Kuwait Times

Witches buried and burned for land in princely India state

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BHILWARA: Gulabi Kumawat was an elderly widow living in a modest home in India’s Rajasthan state, until the day she was branded a witch by fellow villagers and her life went catastroph­ically wrong. Beaten. Buried. She was set alight and left for dead. Somehow Kumawat escaped the pit and lived to tell the tale, first fleeing her Borda village for the safety of a relative’s home and then onto Bhilwara city, where she now lives. Fourteen years later and she remains landless. Her plot - little more than an acre (4,046 sq mt) - and her home of almost 50 years are both gone. “They tried to grab my land and sell it without my consent. When I confronted them, they called me a “dayan” (witch), blamed me for many bad things in the village and nearly killed me,” said Kumawat, 95, her voice rising barely above a whisper. “They have known me all their life. How did I suddenly become a dayan?” she said, her gaunt face etched with sadness.

Blame the women

Kumawat’s story is not unusual in Rajasthan, a state better known for stately forts and grand palaces than witch hunting. Scores of women have been brutally attacked after being branded a witch over the last few decades; several have died. The Mewar region, a former princely state that includes Bhilwara and the popular lake city of Udaipur, is particular­ly notorious, accounting for most cases in Rajasthan. Activists say women have been beaten, knifed, sexually assaulted, stripped naked and paraded, thrown into wells, buried alive, set alight or disfigured with acid. Others are killed.

In most cases, the victims were poor, lower-caste, single women who either had no sons or lived alone. Most had land or property coveted by a relative or highercast­e person. The practice of blaming “witches” for everything from inadequate monsoon rains and failed businesses to infertilit­y, illness or a sudden death, is widely prevalent across several Indian states, and dates back centuries. In such cases, villagers consult with a shaman or godman, who often blames a witch for some misfortune. Family members are also complicit, and often use this as a way to settle scores, often over land, or to throw a female relative out of the house. “The feudal system, a rigid caste hierarchy and patriarchy encourage the practice, with illiteracy and superstiti­on also to blame,” said activist Tara Ahluwalia, who has recorded 88 cases of witch hunting in Bhilwara since 1982. “We file reports, but no action is taken,” said Ahluwalia, who keeps meticulous records of each case in a folder with photograph­s, hospital statements and related police reports.

Living corpse

The practice of witch hunting is not unique to India. Instances have been recorded elsewhere in Asia and in Africa. Thousands of elderly Tanzanian women have been strangled, knifed to death and burned alive over the last two decades after being denounced as witches, usually for their land. In India, nearly 2,500 murders related to witchcraft have been recorded since 2000, according to official data. Victims are often expelled from their homes and villages. Those who stay are isolated and live in constant fear.

Despite a 2015 state law banning the practice, there have been no conviction­s in Rajasthan, such is the reluctance of local officials and police to check the custom, activists say. “We fought for a law for 25 years, but the law is not being implemente­d. What is the point of the law if it cannot protect these women?” Ahluwalia told the Thomson Reuters Foundation. “The case is forgotten, and only the victim continues to suffer. Once you are branded a witch, the stigma is for life, and it slowly kills her; she is like a living corpse,” she said. — Reuters

 ??  ?? NEW DELHI: Indian workers remove religious offerings and frames of the idol of goddess Durga which were immersed in the Yamuna River after the Durga Puja festival yesterday. — AFP
NEW DELHI: Indian workers remove religious offerings and frames of the idol of goddess Durga which were immersed in the Yamuna River after the Durga Puja festival yesterday. — AFP

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