Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Hate crime survivor, Dalit activist remarries

- M Manikandan manikandan.mani@htlive.com

CHENNAI: Shakthi has extended all the moral support to me. He abolished all my sorrows and stood with me in all my efforts to destroy the caste system. So, I decided to marry him. KAUSALYA , Dalit rights activist

Life has come a full circle for 21-year-old Kausalya who became a crusader against caste killings after her first husband, Shankar (a Dalit), was hacked to death in a busy market area in Udumalaipe­t in Tirupur district by men hired by her own family belonging to the dominant Thevar community, on March 13, 2016. The murder, which was caught on camera and circulated through social media platforms, had sent shock waves across the country.

On Sunday, she tied the knot with parai (traditiona­l drum) artist Sakthi at the Thanthai Periyar Dravidar Kazhagam (TPDK) head office presided over by the organisati­on’s general secretary K Ramakrishn­an, Viduthalai Chiruthaig­al Katchi (VCK) deputy general secretary Vanniyaras­u and Dalit activist Evidence Kathir. “Shakthi has extended all the moral support to me. He abolished all my sorrows and stood with me in all my efforts to destroy the caste system. So, I decided to marry him,” Kausalya said after the function.

Kausalya, who played a crucial role in the case against her husband’s killers, testified against her fater Chinnasamy and mother Annalakshm­i, which led to Tiruppur Sessions Court convicting six of the 11 accused in April 2017. However, in December 2017, six people, including her father, were sentenced to death by a Tirupur district court, Kausalya’s mother was acquitted. Presently they are lodged at Coimbatore Central Prison.

Kausalya’s journey from a victim to a Dalit rights activist was punctuated by personal trauma. In May 2017, she allegedly tried to kill herself amid the crushing loneliness and disappoint­ment at the apathy of mainstream parties, who stayed away to placate the powerful Thevar vote. Closure, however, came slowly.

On the second anniversar­y of her first husband’s murder, she floated the Shankar Social Justice Trust in Udumalpet to work towards the uplift of the marginalis­ed and fight against caste oppression.

 ?? HT PHOTO ?? Kausalya’s journey from a victim to a Dalit rights activist was punctuated by personal trauma
HT PHOTO Kausalya’s journey from a victim to a Dalit rights activist was punctuated by personal trauma

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