SlideShare ist ein Scribd-Unternehmen logo
1 von 12
Mob lynching in India and
Everyday Lives of Women –
Questions of Marginalization
and Representations
Sanjukta Basu, PhD Scholar,
School of Women and Gender Studies
Email:
Preliminary
findings -
Exploratory
Research
Incidents of mob
lynching in India
Karwan e Mohabbat -
A journey of love and
atonement
Marginalization of
women within an
already marginalized
community
May 2014 a political
milestone - Mob Lynching
Government does not have official data on mob lynching. According
to India Spend:
Approximately 60 cases of mob lynching by gau rakshaks between
2010 to June 2017 (Currently, this number has crossed 100. Last month, an 80 year
old Muslim man in Bihar was burnt to death by a mob alleged to belong to Hindutva
groups)
25 Indians have lost their life
97% of these cases occurred after May 2014.
84% of the dead are Muslims
IndiaSpend is a non-
profit and a project
of The Spending &
Policy Research
Foundation,
registered as a
Charitable Trust
with the Charity
Commissioner,
Mumbai.
Mohammad Akhlaq, September,
2015, Dadri, Uttar Pradesh
The facts and circumstances
leading up to the attack and
what followed thereafter
were soon to become a
pattern in India. Violence
perpetrated in a systematic
way as a tool of social and
political marginalization and
disenfranchisement of the
Muslims, considered the
original “others/enemy” of
the Hindu nation by
ideologues of Rashtriya
Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS).
 Allegations of beef eating / cow
slaughter / smuggling
 Sudden Mob gathers led by ‘cow
protection groups,’ barge into
somebody’s home or stop a cattle
transferring vehicle.
 Ruthless and incessant beating
sometimes with bare hands, sometimes
using sticks, bricks, or “anything they
could find — iron rods, sticks, knives,
daggers, screw-drivers, even pens” as
weapons.
Video recording - brazen confidence that
you will not be punished for your crime,
and even if you are nabbed, you will be a
hero for the ruling establishment
(Mander, The mob that hates).”
How to understand mob
lynching?
AMERICA - 1865 AND 1920
Lynching as informal means of
dispensing criminal justice (Poe)
Sense of honour and shame among the
Southern white culture.
Lynching as a tool of political hegemony
(Jay Corzine)
Andrew S. Buckser argued that lynching
is a type of ritual - elements of carnival
atmosphere, magic, superstition
Ashraf H. A. Rushdy argued that we can
understand what lynching means in
American history by examining its
evolution.
INDIA
Very little study on lynchings or mob
violence in India
Civil society and media interventions -
The Karwan team so far visited over 60-
70 victim families across 12 states.
Early in the phenomenon – one hopes
they will not increase, but this is also the
time to start our investigations into what
is behind this violence:
Marginalization
Hindutva nationalism
“There are only two courses open to the foreign elements, either
to merge themselves in the national race and adopt its culture, or
to live at its mercy so long as the national race may allow them to
do so and to quit the country at the sweet will of the national
race…the foreign races in Hindusthan must either adopt the Hindu
culture and language, must learn to respect and hold in reverence
Hindu religion, must entertain no idea but those of the
glorification of the Hindu race and culture…must lose their
separate existence to merge in the Hindu race, or may stay in the
country, wholly subordinated to the Hindu Nation, claiming
nothing, deserving no privileges, far less any preferential
treatment-not even citizen's rights ”
M.S. Golwalkar, We or Our Nationhood Defined. Nagpur: Bharat Publications, 1939.
“Humne sabar kar liya (I made peace),” an old and
fragile Jafruddin Hassan of Khurgain village, Shamli
district, Uttar Pradesh told the Karwan team with tears
in his eyes, trembling hands resting between his knees
and his head stooped low, as he hopelessly looked at
the floor. Jafruddin is the face of the traumatized
minority community today (Basu, Karwan e Mohabbat:
Uncovering how violence against minorities has been
normalised).
“The Pehlus and Rakbars of this country are meant to
be killed in the ‘new India’ which Prime Minister
Narendra Modi have vouched to build in several of his
public speeches (Teltumbde). ”
Marginalization – Marginal
Man
Marginality or exclusions have
been mostly understood as
spatial or cultural in the context
of human migration from the
perspective of the immigratory
man (or community), who
becomes ‘marginal man’ in a new
area or culture he immigrates to
(Robert E Park).
Arthur A Cohen argued that
Marginalization is something a
person or community feels in
their mind.
1928 - Human Migration and
the Marginal Man, Robert E. Park
1935 - The Problem of the
Marginal Man, Everett V.
Stonequist.
1947 - A Re-Examination of the
Marginal Man Concept
1972 - A Plea for a Further
Refinement of the Marginal Man
Theory; Roy Dean Wright and
Susan N. Wright
Indian
Context
 Muslims part of Indian landscape for over 500
years.
 History of amalgamation of Hindu-Muslim culture
 Hindu and Muslim animosity traced back to the
period of colonialism by the British, who for the first
time codified the differences (Baber)
 Post 2014, there has been a surge in Hindu
hegemonic ideology often supported by BJP
leaders/allies, which seeks to change the
Constitution (Apoorva) and establish a Hindu
Rashtra. From 2014 to 2015, there has been a range
of attacks on Muslims lives (Gidda), livelihood (Zeba
Siddiqui), food (Mangaldas), faith and culture
(Sharma), madrassa, namaaz, personal laws and so
on. In the ‘new India’ Muslims have been excluded
from the ‘imagined community’ (Anderson) which
constitutes Indian nationalism and are paying a
heavy price (Ashraf) for the Mughal invasions,
colonial rule, and partition – a range of events dating
back to over five hundred years, in which present
generations had no role.
In the Indian context
marginalization of
the Muslim
community have
little relation with
migration anytime in
the near past and
not owed to the
culture difference or
‘hybrids’ as talked
about by Stonequist.
Marginalization
is beyond the
binaries
My argument: Marginalization have to be
understood beyond the binary of the centre and
the periphery. It does not take place just
between two cultures or identities but there are
margins within margins, and layers of identities
placed at hierarchical power positions.
The experiences of the marginal man or
community must be juxtaposed with that felt by
the individual woman and her ‘everyday
realities’
There is an “inner circle” and “everyday world”
(Smith, The Everyday World As Problematic)
within the household that is not penetrated by
the earnest public concern and empathy.
Absence of women from public meetings with
Karwan team made our process of knowing and
understanding mob lynching incomplete – as
argued by Dorothy Smith.
Following media reports of
mob lynching / hate crimes
we as civil society members
reach the doorsteps of
households which have lost
male members of the family
to hate crimes but we stop
there.
Women’s absence from the conversations raised
further questions of representations and identity
politics.
As researchers or civil society members trying to understand a
phenomenon, we go through the dilemma of whether or not it would
be appropriate to insist upon women’s inclusion or ask probing
questions as to why they were absent.
Kimberley Crenshaw explains this problem: Identity politics
“frequently conflates or ignores intra group differences. In the
context of violence against women, this elision of difference is
problematic, fundamentally because the violence that many women
experience is often shaped by other dimensions of their identities,
such as race and class (religion and caste).”
I started Karwan journey with a different purpose but by
talking to the women I learned and unlearned more things.
The issues that emerged cut across academic disciplines,
range and size of studies, geographies and other boundaries.
No single research can possibly accommodate the wide range
of issues I came across in a journey which was about
communal violence. I am now left with the question, whether
it is worth probing into subjects beyond the scope of the
immediate ethnographic study, understanding mob-lynching
or whether we should go into the field without having any
immediate concept as Dorothy Smith suggested and widen
our study to include women’s experiences?

Weitere ähnliche Inhalte

Was ist angesagt?

QuizTree Mega Visual Connect
QuizTree Mega Visual ConnectQuizTree Mega Visual Connect
QuizTree Mega Visual Connect
Kushan Patel
 

Was ist angesagt? (20)

Adrishtha - IFest India Quiz 2016 - FINALS
Adrishtha - IFest India Quiz 2016 - FINALSAdrishtha - IFest India Quiz 2016 - FINALS
Adrishtha - IFest India Quiz 2016 - FINALS
 
honour killing
honour killinghonour killing
honour killing
 
Attorney General Quiz 2016 Prelims + Answers
Attorney General Quiz 2016 Prelims + AnswersAttorney General Quiz 2016 Prelims + Answers
Attorney General Quiz 2016 Prelims + Answers
 
Child Marriage in India: Achievements, Gaps and Challenges
Child Marriage in India: Achievements, Gaps and ChallengesChild Marriage in India: Achievements, Gaps and Challenges
Child Marriage in India: Achievements, Gaps and Challenges
 
2022 Constitution Quiz IIT Jodhpur
2022 Constitution Quiz IIT Jodhpur2022 Constitution Quiz IIT Jodhpur
2022 Constitution Quiz IIT Jodhpur
 
India Quiz- Finals
India Quiz- FinalsIndia Quiz- Finals
India Quiz- Finals
 
QUIZ.pptx
QUIZ.pptxQUIZ.pptx
QUIZ.pptx
 
crime against women in india
crime against women in indiacrime against women in india
crime against women in india
 
Inter College Business Quiz @ College of Business Studies
Inter College Business Quiz @ College of Business StudiesInter College Business Quiz @ College of Business Studies
Inter College Business Quiz @ College of Business Studies
 
Human trafficking in bangladesh
Human trafficking in bangladeshHuman trafficking in bangladesh
Human trafficking in bangladesh
 
15th August (Independence Day) Quiz 2018
15th August (Independence Day) Quiz 2018 15th August (Independence Day) Quiz 2018
15th August (Independence Day) Quiz 2018
 
QUIZHUT WHATSAPP GROUP - WOMEN'S DAY SPECIAL QUIZ
QUIZHUT WHATSAPP GROUP - WOMEN'S DAY SPECIAL QUIZQUIZHUT WHATSAPP GROUP - WOMEN'S DAY SPECIAL QUIZ
QUIZHUT WHATSAPP GROUP - WOMEN'S DAY SPECIAL QUIZ
 
2016 KQA Ganesh Nayak Memorial Open Quiz Prelims
2016 KQA Ganesh Nayak Memorial Open Quiz Prelims2016 KQA Ganesh Nayak Memorial Open Quiz Prelims
2016 KQA Ganesh Nayak Memorial Open Quiz Prelims
 
Scheduled caste and scheduled tribe (prevention of atrocities)act,1989
Scheduled caste and scheduled tribe (prevention of atrocities)act,1989Scheduled caste and scheduled tribe (prevention of atrocities)act,1989
Scheduled caste and scheduled tribe (prevention of atrocities)act,1989
 
Gender issues & women empowerment in india
Gender issues & women empowerment in indiaGender issues & women empowerment in india
Gender issues & women empowerment in india
 
Mela quiz
Mela quizMela quiz
Mela quiz
 
India quiz finals
India quiz finalsIndia quiz finals
India quiz finals
 
Uniform civil code law commision's observation
Uniform civil code law commision's observationUniform civil code law commision's observation
Uniform civil code law commision's observation
 
QuizTree Mega Visual Connect
QuizTree Mega Visual ConnectQuizTree Mega Visual Connect
QuizTree Mega Visual Connect
 
Street crimes
Street crimesStreet crimes
Street crimes
 

Ähnlich wie Mob lynching in India - questions of marginalization and representation

Brown Scrapbook Art and History Museum Presentation_20240501_220419_0000_comp...
Brown Scrapbook Art and History Museum Presentation_20240501_220419_0000_comp...Brown Scrapbook Art and History Museum Presentation_20240501_220419_0000_comp...
Brown Scrapbook Art and History Museum Presentation_20240501_220419_0000_comp...
bhabanisankarmala
 
1WST 4930⎮DR. MOURA-KOÇOĞLU Image cisco.comModule 04.docx
1WST 4930⎮DR. MOURA-KOÇOĞLU Image cisco.comModule 04.docx1WST 4930⎮DR. MOURA-KOÇOĞLU Image cisco.comModule 04.docx
1WST 4930⎮DR. MOURA-KOÇOĞLU Image cisco.comModule 04.docx
lorainedeserre
 
Socio – Economic Mobility among Schedule Caste: A Study of Village Mugalmagri...
Socio – Economic Mobility among Schedule Caste: A Study of Village Mugalmagri...Socio – Economic Mobility among Schedule Caste: A Study of Village Mugalmagri...
Socio – Economic Mobility among Schedule Caste: A Study of Village Mugalmagri...
inventionjournals
 

Ähnlich wie Mob lynching in India - questions of marginalization and representation (15)

Racial Discrimination
Racial DiscriminationRacial Discrimination
Racial Discrimination
 
Media and Democracy
Media and DemocracyMedia and Democracy
Media and Democracy
 
Brown Scrapbook Art and History Museum Presentation_20240501_220419_0000_comp...
Brown Scrapbook Art and History Museum Presentation_20240501_220419_0000_comp...Brown Scrapbook Art and History Museum Presentation_20240501_220419_0000_comp...
Brown Scrapbook Art and History Museum Presentation_20240501_220419_0000_comp...
 
Concept of Disparity II- Prof. Karishma Shetty Foundation Course Semester 1
Concept of Disparity II- Prof. Karishma Shetty Foundation Course Semester 1Concept of Disparity II- Prof. Karishma Shetty Foundation Course Semester 1
Concept of Disparity II- Prof. Karishma Shetty Foundation Course Semester 1
 
Communalism.pptx
Communalism.pptxCommunalism.pptx
Communalism.pptx
 
Racism In Racism
Racism In RacismRacism In Racism
Racism In Racism
 
Views On News 07 April 2016
Views On News 07 April 2016Views On News 07 April 2016
Views On News 07 April 2016
 
Are we Indians matured enough yet to stand up against Fundamentalist Bullying...
Are we Indians matured enough yet to stand up against Fundamentalist Bullying...Are we Indians matured enough yet to stand up against Fundamentalist Bullying...
Are we Indians matured enough yet to stand up against Fundamentalist Bullying...
 
99 castism in india
99 castism in india99 castism in india
99 castism in india
 
Secularism , majoritarianism , identity in final solution
Secularism , majoritarianism , identity in final solutionSecularism , majoritarianism , identity in final solution
Secularism , majoritarianism , identity in final solution
 
Secularism , majoritarianism , identity in final solution
Secularism , majoritarianism , identity in final solutionSecularism , majoritarianism , identity in final solution
Secularism , majoritarianism , identity in final solution
 
Hindutva movement and future of muslim minorities in secular india 7.pptx
Hindutva movement and future of muslim minorities in secular india 7.pptxHindutva movement and future of muslim minorities in secular india 7.pptx
Hindutva movement and future of muslim minorities in secular india 7.pptx
 
1WST 4930⎮DR. MOURA-KOÇOĞLU Image cisco.comModule 04.docx
1WST 4930⎮DR. MOURA-KOÇOĞLU Image cisco.comModule 04.docx1WST 4930⎮DR. MOURA-KOÇOĞLU Image cisco.comModule 04.docx
1WST 4930⎮DR. MOURA-KOÇOĞLU Image cisco.comModule 04.docx
 
Socio – Economic Mobility among Schedule Caste: A Study of Village Mugalmagri...
Socio – Economic Mobility among Schedule Caste: A Study of Village Mugalmagri...Socio – Economic Mobility among Schedule Caste: A Study of Village Mugalmagri...
Socio – Economic Mobility among Schedule Caste: A Study of Village Mugalmagri...
 
Racism
RacismRacism
Racism
 

Mehr von Sanjukta Basu

Workshop on Gender Awareness at Ramanujan College, Delhi University
Workshop on Gender Awareness at Ramanujan College, Delhi UniversityWorkshop on Gender Awareness at Ramanujan College, Delhi University
Workshop on Gender Awareness at Ramanujan College, Delhi University
Sanjukta Basu
 
Risk mitigation strategies in SMEs (small and medium business)
Risk mitigation strategies in SMEs (small and medium business)Risk mitigation strategies in SMEs (small and medium business)
Risk mitigation strategies in SMEs (small and medium business)
Sanjukta Basu
 

Mehr von Sanjukta Basu (11)

Sanjukta Basu on Her Women with Tattoos Project - Seminar Tattoos And Taboos ...
Sanjukta Basu on Her Women with Tattoos Project - Seminar Tattoos And Taboos ...Sanjukta Basu on Her Women with Tattoos Project - Seminar Tattoos And Taboos ...
Sanjukta Basu on Her Women with Tattoos Project - Seminar Tattoos And Taboos ...
 
Indian National Congress Manifesto 2019 Lok Sabha Elections
Indian National Congress Manifesto 2019 Lok Sabha ElectionsIndian National Congress Manifesto 2019 Lok Sabha Elections
Indian National Congress Manifesto 2019 Lok Sabha Elections
 
TEDx talk by TED fellow sanjukta basu at TEDxITMU
TEDx talk by TED fellow sanjukta basu at TEDxITMUTEDx talk by TED fellow sanjukta basu at TEDxITMU
TEDx talk by TED fellow sanjukta basu at TEDxITMU
 
Take Risk, Travel Solo - Solo Travel to Explore Gender and Public Space
Take Risk, Travel Solo - Solo Travel to Explore Gender and Public SpaceTake Risk, Travel Solo - Solo Travel to Explore Gender and Public Space
Take Risk, Travel Solo - Solo Travel to Explore Gender and Public Space
 
Workshop on Gender Awareness at Ramanujan College, Delhi University
Workshop on Gender Awareness at Ramanujan College, Delhi UniversityWorkshop on Gender Awareness at Ramanujan College, Delhi University
Workshop on Gender Awareness at Ramanujan College, Delhi University
 
PRIA Communications Apr-2014 to Mar 2015 Significant achievements and way for...
PRIA Communications Apr-2014 to Mar 2015 Significant achievements and way for...PRIA Communications Apr-2014 to Mar 2015 Significant achievements and way for...
PRIA Communications Apr-2014 to Mar 2015 Significant achievements and way for...
 
Risk mitigation strategies in SMEs (small and medium business)
Risk mitigation strategies in SMEs (small and medium business)Risk mitigation strategies in SMEs (small and medium business)
Risk mitigation strategies in SMEs (small and medium business)
 
Social Media in the Indian non profit context
Social Media in the Indian non profit contextSocial Media in the Indian non profit context
Social Media in the Indian non profit context
 
Indian Social Media trend: Why Nonprofits, Academics, Informal sectors don't ...
Indian Social Media trend: Why Nonprofits, Academics, Informal sectors don't ...Indian Social Media trend: Why Nonprofits, Academics, Informal sectors don't ...
Indian Social Media trend: Why Nonprofits, Academics, Informal sectors don't ...
 
Social media baithak: Information Handout and reports
Social media baithak: Information Handout and reportsSocial media baithak: Information Handout and reports
Social media baithak: Information Handout and reports
 
Bell Bajao Blog, Social Media Case Study
Bell Bajao Blog, Social Media Case StudyBell Bajao Blog, Social Media Case Study
Bell Bajao Blog, Social Media Case Study
 

Kürzlich hochgeladen

Jual obat aborsi Jakarta 085657271886 Cytote pil telat bulan penggugur kandun...
Jual obat aborsi Jakarta 085657271886 Cytote pil telat bulan penggugur kandun...Jual obat aborsi Jakarta 085657271886 Cytote pil telat bulan penggugur kandun...
Jual obat aborsi Jakarta 085657271886 Cytote pil telat bulan penggugur kandun...
ZurliaSoop
 
Uncommon Grace The Autobiography of Isaac Folorunso
Uncommon Grace The Autobiography of Isaac FolorunsoUncommon Grace The Autobiography of Isaac Folorunso
Uncommon Grace The Autobiography of Isaac Folorunso
Kayode Fayemi
 
Bring back lost lover in USA, Canada ,Uk ,Australia ,London Lost Love Spell C...
Bring back lost lover in USA, Canada ,Uk ,Australia ,London Lost Love Spell C...Bring back lost lover in USA, Canada ,Uk ,Australia ,London Lost Love Spell C...
Bring back lost lover in USA, Canada ,Uk ,Australia ,London Lost Love Spell C...
amilabibi1
 
Unlocking Exploration: Self-Motivated Agents Thrive on Memory-Driven Curiosity
Unlocking Exploration: Self-Motivated Agents Thrive on Memory-Driven CuriosityUnlocking Exploration: Self-Motivated Agents Thrive on Memory-Driven Curiosity
Unlocking Exploration: Self-Motivated Agents Thrive on Memory-Driven Curiosity
Hung Le
 
Proofreading- Basics to Artificial Intelligence Integration - Presentation:Sl...
Proofreading- Basics to Artificial Intelligence Integration - Presentation:Sl...Proofreading- Basics to Artificial Intelligence Integration - Presentation:Sl...
Proofreading- Basics to Artificial Intelligence Integration - Presentation:Sl...
David Celestin
 

Kürzlich hochgeladen (17)

AWS Data Engineer Associate (DEA-C01) Exam Dumps 2024.pdf
AWS Data Engineer Associate (DEA-C01) Exam Dumps 2024.pdfAWS Data Engineer Associate (DEA-C01) Exam Dumps 2024.pdf
AWS Data Engineer Associate (DEA-C01) Exam Dumps 2024.pdf
 
Jual obat aborsi Jakarta 085657271886 Cytote pil telat bulan penggugur kandun...
Jual obat aborsi Jakarta 085657271886 Cytote pil telat bulan penggugur kandun...Jual obat aborsi Jakarta 085657271886 Cytote pil telat bulan penggugur kandun...
Jual obat aborsi Jakarta 085657271886 Cytote pil telat bulan penggugur kandun...
 
Digital collaboration with Microsoft 365 as extension of Drupal
Digital collaboration with Microsoft 365 as extension of DrupalDigital collaboration with Microsoft 365 as extension of Drupal
Digital collaboration with Microsoft 365 as extension of Drupal
 
Zone Chairperson Role and Responsibilities New updated.pptx
Zone Chairperson Role and Responsibilities New updated.pptxZone Chairperson Role and Responsibilities New updated.pptx
Zone Chairperson Role and Responsibilities New updated.pptx
 
in kuwait௹+918133066128....) @abortion pills for sale in Kuwait City
in kuwait௹+918133066128....) @abortion pills for sale in Kuwait Cityin kuwait௹+918133066128....) @abortion pills for sale in Kuwait City
in kuwait௹+918133066128....) @abortion pills for sale in Kuwait City
 
Dreaming Music Video Treatment _ Project & Portfolio III
Dreaming Music Video Treatment _ Project & Portfolio IIIDreaming Music Video Treatment _ Project & Portfolio III
Dreaming Music Video Treatment _ Project & Portfolio III
 
My Presentation "In Your Hands" by Halle Bailey
My Presentation "In Your Hands" by Halle BaileyMy Presentation "In Your Hands" by Halle Bailey
My Presentation "In Your Hands" by Halle Bailey
 
Uncommon Grace The Autobiography of Isaac Folorunso
Uncommon Grace The Autobiography of Isaac FolorunsoUncommon Grace The Autobiography of Isaac Folorunso
Uncommon Grace The Autobiography of Isaac Folorunso
 
Bring back lost lover in USA, Canada ,Uk ,Australia ,London Lost Love Spell C...
Bring back lost lover in USA, Canada ,Uk ,Australia ,London Lost Love Spell C...Bring back lost lover in USA, Canada ,Uk ,Australia ,London Lost Love Spell C...
Bring back lost lover in USA, Canada ,Uk ,Australia ,London Lost Love Spell C...
 
Report Writing Webinar Training
Report Writing Webinar TrainingReport Writing Webinar Training
Report Writing Webinar Training
 
Introduction to Artificial intelligence.
Introduction to Artificial intelligence.Introduction to Artificial intelligence.
Introduction to Artificial intelligence.
 
lONG QUESTION ANSWER PAKISTAN STUDIES10.
lONG QUESTION ANSWER PAKISTAN STUDIES10.lONG QUESTION ANSWER PAKISTAN STUDIES10.
lONG QUESTION ANSWER PAKISTAN STUDIES10.
 
SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT SYSTEM OF FENI PAURASHAVA, BANGLADESH.pdf
SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT SYSTEM OF FENI PAURASHAVA, BANGLADESH.pdfSOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT SYSTEM OF FENI PAURASHAVA, BANGLADESH.pdf
SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT SYSTEM OF FENI PAURASHAVA, BANGLADESH.pdf
 
Unlocking Exploration: Self-Motivated Agents Thrive on Memory-Driven Curiosity
Unlocking Exploration: Self-Motivated Agents Thrive on Memory-Driven CuriosityUnlocking Exploration: Self-Motivated Agents Thrive on Memory-Driven Curiosity
Unlocking Exploration: Self-Motivated Agents Thrive on Memory-Driven Curiosity
 
ICT role in 21st century education and it's challenges.pdf
ICT role in 21st century education and it's challenges.pdfICT role in 21st century education and it's challenges.pdf
ICT role in 21st century education and it's challenges.pdf
 
Dreaming Marissa Sánchez Music Video Treatment
Dreaming Marissa Sánchez Music Video TreatmentDreaming Marissa Sánchez Music Video Treatment
Dreaming Marissa Sánchez Music Video Treatment
 
Proofreading- Basics to Artificial Intelligence Integration - Presentation:Sl...
Proofreading- Basics to Artificial Intelligence Integration - Presentation:Sl...Proofreading- Basics to Artificial Intelligence Integration - Presentation:Sl...
Proofreading- Basics to Artificial Intelligence Integration - Presentation:Sl...
 

Mob lynching in India - questions of marginalization and representation

  • 1. Mob lynching in India and Everyday Lives of Women – Questions of Marginalization and Representations Sanjukta Basu, PhD Scholar, School of Women and Gender Studies Email:
  • 2. Preliminary findings - Exploratory Research Incidents of mob lynching in India Karwan e Mohabbat - A journey of love and atonement Marginalization of women within an already marginalized community
  • 3. May 2014 a political milestone - Mob Lynching Government does not have official data on mob lynching. According to India Spend: Approximately 60 cases of mob lynching by gau rakshaks between 2010 to June 2017 (Currently, this number has crossed 100. Last month, an 80 year old Muslim man in Bihar was burnt to death by a mob alleged to belong to Hindutva groups) 25 Indians have lost their life 97% of these cases occurred after May 2014. 84% of the dead are Muslims IndiaSpend is a non- profit and a project of The Spending & Policy Research Foundation, registered as a Charitable Trust with the Charity Commissioner, Mumbai.
  • 4. Mohammad Akhlaq, September, 2015, Dadri, Uttar Pradesh The facts and circumstances leading up to the attack and what followed thereafter were soon to become a pattern in India. Violence perpetrated in a systematic way as a tool of social and political marginalization and disenfranchisement of the Muslims, considered the original “others/enemy” of the Hindu nation by ideologues of Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS).  Allegations of beef eating / cow slaughter / smuggling  Sudden Mob gathers led by ‘cow protection groups,’ barge into somebody’s home or stop a cattle transferring vehicle.  Ruthless and incessant beating sometimes with bare hands, sometimes using sticks, bricks, or “anything they could find — iron rods, sticks, knives, daggers, screw-drivers, even pens” as weapons. Video recording - brazen confidence that you will not be punished for your crime, and even if you are nabbed, you will be a hero for the ruling establishment (Mander, The mob that hates).”
  • 5. How to understand mob lynching? AMERICA - 1865 AND 1920 Lynching as informal means of dispensing criminal justice (Poe) Sense of honour and shame among the Southern white culture. Lynching as a tool of political hegemony (Jay Corzine) Andrew S. Buckser argued that lynching is a type of ritual - elements of carnival atmosphere, magic, superstition Ashraf H. A. Rushdy argued that we can understand what lynching means in American history by examining its evolution. INDIA Very little study on lynchings or mob violence in India Civil society and media interventions - The Karwan team so far visited over 60- 70 victim families across 12 states. Early in the phenomenon – one hopes they will not increase, but this is also the time to start our investigations into what is behind this violence: Marginalization Hindutva nationalism
  • 6. “There are only two courses open to the foreign elements, either to merge themselves in the national race and adopt its culture, or to live at its mercy so long as the national race may allow them to do so and to quit the country at the sweet will of the national race…the foreign races in Hindusthan must either adopt the Hindu culture and language, must learn to respect and hold in reverence Hindu religion, must entertain no idea but those of the glorification of the Hindu race and culture…must lose their separate existence to merge in the Hindu race, or may stay in the country, wholly subordinated to the Hindu Nation, claiming nothing, deserving no privileges, far less any preferential treatment-not even citizen's rights ” M.S. Golwalkar, We or Our Nationhood Defined. Nagpur: Bharat Publications, 1939.
  • 7. “Humne sabar kar liya (I made peace),” an old and fragile Jafruddin Hassan of Khurgain village, Shamli district, Uttar Pradesh told the Karwan team with tears in his eyes, trembling hands resting between his knees and his head stooped low, as he hopelessly looked at the floor. Jafruddin is the face of the traumatized minority community today (Basu, Karwan e Mohabbat: Uncovering how violence against minorities has been normalised). “The Pehlus and Rakbars of this country are meant to be killed in the ‘new India’ which Prime Minister Narendra Modi have vouched to build in several of his public speeches (Teltumbde). ”
  • 8. Marginalization – Marginal Man Marginality or exclusions have been mostly understood as spatial or cultural in the context of human migration from the perspective of the immigratory man (or community), who becomes ‘marginal man’ in a new area or culture he immigrates to (Robert E Park). Arthur A Cohen argued that Marginalization is something a person or community feels in their mind. 1928 - Human Migration and the Marginal Man, Robert E. Park 1935 - The Problem of the Marginal Man, Everett V. Stonequist. 1947 - A Re-Examination of the Marginal Man Concept 1972 - A Plea for a Further Refinement of the Marginal Man Theory; Roy Dean Wright and Susan N. Wright
  • 9. Indian Context  Muslims part of Indian landscape for over 500 years.  History of amalgamation of Hindu-Muslim culture  Hindu and Muslim animosity traced back to the period of colonialism by the British, who for the first time codified the differences (Baber)  Post 2014, there has been a surge in Hindu hegemonic ideology often supported by BJP leaders/allies, which seeks to change the Constitution (Apoorva) and establish a Hindu Rashtra. From 2014 to 2015, there has been a range of attacks on Muslims lives (Gidda), livelihood (Zeba Siddiqui), food (Mangaldas), faith and culture (Sharma), madrassa, namaaz, personal laws and so on. In the ‘new India’ Muslims have been excluded from the ‘imagined community’ (Anderson) which constitutes Indian nationalism and are paying a heavy price (Ashraf) for the Mughal invasions, colonial rule, and partition – a range of events dating back to over five hundred years, in which present generations had no role. In the Indian context marginalization of the Muslim community have little relation with migration anytime in the near past and not owed to the culture difference or ‘hybrids’ as talked about by Stonequist.
  • 10. Marginalization is beyond the binaries My argument: Marginalization have to be understood beyond the binary of the centre and the periphery. It does not take place just between two cultures or identities but there are margins within margins, and layers of identities placed at hierarchical power positions. The experiences of the marginal man or community must be juxtaposed with that felt by the individual woman and her ‘everyday realities’ There is an “inner circle” and “everyday world” (Smith, The Everyday World As Problematic) within the household that is not penetrated by the earnest public concern and empathy. Absence of women from public meetings with Karwan team made our process of knowing and understanding mob lynching incomplete – as argued by Dorothy Smith. Following media reports of mob lynching / hate crimes we as civil society members reach the doorsteps of households which have lost male members of the family to hate crimes but we stop there.
  • 11. Women’s absence from the conversations raised further questions of representations and identity politics. As researchers or civil society members trying to understand a phenomenon, we go through the dilemma of whether or not it would be appropriate to insist upon women’s inclusion or ask probing questions as to why they were absent. Kimberley Crenshaw explains this problem: Identity politics “frequently conflates or ignores intra group differences. In the context of violence against women, this elision of difference is problematic, fundamentally because the violence that many women experience is often shaped by other dimensions of their identities, such as race and class (religion and caste).”
  • 12. I started Karwan journey with a different purpose but by talking to the women I learned and unlearned more things. The issues that emerged cut across academic disciplines, range and size of studies, geographies and other boundaries. No single research can possibly accommodate the wide range of issues I came across in a journey which was about communal violence. I am now left with the question, whether it is worth probing into subjects beyond the scope of the immediate ethnographic study, understanding mob-lynching or whether we should go into the field without having any immediate concept as Dorothy Smith suggested and widen our study to include women’s experiences?