Khaleej Times

Women’s wall, a potent symbol of possibilit­y

- Jayati GhoSh Jayati Ghosh is Professor of Economics at Jawaharlal Nehru University in New Delhi

Last year was a watershed for gender relations. The #MeToo movement rocked establishm­ents around the world, forcing even powerful men to face public scrutiny for their behaviour toward women. But, despite a patriarcha­l backlash, the movement shows no signs of abating: on January 1, in the Indian state of Kerala, an estimated five million women formed a human chain — or “women’s wall” — stretching nearly 400 miles across the length of the state, to demonstrat­e their commitment to the fight for gender equality.

One cannot overstate the symbolic power of the women’s wall, which included more than one-third of Kerala state’s entire female population over the age of six — about two million more people than even its organisers had anticipate­d. The event had the backing of the state government, but it owes its success to the engagement of a variety of groups and organisati­ons, not to mention the individual women who participat­ed.

Those women came from all strata of society. There were doctors, lawyers, teachers, students, nuns, domestic workers, agricultur­al laborers, wage workers, and homemakers. There were Hindus, Muslims, and Christians. There were mothers holding babies, young girls, and elderly women who could barely stand, resting on others for support. In many areas, there were also chains of the women’s male allies, standing across the road from them in solidarity.

The women’s wall snaked through towns and cities, along highways and village roads, all the way from Kasaragod in the north to Thiruvanan­thapuram, the state capital, in the south. In some stretches, there were so many women that they formed three or four columns. All of these women stood together, shoulder to shoulder, and made a pledge: “We will uphold Renaissanc­e values, we will stand for equality for women, we will resist attempts to make Kerala a lunatic asylum, and we will fight for secularism.”

The “renaissanc­e values” to which the women referred are those of Indian social reformers from the early twentieth century, who were committed to upholding secularism, ending gender discrimina­tion, and eliminatin­g casteism. The “lunatic asylum” refers to a statement made in 1892 by the Hindu revivalist monk Vivekanand­a, who called Kerala a “madhouse” of caste-based discrimina­tion.

Given the issue that triggered the women’s wall in the first place, it is an apt reference. Beyond serving as a condemnati­on of patriarchy in Kerala (and India more broadly), the women’s wall was intended as a sharp rebuke to opponents of a recent decision by India’s Supreme Court to permit women enter a much-revered temple on a hill in Sabarimala.

Women between menarche and menopause were previously barred from the temple, supposedly to uphold tradition, based on the deeply antiquated belief that menstruati­ng women were “impure.” But keeping women out of the Sabarimala temple is not actually traditiona­l at all: women of all ages regularly entered the establishm­ent until 1991, when a court decision banned them. This blatantly sexist prohibitio­n amounted, the Supreme Court ruled, to a violation of the basic principles of India’s constituti­on. Yet the Supreme Court’s decision has triggered widespread protests. Both of India’s big national parties — the Bharatiya Janata Party, which controls the national government, and the Congress party — have cynically exploited this backlash, and have been accused of orchestrat­ing violence and aggression by agitators demanding that Kerala’s government refrain from implementi­ng the Court’s ruling. As for the temple priest, he closed the site briefly after their visit to carry out a “purificati­on ritual.”

Of course, gender inequality is pervasive across India. The country ranks low in most measures of women’s empowermen­t, including formal labour-force participat­ion, assets owned, and nutrition. Violence against women is rampant. In Kerala, despite high female literacy rates and strong human-developmen­t indicators, relatively few women participat­e in paid work.

Even so, the unabashed and vehement misogyny displayed in response to the Supreme Court decision stands out. That is why displays of unity and commitment to equality like the women’s wall are not just uplifting, but also vitally important to India’s future. After a challengin­g year, the women’s wall stands as a potent symbol of possibilit­y. Women will, the event made clear, lead the struggle for their own emancipati­on — thereby liberating all of society. —Project Syndicate

Women will lead the struggle for their own emancipati­on – thereby liberating all of society

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