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Why does Indian society believe that a rape survivor should marry her rapist? Why are notions of shame and honour associated with victims of sexual violence? And to what extent are we, as a society, willing to go to protect this ‘honour’ and avoid this ‘shame’?
For you and me sitting in our drawing rooms, these may be questions for debate. For some women and girls though, the fact that we’re still debating this has real consequences.
20-year-old Latha* from Tirunelveli in Tamil Nadu is one of them.
Not that you need it. Latha’s story – of child sexual abuse, about parental neglect, about being forced to suffer abuse and of being under immense pressure to marry her rapist after years of ‘living’ with him, and bearing a child for him - does not need sound effects to anger anyone.
It all began when Latha was around 12 years old. Her father, who was mentally ill, left the family to live with his sister when he found out that his wife was having an affair. The lover – Vaikundashekhar – visited the family frequently, and at some point, started living with Latha, her mother, her sister and her brother and that’s when the abuse started.
Vaikundashekhar, Latha narrated on the show, touched her inappropriately and sexually abused her many times. When she complained to her mother, she looked the other way.
When she was in Class IX, Latha got pregnant, although she did not know this at that point, she claimed
Latha’s son is now 7 years old, and lives with the family and Vaikundashekhar continues to live with them.
While Vaikundashekhar has continued to abuse and rape her over the years, Latha said that she finally decided to speak out because her family was forcing her to get married to him.
"I bought a cellphone without my family’s knowledge and that really angered them. On top this, they were asking me to stop studying. They want me to get married to my 'mama' (how she refers to her rapist) in June," she said. "But all I want to do is study, get a job and leave this place," she added.
"He hit her with a belt and even tried to file a police complaint that she was talking on the phone to a boy. He thinks of her as his property," Lakshmi said.
The survivor, who is currently pursuing her Bachelors in Commerce, allegedly fled from her home in Tirunelveli district after a conversation with the show's producer.
The show producers then housed her at a hotel in Chennai. And in a questionable move, they decided to bring her rapist and her mother to the show as well.
Latha's mother defended her actions when questioned about how she could let her lover rape her child.
And while that justification in itself is shocking, it paled in comparison to the rapist’s brazen attitude.
"They could have sent me to jail for this back then. I would have come out in two months and been happy. Now I am suffering for the last seven years," he said, playing the victim for being ‘forced’ to ‘pay for them’.
The most shocking part of the story though is that while Latha pleaded on the show that she didn’t want to go with her mother, she was taken back anyway.
On the show, a teary-eyed Latha said that she did not want to go back home with her family. But her mother, this whole time, maintained that she should return or she will bring 'shame' to them. "What about your brother's education?" she kept asking.
Except, when the organisers attempted to call the girl and her mother on Tuesday afternoon, they were not reachable. The producers had asked Vaikundashekhar to leave, they put Latha and her mother together in a hotel room, which, Lakshmi now believes, was a mistake.
The entire family, the anchor alleged, has allowed the girl to be exploited. From her brother who watched the abuse silently to her mother who is the "main accused".
Then why did she allow the girl to stay with the "main accused"?
"This is her mother. We can't keep a girl away from her mother,” Lakshmi said.
“Everything was fine till they all sat together and spoke about it. The girl kept saying she wants to stay away from them and study," she said. "But after hours of talking to her, the mother claimed that she will take care of her daughter from now. I underestimated the woman," she claimed.
So, was she show-equipped to handle the psychological effects it had on the participants?
(This article was first published on The News Minute and is republished with their permission.)
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