I was eveteased today. As I made my way along the pavement
to the grocery store, a man walked past me and in a low tone leeringly mumbled,
“looking nice, looking good”.
Now here’s how I’ve dealt with eveteasing in the past: If it
was a remark or a comment, I’d just shrug it off and ignore it, choosing to
walk on and avoid a scene. However, if I was touched or groped, I’d turn around
and let the person have it – verbally and physically.
Lately, I’ve changed. The horrific incident in Delhi and the furor that followed has everything to do with it. We Indian women are too meek, too submissive, too tolerant. Why was I
tolerating a remark? Eveteasing is eveteasing in ANY form – no matter how seemingly innocuous a
comment, a look, a gesture or a touch.
Why must we tolerate it at all?
This morning, something inside me snapped. I wheeled around
as the man walked by and called out, “What did you say? Repeat it!” He ignored
me and quickened his pace as I turned around and began following him. As I
began catching up, he quickly ran across the road and reached the pavement on
the opposite side. I kept pace with him
on my side of the road, keeping out of sight behind a line of parked cars. He
had now slowed to a walk, thinking I’d given up and gone. I quickly ran across
the road and confronted him.
He started babbling apologies as soon as I had him cornered.
Initially, he said, “I was not talking to you.” “Then who?” I demanded at the
top of my voice. “There was nobody there. Were you talking to the cars? The
wall? The pavement? Where should I take you? The mental asylum or the police
station?”
He resorted to apologising again. But I was not going to let
him off lightly. I was livid. My voice kept rising as I yelled at him, telling
him he would get five years in jail if I filed a complaint (I’m not even sure
that’s true, but hey, nobody’s going to debate with a furious woman). As he
switched to Kannada, I decided I’d hit him where it hurt – his pride. “Oh, to evetease you speak English and now you speak Kannada? Do you
Kannadiga men have no respect for women? This is what your culture teaches you?”
"You have goddesses - Durga, Kali, Lakshmi. And yet you have no respect for women?"
A little crowd was gathering. A car with a couple had
stopped. A guy asked what had happened. The eveteaser was
now quite rattled. He kept pinching his throat and pleading and apologising. “You
are the same type of people as the Delhi rapists! Get down on your knees! On
your knees!” I screamed. I kept screaming louder and louder until he actually
complied. There he was, on his knees, apologising. “You open your mouth to one
more woman and see what happens to you,” I shrieked before resorting to a bunch
of cuss words I would not like to defile my blog space with. And with that, I
walked away.
I can only hope that this public shaming will make him think
twice before he disrespects another woman. My only regret is that I wasn’t
carrying my cellphone to take a picture of the groveling lowlife.
This is my appeal to all you women out there. Enough is
enough. Let’s have zero tolerance towards eveteasing or molestation in any
form. No matter how trivial you think it is. Nothing is trivial. Shout. Scream. Make a
scene. Shame them. If the only way to make them respect you is by instilling
fear, then so be it.
And decent men out there: Take a strong stand. Stand up for a woman in distress. Don't stand around and gawk or turn a blind eye as she takes a stand and fights for what is essentially her birthright: a life of dignity, safety and freedom.
Nip it in the bud. Eveteasers today are potential rapists
tomorrow. By confronting these disgusting creeps, you are making our world a safer, better place for other women – one eveteaser at a time. It’s a tiny drop in the
ocean, but it is a start. If my actions today make that man avoid teasing one
other woman in the coming week (I highly doubt it would have cured him of his
filthy behaviour), then I’ve made a difference. Hardly a dent in the wider spectrum
of things, but a teeny tiny difference still.
“Kindly adjust maadi” may be the maxim in Bangalore. But no more. I’m done being kind. I’m done adjusting. The only thing I am going to adjust now is the sickening attitude of eveteasers. Who’s with me?
UPDATE: On Saturday, 23rd February, I encountered yet another eveteaser. The young man sang out as he passed by me. I kicked up a ruckus again - following him while I screamed and brandished an umbrella in his face. When I asked him to kneel down, for some reason (most likely the language barrier), he thought I meant sit-ups! So a few amused passersby and I watched in silence as he did about four or five sit-ups before I walked away. "Very good! Even I do the same thing!" a girl called out to me. I certainly hope she does. She and a couple of million other Indian women.
UPDATE: On Saturday, 23rd February, I encountered yet another eveteaser. The young man sang out as he passed by me. I kicked up a ruckus again - following him while I screamed and brandished an umbrella in his face. When I asked him to kneel down, for some reason (most likely the language barrier), he thought I meant sit-ups! So a few amused passersby and I watched in silence as he did about four or five sit-ups before I walked away. "Very good! Even I do the same thing!" a girl called out to me. I certainly hope she does. She and a couple of million other Indian women.