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On the evening of February 6, 2012, Suzette Jordan went to a nightclub in a hotel on Park Street in Kolkata. A 30-something year old, she was a single mother of two daughters...
A conservative estimate is that approximately 90 percent of conventional romantic comedies begin this way. Suzette Jordan’s reality, however, was a far cry from any comedy whatsoever. Jordan was raped by five men, in a moving car, at gunpoint.
For a year, Suzette was the Park Street rape victim. The Bengal government was despicable; Mamata Banerjee declared that Suzette’s statements were shajano gochano, the literal translation of which is ‘embellished and tidied.’ Those who did believe her, were, amazingly, no better. Dr Kakoli Ghosh Dastidar, MP, said that it was not a case of sexual assault, but of a deal between a sex worker and a client that went wrong.
In 2013, Suzette had had enough. She waived her right to anonymity and came out to the world as the woman who had been raped in Park Street in February 2012. By then Suzette had been mocked, slandered, violated and denied jobs. An embittered but undaunted Suzette took it upon herself to lead by example, and to offer support to others who had faced assault.
In March 2015, Suzette died of multiple organ failure, after battling meningoencephalitis. She was 40 years old.
Suzette was no mere victim of rape. She had survived, and how. She wore her scars for all the world to see, so that she could enable other women to live like her, unabashed, proud and free.
In a letter to his daughter, a grieving Peter Jordan offers a beautiful tribute to his daughter, whom he calls the Lioness of Kolkata.
He speaks of her joie de vivre, and her incredible ability to face her circumstances and emerge triumphant. From Peter’s account, Suzette was a person without malice. Always chatty, pleasant and ready to help.
His account of her determination to fight is inspiring.
A few days before she died, Rhea Jordan, Suzette’s daughter, wrote about her in a school assignment. Writing about who she aspired to be like, Rhea’s essay about her mother is honest. She describes not a flawless, ‘perfect’ mother, but someone who made the best of what she was given. She writes about hardship, but most of all, she writes of her mother’s ability to find joy in the little things. The essay was published on theladiesfinger.com.
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Published: 10 Dec 2015,02:55 PM IST