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Battling domestic violence
A survey by All-China Women’s Federation found that 30 percent of
the 270 million families in China experience domestic violence, with
most of the victims being women.
As the world celebrated the International Day for the Eradication of
Violence Against Women on November 25, it is heartening to read a report
that 13 community volunteers in the Kaiyang community in Beijing have
joined hands to combat domestic violence.
The report said: “Wang Bin is a transformed man now. He no longer uses
hands to communicate with his wife. Thanks to the counseling from
anti-domestic violence community volunteers. Wang himself now leads the
13-member team to fight violence against women.”
Wang said: “I want to use my experience both as a perpetrator of and
fighter against domestic violence to appeal to those gearing up for the
White Ribbon Campaign (WRC).” Kudos to Wang.
It was also reported that Wang and 200 other residents, all wearing
white ribbons as a symbol of personal pledge never to perpetrate or
remain silent on violence against women, gathered to begin a series of
programs. The campaign prompted an increasing number of victims to stand
up against domestic violence.
The responsibility of keeping women safe rests on men. Of course, to say
that men are the sole custodians of women’s safety only strengthens one
of patriarchy’s most enduring myths; women, being the weaker of the two
sexes, need to be looked after and cared for by men.
The danger, however, lies elsewhere. Such an inviolable privilege also
gives men the license to repeatedly abuse the very responsibility that
they have entrusted themselves with.
Domestic violence has been around for centuries. Even the educated and
affluent classes are not immune. Violence cuts across classes.
However, changes have begun. The veil on the issue is lifting and the
silence is breaking as more and more women talk about it. An expert with
the Gender and Law Research Center has rightly pointed out that
educating women victims to break their silence is as important as asking
men to refrain from assaulting women.
Apart from vocational training and counseling, providing legal support
for women to fight their own cases would also help them fight the
injustice.
Violence against women need not always be physical. It is also aimed at
stalling women’s attempts at being self-sufficient. Unfortunately in a
patriarchal society, men find it difficult to accept women’s rising
role. Even today an educated male finds it hard to accept his partner’s
ascendancy in the professional field and in social status. Male
chauvinism!
Well, today women are not bothered about male chauvinism. Women power is
an established and undeniable fact. Take the case of Yang Huiyan. With
$16 billion, she has become the richest person in Asia. With an
estimated fortune of $3.4 billion, Zhang Yin is the first woman to top
the Hurun Report rich list in China. These are just two examples of how
Chinese women have outshone their male counterparts. Thus it will be
foolhardy to consider women as the weaker sex.
It is not a question of empowering women to tackle the problem. It is a
question of domestic peace and happiness which is crucial for family
harmony. And this is only possible if man and woman respect each other.
This is where the true test of man-woman relationship lies.
Thomas Hardy in The Mayor of Casterbridge said: “Happiness is but an
occasional episode in the general drama of pain.” Let us hunt for
“happiness always”.
—The Daily Mail, China Daily news exchange item |