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The learned judges
were opining on a case of divorce in which woman is not willing to join her
husband, who has got a job in Port Blair and she is living in Mumbai. The
judge’s observation and taking a cue from the mythological figures itself has
lot of problems. On the top of that the analogy of Sita may be most painful as
far as women are concerned. Despite various versions of Lord Ram story
prevailing around the most common and well known in this part of the country is
the one of Valmiki. This Valmiki version has been made more popular byMahrshi
Ramanand Sagar through his serial Ramayan. Here the character of Sita is most
servile and subservient to the Lord. For example when Ram faces the dilemma of
banishing her to forest on the alleged rumors of Sita’s chastity, Sita in
Ramanand Sagar’s version herself prods her husband to send her to forest, quite
a retrograde fall over the version of Valmiki himself.
As such in
most versions of Lord Ram Story what is common is that Sita is an
abandoned child found by Raja (King) Janak while doing the ritual and
ploughed the field. She is married off to Ram, who is exiled by his
father Dashrath to keep the promise to one of his queens, Kaikeyi. From
here the misery of Sita starts. Ravan, who wants to take revenge of
insult of his sisterSurpnakha at the hands of Ram- Laxman duo,
abducts Sita and takes her to Lanka, where she is made to live in Ashok
Vatika. Ravan, himself shows a desire for him but she refuses. Her
rescue is also full of insult for her. Lord Ram tells her that he has
rescued her to save his own honor! Sita is made to give ‘Trail by Fire’,
agnipariksha to prove her chastity. She passes the test and is
brought back to Ayodhya to be coroneted along with her husband.
The misery
intensifies. There is a rumor questioning the chastity of the queen. The
King, Lord Ram, is witness to the agniparikshka. At this point
instead of protecting his wife, who is pregnant, he asks his loyal
brother Laxman to dump her in a forest. Exiling a pregnant wife can not
by any standard be part of the justice at any time in the history. Years
later when Ram meets Sita by coincidence, Ram hesitates to take her back
and at this point Sita commits suicide. Probably amongst all the
mythological figures, Sita’s is the most tragic tale.
While all this is part of the popular folklore, how come the learned
judges give the advice to any married woman to emulate Sita? No woman
can have a life worse than this. The other point is in the present
society trying to march towards democratic values; can we think of
giving the examples from mythology to be emulated today? The period of
society depicted in mythologies is the one which was having values of
kingdoms. Kingdoms had the values of ‘birth based hierarchy’ of caste
and gender. While the claims are that in ancient India, women had a
glorious and respectable life, the truth comes out from the values given
in the Manusmirti, a book where the women has the status totally
subservient and secondary to man. It was precisely because of the caste
and gender hierarchy of this ‘holy’ book, that Dr. Ambedkar burnt it.
With
women’s movement coming up and gender subservience being questioned,
surely our laws and courts have to be sensitive to the aspirations of
women. The very concept of woman losing her basic identity after
marriage has to be consigned to the dustbin of history. The adjustment
between couples has be more innovative, few examples of which one sees
in the contemporary times more so in western countries and in good
measure around here as well. Here in India also there are couples who
chart their own course for togetherness, without losing their basic
identities and choices. We need to bring our thinking in tune with the
times, the democratic set up, away from the birth based hierarchies
towards the concept of equality. The intrusion of feudal and other
primordial values has been wearing the garb of fundamentalism, in
various religions. Christian Fundamentalism, Islamic Fundamentalism and
Hindutva are examples where the subordination of women is legitimized in
the language of religion.
In India
with the rise of religion based politics with Ram Temple movement, there
has also been a religio-cultural accompaniment in the form of Godmen,
modern Gurus, who are talking of status quo of social relationships in a
refined language. Manu Smriti’s values are being dished out in the
clever disguise by the five star Gurus, with massive following. Many a
television serials are also playing a very retrograde role as far as the
norms of gender equality are concerned. The TV-Baba combination is very
lethal for values desirable in a democratic set up, in a set up where we
create social situations to dump patriarchal norms for good.
The
analogy of Sita in particular is very painful but as such any analogy
from mythological and periods of history before the democratic culture
starts coming in has to be shunned. One hope courts and legal structures
think of the fate of Sita before ordaining such a life for women in
current times. |
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