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Human
Resource Development (HRM-627)
VU
Lesson
34
THE
PLIGHT OF INDIAN WOMEN
Women's
property rights: Towards Empowering
Women
From
time immemorial, the women in this land of ours
were treated as a sort of thing.
Her placing in the
society
was not at par with
other human being. She
has no rights. She cannot move nor
does anything at her
will.
In Hindu Shastras, she has
been branded just like
animals. From the verses of
Ramayan as written by
Mr.
Tulsi
Das, " Dhol, ganwar, shudra,
pashu, naari- Ye sab tadan
ke adhikari," one may easily
draw inferences as to
what
status has been granted to
our mothers. Similarly, we can
understand that of Dropadi of
Mahabharata was
reduced
to the status of a bitch, as she
was the wife of five
husbands (Pandwas). She was
not only, the wife of
five
husbands; she put at stake
in gambling by none else than the so
called Dharmraj Yudhishthar!
In
'Manusmrati'
the ancient Hindu Code-book, the status
granted to women is quite visible
and she was put to
the
lowest
rug of humanity as she was
treated at par with the
animals and slave by the
proprietors of Hindu
Dharma.
Such was the placement
earmarked to our mothers,
sisters and even great
grand mothers that
the
heads
of humanity bend upon down
with shame!
That
is why Dr. Ambedkar was of
the firm opinion that until
or unless, by applying dynamite, the
Hindu
Dharma-shastras
are not blown up, nothing is
going to happen. In the name sanskaras,
the Hindu women are
tied
up with the bondage of superstitions,
which they carry till their
death. They are also
responsible for
inculcating
these wrong notions learnt by them
through baseless traditions
and preaching of the Shastras in
the
budding
minds of their
offspring.
Otherwise
also the women in India have
remained a matter of joy and a
source of amusement as such
she was
used
and misused by men just to
serve their evil ends.
She has been used
just like a machine for
procreation. It
has
also been mentioned in Hindu
Shastras that the woman is the
bond slave of her father
when she was
young,
to her husband when she is
middle aged and to her
son when she is a mother. Of
course, all the
epigrams,
aphorisms, proverbs, platitudes and
truisms bear necked truth
about the stature of women in
India.
It
does not mean that no
efforts have been made in
the past to bring dignity to
women. As in Europe,
Christianity
inaugurated the Era of equality, liberty
and fraternity by preaching
that a prince and pauper
are
equal
in the eyes of God. There is also a very
long tradition of social
reforms by our saints and
other social
reformers.
But the proprietors of the orthodoxy
thwarted these efforts. In the absence of
any legal sanction or
authority,
these efforts could not
sustain.
In
this direction Dr. B.R.
Ambedkar has tried to brake
down the barriers in the way of
advancement of women
in
India. He laid down the
foundation of concrete and
sincere efforts by codifying the common
Civil Code for
the
Hindus and the principle is
capable of extension to other
sections of the Indian society.
Prior to these
efforts
of Dr. Ambedkar, the destiny of the
Indian women depended upon
the wrong notions and
perceptions
chalked
out by the proprietors of
orthodoxy.
The
prevailing two schools of
Hindu Law viz. 'Mitakshara' and
'Dayabhag, created and
sustained inequality.
According
to 'Mitakshara' the property of a Hindu is
not his individual property.
It belongs to what is called
coparcenary,
which consists of father,
son, grandsons and great
grandsons by reason of birth.
The property
passed
under Mitakshara by survivorship to the members of
coparcenary who remain
behind, and does
not
pass
to the heirs of the deceased. Whereas
Dayabhag recognized the property
held by the heir as his
personal
property
with an absolute right to
dispose it of either by gift or by will
or any other manner that he
chooses.
The
chaotic conditions of the Hindu
law were reduced to eat
propositions in the form of
judicial
pronouncements
and codification was the
legislative recognition of the judge
made law. Dr. Ambedkar
himself
had
explained lucidly the reasons for
consolidation and codification.
Article
25 of the Indian Constitution permits
all the freedom. The reforms
introduced by Dr.
Ambedkar
through
"Hindu Code-bill" have been
adhered to and have been
accepted by and large. He,
by codifying Hindu
Law
in respect of marriage, divorce and
succession, rationalized and restored the
dignity to women. Prior to
the
Hindu
Succession Act, 1956 and
Hindu Marriage Act, 1955, the
Hindu Law was unmodified in a
large measure,
though
Hindu Women's Right to Property
Act, 1937 was the subject
legislative intervention. The
Sharda Act is
also
worth mentioning. It has set
the seal of authority upon
that piece of social
reforms, which the heads
of
orthodoxy
were, imposing and impending. In Hindu
Code Bill, the principles of codification
covered: (i)Right
to
property, (ii)Order of succession to
property, (iii)Maintenance, marriage, divorce,
adoption, minority
and
guardianship.
Needless
to say, the Bill was a part
of social engineering via law. It
was by any standard of any
time a
revolutionary
measure. It was really a
first step towards the
recognition and empowerment of
women in India.
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Human
Resource Development (HRM-627)
VU
Under
these revolutionary measures, a
woman will have property in
her own right and be
able to dispose of
her
property.
The
Hindu Code Bill introduced
by Dr. B. R. Ambedkar in the Constituent
Assembly on 11th April 1947.
A
debate
on this bill continued for
more than four years
and still remains
inconclusive. Here once
again, the
orthodoxy
prevailed upon the reforms. In the words
of Dr. Ambedkar, it was
killed and died unset and
unsung.
He
felt that the then government led by
Pt. Jawaharlal Nehru was
not eager to clear the Hindu
Code Bill. He,
therefore,
tendered his resignation but
continued to participate in the Parliamentary
debates on the request of
the
Prime Minister.
Sharp
criticism of this Bill in and
outside Parliament led many to believe
that it might inflict heavy
damages on
the
Hindu society. Even the
President Dr. Rajendra
Prasad got scared and
issued a threat that he
would
withhold
his assent even if it had
been passed by the Parliament.
But the efforts of Baba
Saheb Ambedkar were
lauded
also like anything. The
Times of India on 26th
December 1950 carried a
statement of Dr. Ambedkar
in
which
he said that the Bill aimed
at removing the legal obstacles in the
social advancement of women.
Justice
P.B.
Gajendra-gadkar while congratulating Dr.
Ambedkar for the role he had
played in drafting and
piloting the
Bill
said, "If Dr. Ambedkar gives
us Hindus our Code, his
achievement would go down in
history as a very
eloquent
piece of poetic justice
indeed."
In
recent past, a lot hue
and cry is being made over
'Women's Reservation Bill' by the
different sections of the
Indian
society, different political or
apolitical organizations but
nobody seems to be honest in
its perspectives.
The
political empowerment is a must
for the all round development of the
women, but as in the case of
dalit
politicians
and legislators, our efforts
may prove futile. We must
concentrate on imparting social
education
before
giving any concrete shape to
their political empowerment to the
women. Without academic and
social
education,
the political empowerment of women in
certain parts of the country
had proved futile. In
Panchayat
Raj
set up in U.P. and elsewhere
in the country, the uneducated women
are subjected to exploitation at
the
hands
of government machinery. It will not be
prudent on our part to
restore the rights of the women
belonging
to the affluent section of the society
only. Therefore, our efforts should be
directed towards all
round
development of each and every
section of Indian women by
giving their due share. It
is a must to
maintain
and protect chastity,
dignity and modesty of
women. It is the need of the hour to give
due share to
each
and every section of the
Indian women. I am sure,
without removing social
stigma, no progress or
development
could be achieved.
Now
the question arises as what sort of empowerment
our women needed prior to
restarting their
equal
property
rights? There is lot of nodal
agencies including the national
Commission for Women said to
have
been
working for the welfare of the
women apart from governmental
efforts. Where do they reach in
this
direction?
Leaving a meager number of urban and
suburban women, the Indian
women are still crying
for
simple
justice. Which is not even allowed to
have been accessed to them?
With their age, no bar, they
have
been
raped, kicked, killed, subdued &
humiliated almost daily.
Why? Because of our
indifferent attitude
towards
them.
This indifferent attitude and
approach of our crops up at the time of
the birth of female child.
They are
subjected
to rebuke and ignored so far as
their education and other
facilities are concerned which
are required
for
their proper and healthy
growth/development. The male
child is given preference over the
female child?
With
this attitude of our own, we
use to suppress and remained
unfair towards the fair
sex.
First
of all we must try to treat
our female child as par
our female child as par
with our male ones
and
thenceforth
restore equality amongst them. No
restoration of property right would be
meaningful without
making
her mentally strong. We must
allow them to think breathe
and act independently and
bring her out of
the
shackles of slavery. Do not
impose the filthy rites, rituals
and superstition citing the examples
from our
dated
SHASTRAS. Don't treat women your
slave or servant who has
come to this world just to
cook your
food,
wash your dirty clothes,
and fulfill your other
needs.
Please
mind it that they are your
mothers, sisters, wife (Life
partners). If we able to mend
our ways, the
restoration
of their property rights to them would be
meaningful.
Let
us be a little bit honest to
diagnose the illness by taking
into consideration all the aspects
and aspirations in
changed
scenario, circumstances and
atmosphere. Only then we could
have a perfect planning to achieve
our
cherished
aim that is empowerment of
Indian women and could be
able to restore their
property and other
rights
in order to bring her at par
with other human beings.
This could be achieved only if we
are able to blow
up
the heinous Hindu-shastras by using
dynamite as affirmed by none else than
Dr. B.R. Ambedkar,
the
emancipator
of the millions including Indian
women.
http://ambedkar.org/bss/Towardsthe.htm
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