http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/This-teenage-girl-is-a-rapists-nightmare/articleshow/49449718.cms

This teenage girl is a rapist’s nightmare
Nicholas D Kristof,NYT News Service | Oct 19, 2015, 12.18 PM IST

Bitiya agreed to be photographed with her face covered. (NYT Photo)

LUCKNOW: For as long as anyone can remember, upper-caste men in a
village here in northern India preyed on young girls. The rapes
continued because there was no risk: The girls were destroyed, but the
men faced no repercussions.

Now that may be changing in the area, partly because of the courage of
one teenage girl who is fighting back. Indian law doesn't permit
naming rape victims, so she said to call her Bitiya — and she is a
rapist's nightmare. This isn't one more tragedy of sexual
victimization but rather a portrait of an indomitable teenager whose
willingness to take on the system inspires us and helps protect other
local girls.

I'm on my annual win-a-trip journey, in which I take a university
student along on a reporting trip to the developing world. The winner,
Austin Meyer of Stanford University, and I see in Bitiya a lesson for
the world about the importance of ending the impunity that so often
surrounds sexual violence, including in the United States.

Bitiya, who is from the bottom of the caste system, is fuzzy about her
age but thinks she was 13 in 2012 when four upper-caste village men
grabbed her as she worked in a field, stripped her and raped her. They
filmed the assault and warned her that if she told anyone they would
release the video and also kill her brother.

So Bitiya initially kept quiet.

Six weeks later Bitiya's father saw a 15-year-old boy watching a
pornographic video — and was aghast to see his daughter in it. The men
were selling the video in a local store for a dollar a copy.

Bitiya is crying in the video and is held down by the men, so her
family accepted that she was blameless. Her father went to the police
to file a report.

The police weren't interested in following up, but the village elders
were. They decided that Bitiya, an excellent student, should be barred
from the local public school.

"They said I was the wrong kind of girl, and it would affect other
girls," Bitiya said. "I felt very bad about that."

Eventually, public pressure forced the school to take her back, but
the village elders continue to block the family from receiving
government food rations, apparently as punishment for speaking out.

In the background hovers caste. Bitiya is a Dalit, once considered
untouchable, at the bottom of the hierarchy.

Civil society scrutiny belatedly led to the arrest of four men, who
were then released on bail. The case has been dragging on since, and
Bitiya's father died of a heart attack after one particularly brutal
court hearing. The family also fears that members of upper castes will
kill Bitiya's 16-year-old brother, so he mostly stays home — which
means he can't take jobs, leaving the family struggling to afford
food.

The rape suspects offered a $15,000 settlement if Bitiya's family
would drop the case, bringing the money in cash to her home with its
dirt floor. Bitiya had never seen so much cash — but scoffs that she
wouldn't accept twice as much.

"I want them in jail," Bitiya says. "Then everyone watching will know
that people can get punished for this."

"I never felt tempted," adds her grandfather.

Bitiya says she does not feel disgraced, because the dishonor lies in
raping rather than in being raped. And the resolve that she and her
family display is having an impact. The rape suspects had to sell land
to pay bail, and everybody in the area now understands that raping
girls may actually carry consequences. So while there were many rapes
in the village before Bitiya's, none are believed to have occurred
since.

Madhavi Kuckreja, a longtime women's activist who is helping Bitiya,
says the case reflects a measure of progress against sexual violence.

"There has been a breaking of the silence," Kuckreja said. "People are
speaking up and filing cases."

Kuckreja notes that the cost of sexual violence is a paralyzing fear
that affects all women and girls. Fearful parents "protect" daughters
from sexual violence and boys in ways that impede the girls' ability
to get an education, use the Internet or cellphones, or get a good
job. For every girl who is raped, Kuckreja says, many thousands lose
opportunities and mobility because of fear of such violence.

That holds back women, but also all of India. The International
Monetary Fund says that India's economy is stunted by the lack of
women in the formal economy.

In one village, I asked a large group of men about rape. They insisted
that they honor women and deplore rape — and then added that the best
solution after a rape is for the girl to be married to the rapist, to
smooth over upset feelings.

"If he raped her, he probably likes her," explained Shiv Govind, an
18-year-old.

I'm rooting for Bitiya and strong girls like her to change those
attitudes and end the impunity that oppresses women and impoverishes
nations.

-- 
Peace Is Doable

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