Thursday, December 20, 2012

Crime and Punishment


The whole world, it seems, is talking about the Delhi gang rape case: the incident has managed to attract the attention of a thick-skinned, usually indifferent and often insensitive generation, caught up in their smartphones and iPads, too busy making money and spending it. Yes, it includes me too.

Now that it has made both the national and international media go hoarse, now that students and citizens have taken to the streets and now that everybody born with a keyboard have expressed themselves on twitter/blogs/facebook, our usually indolent government has also been hustled into action, albeit through some token measures and platitudes.

A few months back, I had written about violation of women in this post. Now, as we witness yet another barbaric act, I am left to wonder, rather helplessly, if at all, there is a solution. You can talk about fast-track courts, death penalty, sensitization of police force, deterrents or even awareness, but it still leaves the issue of the social and cultural norms, which cannot be dismantled so easily.

We belong to a country which treats women as second-class citizens, which is unabashedly pro-men, which worships aggression and bullies the weak and which resists anything that threatens the established hierarchy. Till we become more open-minded as a nation, till we become more tolerant to differences and till we learn to accept the changing social and economic milieu, other measures would fall inadequately short of achieving the harmony that we are waiting for, hoping for, praying for…

Meanwhile, as our society gets educated, painfully and slowly, what are women supposed to do?

Wait for a cultural revolution, as we put up with the callousness in our daily lives?
Hope for a judicial reform, as we patiently look for justice?
Pray for a safe return every day, as we leave the house?

Isn’t it just easier to forsake the nation which has so easily forsaken us, the nation which is so careless towards one half of its citizen and a nation where crime is rampant, but punishment is not?

6 comments:

Neil D'souza said...

You too have jumped on the bandwagon. Surprising. Unfortunately in our country we will forget about this till our dormant moral compass is shaken awake the next time something happens like this and the media circus jumps all over it.

survivingbrain said...

Rapists are not born to be rapists, they are created by the society including us. We hold sex as something which is illegal, give too much importance to the chastity factor to the kids, that frustration builds up among people. Rape is not the 'fault' of the woman or a man, but is because of the frustration, which will be released healthily only if we allow more liberal interaction between boys and girls right from their childhood. Our movies and soaps on TV treat the female species in a bad framework, the typical average indian household restricts the freedom to women. And we expect nice, decent behaviour from men brought up under these circumstances??

Nefertiti said...

@neil
nothing to do with the bandwagon, but it's something I feel very strongly about. and yes, public memory is short, but at times a circus is required to make the clowns in politics take some action.

@sb
comment longer than post. but point being society needs to change, though it's not an overnight exercise...

survivingbrain said...

Society might or might not change. but not definitely in our generation, i guess.

Ps: (I will continue writing longer comments:P)

jo said...

Dont think politics can alone force this issue, its social change that we need which will be decadal/generational. People have forsaken nations for less..

Nefertiti said...

@sb

sighh...

@jo
it's a hobson's choice really. Being treated as second class citizens in your own country or in some other country...