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Why Are Hindu Honor Killings Rising in India?

BanglaBhoot

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For three weeks now, a morbid murder story has been playing out in the Indian media. Nirupama Pathak, 22, a New Delhi–based journalist, was allegedly murdered by her own mother. Her crime? She had wanted to marry a fellow journalist who belongs to a lower caste — and she was pregnant. On a trip home to make a final effort to convince her family, Nirupama texted her boyfriend that she was being held captive, locked up in a bathroom. On April 29, she was found dead. The family claimed Nirupama had killed herself, and lodged a case against her boyfriend for rape and abetting suicide. But when the postmortem results revealed Nirupama had been asphyxiated, the police arrested her mother, Sudha Pathak.

The case is now headed to court, which will disentangle the web of allegations and counterallegations. Meanwhile, it has thrust the issue of honor killings to the center of public debate. Though Western readers associate the term more with Taliban-ruled Afghanistan than with 21st century India, honor killings are shockingly frequent in villages in the northern and northwestern parts of the country, where those daring to cross the barriers of caste are made to pay with their lives. Mostly, these cases are confined to the inside pages of newspapers, but the Nirupama case — in urban, educated, middle-class India — has hit the front pages.

Activists say dozens of people, both women and men, are killed for "honor" every year, falling victim to the deeply entrenched caste system, which dictates an individual's social standing based on the caste they are born into. The majority of these killings take place in the agrarian states of Punjab, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh and Rajasthan, where land ownership and caste go hand in hand and an honor culture thrives by maintaining caste and gender hierarchies. "The upper castes fiercely guard their hold over land and power in the community," says Ranbir Singh, a Haryana-based sociologist currently a consultant with the Haryana Institute of Rural Development. "They are able to mobilize young, educated but unemployed, mostly unmarried men, who are all fired up to shore up their self-esteem."

Perceived caste transgressions are severely punished. In a recent case in a Haryana village, an 18-year-old Dalit girl and her father were allegedly burned alive by upper-caste Jat men following an argument over a dog. Women, since they have property rights, are a threat if not kept under a vicelike grip. It is no surprise that Haryana, one of India's wealthiest states with a largely farm-based economy, has the highest rate of selectively aborting female fetuses, a practice that has skewed the demographics so much that there are only 861 women for 1,000 men. Young men are forced to purchase brides from other states. The statistics on honor killings are also the worst there: groups called khaps run kangaroo courts that routinely issue fatwa-like orders for the execution of those who have offended caste boundaries.

The situation is aggravated by modernity, as more and more young people want to marry for love instead of family or caste considerations. Khaps violently oppose both marriages between upper-caste women and lower-caste men and those within sub-castes and villages deemed to share kinship ties. The khap itself, long a locus of power for the land-owning Jat community, is being rendered irrelevant by economic change, increasingly egalitarian democratic politics and population movement — hence, say observes, this brutal attempt to re-establish its prerogatives. "Due to their declining status, they are trying to assert their existence by taking the law in their own hands," explains Prem Chowdhry, senior academic fellow at the New Delhi–based Indian Council of Historical Research.

A month before Nirupama's death, a court in Haryana sentenced five people to death for killing a couple belonging to the same village and gotra, or caste-based clan (village elders had deemed them brother and sister). Manoj Banwala, 23, and Babli, 19, of Karoran village in Haryana, had married against the wishes of the bride's family on April 7, 2007. Urged on by the khap, the village had turned against Banwala's family, forcing the couple to flee to a nearby city, where they were killed two months later on order from the khap. A police investigation found that police assigned to protect the couple had actually passed on information to the assailants. When the court pronounced the punishment, the khaps launched protests and demanded that the government introduce changes in the Hindu marriage law to ban marriages within the same gotra.

Astonishingly, prominent politicians from both the ruling Congress party and the opposition have come out in support of the khaps' demand. With city and village elections due shortly, political parties see this as an easy ploy to lure votes, caste being a handy instrument of statecraft. Even as the Nirupama case was burning, the government announced that caste data would be collected as part of the census — the first time since 1931 — to get exact caste statistics, ostensibly to implement meaningful affirmative-action plans for underprivileged castes. But the move has many opponents, who believe it will only perpetuate a political culture that takes advantage of caste divisions. "It is the cynicism of politicians that they've made caste a tool for political mobilization," says New Delhi–based analyst Amulya Ganguli. "The khaps' growing clout and the killings of hapless couples show how dangerous this renewed emphasis can be."

India's Nirupama Pathak Case Raises Honor-Killing Debate - TIME
 
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This is shocking but true. The United Nations should be notified of this grave issue.
 
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This is shocking but true. The United Nations should be notified of this grave issue.


Yes this is really shocking......everyone should know about this.....lets make a team and do propaganda about this......even people living in Antarctica should know about this..... India is a bad country....bad...really bad...poor people everywhere...hungry people....no toilets.....no nothing and all money is being spend on defence......people are obsessed with China and Pakistan.....
and list goes on.....

but tell me one thing.........what the f*** this topic is doing in Pakistan's current events and social issue???
 
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To answer the question plainly.

I don't think Hindus are any better than anyone else in developing countries when it comes to brutality against women.

The difference is:

Hindu honor killings rarely happen among Hindus in the west.

On the other hand, the frequency of honor killings (note that I am not trying to say that this is a regular occurrence) among Muslims in the west seems to be much more.

Therefore they get more publicized in the west.

That's all.

BTW PakSher why the troll? You want to honor kill this thread in flames? :D
 
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This is shocking but true. The United Nations should be notified of this grave issue.

s this is a very grave issue...........needed to be adressed............and recently killing in karachi of british nationals too be included:bunny:
 
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BTW the thread title (predictably) claims the honor killings are on the rise.

It would have been good if some data was provided on this matter, otherwise looks like the age old practice of changing titles for flames!
 
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I do not understand why the title has "Hindus"? the author seems very misinformed! The caste inequality that he mentions over and over is social and not based on any religion. This kind of social standing is also practiched by Muslims and Christians. While its good that such things come out in the open, there also needs to be enough evidence or stats that needs to be published. The "on the rise" part of the story only seems to be his imagination, unless he has data to prove it.
 
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Nothing is rising. The social structure both in rural & urban areas is under change due to a variety of reasons .

It is just that such issues are getting thrown up more due to the media - too many news channels.

Such acts have happened all along sporadically , only now they get played on national TV. It is good that they do, everything cannot be left to the Govt to do, society, elders etc too have a role to play.

Awareness & education is the key.
 
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Tsk Tsk! I would say that this is quite pathetic among our INdian Friends. We all Blame Pakistanis of being in Denial. I see the same denial blatantly here.

Just the way you would like to highlight their "Failed State" stuff, they also would like to highlight their rival's shortcomings. In this case, it is true. And in a Hindu Majority country, it is bound to be called as "Hindu Honor Killings" although the religious profiling could have been very well avoided.

On the other hand, what would be achieved by Pakistanis if Indians acknowledged this? Words fail me :|
 
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honor killing is a phenomenon seen in every culture and tradition...even in Christianity and Islam...and it can only be eradicated with education and awareness...please change the title...it doesn't happen everywhere in Hindu society nor it is a written practice of sacred books like in case of Jihad or Pind Dan....so please don't relate it with a specific religion..
 
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Honor killing has nothing to do with any religion.. this is done by few idiots to show their ego and (false) pride of ancestors.. And yes this is on rise as more youngsters are in effect of Bollywood type Love and as these Love ties are increasing, such killing is on rise...
 
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Though i have no data.
I think its not rising, but its being reported more. Better education and media in the last decade has led to people being more aware. More educated young people leading to more fights in the villages.

People being troubled by khap's have raised issues in the police and media. People are reporting honour killings as honour killings and they are not being passed off as suicides, random murder, etc.

Its more to do with more education, awareness and media that more cases are comming to light. And i hope this continues. A fight between the the old systems and the new generations.
 
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This is shocking but true. The United Nations should be notified of this grave issue.


I fully agree with you "The United Nations should be notified of this grave issue in Pakistan." :bunny::bunny:

The wedding day massacre: British family shot dead in Pakistan graveyard in 'arranged marriage row'

Read more: UK couple and daughter shot dead in Pakistan in 'arranged marriage dispute' | Mail Online


Family of Pakistan honour killing couple receive death threats - mirror.co.uk

Pakistan: Three teenage girls buried alive in tribal 'honour' killing

Pakistan: Three teenage girls buried alive in tribal 'honour' killing | World news | The Guardian

Pakistan “Honor killings”: Couple, including teenage bride, mother, sister murdered

PAKISTAN: Honor killing takes lives of 19-year-old girl and 30-year-old man

Blood boils over Pakistan 'honour' killings | The Australian

Senator defends honour-killing | Pakistan | News | Newspaper | Daily | English | Online

"Jaani jin ke ghar sheshe ke bane hote hai,
wo dusro pe patthar nahi phefka karte" :rofl::rofl::rofl:
 
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I fully agree with you "The United Nations should be notified of this grave issue in Pakistan." :bunny::bunny:

The wedding day massacre: British family shot dead in Pakistan graveyard in 'arranged marriage row'

Read more: UK couple and daughter shot dead in Pakistan in 'arranged marriage dispute' | Mail Online


Family of Pakistan honour killing couple receive death threats - mirror.co.uk

Pakistan: Three teenage girls buried alive in tribal 'honour' killing

Pakistan: Three teenage girls buried alive in tribal 'honour' killing | World news | The Guardian

Pakistan “Honor killings”: Couple, including teenage bride, mother, sister murdered

PAKISTAN: Honor killing takes lives of 19-year-old girl and 30-year-old man

Blood boils over Pakistan 'honour' killings | The Australian

Senator defends honour-killing | Pakistan | News | Newspaper | Daily | English | Online

"Jaani jin ke ghar sheshe ke bane hote hai,
wo dusro pe patthar nahi phefka karte" :rofl::rofl::rofl:


these links doesn't show that Pakistan have more Honor killing than India, mate please don't try to compare Pakistan in honor killing with your country,
 
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