[But Sharma and the organisers had chosen Nagpur for two reasons: when
protestors gather at Indora Maidan, they would be less than 5
kilometres away from the head office of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak
Sangh, an organisation that has historically been seen as opposed to
the rights of women, making statements which reduced their role to
doing household chores and serving the men of the house. According to
some RSS members, rape is a product of urban westernisation, and
homosexuality, a “psychological problem”.
Apart from this, Nagpur also has an important role to play in the
history of women’s rights.]

https://scroll.in/magazine/825819/chalo-nagpur-on-savitribai-phules-120th-death-anniversary-women-march-against-saffronisation

WOMEN ICONS
Chalo Nagpur: On Savitribai Phule’s 120th death anniversary, women
march against saffronisation
Organisers were inspired by the many student movements in India in the
past year.

Savitribai Phule (via Sumeet Music/Youtube.com)

6 hours ago.
Zinnia Ray Chaudhuri

Every few days, Jaya Sharma’s phone would ping with WhatsApp messages
from women: university students, Muslims and sex workers.

“The social, political, economic and cultural is no longer the sole
domain of the savarna patriarch,” read one text message. “We shall
decimate Brahmanical privilege and the centuries of oppression that it
has generated. Our universities will not be turned into extensions of
warped senses of savarna entitlement. Nor is it the playground for
saffron, patriarchal hooliganism and violence. We will not let you
carve your toxic discourse on ‘nationalism’ onto our bodies.”

Another message said: “Thanks to caste system and patriarchy, Dalit
women are twice, sometimes thrice, marginalised and hence, lag behind
other women in social, economic and political spheres and the reason
for lack of improvement is the Brahmanical mindset.”

Yet another read: “This is why gay women and trans people, who
struggle to live their life outside the rules of gender and sexual
desire, are part of this fight against Hindutva and Manuvad. Hindutva
is a show of hatred, exploitation, violence, atrocities, and
aggressive masculinity. Our struggle is a celebration of love,
freedom, equality, diversity, and justice.”

Sharma, who has been involved with India’s queer movement for decades,
was thrilled each time her phone beeped. The messages proved that the
legacy of Savitribai Phule was still alive, even 120 years after her
death.

Press conference in New Delhi ahead of Chalo Nagpur march.
Press conference in New Delhi ahead of Chalo Nagpur march.
Born in 1831, Savitribai Phule was a social reformer and poet who
championed the cause of women, widows and Dalits in 19th century
India, playing a significant role in improving women’s rights. Apart
from championing the cause of women’s education, Phule, a child bride
herself, had fought against the practice of child marriage and worked
to improve the lives of widows by staging protests against barbers to
dissuade them from carrying out the unfair ritual of shaving the heads
of widows. She even opened a care centre for pregnant women who had
been victim to sexual abuse – at a time when such activism was
strongly discouraged, even punished.

Sharma and the 30 other organisers for Chalo Nagpur, a women’s march
against casteism and religious patriarchy, hope that March 10, the
death anniversary of Savitribai Phule, would become an opportunity for
women to unite in their demand for a secular, democratic state, free
from discrimination, humiliation and violence. The organisers hope for
a turnout of around 5,000-6,000 women from every marginalised group,
including trans, queer and disabled women.

The venue of the march – Nagpur – came with its own set of logistical
problems. Protests and marches in cities like Delhi, Bengaluru and
Mumbai were usually well-attended and well-covered by the media, but
would the same be true for Nagpur? How would so many protesters get
there? Where would they stay?

But Sharma and the organisers had chosen Nagpur for two reasons: when
protestors gather at Indora Maidan, they would be less than 5
kilometres away from the head office of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak
Sangh, an organisation that has historically been seen as opposed to
the rights of women, making statements which reduced their role to
doing household chores and serving the men of the house. According to
some RSS members, rape is a product of urban westernisation, and
homosexuality, a “psychological problem”.

Apart from this, Nagpur also has an important role to play in the
history of women’s rights.

“Nagpur is also the home of the movement by BR Ambedkar for the rights
of women and the Dalit community,” said Vani Subramanian, film-maker
and activist. “Savitribai Phule had worked in Nagpur. So, there is
also a positive energy there that we want to harness.”

 A stamp featuring Savitribai Phule, released in 1998 by India Post
(via Dr. Ambedkar's Caravan/Youtube.com).
A stamp featuring Savitribai Phule, released in 1998 by India Post
(via Dr. Ambedkar's Caravan/Youtube.com).
“Phule is an extremely important figure,” added Subramanian. “It would
be a shame in a sense if she is only seen as a Dalit icon. She stands
for much more, for principles of education and solidarity. It is
classic casteism that she is seen as only a Dalit icon, but yes, [we
are also protesting] an increased attack on Dalit people, on Adivasi
people. Look at what’s happening to Radhika Vemula [Rohith Vemula’s
mother]. I think this movement is a great way to celebrate her
legacy.”

In India, Dalit women have been targets for violence perpetrated by
the upper castes over the years. During the 2006 Khairlanji killings,
four members of a family belonging to a Dalit caste were murdered over
a land dispute, of which the two women were first paraded around naked
in public, sexually abused and then hacked to death. Last year saw the
rape and drowning of Delta Meghwal, a 17-year-old Dalit college girl
from Bikaner in Rajasthan. Reports of rape of 12 minor Adivasi girls
by their school teacher in Buldhana, Maharashtra, also emerged.

The organising principle behind Chalo Nagpur was the call against
Hindutva, communal, Brahmanical, casteist patriarchal beliefs and
Manuvad, a reference to the ancient legal text Manusmriti, known for
its sexist and casteist verses – which equate women with animals,
declare them to be the property of their husbands and father. Many of
the verses describe a woman as an evil seductress and the root of all
flaws that a man might have.

“We are existing in a society where the outdated and extremist outlook
against women has been gathering strength – who is a ‘good’ woman, who
is allowed to speak out, who isn’t, can they carry a mobile phone or
not, wear jeans or not – these have become topics of national
discussion,” said Subramanian. “We want to come together and fight
against this.”

The logistics of a march
Speaking at a press conference a few days before the march, Shabnam
Hashmi, a human rights activist and an organiser of Chalo Nagpur, had
said, “I think this is the first time that Indian women from such
diverse groups, different parts of the country and with different
world views are coming together in such large numbers. We are
expecting at least 5,000-6,000 women to join us at the march. And they
are going to do this at a time when not just their rights are being
attacked, but their existence in every sphere of life is being
attacked in some way of the other.”

Even though the march has not been funded by a political party, Sharma
described the initiative as political feminism expressing itself in
cultural ways. “It is a political movement, rooted in intellectual
theories and expressed via cultural mediums of songs, art and poetry.
There is an intellectual understanding of the situation. In its basic
form it is a critique of Hindutva and Manuvad, which marginalises
women or subjects them to moral policing. It’s a way in which
religious extremism is kind of used to implement patriarchy and those
two forces come together to subjugate women.”

According to Sharma, Chalo Nagpur was inspired by the many student
movements which India saw in the past year. “Whether it has been at
Hyderabad University, Jawaharlal Nehru University or, now, Delhi
University, the younger generation is making their voices heard and we
felt like it was time to rekindle this movement that is a much older
one but becoming all the more essential everyday,” she said.

The first phase of this movement against Manuvad and Hindutva was put
into motion on January 3, Phule’s 186th birth anniversary, with an
online video campaign. The group had invited “video selfies” from
those wanting to raise their voices against Hindu fundamentalists and
Manuvadis. The anonymous videos were shared on their Facebook page and
posted on Twitter along with the hashtags “#WomenAgainstHindutva” and
“#WomenAgainstManuvad”.

Play
“I am a woman and a feminist activist,” said the voice in one of the
videos uploaded on the YouTube channel Against Hindutva and Manuvad.
“There are voices gathering around us, dark forces, that get shriller
day by day. They speak of anger, hatred and violence. You’ve heard
them and so have I. It is time to put a stop to it right now and say
to them, ‘no’. We are a land, we are a nation that believes in
diversity in peace and harmony and living with each other. We are
Dalit, Adivasis, Muslim, women, trans, queer, disabled. All of us will
gather together, raise our voices and raise our fists and say ‘no
more’ to your hatred and ‘yes’ to love and peace.”

Around 21 testimonials by women from across religion and caste, those
from the LGBT community and many living with disabilities were
uploaded.

Play
“The figure of Savitribai Phule, her contributions, her message, will
remain significant in the life of anyone marginalized on the basis of
their gender,” said Manjula Pradeep, a human rights activist and
lawyer and a key organiser of the campaign. “Many in India still feel
excluded and alienated as their rights are attacked and challenged
again and again. This is not about the elite masses. The idea is to
create a feeling of community, a sense of sisterhood.”

Play
Many Muslim women sent in entries about the injustice of simply not
being able to dress according to their own wishes or how they see the
Hindutva ideology widening the rift between Hindus and Muslims.

#womenagainsthindutva #womenagainstmanuvad @SavitribaiBolte
pic.twitter.com/Z7s17I4IPp

— Womenagainsthindutva (@wynaham) January 3, 2017
Mariya Salim, another organiser of Chalo Nagpur, talked about her own
experience as a Dalit Muslim woman, “As minority women, we become
twice, even thrice marginalised,” said Salim. “I personally still face
problem when looking for an apartment or a house because I’m a Muslim
woman. It has been the same for the last four years. It’s very
important that we don’t stay quiet anymore.”

Today is the real Teachers Day, birthday of a teacher like none other,
Savitribai Phule, who will continue to be... https://t.co/cezsYUXtHf

— v nilesh (@Vnilesh89) January 3, 2017
-- 
Peace Is Doable

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