Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

ANTI-CAA protests have shown women can lead

-

Akhtarista Ansari is not new to protest. In 2017, she marched against discrimina­tory hostel timings at Jamia Millia Islamia where she studies. Earlier, she was part of a demonstrat­ion to demand that the university set up a gender sensitisat­ion committee against sexual harassment.

So, it seemed natural for the 19-year-old Sociology (hons) student to participat­e in a march led by women against Citizenshi­p (Amendment) Act and the proposed National Register of Citizens on December 12. “It was the first protest led by the girl’s hostel, which was later joined by all,” she says. Akhtarista is one of the four women students, along with Chanda Yadav, Ladeeda Farsana and Ayesha Renna, who can be seen protecting a male student from a police beating on December 15 on what is now a viral video. As the police, including a man in plaincloth­es, rain blows on the male student, the women encircle him, shouting at the police, “Go back, go back.”

When her parents who live in Jharkhand heard about the incident, they were worried. Come home, her father, a retired railways employee, said. But, says Akhtarista, “The way the police attacked us and ransacked our library has only made us stronger.” The women have received a lot of abuse online, she says, but equally, they have received messages of solidarity from around the world.

The women are in no mood to back off. Mothers with babies, domestic workers and schoolgirl­s among them are on the streets. “We’ve organised protests before, but nothing on this scale,” says Hina Kausar, a research scholar.

“Muslim women don’t come out on the street easily,” says Sakina Parveen, a social worker who lives near Shaheen Bagh. “But they understand this issue and this is why they are here in such large numbers.”

Headlines have been eloquent about this “women-led” protest. But women have always protested, perhaps because few men understand oppression the way most women do. They were at the forefront of the Independen­ce movement. They marched against dowry and sati. And they

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India