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In the movie, Haraamkhor, the offender is Shyam – a math teacher, who earns a little extra income on the side by taking tuitions in the evening. He enjoys a perfect sexual relationship with his wife, claims to love her passionately and “emotionally” and, in spite of his paan-stained teeth and blood shot eyes, manages to charm the women force around him.
In the same movie, the bystander is the single father – loving yet distant, mourning for a spouse who had abandoned him and in love with someone else.
Caught between Shyam’s physical and sexual abuse and the need to be acknowledged by her own father, is a confused and bruised 15-year-old Sandhya, who is unable to let go.
Haraamkhor is a tale that rings horrifyingly true.
According to a survey conducted by UNICEF:
• 10% of Indian girls might have experienced sexual violence when they were 10-14 years of age.
• 30% during 15-19 years of age
• Overall, nearly 42% of Indian girls have experienced sexual violence before their teenage.
“For many of us who have been subjected to CSA, the disclosing comes much later, when the trauma has already seeped into us deeply,” continues Dhivya.
For many survivors of Child Sexual Abuse, secrecy continues to be a part of their inner narrative, the reasons for which are manifold. According to a study by the Human Rights Watch, children – as well as their parents – maintain a tight-lipped silence mainly due to the following reasons:
Even as a child’s body bears the brunt of abuse, they continue to view the perpetrator as a good father/brother/teacher/uncle. With puberty, the impact finally hits them but the conflict never leaves their psyche. They continue to view their perpetrator’s abuse as love and attention.
A mother, who is financially dependent on the perpetrating family member, finds herself at a great risk of being thrown out of the family when she alleges against the said member.
Indian society places an exceptional weight on honour; communities shun people who choose to make their trauma public. This fear of getting shamed push families into a hell hole of silence. A study conducted in 2007 by the Ministry of Women and Child Development in India covering 13 states further corroborates this point.
Many a time, the extended family members put pressure on the parents of the affected child, to settle matters privately for the fear of dishonour which such disclosure could bring upon the family.
Lack of faith in the police and judicial systems, traumatic medical examinations and an inconsistent, insensitive attitude towards the survivors make it difficult for the latter to come out in the open and talk about their trauma.
Reporting the crime comes from empowerment. A child who is raised to obey elders without questioning, often finds it impossible to break past the trauma of CSA and report the crime.
Professor P Behre, in his paper, Child Sexual Abuse In Indian Context: Fact Or Fiction, says,
For the survivors of Child Sexual Abuse, breaking their silence is the first step towards healing.
(Sridevi Datta is a freelance writer from Visakhapatnam, India. She writes on women's issues, parenting and personal finances, and also dabbles in short stories and poetry. You can find her writing on her writing portfolio.)
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