Note:  Dear Friends, This is in continuation of my recent article: OUST ALL RAPIST NETHAS, with the introductory  note: "Mutatis mutandis, what is said of rapists is applicable  to such incidents in religions and  church institutions." This statement needs solid proof.  That is what Sri.John Dayal provides in the article below and published in   Ucanindia news on Jan.10, 2013.
By John Dayal
New Delhi:
New Delhi:
The Church in India, and in particular the Catholic  Church, have made themselves all but invisible in the current national debate  on gender violence, ceding space to authoritarian voices that confuse revenge  for justice, and shift focus from a change in mindsets and civilized  values.
Perhaps an opportunity has been lost once again to intervene in and change the national discourse on issues of grave concern to the country, its democracy and its people.
Perhaps an opportunity has been lost once again to intervene in and change the national discourse on issues of grave concern to the country, its democracy and its people.
As in the discussion on national corruption that hogged media attention  and parliamentary time through much of 2012, the Church was uniquely placed to  make a difference.
Among religious and social groups in India, the Catholic Church probably  stands alone in articulating a gender policy for itself and the community after  several years of a crushing internal discussion in which its more than 100,000  women took an active part.
It remains a moot question why the Church leadership chose to maintain a  deafening silence over the brutal gang rape and murder of a young medical  student.
I hope it was not because of a want of information, of which there was  plenty in the carpet bombing by the electronic media, or a lack of sensitivity,  which would weigh heavy on its conscience for a long time to  come.
One possible explanation could be that it was afraid it would be seen as  confronting the state, a bitter lesson it learned after it was “punished” for  challenging the government in the controversial Koodankulum nuclear power plant  in Tamil Nadu. 
After siding with the common people whose lives and livelihoods would  have been severely impaired, the local bishop suffered a curtailment of his  permits to receive foreign funding for diocesan development  activities.
Such “lessons” leave a deep mark on the collective psyche of the  institutional Church.
No bishops with their silver crosses on their bosoms, no nuns in habits – barring a few exceptions – and no priests in cassocks were therefore seen in the  massive crowds that laid siege to the national capital and its governance  institutions.
For almost two weeks in December 2012 and the first week of January 2013,  thousands of outraged protesters called for justice for the 23-year-old victim,  gang raped by six men in a moving bus one fateful evening in New  Delhi.
Jyoti Singh Pandey's male companion, who sought to defend her, was also  beaten then both were dumped on a roadside. The severity of her wounds spoke of  the brutality of the sexual attack on her and moved the people into a  frenzy.
Even doctors who attended her at one of Delhi’s premier government  hospitals said they had in their careers never seen wounds such as these. Jyoti  was later transferred to a hospital in Singapore, where she died of her  injuries.
She was cremated in secrecy in New Delhi to prevent further confrontation  between police and the people, mostly young men and  women
The assailants have been arrested and their trial has begun, in a  fast-track court created specially under the orders of the Supreme Court of  India. Judgment is expected within weeks. The police have sought the death  penalty for the rapacious killers.
The trial, judgment and punishment however are not likely to quench the  national demand for comprehensive laws to ensure the security of women in  metropolitan cities and the 400,000 villages of the  country.
The debate has been extended to include violence against women of the  tribals and the Dalits, the former untouchables, and religious minorities such  as the Muslims whose women are victims of targeted sexual violence in times of  strife or even of confrontation with industry, rich landlords and violent  religious and upper caste bigots in battles over land, forest rights and ethnic  space.
The Catholic community has itself been a victim of gender violence, with  religious nuns being victims of gang rape in states such as Uttar Pradesh,  Madhya Pradesh and Orissa in the last 20 years.
Wives, sisters and daughters of evangelical and Pentecostal pastors have  also been subjected to targeted violence in an emerging trend in Madhya Pradesh  and some other states in recent years.
These horrendous incidents quite correctly come under the national  spotlight, but the gender debate itself remains subterranean other than when  some political group or other takes up a position in parliament whenever there  is talk of giving women some sort of a statutory representation in legislative  institutions, or in the matter of equal opportunity in  employment.
The vicious debates in parliament on the Reservations for Women Bill show  perhaps even better than statistics that patriarchal India has still not come to  terms with how to nurture and respect women, a little less than 50 percent of  the population.
That they are not an exact half of the population, as nature designed  them to be, is because of the hazards they run from the moment of conception all  the way till they marry – pre-natal deaths in sex-determined abortions, infant  mortality, girl child bias, and dowry deaths apart from selective malnourishment  and labor.
The data on the “invisible lives” of Indian women remains terrible as it  is for their sisters in some countries of Africa and South Asia. Three out of  five women in South Asia and an estimated 50 percent of all women in Africa and  in the Arab region are still illiterate. Close to 245 million Indian women lack  the basic capability to read.
In India, the child sex ratio dropped from 945 females per 1000 males in  1991 to 927 females per 1000 males in 2001; up to 50 million girls and women are ‘missing’ from India’s population because of termination of the female foetus or  high mortality of the girl child. Female foeticide in India increased by 49.2  percent between 1999-2000.
The share of women in non-agricultural wage employment is only 17  percent. Participation of women in the workforce is only 13.9 percent in the  urban sector and 29.9 percent in the rural sector.
Women’s wage rates are, on average, only 75 percent of men’s wage rates  and constitute only 25 percent of the family income. In no Indian state do women  and men earn equal wages in agriculture. 
Women occupy only 9 percent of parliamentary seats – less than 4 percent  of seats in High Courts and in the Supreme Court less than 3 percent of  administrators and managers are women.
The data on crimes against women is absolutely nauseating. Every 3.5  minutes, a crime is committed against women in India. In terms of daily  statistics, 45 women were raped, 121 women were sexually harassed and 31 women  and girls were trafficked in the last 24 hours.
As many as 40 women and girls are kidnapped every day, and 21 women are  murdered every day over dowry issues. Domestic violence constitutes 33.3 percent  of all crimes against women.
And finally, 110,424 housewives committed suicide between 1997-2001 and  accounted for 52 percent of the total female suicide  victims.
This is data from UNICEF, the National Crime Research Bureau and other  official sources. In instances of sexual violence including rape, close  relatives and acquaintances were the main assailants, and societal silence the  main response.
The data should shock the nation, and specially the governance system – the ministries of the government, the bureaucrats who implement the decisions  and the politicians, in parliament or state legislatures, who make the  decisions. And it should shock the Church and the leaders of other  religions.
The indices show that since 1950 when the constitution came into being  giving every citizen, man and woman, equality under the law and the system, the  effort has been at best half-hearted.
Just taking foeticide, education and wages as test cases, it is evident  that a male-centric semi-feudal and semi-rural social structure has not yet  reconciled the contemporary demands of equal treatment of the son and the  daughter, for that is what every male and female is in the family  structure.
It is all interconnected. One would feel that the decision for midday  meals would help improve the health standards of all children, including girls.  Not so.To begin with, most of the girls are not in school anyway, and others as  surrogate mothers to their young siblings at home often smuggle the food back  for them.
This is of course true only when the midday meal scheme works, and there  are serious doubts if it works as well in forest areas and in Dalit “bastis” or  hamlets in the hinterland.
The issues of equal wages for equal work, better maternity health care  and maternal nutrition are issues the government has not fully resolved, and  may, in fact, not be able to resolve for a couple more decades going by the rate  of progress at present. But it is in the matter of sexual violence that one  notices disturbing trends in governance and  society.
A report compiled by the National Election Watch and the Association for  Democratic Reforms has revealed that about 260 candidates facing charges such as  rape, assault and outraging the modesty of a woman contested assembly elections  on tickets of various parties in the last five  years.
The Congress was leading the 'shame-list' with 26 such candidates  followed by the Bharatiya Janata Party (Indian People’s Party), who had  24.
This does put a question mark on the intent of the political parties.  Civil society has in recent years taken the initiative in persuading the  government to draft a comprehensive law against communal and targeted violence,  which focuses on gender violence and the traumatizing of women of all ages in  times of ethnic or religious conflict.
Women’s associations have also been working on reforms of laws – some of  which date back to the 19th century – concerning sexual violence, including  changes in the definition of rape. The country has also seen mounting anger  against feudal rural society, popularly known as “khaps,” that run kangaroo  courts to punish couples who defy caste norms, or young women who marry men they  love.
Many such khaps are known to have forced rape survivors to marry their  rapists. In fact sometimes police and magistrates, especially in states such as  Madhya Pradesh, also recommend that rapists marry their victims.It is such a  feudal and anti-woman mindset that civil society activists are trying to change.  Many social groups have joined them, especially youth from universities and the  workforce. It is time to strengthen this civil society  movement.
The Church, especially the Catholic hierarchy, religious and laity, have  been in fact invited to join in this struggle at changing society and culture,  introducing value-based education in schools and colleges, and working with  rural and urban communities to ensure that India is safe and nurturing for its  women citizens.
The Catholic Church cannot afford to keep aloof from the tectonic  movement for a modern democratic India.
 
(John Dayal is the general secretary of the All India Christian Council  and a 
member of the Indian government’s National Integration  Council.)
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With Warm Regards,
Dr. James Kottoor
Dr. James Kottoor
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