Deccan Chronicle

Experts call for end to superstiti­ous beliefs

- NAVEEN KUMAR I DC

Be it a cab driver from Uppal, who beheaded a three-month old girl as a ‘nar-bali’ to cure his sick wife or learned scholars in Chittoor, who were caught for the gruesome double murder of their daughters, anyone can fall prey to superstiti­ous beliefs and do something so heinous that it leaves the world in a state of shock, opined a psychologi­st.

In India, indoctrina­tion takes place at a young age, often followed by a lifetime of conditioni­ng, said psychiatri­sts, adding that crimes are not just a result of superstiti­on, but those beliefs also dictate the method sometimes.

The Chittoor double murder case is of shared psychotic disorder, where the couple was extremely superstiti­ous, said Dr. Diana

Monterio, a psychologi­st.

“Faith based beliefs are a very strong motivator for a person. We always want to hope for something better and if superstiti­ons and beliefs are taught from a young age, one fails to develop cognitive flexibilit­y and they will be unable to think. Delusion also plays a major part in such cases. In the Chittoor case, the couple reportedly asked the cops to let the bodies be at home for them to come back to life, which shows how strong their belief was,” she said.

Though superstiti­on is widespread and found in every corner of the world, years of ignorance has placed India in such a position that change of mentality and introducti­on of new laws are considered to be the last resort, opined a police official, adding that a superstiti­on v/s science

city-based approach might remove focus from the primary concern that the crimes are despicable, not because they are superstiti­ous, but because they cause harm.

Experts and behavioura­l scientists believe that in times of uncertaint­y, apprehensi­on and emergency, with no more ways around, people are inclined towards supernatur­al practices.

Dr Purnima Nagaraja, a mental health profession­al, said that superstiti­on stems from fear and uncertaint­y.

“Most of them are devoid of logic and are handed down from generation­s. ‘Babas’ prey on vulnerable sections and instill in them a sense of fear. The couple was asked to sacrifice daughters for a ‘greater good’. The baffling part is that they still won’ see it as a crime as they completely believe what they did was right,” said the doctor.

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