Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

‘Impure’ women exiled for Diwali

- Vikram Gopal vikram.gopal@htlive.com

TRADITION Villages in Shivamogga send away their women around this time as those menstruati­ng are considered ‘unfit’ to celebrate SHIVAMOGGA:

Millions across India might be celebratin­g Diwali with their families but for 23-year-old Supriya, the festival of lights is a time of deep despondenc­y.

Every year this time, women who are menstruati­ng in her village are forced to leave their homes for several days as part of a controvers­ial tradition that considers them “impure and unfit” to participat­e in the holy rituals of Diwali.

The locals in her village of Chennashet­ty Koppa and several others in southern Karnataka’s Shivamogga district celebrate Gama Habba (village festival) in honour of the local deity during Diwali.

The women are accepted back to the village, nestled in the green hills of the Western Ghats, on the night of the new moon after Diwali by bursting firecracke­rs.

Even the vehicles used to transport the women out of the village are washed before they are allowed to re-enter the village.

“I have been asked to move out of the village because of tradition,” said Supriya, a commerce graduate who is now in her uncle’s place around 20 kilometres away.

Opposition to these traditions has been persistent, but change very gradual. “Earlier, women had to live in small huts in the agricultur­al fields with no facilities. That changed eventually and now we are allowed to visit relatives in other villages. Earlier the duration of the purity period was 15 days, which has reduced now to seven days in most villages,” said Supriya.

Gaamamma, an elderly woman of Chennashet­ty Koppa, said she believed not complying with the traditions would anger the village deity. “Honey bees sting those that do not obey these rules,” she said. Chowdappa, a 50-year-old local farmer, said nobody could say exactly when the bees had attacked anybody. “Everybody claims to know someone who had been attacked, but I haven’t ever come across such a person.”

Police complaints are rare because the practice isn’t banned. In fact, many in the district proudly recall how “more cruel” practices from the past have been discarded. For example, 20 years ago, women had to walk naked from the village pond to the temple, a distance of more than three kilometers, as part of a ritual called Bethale Seve.

Lalithamma, a 54-year-old member of the local panchayat, said there was no question of change. According to her, nobody had come up with a good enough explanatio­n for the beesting phenomenon. “Everybody talks of wanting a change but nobody has explained to us why bees sting people who disobey these rules only during the 15-day period.”

Veena Parameshwa­ra of Chennashet­ty Koppa said the opposition to the festival had been muted because of fear. “If there is any untoward incident in the village during this period, it is blamed on those not obeying the rules. This is the way these practices are enforced,” she said. “No young woman observes these rules out of devotion, it is fear that has forced us to stick by them.”

There are other reasons for opposing these traditions. Narayanapp­a of Hosur said it had become very difficult to observe these traditions. “If all the women are sent out of the house there is nobody to take care of household chores,” he said.

State revenue minister Kagodu Thimmappa, who is also the local MLA, said it was unfortunat­e that such practices continued. “Personally, I feel we need to come out of the grip of superstiti­ons and to this end our government is going to table the Prevention and Eradicatio­n of Inhuman and Evil Practices and Black Magic Bill,” he said.

Thimmappa added that the only long-term solution for overcoming superstiti­ous beliefs was education.

One of the practices the bill recognises as inhuman is “forcing isolation, prohibitin­g re-entry into the village or facilitati­ng segregatio­n of menstruati­ng or pregnant women”. The piece of legislatio­n was approved by the state cabinet last month and is set to be tabled in the assembly in the coming session in November.

For Supriya that may be too late. “Of course, I would have loved to be a part of the celebratio­ns. But that is completely out of the question now,” she rued.

 ?? ARIJIT SEN/HT PHOTO ?? Women of Chennashet­ty Koppa speak about the menstruati­on taboo in their village during Gama Habba (Village festival) on Diwali in Shivamogga, on Tuesday.
ARIJIT SEN/HT PHOTO Women of Chennashet­ty Koppa speak about the menstruati­on taboo in their village during Gama Habba (Village festival) on Diwali in Shivamogga, on Tuesday.
 ?? FACEBOOK ?? United States President Donald Trump celebrates Diwali in the White House on Tuesday.
FACEBOOK United States President Donald Trump celebrates Diwali in the White House on Tuesday.

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