9 November 2014 Last updated at 23:52 GMT
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Inside an Indian camp for radical Hindu women
[image: Chinmayee poses with a gun]

Durga Vahini or the Army of Durga is named after one of the fiercest Hindu
goddesses

Indian-Canadian film-maker Nisha Pahuja spent years trying to get inside
Durga Vahini, an Indian camp for radical Hindu women. She was finally
granted permission and made the documentary The World Before Her. Here she
describes what she saw in that camp.

It is the final day of the 10-day Durga Vahini camp.

Eighty girls are on their way to march and chant through the streets of the
western city of Aurangabad. They are about to proudly proclaim India a
Hindu nation.

All across the country many such parades are under way or being planned by
the Durga Vahini, the women's wing of the Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) - the
cultural arm of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) - the largest Hindu
nationalist group in India.

Durga Vahini literally means Army of Durga - named after the goddess who is
among the fiercest in the Hindu pantheon.

There is camaraderie and excitement on the bus. The girls are dressed in
white salwaar kameez (pyjamas and long tunics) and saffron-coloured
dupattas (scarves). Two of the camp leaders are at the front of the bus
leading the girls in a chant: "Hindustan is for Hindus. Pakistan can go to
hell!"

As the girls repeat the chant I'm struck by their eyes - they reflect the
headiness of transgression.
'Die for beliefs'

The leaders grin: "You could be put in jail for what you are saying!"

"We'll die for our beliefs!" postures one young girl. "We'll kill anyone
who gets in our way!" yells another.

Ten days earlier the majority of these girls and young women, aged 13-25,
were soft-spoken, shy and naive.
 [image: Filmmaker Nisha Pahuja (standing)] Filmmaker Nisha Pahuja
(standing) was given rare access to a Durga Vahini camp
 [image: Prachi (facing camera) addresses a group of Durga Vahini girls]

"Prachi Trivedi, one of the leaders of the camp, is quite possibly the most
enigmatic woman I've ever met"

For most, this was the first time - and probably the last time - they were
away from home without their families.

Many of them came from small villages, had little education, were from the
lower castes and likely to be married in the next few years. Before they
got to the camp, many were also free of the deep-rooted prejudice against
Muslims and Christians that so defines the mindset of the VHP and the RSS.

But a lot can change in 10 days.

Apart from the military-style combat training, the girls are fed a
revisionist history that promotes Hindu supremacy and posits Hinduism as
the only legitimate religion of India. They are also taught to see their
role in the defence and propagation of Hinduism as a service to their
country.

And they are trained to be warriors and wives - they must be strong enough
to break the bones of the enemy but docile enough to never question their
husbands. The Durga Vahini leadership is blind to this duality - but that
it has repercussions is abundantly clear.

No-one has been more marked by this duality than Prachi Trivedi, one of the
leaders of the camp and quite possibly the most enigmatic woman I've ever
met. In her world of limited choices, working for the Durga Vahini - which
she admits is problematic - affords her a degree of dignity and freedom.

Prachi is the reason I am here, allowed to witness and document this camp.
It has taken me nearly two years to get access to this world and thus far
ours is the only camera crew to have ever been allowed in.
 [image: line]
Durga Vahani
[image: Durga Vahini]

   - Set up by the hardline Hindu organisation VHP (Vishwa Hindu Parishad
   or World Hindu Council) in 1984-85.


   - Women aged 15 to 35 years are eligible to join the group.


   - The group's website describes it as a "dynamic voluntary organisation"
   of young Hindu women.


   - It says the organisation "strives for the security of society" and
   imparts knowledge of culture and tradition.


   - Every member is expected to exercise regularly for "increasing her
   physical stamina" and to read "good literature".


   - The group says it "ensures rehabilitation" of widows, women who have
   been deserted by their husbands, or women "involved in accidents".


   - Training camps of 15-20 days are organised for members in all states.


   - The group runs vocational training and tailoring centres and blood
   donation camps, among other things.


   - Members are also trained in "dagger wielding" and use of firearms,
   according to the website.

[image: line]

'Complex world'

At our first meeting they chose a rehabilitation project the VHP ran for
prostitutes and their children as a way to introduce me to their ethos.

Getting inside the camps was not easy - it took perseverance, negotiation,
honesty, luck and a lot of time. But more than anything else, it took
gaining the trust of Prachi, her family and key players within the VHP.

Finally, after close to two years, they opened the doors to a world that
was complex, shocking and problematic - but that ultimately forced me to
question my own prejudices and assumptions about them.

Yes, there were deeply troubling moments - taking young girls and teaching
them to be paranoid and to hate the "other" is in itself a form of violence
and yet, it was undeniable that these young women became more confident,
stronger and more sure of themselves after 10 days.

In a country like India, where women's rights is a constant battle, there
was something powerful about watching these young women be transformed in
spite of knowing that the cost of this process was intolerance.
 [image: Girls at the Durga Vahini camp]

At the beginning of the 10-day camp, a majority of the girls were
soft-spoken and shy

It was also undeniable that the people instilling such lessons were
hospitable and filled with a desire to serve their country.

What motivated them was a vision, an idea of the truth and a moral
certainty that they had found it. It was as unshakeable to them as my
belief in equality or Western assertions that "democracy" is the only way
forward.

The question for me became one of faith. How does one reason with faith?
And that too a faith that has been bred into you and reinforced by family
and social structures that form the pillars of the world as you live it?

I began to see that all of us are ultimately products of time, place,
history, genes and countless other factors beyond our control. If this then
is our collective inheritance, how many of our choices are truly our own?
How many of us are actually free?

On the last day of camp, as a group of girls boarded the van that was
taking them home, Pansaray, one of the camp seniors, put her hands together
and said: "Forgive us if we've done anything wrong."

I still find that one of the most moving lines in the film. It reminds me
that all of us are often dictated by forces we cannot see.

-- 
-- 
Nor can Goodness and Evil be equal.  Repel (evil) with what is better; then the 
enmity between him and you will become as if it were your friend and intimate!
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