Foreign | Swadeshi |
Nuclear
Women's
Liberation: The Indian Way
by Dr.
Murli Manohar Joshi
The international
conference on women organised by the United Nations at Beijing
in September was a follow-up of summits in Nairobi, Cairo and
Rio de Janeiro. At Beijing, apart from government
representatives, a large number of non-governmental
organizations participated. Nearly 30,000 women from various
countries attended. Going by media reports, the deliberations
have been compiled into a declaration of principles and a
140-page report which is the platform for action PFA.
It is baffling
that neither the Indian Govt.'s official delegation nor the NGO
participants felt it necessary to have discussions on the
outcome of this highly publicised summit. Leave alone a national
discussion, women in India have not even had the benefit of
being enlightened about the details of the summit. A few reviews
were produced by the media. But people are keen to know the
issues discussed by the official delegation, the views advocated
on Indian womanhood and the attitude towards the PFA.
The available
information has given rise to doubts. First, the issues
discussed at Beijing sprang mainly from Western consumerist
culture. The values of the East - the concept of a life-long
relationship and the respect a husband and wife have for each
other - were not even mentioned. There were no deliberations on
issues relating to women's liberation and its solution. The role
of women in society and cultural evolution did not get proper
attention at Beijing. Nonetheless, the Western delegates
highlighted new morals and the universal role of women in
protecting human rights.
The vital question
is the nature of the views of the Indian women's delegation
regarding women's problems, especially when the so called
emancipated Western women propagated feminist movements and free
sex, physical relationships with men regardless of marital
status, the growth of lesbianism and artificial insemination as
universal human rights. What was the delegation's opinion on
gender discrimination?
What directions
were given by the GOI to the official delegation? One would like
to know the role, duties and rights of a woman in a healthy,
balanced, progressive, and developing social order, whether any
meaningful discussion was conducted by the delegation in Beijing
and what concrete proposals were offered by the delegation on
the physical and the economic exploitation of women in Indian
society? The key issue is whether the Government's approach is
the same as that of those advocating women's liberation led by
the Group of Seven nations or different from it.
The NGO's meet had
been organised 40 km away from the main venue. There were two
types of NGOs, completely autonomous women's organisations and
those chosen by the secretariat of the UN. Among the Govt.
representatives, the women of the G-7 countries dominated the
proceedings of the summit. They obviously did not discuss
oppression and exploitation arising out of social injustice and
gender discrimination. The purpose of the UN secretariat was in
fact to support women from the G-7 countries.
Apparently, the
Beijing Summit aimed at highlighting the morality - or the lack
of it - of the Western feminist woman. One wonders why issues
relating to human rights, including those of women, were
discussed in a peripheral manner while free sex constituted the
core of the discussions. Matters relating to reproduction were
discussed in a naive manner, more in connection with problems of
population than a woman's convictions, feelings, attitudes and
physical fitness.
The West is keen
to keep its consumerism alive. Hence its concern with the rise
in population that might affect standards of living. It is not
felt necessary to discuss the oppression of women in Western
society. Neil Malamath's research in 1986 indicated attitudes
towards women in the West. Thirty percent of the male students
in the US stated if they were not afraid of being arrested they
would go ahead and rape. When "rape" was substituted with
"forcing a woman into sex", 58 percent replied in the
affirmative. The National Institute of Mental Health of the US
had stated nearly 25 percent had to face a situation which could
be termed rape.
The rampant sale
of pornographic magazines in the West has been analyzed by Noami
Wolf in her celebrated work, "The Beauty Myth". According to
her, pornographic magazines have recorded sales of nearly 50
million pound sterling in the UK, and 40 million kroners in
Sweden. In 1993, 25 percent of this came from blue films and the
sale of pornographic cassettes. One wonders how high the sales
are at present.
In the US nearly 2
million men buy pornographic publications, numbering over 165,
spending almost 5 billion dollars annually. In Italy, the annual
sale of pornographic cassettes is worth 6 trillion liras.
Governments in the West are in a panic over crimes related to
sexual abuse. Crimes against women occur less often in the East,
particularly in India, when in societies of the West which cry
themselves hoarse over women's (failed) lib.
Today, with the
excuse of secularism, young people are not inculcated with moral
values. Did the women's representatives from India gather the
courage to tell the women from the G-7 nations to do some
introspection and not teach their non-existent morality to the
Third World? Unlike in the West, Indian womanhood is not a mere
"womb." It is neither an instrument for procreation nor a toy to
be physically abused. The Indian woman is intellect and soul,
not a mere body.
In India, social
relationships and institutions are patterned in such a manner
that an evolving structure of balanced social amity is created.
The family is an important institution. It is only through a
happy family that an aware society is born. In this society
woman has an important role to play. She is not merely a
domestic community. At all times she has made an overall
contribution to the growth of the social order. Right from the
vedic period the Indian woman has made a sincere effort to keep
the home protected. The family has fallen apart in the West and
has created a society where all relationships are founded on
selfishness. The growth of the single parent family in the West
is a direct outcome of this.
Did the Indian
delegation put forth its views on women's role in maintaining
world peace? How can the fragmented and emotionally hollow
society of the West propagate any role for women in world peace?
The concept of women's emancipation in countries where Eve is
believed to have been born from Adam's rib cannot compare with
the Indian concept of "Ardhnarishwar." According to this belief,
a diety is conceived of as partaking equally of male and female
natures. In India alone it is said, "Yo mam jayt sangrame, Yo me
darpan vyapohati, Yo me pratibalo loke sa me bharta bhavishyati"
-- "Durga bhavishyati".
In the Hindu
pantheon only the goddess Durga rides on a lion. This symbolises
that it is woman alone who can control the beast in man. Do
Indian feminists realise their potential? Staying in touch with
their own history and culture would serve Indian women better
than imitating Western women libbers. Indian womanhood
epitomises an individualistic, distinctive personality. It has
little to gain by imitating the failures of the West.
Source: Organiser, Dec. 24, 1995
Women excel
in the shadow of RSS:"Bank on these women"
("Organiser", May 19, 1996)
Yavatmal: "The Mahila Sahkari Bank, Ltd. of Yavatmal,
Maharashtra which was inaugurated by Vandaneeya Ushatai Chati,
Pramukh Sanchalika of the Rashtra Sevika Samiti on Mar. 18,
1995, has made outstanding progress in the very first year of
its operations. It has crossed the limits as outlined by the
Reserve Bank of India for the first three years of a
cooperative bank", so said Dr. Pramila Asolkar, chief advisor
of Matru Seva Sangh and vice-president of the Nagpur Nagarik
Mahila Sahkari Bank, Ltd, while inaugurating the safe deposit
lockers of the bank.
The function was
attended by more than 500 woman members and also the general
public. Shri Annaji Mendjoge, director of the Shikashan
Sahkari Bank Ltd., Nagpur and secretory of the Vidarbha Urban
Cooperative Banks Association, Nagpur was the chief guest. He
commended the progress made by the bank in the very first year
of its business.
The bank's board
of governers is 'manned' exclusively by women.