Photo by Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP/Getty Images.
A tight circle of hundreds of protesters chanted angrily in a heavily policed New Delhi alley on Sunday afternoon. They waved placards calling for the hanging of six men?including a 17-year-old?accused in the gang rape of a woman who died over the weekend in the hospital. ?They demanded a deadline for the hanging: Jan. 26, the annual celebration of the nation?s independence, which arrived courtesy of the nonviolent "eye for an eye makes the whole world blind? leadership of Mahatma Gandhi.
?So what he is minor .. [sic]? read one man?s sign in gothic black handwriting and accompanied by a crude drawing of the accused teenager with a noose around his neck, ?hang him too.?
The protesters chanted angrily, as television news crews broadcast their rage around the world. They seemed irate and bent on revenge.
And almost all of them were men.
Thousands of Indians have taken to the streets to protest the vicious Dec. 16 raping of a 23-year-old medical student, who boarded a bus with a man and then was attacked by several men, including the driver. The mass protests are a sign that India might finally be ready for change, that a country with a history of indifference and even tacit encouragement of rape might finally be learning a different way to respond. And in India?s deeply sexist society, it is probably the voices of these men that will deliver publicity unlike any seen before about the crisis facing India?s women and girls.
But change doesn?t happen overnight. There are women out on the streets, some from India?s long-suppressed women?s movement, to fight for stronger rape laws and other legal protections. But those women risk being groped by fellow protesters or shouted down. And the men on these same streets seem to be operating just as much from a revenge instinct as from any desire for meaningful social, political and legal changes.
?I?m really happy about men protesting,? said Ritupurnah Borah, a queer feminist activist who has helped organize the Citizen?s Collective Against Sexual Assault. The collective has been coordinating women?s safety protests every month for the past year. She said those protests were attended by virtually no men. Like many women?s activists and groups in India, Borah opposes the capital punishment that so many of the protesting men seek. She said capital punishment is not a deterrent against crimes such as rape and that profound social changes are instead needed to protect women in India.
?But recently, because men?s voices are more audible, they take over many of the protests. It?s really sad because we don?t want goons?we want people who are really concerned about violence against women to come out on the streets. We?ve been requesting the men to slop sloganeering and let the women slogan, but it?s not happening. They say, ?Oh, come on, we?re coming out and helping you.? ?
Some of the anti-rape protests during the past two weeks have been dominated by men, as was the case on Sunday; others have been roughly half women and half men. While men shout and hold brash signs calling for capital punishment, the women tend to light candles. They sit with sad faces. They silently hold signs that call for an end to violence against women, for peace after death for the victim, and for systemic changes in government and in society. For them, this is just the latest chapter in a drawn-out fight that for these women has lasted decades and enjoyed little progress. ?We want women dignity back [sic],? read a sign held by two young women as they stood mournfully at the periphery of the circle of angrily chanting men.
Some male protesters appeared steadfastly sincere about their desire to send a message to the government that crimes against women must end. But many more seemed to be interested in protecting women in the more old-fashioned, oppressive way.
Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=8be04a529c9b397e6a3c7ef068eba251
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