did not receive a single complaint. And our only response was that ‘there are girls who will bear the injustice and keep quiet and there are some who will stand and speak, why speak, shout about it and say that this is not appropriate behaviour’.
Every girl living alone or even with their family should speak up about the injustice happening to them. Staring and passing comments is ethically wrong and moreover lowers ones self esteem. 


Unfortunately in some cases speaking up defeats its purpose. The purpose being to acknowledge the perpetrators that what they are doing is morally wrong. One example totally gone wrong was the Amboli incident where two youths, Keenan Santos and Reuben Fernandes lost their lives when they stood up against such perpetrators. Another such incident happened recently, on 4th December 2012, in Dombivali where Santosh Vicchivora was allegedly stabbed by a group of men. He was accompanied by a female friend and a group of men passed lewd comments, he turned aggressive and eventually paid for his valour by surrendering his life. He was the only breadwinner of his family.
An incident of this nature, happening for the second time, speaks a lot about the mental attitude of a section of our society. Till what extent do women have to pay the price for such behaviour? And the more substantial question remains: What price do we have to pay for Speaking Up?

Nishtha Juneja

Photo Courtesy:
1)http://othersociologist.files.wordpress.com/2011/12/eve-teasing.jpg?w=529
2)http://behance.vo.llnwd.net/profiles16/965897/projects/3544935/c252302d6bf26d745924db20c390bb0d.png



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