In the dead of night...
I am done with
channel discussions. I don’t think there is a single nerve in me that can stand
the yap and clack anymore. But my father-in-law is so obsessed with the 8.30 pm
rattle that he has his dinner right at the drawing room staring into the
screen. He puts the volume so high that however hard I pledge to ban channel
discussions from my life forever, it falls flat.
So the last three days, amidst rolling out my perfectly round chapattis, I have been listening to both the media and film industry getting aroused over the incident where another woman was molested out in the street at night. But this one happens to be an actress. So the world has to sit up and take notice and pass judgments.
So the last three days, amidst rolling out my perfectly round chapattis, I have been listening to both the media and film industry getting aroused over the incident where another woman was molested out in the street at night. But this one happens to be an actress. So the world has to sit up and take notice and pass judgments.
While my chapattis
puffed up, I remembered one especially dark night in my life a decade
back. It was my second year as a telecast journalist with a channel. Returning
from a night shift , my car was stopped and attacked by a group of criminals.
They beat up three male colleagues in the car and verbally abused me, the lone
woman in the group. All because our driver had gestured when they came opposite
in neck breaking speed on a supposedly one way road. They threatened to finish
us off, luckily which they didn’t. And I ended up taking the men folk to the
hospital casualty at 2 am.
When something
untoward happens, we are only focused on surviving the moment. But later on,
as the gravity of the incident dawns upon us, it becomes real and often a
nightmare. What made the episode worse for me was the way my channel reported it. They
played it up saying it was a counter attack against one of the investigative
programmes aired by the channel the previous week. A penniless publicity to the
newly launched programme. I received no calls from the channel heads the whole of next day and by evening I was asked to report on duty to give a live stand-up on how the
goondas had `planned and attacked’ us. It was disgusting, the way the channel
wanted to cash in on the incident and the days that followed- the police station,
the statement giving and to top it all my mother’s terrified face- made it
grueling.
All the while, I believed it was a complete showdown by a group of criminals
who were not afraid of the media or police nor the government. A grave invasion into
a citizen’s life. Leaving her benumbed.
And then came the turn of filthy questions. Are you sure they did no physical harm? Isn’t it
surprising that the goondas beat the rest of them and did not touch you? But why
were you returning with a group of men? And the best one- why did you take up
journalism??
I did not answer
many questions and dismissed all glances and stares that came my
way. But it was enough to set me thinking if this was the organisation I wished
to be part of. Who did not for once ring me up and asked for details. Nor raised
concern why our streets were dangerous at nights. Being a news media, they had
all the means. I quit after one week not because of the episode that happened but because it showed me I was working for the wrong people.
Months into my next
job at Indian Express, I visited the corridors of the now infamous Law Academy
to interview the daughter of a Malayalam actor , a legend for his comedy roles. She was molested while on her visit to one of the hill stations in the state and had filed a complaint and the media instantly took it up.
The
college authorities were not convinced though. Narayanan Nair, the Manager,
seemingly full after a heavy lunch, wanted to know why media played up
everything. Finally, I caught up with the girl who wanted a permission from her
father to talk to the media. And so I was put to the film star himself on line.
I remember his exact words. ``I do not know you. But I consider you like my daughter
and request you not to bend the matter. Please publish only what she says. It’s
a father’s plea.’’ The comedian was damn serious. You might be known as a playboy, when it comes to one’s daughter, uprightness prevails.
The girl however
acted like a heroine. But I was relieved to see, though feather-brained she
appeared, she had the fortitude to stand against someone who saw her only as a
pretty face with nice ass. She not only complained but spoke about it and how!
And then there were
the hundreds of women local body heads that I interviewed for a series during
the state’s local body elections in 2010. Who told me hundreds of stories about
how easy it was to forget being a woman when you are in politics but how the
men folk will always remind you. Even Mayors told me they wished they were
treated differently at home and at work.
As I hear the
channel discussions end every day throwing up the question `who is behind
this?’, I want to scream ``we all are.’’ Because for some men, there are no
actresses, no journalists, no politicians and no students. They only see a
weaker sex, frail lithe beings, who can be dictated and discarded. Out of love or
force, since both works wonderfully well. And since half the women are ready to swallow the bitter pill, it falls
upon the other half to huff and puff against it.
Every small change should begin at home if any hope remains for a doomed society. Maybe the day when
I will finally sit and watch my baking show at 8.30pm while my husband tries hard to come up with round chapattis, things will start to look up.
ends...


Change should begin at home....You got me thinking again:)
ReplyDeleteNee enne oru Naxalite aakkum
ReplyDeleteReally looking forward to that baking show 😆. Loved your end note.
ReplyDelete