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“She should just be silent”: the real roots of India’s r@pe culture

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Indian activists participate in a rally organized by "The Red Brigade — Bring Bangalore Back" to protest against the recent incidents of s2xual abuse, molestation, and r@pes against women in Bangalore on July 20, 2014.


Three years after a horrific gang r@pe in Delhi brought global attention to India's s2xual assault epidemic, a new documentary hasquotedone of the rapists saying something so inflammatory that it has provoked a whole new wave of outrage.

"A girl is far more responsible for r@pe than a boy," Mukesh Singh, one of the six rapists convicted in the 2012 attack, says in the documentary, because "a decent girl won't roam around at 9 o'clock at night."

"Housework and housekeeping is for girls," he claimed, "not roaming in discos and bars at night doing wrong things, wearing wrong clothes. About 20 percent of girls are good."

If women are not "good," he said, men have a right to "teach them a lesson" by raping them. And if that happens, the woman being r@ped has a responsibility to silently accept the assault. "When being r@ped, she shouldn't fight back. She should just be silent and allow the r@pe."

"A GIRL IS FAR MORE RESPONSIBLE FOR R@PE THAN A BOY"

What has made the comments so outrageous is not just the callousness and victim-blaming expressed by this one rapist, but the degree to which his comments reflect attitudes that are disturbingly common in India, and that are central to its climate of hostility toward women and, often, impunity for male violence against them.

The 2012 gang rapist's horrifying justification for his attack reflects a much deeper problem in India
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(DIBYANGSHU SARKAR/AFP/Getty Images)

Singh made the comments in the new documentary India's Daughter,which screened Wednesday night on theBBC. In the 2012 attack, Singh and five other men lured a young woman onto a bus and then gang-r@ped her, violating her so brutally that she later died from her injuries.

The 2012 Delhi gang r@pe was a high-profile instance of the brutal s3xual attacks that strike fear into Indian women — more recently, a woman in Rohtakwas violently gang-r@ped and beaten to death by eight men. In a 2011study, nearly one in four Indian men surveyed admitted to committing r@pe — by far the highest of any country included in the sample.

"WHEN BEING R@PED, SHE SHOULDN'T FIGHT BACK. SHE SHOULD JUST BE SILENT AND ALLOW THE R@PE."

Driving this problem is a widespread view among many tradition-minded Indians that women must adhere to certain conservative social norms, and that r@pes are the fault of "bad" women who violate those norms.

At the same time, culturally modernizing forces are leading more Indian women to behave in ways that traditionalist society deems transgressive — dating, delaying marriage, pursuing careers — thus making them "deserving" of r@pe. Not only are victims blamed and rapists forgiven, but aspects of India's legal system and police also support this view of r@pe, which for traditionalists is all about enforcing their demand that women adhere to their "proper" role in the traditional family structure, which just happens to mean subjugation.

The documentary — and India's decision to ban it — shows that the issues raised in 2012 are still very much alive
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A demonstration in Rohtak, India, on February 8, 2015, to protest police inaction after the r@pe and murder of a mentally challenged woman, whose body was found stuffed with stones and missing some organs. (Manoj Dhaka/Hindustan Times via Getty Images)

In the documentary, Singh, who was sentenced to death for his role in the crime, shows no remorse. He explains that the victim's death was her own fault: that if she had simply silently acquiesced to the r@pe, the men would have "dropped her off after doing her."

India's government has nowbannedthe documentary, arguing that it could provoke "public disorder," which suggests that officials may fear a resurgence of the massive protests that occurred in 2012 and 2013 in response to the attack. Their apprehension is understandable: s3xual assault is a serious problem in India, and outrage over both that problem and the failure to address it is still high.

IF WOMEN ARE NOT "GOOD," HE SAID, MEN HAVE A RIGHT TO "TEACH THEM A LESSON" BY RAPING THEM

S3xual assault has become a flashpoint in a much deeper political dispute over the ways in which Indian culture is changing as the country becomes more urban and less traditional. A sort of culture war has emerged. One aspect of that war: sxual assault has at times become a weapon used to police Indian women's adherence to traditional social rules and, by extension, society's adherence to traditional values. That has come with disturbingly institutionalized victim-blaming that, along with impunity for perpetrators, allows a culture of sxual assault to flourish.

Singh's comments offer a fairly precise summary of the traditionalist logic — by no means unique to India — that insists sxual assault is the result of women transgressing traditional norms of behavior. That attitude doesn't just blame women for rapists' violence against them. Its logic leads to the conclusion that women must avoid public life, and therefore abandon any prospect of economic or social empowerment.

Indian writerSalil Tripathiargues in Mintthat Singh's statements highlight the true discourse about r@pe in India (and, he points out, in many other countries, as well): "it is not about s3x; it is about control, power, and violence." That helps explain why Singh's interview has provoked such a strong response: his comments perfectly capture the logic of that argument — one that many Indian women are desperately fighting against.

Why some in India see r@pe as permissible
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Indian journalists protest in Ahmedabad in 2013 after the gang-r@pe of a female colleague in Mumbai. (SAM PANTHAKY/AFP/Getty Images)

Sxual assault has become a point of major political conflict between India’s growing urban, progressive middle class, and the traditionalists — whose base skews older and more rural — who still control most state institutions.

This issue is just one in a larger culture war over India's social and political transformation. It's a transformation that many traditionalists bitterly oppose, so in many ways the fight over sxual assault is also a fight over how traditional Indian society will remain.

India's traditionalists tend to view r@pe as a matter of collective honor and morality. To them, decisions about women’s sxual relationships are to be made by parents, when they select their daughters’ husbands, and then by husbands after marriage. A woman’s only legitimate sxual decision, then, is to obey her family.

"IT IS NOT ABOUT S3X; IT IS ABOUT CONTROL, POWER, AND VIOLENCE"

In that view, r@pe is the result of transgressive behavior on the part of the victim — often due to the pernicious temptations ofmodern life— by placing herself in a situation where she was able to interact with men outside the supervision of her elders. In this view, r@pe can be permissible and rapists innocent of real wrongdoing, just as Mukesh Singh claims in the new documentary. Indeed, under that logic, r@pe can be seen as serving an important social role: it punishes women for "bad" behavior and discourages other women who might be considering it.

And yet as India becomes a more urban, better-educated, and wealthier country, more women are embracing freedoms that look like "bad behavior" to traditionalists. That includes delaying marriage to pursue higher education, working outside the home, and socializing publicly with men outside their families. To traditionalists, that behavior is threatening to the social order they prize, in which women primarily restrict their lives to the private sphere and only socialize according to their families' direction.

Enforcing "traditional" social roles often means blaming victims and forgiving rapists
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Demonstrators light candles that spell "we want justice" during a 2014 protest to mark the second anniversary of the Delhi r@pe. (SAJJAD HUSSAIN/AFP/Getty Images)

It would seem like an obvious point that r@pe should be prevented by punishing rapists and making India safer for women. But traditionalists tend to see policies designed to make public life safer for women as more trouble than they're worth, because they would erode the social order that is to them central to the entire issue.

Why go through the bother of changing society to accommodate women’s increased participation in it, if you think their increased participation is a bad thing? Understanding that view is crucial to understanding why rapists often enjoy such impunity.

That's why traditionalists tend to argue that the right response to r@pe is to restrict women's freedom, for example by forbidding them from the social spaces that traditionalists believe lead to r@pe. Often, this means preventing women and girls from participating in public life, especially if they are not supervised by elders who can ensure their "proper" behavior. By shifting the responsibility to women, this implies that the victims — and not the rapists — are at fault for r@pe.

For instance, in 2012, an organization of village councils in the state of Haryanacalledfor girls to be married before the age of 18 in order to prevent r@pes, which theyattributedto the early sxualization of girls who watch "vulgarity shown in TV and cinema."

Mobile phones are also viewed as sources of moral danger. The leader of a khap panchayat (village council) in Haryanaexplainedto the New York Times that "the mobile plays a main role," in sxual assaults because "a girl sits on a bus, she calls a male friend, asks him to put money on her mobile. Is he going to put money on her mobile for free? No. He will meet her at a certain place, with five of his friends, and they will call it r@pe."

"JUST BECAUSE INDIA ACHIEVED FREEDOM AT MIDNIGHT DOES NOT MEAN THAT WOMEN CAN VENTURE OUT AFTER DARK"

In Bhopal,a mobile police squadnamed the "Nirbhaya unit," after the Delhi r@pe victim, has beencriticizedfor policing morality in the name of preventing sxual assault. It reportedly targets young women and couples wearing "fashionable clothes," meting out vigilante punishments including slaps and forced sit-ups in response to their perceived transgressions.

Politicians, male and female, offer similar views. Asha Mirje, a Nationalist Congress Party leader in western Maharashtra state,claimedin January 2014 that r@pes take place "because of a woman's clothes, her behavior, and her presence at inappropriate places."

The Congress Party’s leader in the state of Andhra Pradeshcriticizedthe Delhi r@pe victim for going out at night: "Just because India achieved freedom at midnight does not mean that women can venture out after dark" — a slightly more poetic version of the sentiment Mukesh Singh espoused in the more recent documentary.

Attitudes toward gender and r@pe have created a "subculture of oppression"
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Indian students at a December 2014 protest in Mumbaihold placards with messages about how sxual violence affects their daily lives. (INDRANIL MUKHERJEE/AFP/Getty Images)

In response to the 2012 Delhi r@pe, India’s central government created theVerma Commission, a three-person committee chaired by former Supreme Court chief justice J.S. Verma, to investigate ways in which India’s laws should be improved in order to better combat sxual assault.

Theirreportlooked at more than just laws: it found that police in India had created a "subculture of oppression" against r@pe victims.

Anecdotal evidence bears that out. A 2012investigationby the magazine Tehelka revealed a widespread belief among police officers that "genuine r@pe victims never approach the police and those who do are basically extortionists or have loose moral values."

THE REPORT FOUND THAT POLICE IN INDIA HAD CREATED A "SUBCULTURE OF OPPRESSION" AGAINST R@PE VICTIMS

Several officers asserted that if a woman consented to s3x with one man, she could not object if several of his friends "joined in."

And in another particularly egregious case, police in Kolkata tried tosteal the corpseof a young woman who had allegedly been gang-r@ped and murdered, apparently in order to destroy evidence of the r@pe, which had proven embarrassing to them after the victim’s murder prompted an outcry. They alsoaccusedthe victim of being a prostitute.

India has tried to reform some laws that reinforce the problem, but that alone won't solve it
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Women stage a protest outside of Delhi police headquarters following the r@pe of a woman by a taxi driver in December 2014. (Arvind Yadav/Hindustan Times via Getty Images)

After the 2012 Delhi gang r@pe, when mass protests gathered in 2012 and 2013 over India's problems with sxual assault and impunity, one issue that drew national attention were laws that encoded these destructive social norms. For example, evidence laws permitted defense lawyers to introduce the victim's sxual history as evidence of her "character."

Many of the Verma Commission’s recommendations to address this wereadoptedinto law, including amendments to the rules of evidence to prevent victims from being questioned about their previous sxual histories.

However, several of the Commission’s recommendations were rejected, including, most important, its proposed prohibition on marital r@pe.

The parliamentary panel that reviewed the proposed amendmentargued thatcriminalizing marital r@pe "has the potential of destroying the institution of marriage," and that "if the marital r@ape is brought under the law, the entire family system will be under great stress." (Which, in fairness, is probably true if the "family system" in question is based on women's subjugation.)

As a result, it is still legal in India for a man to r@pe his wife, as long as she’s at least 16 years old. That’s a particularly chilling rule given that47 percentof Indian wives were married before they turned 18 — meaning that their husbands were legally permitted to force them into s3x before they had even reached adulthood.

That law, and the political support for maintaining it, is just one example of the culture of victim-blaming and impunity that remains, and why its root causes go much deeper than legislation.

@jamahir
 
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