thesolar65
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This is a TV script which I saw in Yahoo : @levina @Parul
Indian tribe puts women in control | Watch the video - Screen India
SCRIPT: In this remote corner of India, women are in charge. Meghalaya state is home to the country's only matrilineal tradition, practised by more than a million members of the Khasi tribe. Only women can inherit family property, husbands move into their wives' homes and children must take their mother's last name. But now a men's rights group is fighting back, saying they want equal rights. SOUNDBITE 1 Keith Pariat (man), chairman, Syngkhong Rympei Thymmai (English, 19 sec): "The matrilineal system has been good for the women in the Khasi society, but it has been totally detrimental as far as the men in the Khasi society are concerned. It puts no responsibility on their shoulders so they tend to take life easy and they go into drugs and alcohol and that cuts their life short." The community's matrilineal traditions date back thousands of years. Its ancient rights are even guaranteed by India's constitution. SOUNDBITE 2 Patricia Mukhim (woman), editor, The Shillong Times (English, 14 sec): "In our society because girls are supposed to perpetuate the lineage so girls are more welcome to families. If a family, if a couple does not have a daughter, they are seen as very unfortunate." The tribe is an anomaly in the male-dominated country. Indian wives often face huge pressure to produce sons and female foeticide rates are high. The gang-rape of a female student in December in Delhi led to an outpouring of criticism of attitudes toward women. All reasons why Khasi women are reluctant to see their way of life change. SOUNDBITE 3 Pesundra Reslinkhoy (woman), (English, 9 sec): "I think it is a good tradition for Khasi, that all the power will stay with womens because it will avoid us from many evil things." Up until now, the men's rights group has only been able to attract a few thousand members. So the balance of power is unlikely to shift anytime soon. SHOTLIST: SHILLONG, INDIA. FEB 1-2, 2013, SOURCE: AFPTV - VAR of people walking along busy Shillong street - A woman walking along a street in Shillong - VAR of Keith Pariat, chairman, Syngkhong Rympei Thymmai, at home, with his wife and daughter - Keith Pariat and other activists at Syngkhong Rympei Thymmai (SRT) meeting SOUNDBITE 1 - VAR of men and women walking along busy Shillong street SOUNDBITE 2 NAWANSHAHR, INDIA, JULY 5, 2012, SOURCE: AFPTV -VAR of pregnant women waiting for check ups at a public hospital -CU oF pregnant women NEW DELHI, DEC 23, 2012, SOURCE: AFP - VAR of people shouting "we want justice" - People hold placards during a protest at India Gate SHILLONG, INDIA. FEB 1-2, 2013, SOURCE: AFPTV - People coming out of a church SOUNDBITE 3 - VAR of male activists during SRT meeting - Women walking along a street in Shillong /// -------------------------------------- AFP TEXT STORY: Women-India-rights-tradition,FEATURE Indian tribe puts women in control by Ammu Kannampilly SHILLONG, India, March 7, 2013 (AFP) - India's remote northeast is home to an ancient tribe whose high regard for women makes it a striking anomaly in a male-dominated country. But as the world marks International Women's Day this Friday, the region has become a staging ground for an unlikely battle in which men are trying to end a matrilineal tradition practised by more than a million people. The Khasi tribe in the picturesque state of Meghalaya places women at the centre of its society from the cradle to the grave. "Go to any hospital and stand outside the maternity wards and listen," says Keith Pariat, a men's rights activist. "If families have a boy, you will hear things like: 'oh okay, he'll do'. But if it's a girl then there is joy and applause." Pariat is the chairman of Syngkhong Rympei Thymmai (SRT), an organisation fighting to eradicate a tradition with tremendous staying power. According to Khasi tradition, the youngest daughter inherits all ancestral property, men are expected to move into their wives' homes after marriage and children must take their mother's family name. And, in a ruling which helps explain the grand welcome for female babies, all parents with ancestral property but no daughters are required to adopt a girl before they die, since they cannot leave the inheritance to their sons. The matrilineal system has endured for thousands of years here, but now activists like Pariat are determined to overthrow it. "When a man has to live in his mother-in-law's house, it tends to make him a little quiet," Pariat says. "You are just a breeding bull. No one is interested in hearing your views about anything, you have no say in any decision whatsoever." The 60-year-old businessman believes that the matrilineal system has been "totally detrimental" to Khasi men. "It puts no responsibility on their shoulders so they tend to take life easy and they go into drugs and alcohol and that cuts their life short," he told AFP in the state capital Shillong. It also makes them unappealing to Khasi women, who exercise their right to marry outside the community instead. Teibor Langkhongjee, a 41-year-old entrepreneur and SRT member, says the choice is easy to understand. "Khasi men don't have any security, they don't own land, they don't run the family business and, at the same time, they are almost good for nothing," he said. -- Uphill battle -- ------------------- A men's rights movement did emerge in the early 1960s but petered out after hundreds of Khasi women turned up at one of their meetings, armed with knives. SRT, founded in 1990, faces an uphill battle to overturn Khasi tradition, since India's constitution guarantees the tribal councils' right to set their own customary laws. The clash between clan rules and Indian law is a familiar one, with the judiciary often expected to step in when gender rights are at stake. In the past however, such conflicts have focused on expanding women's rights whether in matters of inheritance, dowry or alimony in the case of Hindu and Muslim families. Men's rights have never been the subject of debate. In Shillong, most women dismiss the suggestion that their society is biased. Although Khasi women are empowered to make their own decisions over marriage, money and other matters, political participation remains low, with women accounting for only four out of 60 state legislators. "The reason the property is left to the youngest daughter is because she has the responsibility to look after the parents until they die," said Patricia Mukhim, editor of The Shillong Times. "Parents feel like they can always depend on their girls." In a country where mothers often face huge pressure to give birth to sons, leading to a surge in selective abortions, Meghalaya has consistently boasted a healthy sex ratio. The state's sex ratio currently stands at about 1,035 females for every 1,050 men, higher than the global norm of 1,000 women for every 1,050 men. Misogyny remains widespread in many parts of India, where sex assaults are often dismissed as "eve-teasing" and victims can be blamed for attacks. The gang-rape of a female student in December on a bus in New Delhi fueled angry nationwide demonstrations. Pesundra Reslinkhoy, a 25-year-old nursery school teacher in Shillong, said she appreciated the matrilineal system all the more after the Delhi gang-rape. "I think it is a good tradition for Khasi, that all the power will stay with women because it will avoid us from many evil things," she said. The SRT has no plans to mount a legal challenge to the tribal customs, hoping instead that an informal campaign of brochure distribution and public meetings will convince more Khasis of the need for change. But there are few signs of the group's influence in the state's tradition-bound villages, suggesting that the balance of power is unlikely to shift anytime soon. "In most of Meghalaya, people only know the old ways and they like the old ways just fine," Mukhim said. END
Indian tribe puts women in control | Watch the video - Screen India
SCRIPT: In this remote corner of India, women are in charge. Meghalaya state is home to the country's only matrilineal tradition, practised by more than a million members of the Khasi tribe. Only women can inherit family property, husbands move into their wives' homes and children must take their mother's last name. But now a men's rights group is fighting back, saying they want equal rights. SOUNDBITE 1 Keith Pariat (man), chairman, Syngkhong Rympei Thymmai (English, 19 sec): "The matrilineal system has been good for the women in the Khasi society, but it has been totally detrimental as far as the men in the Khasi society are concerned. It puts no responsibility on their shoulders so they tend to take life easy and they go into drugs and alcohol and that cuts their life short." The community's matrilineal traditions date back thousands of years. Its ancient rights are even guaranteed by India's constitution. SOUNDBITE 2 Patricia Mukhim (woman), editor, The Shillong Times (English, 14 sec): "In our society because girls are supposed to perpetuate the lineage so girls are more welcome to families. If a family, if a couple does not have a daughter, they are seen as very unfortunate." The tribe is an anomaly in the male-dominated country. Indian wives often face huge pressure to produce sons and female foeticide rates are high. The gang-rape of a female student in December in Delhi led to an outpouring of criticism of attitudes toward women. All reasons why Khasi women are reluctant to see their way of life change. SOUNDBITE 3 Pesundra Reslinkhoy (woman), (English, 9 sec): "I think it is a good tradition for Khasi, that all the power will stay with womens because it will avoid us from many evil things." Up until now, the men's rights group has only been able to attract a few thousand members. So the balance of power is unlikely to shift anytime soon. SHOTLIST: SHILLONG, INDIA. FEB 1-2, 2013, SOURCE: AFPTV - VAR of people walking along busy Shillong street - A woman walking along a street in Shillong - VAR of Keith Pariat, chairman, Syngkhong Rympei Thymmai, at home, with his wife and daughter - Keith Pariat and other activists at Syngkhong Rympei Thymmai (SRT) meeting SOUNDBITE 1 - VAR of men and women walking along busy Shillong street SOUNDBITE 2 NAWANSHAHR, INDIA, JULY 5, 2012, SOURCE: AFPTV -VAR of pregnant women waiting for check ups at a public hospital -CU oF pregnant women NEW DELHI, DEC 23, 2012, SOURCE: AFP - VAR of people shouting "we want justice" - People hold placards during a protest at India Gate SHILLONG, INDIA. FEB 1-2, 2013, SOURCE: AFPTV - People coming out of a church SOUNDBITE 3 - VAR of male activists during SRT meeting - Women walking along a street in Shillong /// -------------------------------------- AFP TEXT STORY: Women-India-rights-tradition,FEATURE Indian tribe puts women in control by Ammu Kannampilly SHILLONG, India, March 7, 2013 (AFP) - India's remote northeast is home to an ancient tribe whose high regard for women makes it a striking anomaly in a male-dominated country. But as the world marks International Women's Day this Friday, the region has become a staging ground for an unlikely battle in which men are trying to end a matrilineal tradition practised by more than a million people. The Khasi tribe in the picturesque state of Meghalaya places women at the centre of its society from the cradle to the grave. "Go to any hospital and stand outside the maternity wards and listen," says Keith Pariat, a men's rights activist. "If families have a boy, you will hear things like: 'oh okay, he'll do'. But if it's a girl then there is joy and applause." Pariat is the chairman of Syngkhong Rympei Thymmai (SRT), an organisation fighting to eradicate a tradition with tremendous staying power. According to Khasi tradition, the youngest daughter inherits all ancestral property, men are expected to move into their wives' homes after marriage and children must take their mother's family name. And, in a ruling which helps explain the grand welcome for female babies, all parents with ancestral property but no daughters are required to adopt a girl before they die, since they cannot leave the inheritance to their sons. The matrilineal system has endured for thousands of years here, but now activists like Pariat are determined to overthrow it. "When a man has to live in his mother-in-law's house, it tends to make him a little quiet," Pariat says. "You are just a breeding bull. No one is interested in hearing your views about anything, you have no say in any decision whatsoever." The 60-year-old businessman believes that the matrilineal system has been "totally detrimental" to Khasi men. "It puts no responsibility on their shoulders so they tend to take life easy and they go into drugs and alcohol and that cuts their life short," he told AFP in the state capital Shillong. It also makes them unappealing to Khasi women, who exercise their right to marry outside the community instead. Teibor Langkhongjee, a 41-year-old entrepreneur and SRT member, says the choice is easy to understand. "Khasi men don't have any security, they don't own land, they don't run the family business and, at the same time, they are almost good for nothing," he said. -- Uphill battle -- ------------------- A men's rights movement did emerge in the early 1960s but petered out after hundreds of Khasi women turned up at one of their meetings, armed with knives. SRT, founded in 1990, faces an uphill battle to overturn Khasi tradition, since India's constitution guarantees the tribal councils' right to set their own customary laws. The clash between clan rules and Indian law is a familiar one, with the judiciary often expected to step in when gender rights are at stake. In the past however, such conflicts have focused on expanding women's rights whether in matters of inheritance, dowry or alimony in the case of Hindu and Muslim families. Men's rights have never been the subject of debate. In Shillong, most women dismiss the suggestion that their society is biased. Although Khasi women are empowered to make their own decisions over marriage, money and other matters, political participation remains low, with women accounting for only four out of 60 state legislators. "The reason the property is left to the youngest daughter is because she has the responsibility to look after the parents until they die," said Patricia Mukhim, editor of The Shillong Times. "Parents feel like they can always depend on their girls." In a country where mothers often face huge pressure to give birth to sons, leading to a surge in selective abortions, Meghalaya has consistently boasted a healthy sex ratio. The state's sex ratio currently stands at about 1,035 females for every 1,050 men, higher than the global norm of 1,000 women for every 1,050 men. Misogyny remains widespread in many parts of India, where sex assaults are often dismissed as "eve-teasing" and victims can be blamed for attacks. The gang-rape of a female student in December on a bus in New Delhi fueled angry nationwide demonstrations. Pesundra Reslinkhoy, a 25-year-old nursery school teacher in Shillong, said she appreciated the matrilineal system all the more after the Delhi gang-rape. "I think it is a good tradition for Khasi, that all the power will stay with women because it will avoid us from many evil things," she said. The SRT has no plans to mount a legal challenge to the tribal customs, hoping instead that an informal campaign of brochure distribution and public meetings will convince more Khasis of the need for change. But there are few signs of the group's influence in the state's tradition-bound villages, suggesting that the balance of power is unlikely to shift anytime soon. "In most of Meghalaya, people only know the old ways and they like the old ways just fine," Mukhim said. END