08/03/07 12:11 Filed by Saswat Pattanayak in:
Saswat | Political
| Editorial
By Saswat Pattanayak
"Violence against women has yet to receive the
priority attention and resources needed at all
levels to tackle it with the seriousness and
visibility necessary."
UN Secretary-General’s in-depth study on
violence against women (2006)
(A/61/122/Add.1)
Before we reach another consensus on violence against
women, let us examine the existing differences. For,
whereas it is far easier (because it is pacifying) to
share the knowledge that violence against women
continues to exist, it is rather discomforting
(because it is agitating) to throw lights on why it
is so.
Like every year, academic and administrative reports
of all kinds will be generated to commemorate March
8. After all, since we have a non-profit United
Nations and we have corporate profiteers, we will
eventually need to reach a consensus on issues such
as violence against women. And amidst the thousands
of articles and hundreds of televised tear-jerkers we
will encounter in the coming month, the information
overload would have done the damage, if we do not
stay alert about few conditions that need addressing:
1. Suspect the Messengers: The kinds of
messages about women may be misgivings. Indeed, most
channels that provide news about women’s progress and
violence are owned and controlled by men. Whereas it
is undoubtedly true that many men are truly
understanding of their gender positions and many
women are too willing to play the assigned roles, it
is still wise to suspect the men in the month of IWD
message boards.
2. Women’s Rights are Universal
Rights: Some will talk about women’s rights
as a domain that applies to women only. Indeed,
women’s rights are women’s prerogative only as a
practice, but everyone’s concern as a scope. Just
like they fool us by writing different history books
for African-Americans, and the Americans as though
American history does not include the minorities, it
is highly suspect that women’s rights are not matter
of concern for men.
3. Workplace for women vs Women for
workplace: Most arguments about women’s
rights focus on necessities to prepare the women for
the workplace. Its like Amartya Sen saying that the
question should not be if democracy is good for a
country, but it should be directed towards making the
country good for a democracy. Well, frankly speaking,
he could be wrong. Just as JFK was while demanding
that people give to the country without asking what
the country can do for them. That’s the populist
tone. The reality is women don’t need to be prepared
for workplace. Workplaces need to be geared to serve
women.
4. International Woman has a meaning: It
means, women identify with each other across
different boundaries. This identification has an
undertone: that is, they accept the differences
across cultures. To be truly international means
understanding that there are differences across
nations, and hence across women from different
nations. There is no place for homogenization of
women as one entity. So yes, White women are
different from Black women are different from Asian
women are different from Latina women are different
from Muslim women are different from Hindu women are
different from Swahili-speaking women who are
different from Greek women. Women have different
social locations among themselves, and hence
understanding them holds the key. Let no one lead us
into an essentialist notion of women’s problem.
Different women face oppressions of different nature.
The similarity is the most striking: that women are
oppressed simply because they are women.
5. Are women human?: MacKinnon’s
question is still valid. No amount of cultural
excuses (from first world pornography to third world
dowry) makes all women full human today. Ruling
classes of the world still consider women as
accessories to either their power ladder, or to their
social justice tokenism. Their domestic adornment or
cheap working class market value. Their television
anchoring revenue system or their make-up kit
industry. Just as Aishwarya Rai cannot be allowed to
cry in public because Revlon will probably run into
losses, Tamara MaidenName cannot challenge her greedy
boss for uneven wages because he will merely
retaliate.
International Women’s Day must not be allowed to
promote card and gifts companies to indulge in
exhibitionism of annual love to the mothers and
sisters and wives and friends. It is rather a day to
remind all of us in the world that a separate battle
is on. This one is a battle of all. A battle that is
waged by the true majority of the world, the women. A
battle, that addresses the core inconsistencies of
capitalism.
Originally written for Womens Rights
Blog.
Tags: Saswat, Feminism, Communism, Capitalism, Philosophy