When Rajpal, a Dalit youth, eloped with Sushila,
a Jat girl from Talaav village in July, it unleashed the fury of a mob
that wanted to 'avenge' the 'insult'. Rajpal's family had to flee the
village and his house lies vandalized - a bitter reminder of the
criminal collective rage. Three months have elapsed, but no one from
Rajpal's family has been able to return.
Upper caste wrath
Two educated Dalit youth, who spoke out against the terror tactics used
against their community, were publicly humiliated in the village. One
of them, Sundar, who works in the local court at Jhajjar, said that
after the elopement, Dalits in his village were targeted by the
majority Jat community. "Only people from the Scheduled Caste category
were rounded up by the police. The message that went out was that all
those who belonged to the Chamar caste had a hand in the elopement,"
said Sundar. Sundar went to the police and the press with an
application signed by 12 Dalits, alleging that they faced threats to
their life from the Jats in the village. One of the applicants was
Poonam, a common friend of the lovers who eloped, and therefore a
particularly vulnerable target. She allegedly committed suicide.
"I wasn't there. I had gone to cut grass, so I don't know whether the
Jats scared her. But she must have got scared because the police would
come daily and question her," said Poonam's mother-in-law.
Yet the police took no notice of either the application or the
circumstances leading to her death. More deaths followed with the
return of the lovers.While the Dalit boy, Rajpal, was arrested, the Jat
girl, Sushila died after returning to her parental home. Her sister
also died under mysterious circumstances. Another Dalit, Hari Singh,
also allegedly committed suicide. Behind the trail of death and
destruction, there were signs that the Jats were meting out their own
version of justice.
Police inaction
Meanwhile the police claim to be completely unaware of how Rajpal's
family was punished for the elopement.
"If they want to come back, they can come to me any time. I'll place a
guard there. I'll take action (against those who vandalised the house)
also, if they come to me," said Muhammed Akil, Jhajjar's Superintendent
of Police.
As the administration remains inactive, vigilante justice by powerful
groups appears to have become the law of the land in Haryana.
http://www.hinduonnet.com/fline/fl2018/stories/20030912003403800.htm
Killing for `caste honour'
S. VISWANATHAN in Cuddalore
In a gory instance of assertion of the caste divide, relatives of an
`upper-caste' woman murder her and her Dalit husband in a Tamil Nadu
village.
CASTE prejudices are deep-rooted in Tamil Nadu, and people would even
kill to preserve `family (or caste) honour', as they did at
Puthukkooraippettai village in Cuddalore district recently by poisoning
to death and burning a newly married couple who belonged to different
castes. This incident, as also a simple flag-hoisting episode at nearby
Siruthondamadevi village, reinforced the fact that the worst sufferers
in such situations are women and Dalits.
S. Murugesan (25), a graduate in chemical engineering, and D. Kannagi
(22), a commerce graduate with a diploma in cooperation, both residents
of Puthukkooraippettai, near Vriddhachalam town, about 200 km from
Chennai, fell in love with each other when they were students at
Annamalai University in Chidambaram. Their marriage was solemnised and
registered on May 5, 2003 under the Hindu Marriage Registration Rules,
1967, by the Registrar of Hindu Marriages, Cuddalore. The couple
concealed the fact from their parents, fearing their disapproval
because they belonged to different castes. While Kannagi was a Vanniya,
Murugesan was a Dalit. Vanniyas are placed above Dalits in the caste
hierarchy.
The couple spent a few days in the house of Murugesan's relative, and
then decided that Kannagi would stay with her parents until Murugesan
took up a job. Within a month or so he got a job in a private firm at
Tirupur, but in the meantime Kannagi's parents came to know of the
marriage and showed their resentment in every possible way. The couple
could not meet; they kept in touch with each other through letters.
On July 3, Murugesan came to the village and took Kannagi with him
without the knowledge of their parents. Her `disappearance' caused
tension in the village and Kannagi's father, C. Doraisami, who is the
local panchayat president, and brother Marudupandian, apparently took
it as an affront to their family and caste honour. They organised a
search for the couple, and their men are said to have cornered
Murugesan at his house on July 7. He had apparently come to take some
documents. Even at this point Murugesan's parents claimed that they
were not aware of the marriage.
Murugesan was apparently taken to a secluded place on the outskirts of
the village and tortured all night for information about Kannagi's
whereabouts. His captors allegedly suspended him upside down into a
deep well and threatened to drop him in if he did not disclose where
Kannagi was. Murugesan's resistance finally broke, and he told them
that she was with some of his relatives. Marudupandian, accompanied by
an uncle of Murugesan, brought her back to the village. Both were
allegedly forced to drink some poisonous liquid in the presence of
scores of people, who were mute witnesses to the agony of the dying
couple. The bodies were burnt, leaving no evidence of the gruesome
incident.
FIRST reports of the incident said it was a case of suicide. But when
information began to spread through witnesses and the grapevine about
what actually happened, political parties demanded an inquiry. The
Communist Party of India (Marxist) issued a call for a demonstration to
demand action against the casteist forces responsible for the murder.
The Viduthalai Siruthaigal (Dalit Panthers of India) also demanded an
inquiry. Ten days after the incident, Doraisami, Marudupandian and four
others surrendered to the Village Administrative Officer, who produced
them before the police. A case of murder was registered and a few days
later Murugesan's father Samikkannu, 49, was also arrested. All the
accused were granted bail after about three weeks in custody.
Samikkannu alleged that he had been implicated in the case and said he
was not present in the village that day. Father of six children and
relatively wealthy (he owns a few acres of land), he had spent a lot of
money educating his eldest son and saw him as the family's hope. He
maintained that he was not aware of his son's wedding until early July.
Chinnappillai (45), his wife and Murugesan's stepmother, alleged that
the police beat her when she went to the police station to complain
about the incident. Murugesan's bother Velmurugan, 17, a Class XI
student, said he was beaten up by Doraisami's people because he did not
know where his brother was. Samikannu's family has since moved to
another village given the fact that the Dalits of Puthukkooraippettai
are poor agricultural workers fully dependent on the land-owning
Vanniyas for survival.
S. Dhanasekaran, CPI (M) District Committee secretary, speaking to
Frontline, called for steps to wipe out the illicit-liquor trade,
which, he said, was the biggest sustaining force for casteist elements.
"Illicit liquor makes vast sections of the village communities
insensitive to such cruel incidents," he said. Puthukkooraippettai is
one of the villages where untouchability is practised in several forms.
"When our party staged a demonstration against untouchability, the
party of the local MLA (the Paattali Makkal Katchi) organised a counter
demonstration," Dhanasekaran said, and added that "such actions will
only help aggravate the situation".
IT is a situation where a woman is not meant to have any views of her
own, not even about the man who would be her husband, all in the name
of `family honour'. Women's rights experts believe that this is based
on the anachronistic but still-prevalent belief among many communities,
cutting across race, religion or caste, that women are the property of
the men in the family and, as such, do not have any right of their own
to decide their future.
Dalit women, in addition to the gender bias, bear the burdens of caste
and class. Studies have revealed that Dalit girls have been forced to
become concubines of caste-Hindu patrons and village priests at several
places. Dalit women are routinely subjected to sexual abuse and related
offences by caste-Hindu landlords and their family members, these
studies show. In fact, at Siruthondamadevi, for the last 10 years Dalit
families have been sending their grown-up daughters to welfare centres
in Chennai and Pondicherry, to save them from such sexual harassment.
"Life for women here is like coexisting with fire," said Palaniammal,
34, of the village, which has 100 Dalit families and 1,500 Vanniya
families. Barring a few, all the Dalit families are Christians and most
of them work as labourers in the Vanniyas' farms.
Dalit-Vanniya tensions in the village came to a head on April 14, B.R.
Ambedkar's birth anniversary. Caste Hindus objected to the celebrations
organised by Dalits and to the hoisting of a party flag on the grounds
that no political party can hoist its flag in the village under a
"(informal) panchayat" decision. Dalit youth said that using this as a
pretext, Vanniyas entered the Dalit "colony" and went on the rampage.
They assaulted men and women, ransacked homes and damaged their
belongings. Ten persons, including women, were injured in the attack.
One woman, Samans Mary, suffered a fracture in her right forearm. Cases
were registered against 16 Vanniyas, who were arrested and then
released on bail. Dalits of the village said that they were subjected
to several forms of "untouchability". They said that they were not
allowed to use footwear while crossing places where caste-Hindu people
lived and that they were not allowed to ride two-wheelers when
caste-Hindus were around. They could not drive their bullock carts
through "upper caste" streets, and whenever they saw a caste-Hindu
person they had to get down and push the cart. Their children did not
have access to the only primary school in the village, run by the
panchayat union. Some elders in the village said no Dalit children had
been admitted in the school for more than two decades now. They went to
schools in the neighbouring village.
Dalit women said they were asked to wait for long hours at the Public
Distribution System outlet located in the caste-Hindu area, and often
they did not get their supplies. They and their men were forced to work
long hours in the Vanniya landholders' fields and households for meagre
payments. Anthony Ammal, 40, said she had taken a loan of Rs.1,000 from
a landholder and in return she and her husband had been working on his
land for half the regular wage. They were beaten if they failed to turn
up when they were asked to. Agricultural workers, she said, had to pay
a fine if they absented themselves from work. Not even the relatively
well-off Dalits were spared. Palaniammal said that three years ago
their landholder-master seized their new two-wheeler even as they were
driving into the village in it. They were still to get it back.
Worse is the sexual abuse that Dalit women are subjected to by the
masters and their family members. They said that the men entered their
huts at night, often drunk, and harassed them.
A woman said "they forget about `untouchability' and `pollution' during
their nocturnal ventures." The women, however, stressed that not all
Vanniya people behaved badly.
Any resistance was met with a boycott of Dalits, as it happened after
the April 14 incidents, they said. Dalits said that they were almost
jobless for a few weeks after the incident. Lourdusami, 59, said he was
driven out of his three-acre land, on which he had raised cashew. The
loss for him, he said, would run to about Rs.20,000. "We have been
living in fear for the past six months or so," he added. Although
Vanniya landholders were now prepared to give them work, Dalits said
they were afraid of going to their fields. After the State government's
intervention, Dalits were provided jobs under the Food for Work
Programme. This, they said, could be only an interim arrangement.
A fact-finding team of the All India Democratic Women's Association
(AIDWA), which visited the village, demanded the government's
intervention to initiate inquiries into the charges made by Dalit women
and to take prompt action for providing relief to the affected Dalits.
AIDWA's district secretary, S. Valentina, said that unless the
government had the political will to eradicate "untouchability" and
took serious efforts in that direction, discrimination against and
harassment of these marginalised people could not be stopped.