Guest guest Posted April 7, 2008 Report Share Posted April 7, 2008 " The more vulnerable you are, the likelier your chances of being victimised. Women and the lower castes are the worst affected. Very often single women - usually widows [...] and elderly men [...] are targeted by villagers and family members eyeing their land. [....] [T]he victim becomes the Other, an inhuman devil that needs to be humiliated, tortured and destroyed. And villagers get swept into mob fury lashing out against all that is causing trouble - bad fate, ill health, failed crops, droughts, disease - as they engage in this primeval sport of hunting the demon and purging society of evil. " A Nation Possessed Antara Dev Sen http://www.littlemag.com 05 April, 2008 Sify News, India Witches refuse to go away. They stay squarely in our midst, staring at us through dead eyes, bursting into our homes with their mutilated bodies and split skulls, seeking justice. Last week, it was Phool Kumari, 40, of Chhattisgarh. She was dragged out of her home at night, beaten ruthlessly with rods, branded with hot irons and then burned alive. All because some woman had apparently gone into a trance and declared that Phool Kumari was a witch. Also last week, in Orissa, Kosa Madhi, 70, was hacked to death, apparently for casting the evil eye on a child. His killers included his own grandson. Family member are often party to the killing of a person branded a 'witch'. Because a witch-hunt is as much about property disputes and settling scores as it is about blind superstition. But of all the witches attacked last week, Lalpari, 45, of Bihar was the most visible. She materialised in our living rooms as a woman tied to a tree, being thrashed by villagers, abused and humiliated, her hair being shorn savagely in a ritual insult. Television screens and newspapers told us of the sorry fate of this woman branded a witch in the outskirts of Patna, because she had failed to cure a mentally ill woman. But Lalpari was fortunate. She survived. This week, another such 'fortunate' woman stepped into our homes. Kalawati, a " middle-aged " Dalit widow, was stripped and beaten up, garlanded with shoes and paraded naked through her village near Dhanbad in Jharkhand. They also tried to force her to eat human excrement. She was accused of casting a spell on a woman and killing her by black magic, and of causing an outbreak of chickenpox in her village. Significantly, Kalawati was accosted by about 200 villagers at the entrance to the Kali temple where she worshipped regularly. She was a widow, and from a backward caste. How dare she defile the sacred grounds? " A widow has no right to enter a temple, " said the villagers. A quickly rustled-up kangaroo court decided to punish the woman who had dared to transgress. She was branded a 'witch,' charged with causing disease and death and taught a lesson. But the woman lived to tell her tale - to the police. Not surprisingly, there have been no arrests. Instead, the villagers gheraoed the officer-in-charge investigating her complaint, marched triumphantly to the police station and demonstrated against Kalawati's FIR. After sixty years of independence, we still kill innocents in the name of black magic. The more vulnerable you are, the likelier your chances of being victimised. Women and the lower castes are the worst affected. Very often single women - usually widows like Kalawati - and elderly men like Kosa Madhi are targeted by villagers and family members eyeing their land. Once labelled a witch, the victim becomes the Other, an inhuman devil that needs to be humiliated, tortured and destroyed. And villagers get swept into mob fury lashing out against all that is causing trouble - bad fate, ill health, failed crops, droughts, disease - as they engage in this primeval sport of hunting the demon and purging society of evil. Punishing or killing the witch is regarded as a heroic act, so there is no question of repentance. Not surprisingly, the witch-hunters and killers go unpunished. In fact, very few cases are even reported. Of these, less than 2 percent of the accused are convicted in court, says a study by the Free Legal Aid Committee. Every year, around the country, thousands of vulnerable people are labelled a witch and murdered most brutally. Terrified of social ostracism and hostility from villagers, the family members of these 'witches' very often disown them. Once the 'witch' is killed, the matter is buried. Unfortunately, when a victim or family member does muster the guts to trudge all the way to the police station, brave the insensitive interrogation of the cops and report the attack, the local police brush them aside, further endangering the life of anyone who dares to blow the whistle. Hardly surprising, since most victims are women. And in India we don't generally take violence against women very seriously. We have known for decades that women become scapegoats in the power play of patriarchal society and are often branded as witches and killed to grab their land and property, or disgraced to settle family scores. Widows are especially vulnerable. As are women who don't give in to the demands of powerful men, especially women who spurn their sexual advances, women who are seen as threats to the power equation. And to a lesser extent, elderly men are vulnerable too. The less privileged you are, the less power you have, the more your chances of being branded a witch. Sometimes entire families are killed, supposedly to purge the village of evil. Sometimes, villagers don't even have to soil their hands with murder. The tortured and humiliated victims, driven out of their home, weary of being ostracised, of being forced to eat burning coal or human shit, of facing violence and hostility every moment of their lives, quite often kill themselves. Witch-hunts and murders in the name of black magic flourishes in states like Andhra Pradesh, Bihar, Jharkhand, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Orissa, Assam, Tripura and West Bengal. All it takes is for someone to be named - either by the village ojha or medicine man, or by anyone in a trance who 'hears the voice of god.' Once named, the 'witch' is as good as dead. Even if she is not murdered, her life as a villager is practically over. And introducing special laws banning witch-hunts has not helped. These laws are in place in states with large tribal populations like Bihar, Jharkhand and Chhattisgarh. Although such legal effort may have encouraged the police to take witch-hunts more seriously, it has not really led to any decrease in actual attacks. Which is not surprising. We cannot change mindsets with laws. We need to give people viable alternatives. If the village ojha - who can get anyone killed on a whim or for a bribe - is all-powerful, it is because there is no other medical or health care system that villagers, especially in remote areas, can turn to. And the available health centres in interior India fail to perform. Lack of doctors and medicine, horrifying corruption that kills patients through infection, outdated drugs and rotten injections, and the overall negligence of the state and healthcare officials make patients turn to the supernatural. God has always been the greatest personal physician for most of us, and for some of us the ojha and his magic medicines come a close second. We must replace the need for black magic and sorcery by giving our citizens in the remote areas access to genuine health care and other basic necessities that we urban Indians take for granted. We need to value our citizens even in the remote and tribal areas, and protect their life and health, like any civilised country is expected to. We also need to work on changing deep-seated superstitions through education. Black magic and the dominance of the mumbling ojha may well continue in spite of doctors and secular medicine, but at least villagers will have a choice. And thousands of innocent lives may be saved. For witch-hunts are really not about superstition. They are about our own inadequacies - as a state that fails to protect its citizens' health and well-being, as a society that fails to protect its vulnerable members, as a culture that fails to recognise selfish manipulation in the name of sorcery and black magic, as people who refuse to face reality. And most of all, witch-hunts are about the powerless and vulnerable being victimised, and their tormentors and killers going free. http://sify.com/news/columns/fullstory.php?id=14638633 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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