A
couple of years ago, three of my girlfriends had come over to my
place for a sleepover. After chatting late into the night, we were
looking forward to waking up leisurely. But around 6 in the morning,
I was rudely woken up by the sound of someone banging at the door and
shouting. When I came out of my room, my grandmother told me that
earlier that morning when she had gone to keep the trash out, she saw
someone sleeping with his shirt off outside the door. She took him to
be some drunkard who would wake up and walk away in some time.
Apart
from what she told me, I knew nothing about this man who was
violently banging at my door and shouting loud enough for the entire
neighbourhood to hear. I did not know who he was, what he wanted, or
whether he was armed. I called the police immediately, along with my
driving trainer who lived not too far off. After over an hour of this
high drama when all of us in the house were extremely tense, the
banging stopped. I opened my wooden door (beyond which was a grilled,
iron one) and there was nobody outside. I also contacted my
neighbours to ask if they knew anything. Some smirked and said they
thought he might have been a "friend" of mine. Another said
he had seen him get into an auto, and went to follow him.
By
the time the police arrived, having taken their own sweet time as
usual, the neighbour had found the guy. Two of my friends stayed with
my grandmother at home, and I and another friend went to the police
station. We found out that the guy was someone on the run after
having crashed his car into an auto in his inebriated state. The
meaning of being "wasted" had never struck me so literally;
he was so drunk that he had come to my house, taking it to be his
own, and was banging to be let in. Even when he became conscious he
remained impervious to his surroundings. When he finally came to his
senses, he took an auto and ran again.
At
the police station, looking at the sunk-in front of his tall and
shiny, now squashed car, the police started tch-tching about what a
pity it was that such a thing should happen to an "achche ghar
ka ladka", "a 'boy' (who was really a full grown man
and not a juvenile delinquent) from a good home". Upon seeing me
there, the culprit sarcastically said, "Here comes the harassed
lady." And his friend started explaining why the guy was
deserving of my sympathy, immediately resorting to his friend's
sarcasm when I refused to indulge him. My neighbour, who had found
the guy, called up my sister saying she should ask me not to file a
complaint (my sister said I should go ahead and do whatever I
wanted), and the police started asking if I really wanted to get into
the "chakkar", the hassle of it all. At this, I lost it and told
the police that this was exactly the kind of response that tells men
they can get away with anything and discourages women from
complaining. They finally registered my complaint, though nothing
came of it eventually, and of course no thoughts were spared for the
auto driver whose vehicle had been badly hit in the accident.
I
was reminded of this incident when reading about the Standford rape
case because in a case of sexual harassment, it is easy for people to
completely deflect attention from the crime to questions that put the
survivor in the dock. But the truth is that impunity to men is not
restricted to sexual offences. The "boys will be boys"
culture extends to condoning each crime they commit (unless, maybe,
they come from an underprivileged background) and anyone who dares to
condemn it is seen as cruelly destroying the golden future these
"boys" were born to have.
In
my case, while the man's glaring action in the present was getting
him everyone's sympathies, my "history" of a woman living
alone in a neighbourhood of "family people" was the cause
of muffled laughter, which assumed that a man who sounded like he was
ready to break down my door could be my "friend". (Not too
long before this incident, a male colleague had told me that when he
asked someone the way to my house, a neighbour had pointed to my
place saying it must be the one because "men keep going there".)
When it comes to taking a stand on crimes against women, we are
reminded each time that women have pasts that would be used and
twisted to damn them, while men have a future waiting anxiously to
roll out the red carpet for them, under which can be brushed all the
wrongs they commit.
First published in DailyO, 9 June 2016.
1 comment:
I like ur writing esp ur poem but I hv a question , could u tell me who is responsible for 'men will be men ' statement
we man ,women both shelters in the shadow of our mother for 13 to 14 of our age and as far as I can remember , my mother never ever teach me how to respect woman , how to behave with a woman, and I guess , most of the indian ma is the same as mine on these issue . as far as this modern era is concerned , i can unfortunately guarantee u that these type of problem will come up more and more like those skirts getting more and more shorts. if u see these days modern mom;they r not even getting the time to talk to their sons because of the work they r doing all the day in offices. I feel terrified thinking of the future of women in entire world esp. india .
And u knw the problem I have with u women , you proudly says that 'woman are not lees than men' but the problem starts with this statement ,that's means you actually feel weak and that's makes momen more and more weak day by day . And the solution of this problem according to me is that woman should not be so obsessd with the dress and looks , instead of that concentrate of your physique .try Making a strong physique until u feel u r strong enough .
Be like lion ...
And. Also these is a easy way out , as indian culture , like after knowing , there is a girl child in the womb.....Abortion , do it knowing a male...
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