After having lived at the same
place in New Delhi in India for over a decade, I was happy when I
moved to a part of the city where my college friend was my neighbour.
If I drive to her place, it doesn’t take over five minutes. One
night, I was leaving her house around 12, grinning from ear to ear
after hours of laughing at her slapstick jokes. My car had just about
touched the gravel of the road when a bike dashed past me, the driver
hatefully spitting out these words: “You are roaming the streets at
midnight?!”
I am always over-conscious about
following the rules while driving because women drivers are summarily
ridiculed while men always beat them when it comes to rash driving
statistics and the overconfidence that it takes to leave a car parked
in the middle of the road, or the sense of entitlement needed to
graze your car and stare at you blankly when you look to them for an
apology. This time too my first instinct was to check if I had been
in the wrong. But I couldn’t figure out what had inspired him to
curse when both of us had enough space to co-exist on a broad
two-lane, and my speed wouldn’t have made a cycle rickshaw
insecure. There was hardly any traffic.
The sad and simple explanation
was this: Years after the rape and murder of the student on 16
December 2012, whom the country had decided to call Nirbhaya, the
city felt just as repelled by the idea of a woman on a night street.
In college too cowardly bike
riders were a common pestilence, even as early as seven in the
evening, uttering inane jibes and scurrying away cockily. It was not
acceptable to us to remain helpless so we took to walking with stones
clenched in our fists. Hearing an occasional pebble hit the spokes of
their wheels made us feel we had been able to answer back.
This
time I was in a car, supposed to be safer for women compared to
public transport or walking. My hands were empty, and I threw them up
in the air to ask the bike driver what he meant by his rudeness. I
don’t know if the motorist saw me. Once again, I tried to gulp down
the feeling of having been attacked and not having been able to
retaliate.
People
often enquire, “Don’t you feel scared, going around everywhere
alone?” When one has to feel scared without having done anything
wrong, the fear eventually bursts giving way to the molten lava of
anger. The sense of injustice that jabs at the heart every day
becomes sharper than fear. It becomes a question of living with
dignity, with your head held high, rather than surviving each day
curled indoors and inwards like a foetus.
The
one riding the bike that night was merely a face I could not even see
clearly. But his arms and shoulders, giving strength to him, were
huge sections of society. The rebellion against all of them churning
in my stomach made me resolve that now I would actually roam and not
rush back home fearful.
I
started driving at a leisurely pace. There were other people, rather,
other men on the roads . . . strolling, chatting, buying ice-cream
without looking over their shoulder, while it is a fantasy for women
to enjoy such nightly strolls on the streets. I wanted to be able to
pass them peacefully without another fight, another encounter. I
wanted to own the streets as rightfully and confidently, as do those
who think of mothers while cursing and of fathers when asserting
their right over the street. Nobody asks, “Does the road belong to
your mother?” It’s always the father when it comes to property
ownership. What falls in the mother’s share is the home, and only
till they promise to remain the sacred tulsi
plant in the courtyard, quiet and uncomplaining.
Having
arrived at my place, hardly a kilometre away from my friend’s, I
calmed myself down as I unlocked my door and thought of how the bleak
situation seems the same even after all the uproar over the assault
on Nirbhaya. But what kept coming back to me was the outrage and
insecurity in the mototrcyclist’s voice, which showed he was not
able to digest a woman a) being out b) at night c) driving a car.
Those
who have been raised to believe that being a man is to be everything
a woman is not would have difficulty swallowing when they see women
in “manly” roles. But this change would not seek the permission
of such men. Nor would it quietly wait for the police or the
administration to get their act together. It is true that women like
Nirbhaya have been going through brutalities in villages and cities.
But voices suppressed for ages are also revolting. The torment that
had to be quietly borne but could not be named is now being spoken of
in debates, discussions, protests, FIRs and courts.
Women
have battled oppression for years. We are perhaps too cynical now to
dream of a magical revolution overnight. To live a life of
self-respect, however, we cannot afford to be resigned either. It’s
hard to say about the country but its women are changing. The roots
of this change sprouting within us are claiming the streets, and the
land beneath.
First published in thREAD, The Hindu, 18 May 2018.
3 comments:
Well, the upbringing has been such that women are oppressed and they are not supposed to act "bold" or "daring". Its the men's right you see.
Unless the roots are shaken, nothing will change.
Yes, I often look at men and wish they were raised to be so confident and not so doubtful all the time.
Thanks foor the post
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