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INDIA'S OUTCAST WIDOWS HAVE NEW
HAVENS
By Uma Girish
April 18, 2004 (WeNews) Widows in India still undergo ritual
humiliations and extreme ostracism; conditions that several new
programs are seeking to redress.
When Mohini Giri wants to describe the hardships of widows living
along the banks of the Ganges, she tells the story of Shanta Bai.
When Bai was 5 years old her shoulders drooped under the weight
of her bridal garland. But according to Giri, a widows' advocate,
the little girl could hardly have imagined what burdens lay ahead.
Her uncle had pocketed Rs.300 ($6.55) by marrying her off to a 36
year old. The husband died four years later, leaving Bai a 9-year-old
widow.
Now 85, says Giri, Bai hobbles down the streets of Vrindavan, a
city in the north of India, her gnarled fingers cupping a broken
bowl, begging for her living while she waits for death to claim
her.
Bai is one the estimated 33 million widows in India, the country
with the largest widow population in the world. Among them, at least
20,000, like Bai, sit on the banks of the river Ganges and beg for
alms. Vrindavan and Varanasi, holy cities in the north of India
and two of the country's most sought-after pilgrim centers, have
become home to the husbandless.
Conference Drew Attention
Giri is chair of the New Delhi-based Guild of Service, which aids
women and children. Two years ago, the national volunteer group
focused international attention on the plight of women such as Bai
with a conference about the situation of India's widows.
Attendees produced a series of demands, including reforms to legal
inheritance rights, a plan for economic empowerment and laws to
mitigate their physical and social abuse.
Delegates at the conference also formed the New Delhi-based South
Asian Alliance for Widows to lobby local governments to provide
support and plans to assist widows in gaining more power throughout
India. Spurred by these gatherings and initiatives, the central
government formed a committee to address the needs of the widows
of Vrindavan.
In the short term, the committee aims to provide widows along the
Ganges with shelter, medical care and education. In longer and broader
terms, it aims to bring such widows in from the outskirts of society.
A look at the cultural forces that have made the northern holy cities
of Vrindavan and Varanasi a home to the husbandless show what such
efforts are up against.
The preponderance of widows in the two holy cities can often be
couched in the euphemistic terms of religious reverence. According
to traditional Hindu belief, those who die in a pilgrim center are
freed from the eternal cycle of life and death and even attain moksha,
or emancipation.
But, Giri says, few widows choose to spend or end their lives as
beggars. Many are thrown out of family homes by their children or
abandoned by their in-laws as evil women who caused the death of
their husbands.
"This is the plight of most of the widows who arrive in Vrindavan,"
she says. "Without a man by her side a woman has no respect
in Indian society. It is part of a patriarchal culture."
Ritual Humiliation
Although the horrific practice of sati--requiring widows to throw
themselves on their husbands' funeral pyres--was abolished in 1829,
widows still undergo ritual humiliations. After the death of a husband,
a woman is shorn of her bridal ornamentation; her head is shaved
by the local barber and her body is wrapped in a stark white sari
so she may not arouse carnal pleasures in other men.
The bright red sindoor, the red smear that a married woman wears
in the parting of her hairline, is substituted by a vertical ash
smear from the top of her forehead to the top of her nose. Her very
presence is considered so inauspicious that even her shadow may
not fall on a married woman lest her terrible fate befall the other
woman.
"In India a woman is respected only if she is a mother, daughter
and wife," says Giri. "While we have come to accept death
we have unfortunately not learned to accept widows."
The 1856 Hindu Widows' Remarriage Act gave women the legal right
to remarry and the Hindu Succession Act of 1956 gave women the same
inheritance rights as men. Those rights, however, are rarely put
into practice.
Since women in India are often married off at a young age instead
of being educated, they usually lack the skills and knowledge to
fend for themselves economically and fight for their basic rights.
When they arrive at Vrindavan and Varanasi, the widows find shelters
that were built almost a century ago for local ashrams or religious
institutions. Today, the cramped, leaky spaces--administered by
local government officials--accommodate about three women each,
who sleep on torn sacks.
They receive meager rations of rice and lentils only if they spend
six hours singing devotional songs at the ashram. Young widows are
often lured into sex in exchange for more food or money.
Alternative Housing
For some widows, however, there is an alternative.
In 1998, Giri marshaled her contacts and developed Aamar Bari, or
My Home, a large housing complex in Vrindavan that shelters over
100 widows, between the ages of 40 and 105. The women here learn
skills such as weaving, embroidery, beadwork, nursing and spinning,
which Giri hopes will one day translate into economic independence.
The women worship together, receive medical help at a small clinic
and eat regular meals.
The government is also beginning to try to help widows who are cast
out by their families. One of the plans is Swadhar, an $11 million
network of shelters, which will provide food, medical care, education,
counseling and training.
Giri says education is one of the most important components of the
new initiatives. With education, she says, comes an empowerment
that can help widows build a new identity for themselves. Otherwise,
she says, "their voices will be stifled from the cradle to
the grave."
Uma Girish is a freelance writer in Chennai, India.
From: http://www.womensenews.org/article.cfm/dyn/aid/1794/context/archive
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