---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Shamsher Alam, phooleen org <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Mar 30, 2008 5:17 AM
Subject: Re: [ =>> Jharkhand <<= ] *DAYAN PRATHA: A REFLECTION OF WOMEN,
VICTIMIZATION AND WITCHCRAFT*
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

   *DAYAN PRATHA: A REFLECTION OF*

*WOMEN, VICTIMIZATION AND WITCHCRAFT*



The Status of women in a society is a significant reflection of the level of
social justice in that society. Women's status is often described in terms
of their level of income, employment, education, health and fertility as
well as the roles they play within the family, the community and society.
The Constitution of India guarantees equality of opportunity and status to
men and women. It directs that women shall not only have equal rights and
privileges with men but also that the State shall make provision-both
general and special for the welfare of women.



Notwithstanding the above Constitutional guarantee it is known to all, that
women as a class have been subjected to deprivation, brutality and extortion
in India. In other words, women who are nearly half the population suffer
from many social and economic disadvantages. Culturally also their roles are
ill defined for public participation.



The increasing number of incidences being reported in the press and at other
forums regarding offences against women especially rape, molestation, dowry
violence, wife-beating, alcoholism, eve-teasing etc. is a matter of great
concern. and  a matter of greater concern is the fact that a higher number
of such crimes against women, still go unreported. It is felt that such
offences are not merely a problem of law enforcement but are also indicative
of the disabilities and inequalities from which the women in our country
continue to suffer, despite the Constitutional provisions for equality,
social Justice and protection of women.



The increase in the stress on women's emancipation without corresponding
changes in social attitudes and institutions sometimes lead to women being
subjected to various types of hostile reactions and aggressive postures.
Most of the disabilities and constraints on women arise from socio-cultural
institutions. The traditional social structure, cultural norms and value
systems continue to place Indian women in a situation of disadvantages in
terms of role relationship, decision-making and sharing of responsibility.
Their social status is still shrouded by a variety of institutional
complexes, connection and myths, while there is undoubtedly a much greater
awareness of the need to release them from their dependent and unequal
status in society, the realization of the goals as enshrined in the
Constitution of India is still a far cry. Even the social laws that seek to
mitigate the problems of women remain largely unknown. As a result, Indian
women when found in distress are much more insecure, socially and morally,
than men in similar circumstances.



It is in this background that we need to introduce and discuss the issue in
hand, i.e. Dayan pratha or witchcraft, a less known, less discussed, but a
highly perpetrated crime against women, peculiar in nature and evil in form.



One of the most disturbing and least resisted forms of gender violence we
encounter in our times centers around witch-hunts and witch-trials being
conducted in certain parts of the country. Asymmetrical social and economic
development targets vulnerable women, oftem widows, as symbols of collective
anger and thwarted aspirations. Media reports record these witch-hunts with
monotonous regularity. Women accused of sorcery are humiliated, humbled and
destroyed. Sometimes they are burnt to death. The option of survival is even
worse. They are usually invisible and silent, helpless before these attacks.



The evil spirit is called by various names: dayyam is Telugu, pischacha in
Kannada, Dakin in Gujarati and Malwi and dayan in Hindi. There is a clear
gender bias in the beliefs about possession. Women cannot be trusted,
because they can acquire an evil eye. For instance, the tribals of
Panchmahals, Gujarat, scrutinize the credentials of the mother-in-law before
marriage. If she is a Dakin, that family is disqualified.



Who then is a dakin? The dakin is an invisible tormentor who visits the
woman's body, ravages her with distress and disease and leaves only when
appeased. A woman's repressed individuality and sexuality, in a patriarchal
context, often leads to behaviour chracteristic of a visitation form the
Devi or Dakin. Also the woman who is seen to break society's norms (doing
her own dance'), tends to get labeled a Dakin.



Closely related to the Dakin is the idea of the churail, the unsatisfied
ghost of a woman who dies at childbirth. Term churail, in popular usage in
North India, has become a metaphor for the woman who dares to deviates from
the patriarchal norm. Over the centuries an elaborate raisond' etre has been
built around the churail whose one major function appears to be to take the
blame for the high rates of infant, maternal and neonatal mortality and
stillbirths. Ritual acts of omission, and occasionally commission, are seen
to invite the dance of the churail.Non-standard expressions of male and
female sexuality are also attributed, sometimes too conveniently, to
churail.



The word daya, referring to a female witch, has its etymological origin in *
Diana*, the huntress- goddess of ancient Greece. Centuries ago the process
of acculturation after Alexander's forays brought them as Daina and Hecate
to ancient India, where they were assimilated into the local folklore.



In the beginning, God was a woman. The traditions of the mother religions
were inexorably marginalized by the male Brahminical system, yet survived in
the practices of the Shaktaworshippers and the Yogini cults. Women adepts
with mystical powers were kown as Yakinis or Dakinis. While may of the
female divinitied were co-opted and appropriated into the masculine
pantheon, pockets of mother worship and a deep residual respect for the
feminine principle remained in both theory and practice.



In our times, the social traumas accompanying these moments of accelerated
change have led to polarization and gender hostility. It is always easy and
convenient to hate, and the alarming proliferation of witch-hunts and
witch-trials needs attention, understanding.



The murder of women in the name of witchcraft is enough to stun the modern
mind. The killing, lynching, decapitation, or hacking of women labeled as
witches of *dayans*, my seem



a tribal aberrations,  but it as a fact that these crimes against women find
sanction even in this day and age, what is worse, are deemed heroic.



These crimes have been subjected to various interpretations, some see them
as a gender conflict, others regard them as a tussle between those who
believe in witchcraft and those who do not. The tribals hate and resist any
interference from outside on this issue. This clearlyreflects the influence
of some of the powerful groups in the tribal villages who do not want such
matters to come under public scrutiny. How else would the *pradhans* (the
headmen), the  *ojhas* (the witch doctors), and the *purohits *(priests)
grab money, land, and property under the garb of witch-hunting and killing
of innocent women labeled as witches. Also, in myriad villages in the
country, there are "witch doctors", most of them wearing a frightening and
menacing look who claim to possess divine powers to exorcise evil spirits
and ghosts lurking in " afficted" men and women.



Among the tribals, women have been accused of practicing black magic sine
time immemorial.they are accused of harbouring evil powers that would wipe
out thers on whom whey pouredtheir evil power. Once branded witches, these
women who actually lived in abject poverty wee remorsely hunted down, and
various brutalities were inflicted upon them, quite often they were
"sentenced to death" by mock courts thereby lynching  them in public or
excommunicating them.



However, there is no denying the genuine terror associated with witchcraft.
The tribals truly believe in the existence of evil Spirits that are
constantly at work spoiling life and property. To make maters worse witch
doctors project themselves as godfathers-the only saviours-who can protect
the tribe from the wrath of the witches. The result is that tribal men and
women submit to all the demands of the Ojhas suppolying them with rice,
chickens, goats, and local brew, to granting sexual favours.



The prejudices against witches along with the witchdoctors'-increasing
demands have made the lives of tribal and non-tribal women especially the
old and widowd, a living hell. Widowed women, who have been left with
property, also become targets of jealousy within their peergroup.



A number of so-called witches admit that it is not the fear of death that
naunts them a much as the manner in which they are hunted down. What pains
them most is that many a time, their own kith and kin are the witch-hunters.



   - Fear of being forced to parade naked as the entire village looks on.
   - Fear of being gang-raped or sexually harmed in some other way.
   - Fear of being tonsured or being visited by some other form of bodily
   harm.
   - Fear of being forced to offer pinddaan )a tribute ot the dead,
   especially parents ndancestors)' being drenched with urince and human
   excreta; being forced to eat human flesh the raw blood of freshly
   slaughtered animals.
   - Dread of being hapless witness to the murder of their family members
   and being victimized without any hope of rescue.



These victims also know that they cannot expect the police or the local
administration to help Death scares them less. It is living under a cloud of
continuous terror that leaves a thousand scars, each telling its own
dreadful story. It is a terror that does not end with a single death
sentence, but continuses to haunt them like a recurring nightmare. The
dastardly crime of witch-hunting jcontinues unchecked.


Shamsher Alam
Executive Director
PHOOLEEN


On Fri, Mar 28, 2008 at 9:17 AM, Jharkhand News <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:

>    *THIS CASE IS NOT MUCH DIFFERENT THAN ASSAM's ADIVASI GIRL, BOTH TIMES
> REPORTER'S CAMERA IS TELLING THE TRUTH BUT, WHERE ARE THE HUMAN RIGHT'S
> ACTIVISTs & GOVT.*
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>
>
> In a shocking example of lawlessness in Bihar, a woman was beaten
> mercilessly in front of a crowd in a village near Patna.
>
> The woman, villagers claim, was involved in witchcraft. However, she
> rebuffed the allegations but the crowd ignored her denials.
>
> Forty-five year-old Lalpari Devi of Naubatpur village in Patna had gone to
> Adalchak Dumaria village on Thursday for treating one Manorama Rai, who was
> suffering from mental ailment, police sources said.
>
> But as Manorama's condition deteriorated during the treatment, her husband
> Ramayodhya Rai got angry with Lalpari and tortured her along with the
> neighbours.
>
> Describing her ordeal, Lalpari Devi said, ''They beat me brutally and
> called police. They tied me with a rope and made me walk through the
> village.''
>
> She further added that the villagers cut her hair and burnt it, tied her
> to the tree and beat her up. ''I am not a thief but they did this to me. I
> have not done anything,'' she said.
>
> The villagers then tonsured her head and smeared her face with limestone.
>
> Police soon reached the scene and rescued Lalpari. She was admitted to a
> hospital from where she was discharged on Friday.
>
> Police have filed an FIR and arrested Ramayodhya Rai. (With PTI inputs)
>
>
> ndtv.com/convergence/ndtv/story.aspx?id=NEWEN20080045251&ch=3/28/2008%206:02:00%20PM
>
>
> In yet another incident of mob justice in Bihar, residents of a village in
> Patna mercilessly beat up a woman accusing her of being possessed and
> practicing witchcraft.
>
> The woman had reportedly gone to the village on Thursday to collect her
> baggage that she had left a week ago when she had gone there to cure a
> woman.
>
> When she reached the village on Thursday, villagers tied her to a tree,
> beat her up, sheared and set her hair on fire.
>
> They then tied her hands and paraded her through the village, with even
> the village elders joining in.
>
> The incident took place a stone's throw away from the local police
> station.
> ibnlive.com/news/villagers-catch-witch-beat-up-and-parade-her/62145-3.html
>
>
> --
> Jharkhand News
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Jharkhand Online Network
> www.jharkhand.org.in/news
>
>
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