
Dalit Women and Village Justice in Rural India

Published by Graham Peebles
Graham Peebles is an independent writer and charity worker. His essays are widely published on leading alternative media throughout the world. Formerly a photographer and fine artist he set up The Create Trust in 2005, and has run education projects in India, Sri Lanka, Palestine and Ethiopia where he lived for two years working with street children and under 18 commercial sex workers. He lives and works in London. View all posts by Graham Peebles
Kessi Bai has lived in Thuravad village in Rajasthan for 21 years. In November last year the 45 year-old mother of five was accused, with no evidence whatsoever, of murder, by a mob of villagers led by the village council and violently punished: stripped naked, her face was blackened with charcoal, her head shaved and she was repeatedly beaten with wooden sticks. Her husband and son were locked inside their home while she was paraded for six hours around neighbouring villages on a donkey.
The Dalits, especially women, face a terrible situation. Few people in the West know about it. This essay was posted in 2015, and I’m commenting in 2018 – yet the American media (so far as I know) has said nothing about the lives of the Dalits.
I think that nothing good results from a fundamentalist religion of any t;ype controlling a society. What will change attitudes? Education helps, as literature and the arts show people that other ways of believing and behaving are possible and can be chosen without lethal consequences. Working and playing with others who are different in religion, race, etc. also helps; but Dalits are forbidden this opportunity.
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