INDIA/PAKISTAN:  Peaceful Pink Panties to Tame Right-Wing Goons
By Beena Sarwar

Credit:Pink Chaddi Campaign

KARACHI, Feb 13 (IPS) - Outraged by an attack by right-wing Hindu
militants on women emerging from a pub in Mangalore, Karnataka state,
activists in India have initiated a 'Pink Chaddi' (underwear) campaign
in which they are sending pink panties to members of the Sri Ram Sena
(Army of Lord Ram) on Valentines' Day.

Television cameras caught the attack, on Jan 24, in which a group of
men chased and beat up women as they came out of a pub, kicking some
of the women who tripped and fell. Some 30 men, including the SRS
chief Pramod Muthalik were later arrested.

But, apparently emboldened by the fact that Karnataka state is ruled
by the pro-Hindu, Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), SRS leaders have
announced that the group will attack anyone caught celebrating
Valentine's Day.

The Pink Chaddi campaign has defiantly called for a Pub Bharo
(fill-the-pubs) action on Valentines Day.

"Go to a pub wherever you are. From Kabul to Chennai to Guwahati to
Singapore to LA women have signed up. It does not matter if you are
actually not a pub-goer or not even much of a drinker. Let us raise a
toast (it can be juice) to Indian women," Delhi-based journalist Nisha
Susan, who started the campaign on Feb 5, wrote in the blog
http://thepinkchaddicampaign.blogspot.com/ .

The move has resonated in pub-less Pakistan, where women are equally
threatened by right-wing militants who claim to have Islamic sanction
for curbing women's visibility and movements in the public sphere.

Muslim extremists in Pakistan oppose the celebration of New Year and
Valentine's Day with as much fervor as their Hindu counterparts in
India.

However, shops in all major Pakistani cities were reported stocking
Valentine Day cards and other red and pink paraphernalia while street
vendors were doing brisk business selling red roses and heart-shaped
balloons.

This is far removed from Saudi Arabia's Ministry for the Protection of
Virtue and Prevention of Vice which, last year, banned the sale of
Valentine's Day material with officials from the ministry seen
scouring shops in Riyadh and ordering removal from shelves of anything
in pink or red, including roses.

Commenting on the Pink Chaddi campaign, Pakistani filmmaker Aisha
Gazdar who recently joined the Pakistani Facebook group 'Fashionistas
Against Talibanisation' told IPS it was a great idea. "But since we
don't have pubs in Pakistan, we need to find some other way to
respond."

Several people from Pakistan have contacted Susan, says her partner
Aniruddha Shankar, also a journalist in Delhi. He told IPS via the
internet that Pakistanis have been calling Susan and saying, "Why
don't you send pink underwear to our mullahs (Muslim priests) also?"

"The reason why we picked 'chaddi', underwear, is because it's also
the slang word for a right-wing person," Susan explained in an audio
interview to the BBC.

Regarding Muthalik's response - he has said he will respond by sending
pink 'khaddi' (homespun) saris to "all of us, thereby shaming us into
modesty," Susan added, "that was an excellent action. It works because
we've been non-violent, maybe we can get him to be non-violent too."

"There is of course a point to being light-hearted about this," she
said. "They seem to take Valentine's Day extremely seriously. For most
people, Valentine's Day doesn't matter, going to pubs doesn't matter.
We're not promoting high-consumption lifestyles... What we do object
to is people using a certain dislike of high consumption lifestyles to
control women's actions.

"This group has attacked Christians before, they've attacked Muslims
before, we're only the latest constituency."

Some 30,000 people, including older men and women in their 50s, have
so far joined the Facebook group 'Consortium of Pub-going, Loose and
Forward Women' that Susan started against religious extremists in
India.

"We've been crazily busy since but it's quite an exhilarating
experience," said Shankar. "Thousands of pink chaddis are on their way
to Muthalik (the chief) of the Sri Ram Sena.

"What's so awesome is that so many Hindus who are teetotalers and
vegetarians and quite religious are speaking out and saying this is
not on, from teenagers to grandmothers, they have all sent bright
gulabi (pink) chaddis to the Sri Ram Sena."

The Pink Chaddi movement has no relation to the Gulabi Gang in India,
Shankar told IPS when asked.

The Gulabi Gang http://www.gulabigang.org/ is a movement of some
60,000 stick-wielding pink-sari clad rural women in India's Uttar
Pradesh, mostly poor and illiterate, led by the 47-year old gadaria
(cowherd) Sampat Devi Pal. Her aim is to educate the women and empower
them to fight against injustice.

They had actively participated in the first Ahimsa (non-violence) Day
on Jan. 30 this year in New Delhi, aimed at reviving the spirit of
non-violence popularised around the world by the assassinated,
independence leader Mahatma Gandhi.

Ridicule and humour of the Pink Chaddi type were also weapons in
Gandhi's armoury. He handspun his own clothes - mostly a simple
loincloth - which he wore to a 1931 audience given him by King George
V at the Buckingham Palace. ''His Majesty had on enough clothes for
the both of us,'' he famously said, when asked about his disregard for
dress protocol.

Paris-based, peace activist Akshay Bakaya, who initiated Ahimsa Day,
has roped the Gulabi Gang into the event.

In an email to IPS at the time, he said he had been in close contact
with Sampat Devi since being her French-Hindi interpreter in Paris
when her autobiography 'Moi, Sampat Pal: Chef de gang en sari rose'
(I, Sampat Pal: Warrior in a pink sari) was published last October.

Bakaya now likens the Pink Chaddi movement's call to fill the pubs on
Valentine's Day to Gandhi's non-violent 'Jail Bharo'
(fill-the-prisons) call as part of peaceful resistance against British
colonial rule.

In this case, said Bakaya, it "marks determination not to be cowed
down by 'Hindu' movements that take British khaki shorts to be symbols
of Indian culture!"

Many 'Hindutva' (Hindu right-wing) organisations in India wear
uniforms of khaki shorts.

"They would just as soon burn the Vedas and most Sanskrit literature
as 'pornographic' and smash Hindu temples from Konarak to Khajuraho,
rather than - more creatively - suggesting that the 'Vatican
conspiracy' of Valentine's Day be countered with a true-blue
Krishna-Gopi festival on a more suitable Hindu day like Holi, India's
very own festival of love," said Bakaya.

"If the mostly-urban Pink-Chaddi campaign and the rural Pink-Sari gang
joined forces, they could easily take the khaki shorts off the
Hindutva goons."

An email from Nisha Susan doing the rounds invites people to join the
Pink Chaddi Campaign. "Be imaginative, have fun and fight back!"

"It does not matter that many of us have not thought about Valentine's
Day since we were 13. If ever," says one email. "This year let us send
the Sri Ram Sene some love. Let us send them some PINK CHADDIS."

The post provides an alternative to those who don't want to mail it
themselves: "you can drop it off at the Chaddi Collection Points"
detailed on the Pink Chaddi Campaign blog.

However, because "we should not colour-discriminate", those who
"really, really can't send pink chaddis, send those in other colours,"
says the blog, providing the Karnataka address of Muthalik.

The last step after Valentine's Day, is to "get some of our elected
leaders to agree that beating up women is ummm... AGAINST INDIAN
CULTURE.''

"For right now, ask not what Dr V.S. Acharya, Home Minister of
Karnataka can do for you. Ask what you can do for him. Here is his
blog. http://drvsacharya.blogspot.com. Send him some love."

(END/2009)

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