Published on Ultra Violet.

On March 28, 2008, Lalpari Devi, a 45-year-old Dalit woman was accused of being a witch by caste-Hindu, feudal villagers in Bihar who mercilessly beat her up, paraded her through the streets, tied her to a palm tree, cut her hair and smeared her face with limestone paste. She was saved from certain death by the timely arrival of the police. Lalpari somehow managed to survive the ordeal of social censure and hysteric, mob-driven humiliation. Many of her sisters have not been that lucky.
According to conservative (official, and outdated) estimates, 2,556 women were branded as witches and killed in India between 1987 and 2003. From 1991 to 2000, over 522 cases of witch-hunting have been registered in Bihar alone. In the same decade, about 300 people were done to death in the Telangana region in Andhra Pradesh on the suspicion that they were practising black magic. Bihar, for all its backwardness, was the first state in India to pass a law against witch-hunting in 1999. Jharkhand followed up with its anti-witch-hunt law in 2001, Chhattisgarh in 2005 and Rajasthan in 2006. An essential excerpt of the legalese: “a crime would be considered to have been committed when any person or community intentionally or inadvertently abets, conspires, aids and instigates the identification of a woman as a witch leading to her mental and physical torture and humiliation.” What is wonderful on paper rarely gets translated into something effective in practice. Besides, the threat of punishment and conviction hasn’t been a deterrent since the perpetrators of the crime (always male, almost always caste-Hindus who enjoy political clout) know that they will not be brought to book for what will be seen as an incidence of mob fury. Sometimes, it is the knowledge that the state will stand by them.
This free hand gives a free run to their imaginations, and witch-hunts have grown macabre by the day. The helpless “witches” are hounded and punished by being stripped naked, paraded around the villages, their hair is burnt off or their heads tonsured, their faces blackened, their noses cut off, their teeth pulled out (they are supposedly defanged) so that they can no longer curse, they are whipped, they are branded, sometimes, they are forced to eat human faeces and finally, they are put to death (here again the Indian imagination takes over: the victim is hanged, impaled, hacked, lynched or buried alive). And you have got it all wrong if you assumed that such stomach-churning, toe-curling torture is done in dingy, shadowy places: vast, open village lands come in particularly handy as favoured locations, and the cheering crowd can fill a modest stadium. Where these women are left to live, they are considered inauspicious and malevolent, socially ostracized and forced to forego their livelihood. Where they don’t end up losing their life, they are made to lose their mental balance.
It is no surprise that almost all the ‘witches’ have been Dalit or Adivasi women. Nowhere else in Indian history can we see such an explicit tie-up between patriarchal oppression and casteist subjugation. Witch-hunting is a powerful tool in the hands of caste-Hindu men who want to persecute assertive Dalit and Adivasi women who might directly challenge caste hegemony, or indirectly subvert local power equations.
Because names and places and stories speak stronger than statistics, here’s a sample: A Dalit woman, Badam Bai was beaten to death by four men at Bhunein village in Sultanpur in Kota district. Lajwanti Harijan of Kamolar village in the same district met with a similar fate. When a Dalit woman in Tarra village in Raipur district claimed rights to her dead husband’s land, she was killed after being branded a witch by her brother-in-law. Memki Bai Bhajaat of Varlipahada village and Sakri Bai Meena of Sailana village of Udaipur district were branded witches because of property disputes. Subhadra Basumatray, a 40-year-old Bodo woman in Tilapara village of Goalpara district in Assam, denounced rituals conducted by witch-doctors. Just as she started to voice her dissent, she ended with a fractured arm, broken ribs and bruised legs. Her own family members colluded with others to declare her a witch because she had demanded a share in her father’s property. An Adivasi woman panchayat president in Udaipur district in Rajasthan was declared a witch by caste-Hindu villagers who wanted to settle political scores. In neighbouring Nepal, a 52-year-old Dalit woman Dayawati Urab and her daughter Sunita Kumari Urab of Sunsari village were stripped naked, beaten, and forced to eat human faeces because villagers suspected them of indulging in sorcery.
Such humiliations, lynchings and killings, done with nauseous ingenuity haven’t spared old women either. In November 2004, Dhoopi Raigar, a 70-year-old Dalit woman from Jita Ka Dalda in Tonk district was forcibly dragged out of her son’s house by some villagers who cut off her hair and attempted to immolate her. Her son’s increasing prosperity infuriated the ‘upper’ castes who sought to prevent it by accusing Dhoopi of being a witch. A 65-year-old Dalit woman labourer Pochamma and her 70-year-old husband Sailu were burnt to death in Ulitimaipalli village near Hyderabad because they were suspected of using black magic to kill cattle. In Gaandi village in Angara Block in Ranchi, two old Dalit widows Jeetan Devi and Dubhan Devi were tortured and held responsible for the death (due to malaria) of two children. The women were tonsured, beaten, paraded and burnt to death. Before the final disgrace, earthern pitchers were broken on their heads. As recent as August 2007, Bali Bharu Doli, an 85-year-old Dalit woman in Rajasthan was mercilessly beaten and forced to keep a burning coal in her mouth on the suspicion that she was a witch. Barely a month later, on Sep 2, 2007, two elderly women in their 60s were murdered by their sons in Orissa’s Keonjhar district for allegedly practicing sorcery.
Where do these cruel and perverse caste-Hindu witch-hunters get the moral high-ground to condemn Dalit and Adivasi women? Revolutionary Dr. Ambedkar observed that the Atharva Veda itself as “nothing but a collection of sorcery, black-magic and medicine,” so witchery is not something new to the ‘upper’ castes. And shouldn’t the caste-Hindus be reminded of Joan Mencher’s sociological insight into sorcery in Travancore, that “some social control over the excesses of the high-caste landlords was exercised through the thread of Pulaya black magic” since Pulaya medicine men and witch doctors were believed to possess the “powers of bringing malaise and misfortune on wrongdoers, especially the cruel landlords and wicked bossmen.” Shouldn’t the oppressor caste-Hindus be ashamed that Dalits could have come up the idea of black magic and communion with the spirit world only in order to subvert the caste system where the priestly caste alone enjoyed the hotline to God?
It is true that lack of adequate health-care systems have spawned the growth of alternative beliefs and faith healing, and consequently witch-doctors. But that is not the reason why Dalit and Adivasi women have been singled out for public humiliation. By punishing those who are seen as vile and wild, oppressors want to send a not-so-subtle message to the women of their own castes: docility and domesticity gets rewarded, anything else gets punished. This has been the legacy of violence against women.
When sin meets superstition, as in witch-hunting, the victims are also single (read widowed/ deserted/ divorced) women of a certain age who are no longer burdened with reproductive duties. The word ‘witch’ is thrust on these ‘dangerous’ women who asserted their entitlement to rights and thus challenged patriarchal and caste supremacist diktats. Dalit or Adivasi women who dared to contest elections and directly challenged the political power of the landed caste-Hindus have been labeled hags. They have been accused of exercising black magic when in fact they have only been exercising their fundamental rights. Witchcraft, when used by brutal caste-Hindus in the modern context, has come to signify women’s resistance to oppression, and the price they have paid for it.
*sigh*
Boons of religion.
spanish inquisition?
Of late, I read a few of these incidents in newspapers. They are just trying to sell by giving “exciting” News. None of them do a root cause analysis or think of a solution as to how to avoid such incidents. Shame on me, shame on my nation.
Reports of witch hunt in India often come out as though they were caused by caste alone; even when one should see that caste is not something without gender embedded within, we ought to give a little thought to the politics of hate so characteristic of the
hetero sexualized, gendered society.If the critical mass of hatred generated against the victims were attributable only to their status in caste, their being all women would have had little consequence.
If we were to take a look at the medieval Europe,we would see that as many as 15-20 million white women were murdered at the behest of the (white) male clergy over a period of three hundred years or more. Racism was yet to take off then and the dark people and continents were just waiting to be explored by white men.
From this, it may be inferred that most discussions focused on caste taking place in this country though for reasons valid enough,is lacking in the necessary edge on the equally important factor of gender.
http://mekhala.blogspot.com/2008/04/strange-fruit.html
To top it all Mayawati bitches about Rahul G spending a night at a Dalit’s house..cheers to the great indian farcial democracy!
please not in this day, was my first reaction. And then, why not? what makes this age different from any other as far as misogyny is concerned? one of those things that make me wish there really WERE witches with the power to curse..
I have just written an article on the advancements on technology and how it is benefitting the social sector beside the many posts on NGO Post (ngopost.org). After reading this blog it all appears to be a huge farce…
I don’t understand why the news channels find Aishwarya Abhishek kundli more important than such issues!!! People ougt to know about this. But what good it would be merely knowing about the issues unless something is done???
Posted this -
http://ngopost.org/story.php?title=Dangerous_Dalit_Women_and_Witch-hunters_%AB_Meena_Kandasamy-1
Hoping to reach out to as many people as possible.
Nenju Porukku thillaye indha nilaiketta manidarai ninainthuvittaal…
This is just the tip of an iceberg. I have seen worse in Koraput of Orissa, where i did my Ph.D. Though such incidents occur in large numbers, only a few are reported.. a pity that in the 21st century we praise people who worship cows but beat up people who invoke tribal gods; branding them as witches…
interested in dalit issues
to shamful for me and my nation
Not Spanish Inquisition, Rufus lucifer. Inquisition of man, of all cultures. Its so sad. excuseme for my bad english, i am latin.
MARTIN, from Argentina
HI looking forward to hear more from you !!!
Liked u r article and i am new to writing blogs , and i searched thru net for caste and religion diffrences saw ur blog ,and mark my words u r an inspiration to start blog of my own .
Hello Meena, and thank you for posting this.
Its such a terrible and sad subject, but it needs to be brought out into the open and discussed. Hopefully, we can all work to prevent this kind of thing from ever occuring again. No person should ever have to endure such a cruel injustice, but the fact that it happens to women old enough to be our grandmothers is inexcusable.
Modern historians have observed that many of the documented witch-hunts in colonial America and in Europe often obscured the very real, and very material concerns proritized by those leading the charge to “fight witchcraft”.
More often than not, the accusers had a clear interest in the rights or resources belonging to the accused, and acquired these by dipossesing the accused through confirming her/him/them publically as a witch(es). A really good, detailed analysis of the political ramifications surrounding a famous witch-trial in France (one that decided the fate of an entire city) can be found in Aldous Huxley’s “The Devils of Loudon” (Ken Russel made a really good movie about this particular incident, but its kind of brutal, and thus hard to watch). The book clearly demonsrates the very deliberate and self-interested hand behind mass-hyteria.
I have an American friend whose great-grandparents were accused of witchcraft, and driven from their community in the Mid-West prairies. He claims that although his ancestors were accused of sorcery, the real dispute was over land-rights. He says that the antagonists used the witch-craft accusation as a means of socially ostracizing his great grand-parents, terrorizing them away from their own home, and thus freeing up their coveted property. I wouldn’t be surprised if accusations of witch-craft in India derive from the very same selfish ambitions which rely on popular superstitions and a lack of education.
I also agree with whole-heartedly Mr. KM Venugopalan. The problem isnt just the injustice of caste, but a double injustice of misogyny and hetero-sexism as well. Definately, I think the issue of caste is an important factor, but I also think that many Indian communities (irrespective of caste) display a very real neurosis about sexually mature, independant women. I am a native Malayali man, but I have seen many examples of this neurosis throughout India. As a devoted Devi Baktha, I do what I can to counter that cruel imabalance (for me, feminism is very much in line with my beliefs about Devi).
But the fact remains that many Indian men (-not all, but many-) are enculturated to fear women’s independence, women’s bodies, and women’s independant sexuality… consider the superstitions surrounding menstration, or those attached to unmarried and widowed women. In Kerala, there used to be a belief that girls who died unmarried would become bloodthirsty Yakshis. These spirits are believed to “entice men” in order to “attack them and drain them of their life-fluids” (an notion which truely reverses the reality of the gender imbalance: that is that it is men who seduce and rape women, not the other way around). The tradition of arranging the marriages of young girls to older men is the most graphic realization of that anxiety.
Provincial modesty might require that people not discuss such issues openly. But I know for certain that many of the women in India’s villages are more than interested to bring these uncomfortable truths out into the open.
Now a days violence againist daliths is very
common ……………
Dr:Ambedker says”POLITICAL POWER IS THE
MASTERKEY BY WHICH WE CAN OPEN EACH
AND EVERY LOACKS……….”yes ,we have to
go there ……..Politics………we have to destroy
the present system…….