OPINIONS

‘India’s Daughter’ as seen by America’s Daughter

“India’s Daughter” is a BBC documentary about a rape in India that the Indian government does not want anyone to see. So I took time out from my hectic junior year of high school to locate the film online and watch it.

I was born in Red Bank, New Jersey, and attend school in Saratoga, California, a Silicon Valley town. But my perspective on India is shaped by my dad, who is from New Delhi, and my mom, who is from Bombay.

“India’s Daughter” documents a particularly gruesome gang rape in India. In December 2012, a young woman in her mid-20s was savagely raped and mutilated while a male friend of hers was severely beaten, all in an otherwise vacant bus being driven around New Delhi. Then, the two were dumped roadside. The woman subsequently died. Of the six perpetrators, one committed suicide while awaiting trial, a 17-year old juvenile received a three-year sentence in a correctional facility, the maximum punishment for a juvenile in India, and the remaining four are awaiting appeals of their death sentences — which in India are awarded only “in the rarest of rare cases,” and even then almost always commuted.

This crime sparked outrage across India and led to violent street protests in New Delhi, prompting the Indian government to make prosecution of rapes easier and their punishments more severe.

Whereas media coverage of this and other rapes in India has created the perception that rape is more prevalent in India than elsewhere, according to a UN study, the per capita rate of lifetime sexual violence against women in the U.S. is about twice that in India. Neither is the gruesomeness of the crime uniquely Indian. For instance, in the Mahmudiyah killings and rape of 2006, five U.S. Army soldiers raped a 14-year-old Iraqi girl and murdered her and her family; and although this crime was premeditated, and the death penalty is far more common in the U.S. than in India, none of the U.S. soldiers received the death sentence. While the Iraqi girl’s mother had realized the threat posed by the U.S. soldiers to her daughter — not unlike when Toni Morrison’s grandmother had realized it was time to pack up her girls and leave when white boys began “circling” her yard in Alabama — the Iraqi mother had not appreciated the immediacy of the threat.

Monstrosity knows neither bounds nor boundaries. As in William Golding’s Lord of the Flies, a novel prompted by “unfathomable” German monstrosity toward Jews and others in WWII, even ordinary “children” can turn into savages in the absence of supervision. In Golding’s novel, the “children” kill a sow in the fashion of a gang rape.

Many in India are upset by the film because in it a perpetrator blames the death of his rape victim on the victim for resisting her rape. But victim blaming is common everywhere. For instance, when 15-year-old Audrie Pott from my high school committed suicide after her sexual assault by three teenagers at a party in September 2012, many at my school blamed Pott for going to a party that served alcohol.

But what appears to have upset the Indian government more than anything else about “India’s Daughter” is that in it, both the defense attorneys of the rapists espouse the view that women should dress conservatively, not go out late or with non-family members and focus on motherhood and on raising a family. But such views are common in India, especially in small towns and the countryside. Unsurprisingly, then, whereas there was universal outrage over the crime in India, protests against the film appear limited to activists and politicians.

Given that no one is challenging the accuracy of the film, I am baffled by the Indian government’s attempt to suppress it. The film is a commentary on man as much as on India. Is the Indian government ashamed of the values held by many of its citizens on the role of women in Indian society?

While I do not subscribe to these values, everyone is entitled to express his or her opinion — and that is all values are, opinions — as long as this opinion is not sought to be imposed on others, especially when such expression is not gratuitously offensive, as were the Charlie Hebdo cartoons.

Freedom of expression allows for the public challenge of otherwise private premises. But outside the United States, countries routinely suppress the views of their citizens, especially when these views are widely held and threaten either the ruling establishment or the narrative that this establishment wants to promote. So it is in India, with the role of women. So it is in swaths of Europe, with its anti-Semitism. So it is in much of the rest of the world, with its political and religious dogma.

Censorship then seems to serve but one primary purpose worldwide: to perpetuate views that cannot withstand the scrutiny of reason.

Gitika Nalwa, Saratoga High School, ‘16

Contact Gitika Nalwa at gitikanalwa ‘at’ gmail.com.

  • mxm123

    And yet you justify censorship. Need i say more.

  • mxm123

    Long live Al Jazeera !!!

  • mxm123

    What else do you think, now. I really wanna know !!!

  • browneyes

    Okay, since you asked, I think you should keep a puncture kit handy. Because, when you get pricked, all the gas leaks out and you just sort-of collapse. Like you have here.

  • browneyes

    You’re out of petrol, little one. Go home now. Seriously, take a break and think some more and then come back.

  • browneyes

    Okay good. That last exchange clarifies our basic positions.

  • mxm123

    Still defending censorship in India ? You seem to resemble those tv shows in India you talk about. Full steam babble, no sense.

  • browneyes

    Upvote also. There is a pretty consistent theme in Western media since India became independent of running the country down. It does not have any signs of being a conscious bias but it’s discernible. And it is not purely for India alone – until recently China faced it too. India will emerge from it much as China has. The media coverage actually makes little to no difference to India or China, so no change in anything is needed from the Indian perspective, really. The bias can continue unaddressed. I do not think it has had any effect whatsoever on Indian or Chinese events in the past 60 years.

    To take another example, Western media consistently whitewashes British rule in India. The pure statistics are horrifying. India was about 30% of global GDP for more than a thousand year running when the British gained control. In the time between 1750 and 1947 (independence) that share plummeted from 30% to 2%. Average life expectancy at independence was 29 years (which post-independence development efforts raised to the 65 years it is now). They systematically blocked social efforts to raise literacy because it created rebellions. At independence it was 12% (now 75%). They decimated industry – it was illegal for example to extract salt from the sea (the Salt Acts). If you lived in India, you HAD to buy salt imported from Britain – even though India has a massive coastline. Fertility was through the roof (6 children per woman) because the economy was forced to be entirely agrarian through a system of enforced feudalism (under the Land Settlement Act). Since independence, this has been plummeting too. The current number is 2.4 and falling fast, ie the country is on the verge of slipping below replacement rate (many experts believe it might already have done so). More than half the states in India are now below replacement and their population would drop without immigration from other states. India as a whole is headed fast towards a population stall over the next 20-25 years, after which the population will inexorably begin to fall. India’s borders are unsecured, so a lot of immigrants come in from Bangladesh, Burma and other places, but overall family planning is working well. India also lacks a wealth gap, which is typical of Latin America and other regions. The inequality indices (Gini, R/P indices) are consistently good – the country is more economically equal than America or China. The ratio of income between the richest 10% and poorest 10% in India is 8.6. By comparison, America (15.9), China (21.6), Brazil (40.6), South Africa (33.6%) are much more unequal. This is precisely why there will never be a revolution in India. The wealth spectrum is a continuum and people move on it readily over the span of their lives – which is DRAMATICALLY different from under British rule.

    India might be in bad shape but, compared to British rule, the country is an absolute paradise. Almost all older Indians from non-elite backgrounds are shocked at the level of progress. The biggest failure has been Socialism, which was also a British transplant into India (Fabianism). It has been a disaster but the rollback over the past 20 years is propelling the country forward. Share of global GDP is rising. Rape is no different. It is worse in the West for sure – all the indices show it without a shade of a doubt. If anything, once you control for reporting/non-reporting (where you might argue for unknown levels), the differential in punishment is even worse. It points to a cover-up basically. It also puts the church molestations in context and makes it more comprehensible to non-Westerners how such things could be hidden for century-timespans. Anyway, long enough analysis already :-)

  • browneyes

    By the way, it is revealing why Pakistanis are often so hung-up on caste. This too has roots in feudalism and the Land Settlement issue. As you know, the vast majority of Indians under British rule never actually saw a British person. They were the hidden rulers, by and large. They ruled almost entirely through intermediaries. Essentially, they created a system of warlords throughout the country. In any area, the warlord (aka zamindar) was responsible for collecting revenue and paying it to the British agent. How he ran his territory was up to him. He was allowed to raise a small militia if he wanted. This created, over 100 years, a layer of warlords in India. Of course, they made it caste-linked where they could hooking it into existing social divisions.

    At independence, India immediately seized and redistributed this land under the Abolition of Zamindari Act. That broke feudalism in most of India and is the reason why India democratised so rapidly. Pakistan never did, which meant that the Zamindar layer has remained intact. After independence, this has collaborated with the Military, basically coopting each other into a ruling combine that now prevents any moves towards actual democracy. Caste is extremely important to them. As you know, Hindus and Muslims actually share the same castes in Northern India (Rajput, Gujjar, Kamboj, Jat, Khatri, etc). In India, castes are inexorably dissolving due to urbanisation. In Pakistan, not so much. Their view of India is what it was in 1947. They cannot comprehend that someone from the lowest caste (Modi, current prime minister) can be in control. It would be like someone from apartheid South Africa looking at Obama and saying, “cannot be, there must be some white person controlling him.” Similarly, they cannot comprehend fully the new religious atmosphere in India where Muslims and Hindus are intermarrying much more freely – all of us are in or know about many such relationships, especially in urban areas. Among Hindus, Christians, Sikhs, Buddhists, etc this bar has completely disappeared. Again, they have trouble understanding that younger Indians just do not feel those passions of religious identity. They just don’t identify themselves in that way anymore. The answer to “Are you a Hindu/Muslim/Christian?” for most younger urban people is usually “I guess.”

  • JVG

    I am well aware of it. Have been through it twice. Thank You for the warning though. :)

  • MiG-21MF

    A perfect and insightful comment from you, browneyes. Couldn’t have analyzed it any better. Thanks – I hope these Porkis (and other non-Indians who think that the caste system still holds sway) read your comment and learn something.

  • Bemused Bystander

    Commenter browneyes,
    You bemuse me. You make several good points and appear knowledgeable, but undermine your good arguments with bad ones. You also undermine your case by being highly excitable and spontaneous, rather than deliberate.
    Kudos to The Stanford Daily for not blocking your comments, as I am sure the NYT and others would do for the simple reason that your comments do not fit their narrative on rape in India. The NYT is a disgrace: You must either be a self-proclaimed victim or someone famous (perhaps commenting on something you have no idea about) to publish there, and of course your discourse must fit its narrative.
    First, it is true that there is an inordinate degree of self-censorship in the U.S., but no one rioted when Madonna put out a song that seemed to denigrate Christ/Christianity, and neither was it banned, as with recent texts in India that some Indians perceived as denoting Hinduism as erotic. Or even with Rushdie’s Satanic Verses. Here is the key to our Freedom of Expression: Being offended is not a good enough reason to ban speech. Most of the world does not get it: In France and Germany, denying the Holocaust can get you a jail term. They try so hard to convince the world that they are not anti-Semitic, not realizing that this effort itself is proof of their widespread anti-Semitism. Would not the same reasoning apply to the ban of “India’s Daughter”?
    Second, even if the director/producer of “India’s Daughter” has expressed disparaging views about Indian society, one must distinguish between a creator and his or her creation. Disdain or dislike for the director is not a reason to ban her movie, even if the director is worthy of your disdain.
    Third, if your goal is to convert others to your point of view, instead of being dismissive of other points of view and highly presumptuous (“you are definitely not American,” or those who disagree with you are “definitely Pakistani,” or a different point of view is “propaganda”), you should listen, appreciate, and then respond. The whole wide world out there is not against you, or out to get you, or stuck in a “colonial” frame of mind. Many of us welcome to be SHOWN that we are wrong.

  • Emic

    @Bemused Bystander, those were very thoughtful and instructive comments.

    “no one rioted when Madonna put out a song that seemed to denigrate Christ/Christianity”

    Absolutely, and neither were there riots here over Serrano’s photograph of a crucifix in a glass of urine. But therein lies the rub. In India innocent people (a Muslim from a different community, as it so happened) can get lynched by a vigilante mob (in an overwhelmingly Christian state) because of mass hysteria over (false) allegations of rape. Under these circumstances, Freedom of Expression cannot be absolute for different countries under different societal pressures. Even in this country there was enormous pressure brought to bear on the preacher who wished to burn Korans in a bonfire, because of the dangers it posed to American servicemen serving in Afghanistan. A noose, for example, is considered deeply offensive and a chargeable hate crime here because of its association to a sordid chapter in America’s past. The display of the same effigy in India, or in most other countries, would not be considered inflammatory, criminal or prosecutable. For that matter, a reverse swastika is an ancient sacred and auspicious symbol for Buddhists and Hindus, and yet, because of the looking-glass image’s association with a European racist ideology, its depiction in either form is viewed as a symbol of hate and its scrawling as graffiti a prosecutable hate-crime offense in this country.

    “Disdain or dislike for the director is not a reason to ban her movie, even if the director is worthy of your disdain.”

    You are correct. Riefenstahl’s Triumph of the Will should never have been banned in Germany. And the NAACP should never have sought to ban Griffith’s The Birth of a Nation (unbanned in 1916). However, try airing the latter movie at a theater in Baltimore today and see how quickly the authorities would seek to prevent this attempt at Freedom of Expression. The FEC did ban the airing of a political hit piece, Hillary: The Movie before the 2008 Democratic primary because they ruled it to be prejudicial (well, the legal cover was McCain-Feingold and the SCOTUS overturned this in their Citizen’s United ruling; which opened up an entirely different can of worms). In the Indian context, the documentary in question was deemed by the Indian government to be prejudicial to the convicted rapist’s ongoing appeal against a death sentence, among other law and order concerns on preserving the public peace internally. This is the prerogative of the democratically elected government in India. And its citizens, just like the citizens of Germany or the US (or Canada, the UK, Australia, etc, where movies have been banned), can vote their government out of office at the next election if they disagree with affront to their FoE.

    @mxm123, the review of targeted assassinations by “secret” judicial review, as were the “secret” findings on the legality of torture, may also be viewed as a joke. But then, no one else is laughing, or looking to be sanctimonious or hypocritical.

  • Mark

    Cosby Bill accused of drugging and raping 45 women in various countries.
    Fact: 98% of rape victims don’t lie. 98% of 45 = 44 accusers are not lying.
    Fact: 73% of victims know their rapist. 5% of rape crimes are reported!
    Fact: 95% of rape crimes are never reported. Victims fear rapist reprisal.
    Fact: Many Media not reporting Cosby rapist comments for fear of reprisal.
    Cosby didn’t rape just once 30 years ago, he has been raping for 50 years.
    Cosby spent and continues to spend untold millions delaying prosecution.
    Cosby a sociopath, lacks conscience, empathy, remorse, guilt or shame.
    Cosby an accused rapist has no one to blame but himself. Cosby owns this.
    When anyone is above the law then there is no law for anyone, not even you.
    When elected representatives say there is nothing we can do, Replace them..
    When a Government is based on corruption, no matter where, Replace them…
    Governments and Courts have a shared fiduciary duty to prosecute Bill Cosby.
    When it comes to Cosby “Innocent until Proven Guilty” is a cliché, a joke!
    The “Statute of Limitations” does not apply to serial rapists. It never has!
    UNDENIABLE: “Dr. Jekyll is to Mr. Hyde” as “Dr. Huxtable is to Mr. Cosby”.
    Please CARE: HELP eliminate the “Rape Culture” TODAY. #cosbyrapistlaw
    We must never ever grow tired of hearing about or defending these victims.
    These victims represent all of us, our families, our children, our daughters.
    Talk to people; contact Governments, Media, Celebrities, Friends, etc…
    Share this link with everyone. Why, VICTIMS MATTER. Thank you for caring.
    https://plus.google.com/103041359322144339544/posts/e5vBecfNDJw

    I read this recently and I am at a loss defending Bill Cosby any longer.

  • Bemused Bystander

    Your arguments about the lynching of a Muslim man by a Christian mob and about the banning of the swastika and the noose do not seem pertinent to the banning of the movie in question as no one is arguing that this movie constitutes or advocates hate speech.

    I am amazed by how “liberal intellectuals” worldwide have disdain for the opinions of the masses. For instance, your and many other’s comments about the intolerance in India for a diversity of opinions is at complete odds with India’s millennia of not only tolerating disparate cultures and religions, including foreign, but also allowing them to flourish.

    So, the question is what is bothering activists and politicians? Activists are concerned that the right of women to lead the lives they choose is under attack, a concern that is understandable, and politicians just want to be reelected.

    But does the suppression of the airing of views serve any purpose other than sending these views underground, as the author argues?

    What “liberal intellectuals” worldwide must realize is that fighting a culture war against the majority is futile, and what they would be better served by focusing on is finding common ground with the majority. For instance, all could agree that everyone has a right to public safety, everywhere, at all times, no matter what their lifestyle.

  • http://crossingfrontieres.wordpress.com Cinemaste

    in fact, in America a director can film such a film. or in other countries.
    did you see hind bensari’s 475: treve de silence?