Marathon woman!
 Yes, a few prizes for finding me in that crowd of CHILDLINE bachchas....
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Haaaaash!  Back on the blog after what seems like ages! My laptop had taken a  chill pill and was comatose for a few days. I was taking it a little  easy as well and giving my painful, swollen wrist a chance to heal. Was  dying to tell you what I really, really thought of 'Dhobi Ghat' (  tomorrow's post - promise!). I spent a day in my favourite city (Pune),  and that disrupted my writing schedule. Ate a terrific meal at the brand  new, but largely deserted 'Ista'. Was delighted to meet up with Mumbai  Chef Anthony  ( 'India Jones' )who rushed into the kitchen and prepared  an impromptu feast for the four of us. India's first 'Hermes' store has  picked 'Ista' and 'Pune' as a location. That shows one hell of a lot of  faith in both!
 I spent a wonderful hour- and -a -half at the Strand  Book Exhibition. It was for the launch of a very special book - Will  Durant's 'The Case for India' ( written in 1930), translated into  Marathi by Kalyan Varde ( a labour of love). It is a must read for  anybody interested in history and Durant's passionate, power packed  tribute to what he describes as 'the greatest civilisation on earth'.  The contents may shock and pain the unwary. Most documented histories  are suppressed , distorted truths. Here is an American intellectual's  fearless version of what the British really did to us - just 68,000 of  them  in a country of 32 crore people at the time. I hope the book gets  translated into all our regional languages so that our children finally  learn what my generation was never told - the truth.
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This appeared in The Week....
 Nothing ‘diplomatic’ about this mess…
Years  ago, I had a lady called Binabai working in our home. She was  extraordinarily cheerful and good to have around when the children were  growing up. Even though she was illiterate, her basic common sense had  earned her a doctorate in my eyes. She had a solution for virtually  every crisis and most of the time, her advice was sound and sensible.  Strongly built and ready to work hard, she was my Rock of Gibraltar,  especially on those days when I was low on energy and high on stress.  One day she found me sniffling after some silly argument with my  husband. She came up close and asked conspiratorially, “Did he beat you a  lot?” My sniffling stopped instantly as I whirled around and said, “  Don’t be ridiculous! Beat me?? ME??? Are you crazy?” She shook her head  and sighed, “I am not crazy. Men are like that. You are lucky your  husband doesn’t raise his hand on you.” I launched into a speech on  domestic violence and how crucial it was for all women to be aware of  their rights… I lectured her about our laws, the role of cops, various  social service organizations that protect victims.” Binabai was  unimpressed and far from convinced. She pushed up the sleeve of her  saree blouse and showed me a deep scar, “See this? My husband attacked  me with a wood chopper… why? Because one of the chappatis I’d served him  was burnt at the edges.” before I could react in horror to that, she  opened up her hair which was tied in a bun and exposed her scalp, “Look  at this gash – another attack with the chopper. This time for not  washing his clothes properly.” Too pained and shocked to say very much, I  just held her as we wordlessly communicated in the universal language  of  women – silence.
 Binabai’s story came to mind while reading  about the ‘wife-beater’ from London – senior diplomat Anil Verma. There  are conflicting reports about what really went wrong between him and his  wife Paromita, to create such a major diplomatic incident, but clearly  something terrible must have happened. Paromita is not Binabai. She is  an educated and empowered woman who works for the Indian Railways. If  her claims are true, she mutely put up with physical abuse at the hands  of her husband because he taunted her by saying nothing and nobody could  touch him since he enjoyed diplomatic immunity. Amazingly enough, she  bought that bogus story and kept mum. Going by some of the reports, the  turning point  came when Anil flew into a rage over a  X’Mas tree sent  to their London home by Paromita’s relatives. A rage that made him  attack his wife and harm her physically. Make any sense? Either the  senior diplomat is a certified psycho, or someone is making up stories.  Since he enjoys a minister’s rank and was once the private secretary of  Pranab Mukherjee, it is assumed he will receive special treatment, and  may waltz away after a token reprimand or two. Paromita who was  ‘scolded’ by Rajendra Prasad ( deputy high commissioner) for going  public with a ‘private’ matter, is in hiding at the time of writing, and  is reported to have fled her Hampstead home with blood gushing down her  face. There is an attempt to accuse her of dramatizing this incident  since she wants to seek asylum in Britain and stay on. Even if that is  so, she is not the one who has committed a crime. No matter what the  provocation, if her injuries are anything to go by, Paromita deserves  justice and Verma must be punished for his brutality. Will that happen?  Will we have the guts to prosecute someone in Verma’s privileged  position? Or will pressure be put on Paromita to withdraw the charges in  return for a goody bag that includes perks that may sort out her visa  issues?
 This is but a solitary case that has attracted media  attention because of the personalities involved. But for every Paromita  whose story of domestic violence gets into the public domain, there are  countless others who are forced to ‘shut up and put up’. The standard  advice doled out to them is , “Don’t bring shame to the family.” What of  those women? Who is there to fight their battle for them? Frankly, no  one. So long as our society’s mind set remains stuck and warped, and  women continue to be viewed as dispensable, replaceable, recyclable  commodities, the Binabais and Paromitas in our midst will have to go to  war on their own and pray for fair play or suffer wordlessly and wait  for some sort of redemption in this lifetime… or the next one. Whichever  way…. it’s a long, long wait and an endless journey with just a glimmer  of light at the end of a very dark and narrow tunnel.
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