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Parents murder Delhi University student: So much for educating the girl child

thesolar65

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Bhavna was a 21-year old, studying Sanskrit at Venkateswara College in South Delhi. She fell in love with Abhishek, a young assistant programmer at the Rashtrapati Bhawan, also doing his BA in computer applications. They dreamed of graduating, landing great jobs and getting married. They dreamed the new Indian dream, much as countless young people across this nation.

Except there was this one little catch, as Abhishek explains it to Times of India: "She often told me that her father would never allow her to marry a Punjabi but I used to assure her that we will find a way. We did not want to shock them which was why we had told them about our friendship and she had also conveyed her feelings to her mother. However, they snubbed us saying it was imposible."

For this one indiscretion, Bhavna was allegedly strangled by her middle class parents, Savitri and Jagmohan -- a middle class property dealer, described as a "strict but harmless man" with "strong views about inter-caste marriages and community prestige" by his neighbours.

This is not a khap killing in some remote village. This is middle class Delhi.

"The dignity of a woman is our collective responsibility. The main issue is the education of the girl child. By doing so, the possibility of empowerment of women will increase," said Prime Minister Narendra Modi in his Independence Day speech.

Yes, we must all educate the girl child. But that begs the bigger question: Who will educate her family?

As Malala's stunning popularity demonstrates, sending girls to school seems like a no-brainer. Education is the ladder of opportunity, more so in patriarchical, developing nations where it offers precious upward mobility within an entrenched hierarchy. But with opportunity comes freedom, or at least, the desire for it. When young girls leave the house to study, learn to navigate the world outside, they become independent, more willing to make their own choices, without deference to the tradition that would have kept them at home.

And therein lies the rub. Parents are willing to educate their daughters, but certainly not emancipate them. As was the case with Deepti Chikara, the 26-year old primary schoolteacher in Outer Delhi who was also strangled by her mother, brother and uncle because she wanted to marry an engineer from another caste.

In our cultural vocabulary, education is reduced to a handy tool of economic advancement. Achha job milega, paisa milega. Maybe even achha var (bridegroom) milega, given that a padhi-likhi wife is a desired commodity on the marriage market these days. But god forbid if 12 years of schooling or a college degree open her mind and the doors to a wider world. We will have no truck with that kind of schooling.

Our version of education doesn't broaden the mind, but sticks to its assigned job, i.e. fatten the wallet. This price of this debased definition is made painfully clear by the likes of this young man who said of the Ashok Vihar honour killings, "We are educated people... this is the right thing to do, society will go for a toss otherwise."

Young journalist Nirupama Pathak's relatives were educated people too. Father worked at a bank, brothers held doctorate degrees, and yet her decision to marry outside her caste evoked immediate consequences. While it remains unclear four years after her death whether she was driven to suicide or killed, what is unmistakeable is her family's outrage at her presumption.

They should have known better, except they didn't. In a letter to his daughter, reports the New York Times, he "acknowledged that such marriages were allowed under India’s Constitution, but argued that the Constitution had existed for only decades while Hindu religious beliefs dated back thousands of years."

It is, of course, these age-old beliefs (pick your religion) that tell a woman to remain in her place, the Constitution or college degree be damned. Contrary to what the Prime Minister desired, many parents send their girls to school praying that the experience will not teach her to think for herself, will not encourage her to question that hallowed tradition, will not lead to that much-touted empowerment. As it turns out, nice middle Delhi parents are not all that different from the Taliban. Sure, we allow our daughters to go to schools. But we most certainly don't want them to learn.

@levina @DRAY @Sidak @jbgt90 @Dash @desert warrior @scorpionx @anant_s @SpArK This news made me feel depressed the entire day!!:hitwall::( What do the parents think when they do these kinds of things? I shudder to think how can a parent strangle their own child? Just think of her childhood days when you pamper/coax your child!! No trolling please, because these things happen all over the subcontinent!!
 
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Being a father of a lovely girl, i know how great the honor is to have a daughter.
Unfortunately even with education and economic well being, people still live in medieval sick mindset. What is most disturbing about the story is that the people involved are urban educated people who are supposed to have a rational thought on these facets of life.
Now i can't speak on state of affairs Pan India but looks like States of Haryana and Western UP, a lot of people still suffer from this mentality of treating daughters as a material thing.
Honestly what difference is their between people like these and Taliban, we love to hate.
Sad that an innocent precious life is lost. Morons like these don't deserve to have a girl child :mad:
 
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Being a father of a lovely girl, i know how great the honor is to have a daughter.
Unfortunately even with education and economic well being, people still live in medieval sick mindset. What is most disturbing about the story is that the people involved are urban educated people who are supposed to have a rational thought on these facets of life.
Now i can't speak on state of affairs Pan India but looks like States of Haryana and Western UP, a lot of people still suffer from this mentality of treating daughters as a material thing.
Honestly what difference is their between people like these and Taliban, we love to hate.
Sad that an innocent precious life is lost. Morons like these don't deserve to have a girl child :mad:
North Indian Feudal mentality. :(
 
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I 've yet to understand how can caste/religion and family honor be more important than your own child's life.

Somehow (unfortunately) it is. People often tend to put their (False) honor beyond anything. I've also seen cases where a boy has married a girl from different caste only to find both of them getting denounced from society and parents disowning their own children. How much crazier can it get?
 
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Nothing to do with educating girl child.

Parents of girl from OBC yadava caste and parents of boys from khatri caste.

So caste based violence. Seems girl's family is village-type backward feudal. As story says its completely their fault.

Sad that youngsters these days suffer due to caste based thinking of their parents.
 
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North Indian Feudal mentality. :(
I won't generalize, but atleast in a lot of parts of Western UP, haryana, some parts of Punjab and Rajasthan it is true. Some reasons have to do be historical and old traditions still being followed and some have to do with lack of education and inability of people to accept changes.
 
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Bhavna was a 21-year old, studying Sanskrit at Venkateswara College in South Delhi. She fell in love with Abhishek, a young assistant programmer at the Rashtrapati Bhawan, also doing his BA in computer applications. They dreamed of graduating, landing great jobs and getting married. They dreamed the new Indian dream, much as countless young people across this nation.

Except there was this one little catch, as Abhishek explains it to Times of India: "She often told me that her father would never allow her to marry a Punjabi but I used to assure her that we will find a way. We did not want to shock them which was why we had told them about our friendship and she had also conveyed her feelings to her mother. However, they snubbed us saying it was imposible."

For this one indiscretion, Bhavna was allegedly strangled by her middle class parents, Savitri and Jagmohan -- a middle class property dealer, described as a "strict but harmless man" with "strong views about inter-caste marriages and community prestige" by his neighbours.

This is not a khap killing in some remote village. This is middle class Delhi.

"The dignity of a woman is our collective responsibility. The main issue is the education of the girl child. By doing so, the possibility of empowerment of women will increase," said Prime Minister Narendra Modi in his Independence Day speech.

Yes, we must all educate the girl child. But that begs the bigger question: Who will educate her family?

As Malala's stunning popularity demonstrates, sending girls to school seems like a no-brainer. Education is the ladder of opportunity, more so in patriarchical, developing nations where it offers precious upward mobility within an entrenched hierarchy. But with opportunity comes freedom, or at least, the desire for it. When young girls leave the house to study, learn to navigate the world outside, they become independent, more willing to make their own choices, without deference to the tradition that would have kept them at home.

And therein lies the rub. Parents are willing to educate their daughters, but certainly not emancipate them. As was the case with Deepti Chikara, the 26-year old primary schoolteacher in Outer Delhi who was also strangled by her mother, brother and uncle because she wanted to marry an engineer from another caste.

In our cultural vocabulary, education is reduced to a handy tool of economic advancement. Achha job milega, paisa milega. Maybe even achha var (bridegroom) milega, given that a padhi-likhi wife is a desired commodity on the marriage market these days. But god forbid if 12 years of schooling or a college degree open her mind and the doors to a wider world. We will have no truck with that kind of schooling.

Our version of education doesn't broaden the mind, but sticks to its assigned job, i.e. fatten the wallet. This price of this debased definition is made painfully clear by the likes of this young man who said of the Ashok Vihar honour killings, "We are educated people... this is the right thing to do, society will go for a toss otherwise."

Young journalist Nirupama Pathak's relatives were educated people too. Father worked at a bank, brothers held doctorate degrees, and yet her decision to marry outside her caste evoked immediate consequences. While it remains unclear four years after her death whether she was driven to suicide or killed, what is unmistakeable is her family's outrage at her presumption.

They should have known better, except they didn't. In a letter to his daughter, reports the New York Times, he "acknowledged that such marriages were allowed under India’s Constitution, but argued that the Constitution had existed for only decades while Hindu religious beliefs dated back thousands of years."

It is, of course, these age-old beliefs (pick your religion) that tell a woman to remain in her place, the Constitution or college degree be damned. Contrary to what the Prime Minister desired, many parents send their girls to school praying that the experience will not teach her to think for herself, will not encourage her to question that hallowed tradition, will not lead to that much-touted empowerment. As it turns out, nice middle Delhi parents are not all that different from the Taliban. Sure, we allow our daughters to go to schools. But we most certainly don't want them to learn.

@levina @DRAY @Sidak @jbgt90 @Dash @desert warrior @scorpionx @anant_s @SpArK This news made me feel depressed the entire day!!:hitwall::( What do the parents think when they do these kinds of things? I shudder to think how can a parent strangle their own child? Just think of her childhood days when you pamper/coax your child!! No trolling please, because these things happen all over the subcontinent!!
Sorry but this is not related to education first of all because her parents were not stopping her from getting education or some one else as for issue of marrying other group or caste many educated people have issues too. That is an old issue but this is completely different issue.
 
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Sorry but this is not related to education first of all because her parents were not stopping her from getting education or some one else as for issue of marrying other group or caste many educated people have issues too. That is an old issue but this is completely different issue.
That's all you saw wrong in this whole article???
 
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A lady is killed yes sad but reporter should tell the right thing not mix up to sell his story
From the article -
"Yes, we must all educate the girl child. But that begs the bigger question: Who will educate her family?

As Malala's stunning popularity demonstrates, sending girls to school seems like a no-brainer. Education is the ladder of opportunity, more so in patriarchical, developing nations where it offers precious upward mobility within an entrenched hierarchy. But with opportunity comes freedom, or at least, the desire for it. When young girls leave the house to study, learn to navigate the world outside, they become independent, more willing to make their own choices, without deference to the tradition that would have kept them at home.

And therein lies the rub. Parents are willing to educate their daughters, but certainly not emancipate them."
 
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Here is the distribution of gender ratio in India as per last census. No wonder states like Haryana & Punjab are laggards. selective abortion and gender determination are major contributors to this sorry state of affairs and statistics.

india-map.jpg


Now the literacy rate pan India
literacyrate.jpg



& Female literacy rates. Leaving some urban areas, overall rates are quite poor. now it is understandable in backward rural areas, where there are problems of infra-structure, several economically developed states too have a dismal record. Needless to say the role of women in these areas in businesses and other walks of society is very limited. Also there is a contrast in average literacy rate and that of women.
femaleliteracydistrictwise.jpg


Finally, the states having societies that have historically given women a greater role do have some of the best literacy rates, Kerala leading from the front. I hope other states too emulate the figures.
y_Rates.png
 
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Sad Incident, but changing a society and that too of 1.2 billion people takes its own time. 1-2 generation life time is nothing for a society to show the tendency towards change leave apart the change itself. At-least some part of the society is changing that will push or force other parts of the society to accept the change or think about accepting the change as well.

Changing a mindset is like changing generations all together as with the passage of time, each generation adopt a little change from the previous one and after few iteration a new generation emerges whose mind set is totally different than from its fore-fathers few generations ago.

At-least number of these deaths are decreasing ( if we go for actual numbers, rather than official reported which is increasing due to more media presence). In percentage terms this is actually a downward term if we take into account number of inter caste or inter religion marriages being accepted by various section of the society where it was previous considered as outrageous thing to even think about.

Condolences to the family and Rest in Peace to the departed souls.
 
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