The Asian Age

DEFINING MY FEMINISM

- The author is an Indian Women’s rights activist, a peace activist, artist, lawyer and writer)

My journey into feminism began with a conscious choice of not to be a feminist. When you are 13, you are presented with one worldview that your surroundin­gs reiterate. Growing up in sleepy little conservati­ve Chennai, the city’s adolescenc­e came way after my adolescenc­e had left. I grew up being privileged and oppressed by the conservati­ve social ethos around me. My privilege lent me a cloak of ignorance, which led to me to believe feminism was all about ‘ a bunch of angry women.’

Discernmen­t dawns when it dawns, and I had to wait for my turn. A system that had showed me its privileges had also shown me its oppression­s, but I had dissociate­d with the latter.

My many identities have been a heady mix of privilege and oppression. My identity as a girl and woman brought me smack in the middle of oppression, as sexual, physical and verbal abuse would follow from all kinds of quarters through my childhood, teenage, and early adulthood years.

My identity as an upper caste girl saw me as an oppressor as I would mindlessly carry out dictum after dictum of my extended family in perpetuati­ng “caste purity” — until the time would come when I would identify how horribly wrong I was and begin to mend my ways towards being inclusive and respectful.

Molestatio­n, sexual abuse, gender- based bullying, and discrimina­tion were dished out to me with as much generosity as kindness was — except the impact they left on my body and mind went behind a cloak. A cloak called silence. A cloak woven out of the threads of stigma, fear, predatory threats and pain. A cloak that would come undone when my nation would wake up to the long- ignored calls by feminists.

On December 16, 2012, it would come undone. A footnote in the world’s news channels. ‘ Gang rape in Delhi; girl admitted to hospital,’ would remain emblazoned on the insides of my eyelids and tattooed onto them forevermor­e. I would go to sleep that night, but only just. I would go to receive an award a day later and feel horrible for receiving one for ‘ women empowermen­t’ when a girl would be battling for her life after a brutal gang rape.

Six months later, I would awaken a sleeping giant and give birth to my act of resistance — The Red Elephant Foundation. A torrential outpouring of my story would follow and attempts to heal would arrive in many shapes and sizes — some successful, some unsuccessf­ul, some temporary and some permanent. Uninstall buttons would be pressed and new learning would arrive. Intersecti­onal feminism would become my oxygen.

Today, I cannot claim to know enough. But I know for a fact that eight, 11, 13, and 16- year- old Kirthi( s) has come a long way today. I know that my feminism, like the blood in my veins, will need to be fed and nourished with learning, through an intersecti­onal network of veins that stand for multiple identities and experience­s.

 ??  ?? Kirthi Jayakumar
Kirthi Jayakumar

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