by The Crackednut » Mon Aug 12, 2002 12:34 pm
My oh, MY! lots of ppl seem to be in womens\' rights these days. It\'s a good sign, tho. i sincerely expected some college-humour level response. more and more ppl are opening,out in a very civilised way, to talk about gender discrimination. Sankita started a really interesting topic. Ironically the only girl who replied, shot out a one-liner. And the only ppl left talking about women\'s rights are the Males! But seriously, what the girls should do is to stand up and actually tackle the issue head on. Let me give you a certain example which i had seen with my own eyes and could practically happen anywhere in the city. A group of girls got down from the bus and headed to their college. Predictably, lots of boys all around to oggle at them. When they saw a girl dressed in a clean white salwar-kameez, one of the boys shouted \"Aaya Naya Ujaala!!\". Instantly, the girl shot back- \"Surf Excel Hai na!!\". Everyone all around giggled. Girls walked along, while the boys laughed it off and waited for the next bus. now let us take a deeper look at this small incident. The fact that the boy shouted out filled me with anger. BUt the girl\'s reply was very amusing. Does this amount to eve-teasing? Teasing.Yes. But eve-teasing? not necesarrily! She shot back in the same vein. End result : Noone\'s angry. No-one\'s feeling humiliated. Everyone just forgets it and gets back to normal life. The point i\'m driving to is this-- don\'t we all get teased sometime or the other? Sometimes in the schools we are teased by other friends. IN office, colleagues pull our legs once in a way. in the house, some relative likes a laugh. In the same manner, when this girl was teased, she didn\'t put her head down and mumble about her gender being used like this. neither did she complain the police (which she could have!). She retorted in exactly the same way he talked to her. Moral of story:Don\'t take the issue so seriously and make so much of talk around it. Fight your way out of the place. I personally know the girl in topic. She was brought up in a cery conservative atmosphere. She doesn\'t know and neither deos she care much about the world. But the way she talked back was not only comical, but also a proud moment. I sincerely felt that all other females need to stand up in a similar fashion. Now looking at it from another angle, was the boy wrong in calling out?? Yes. That he shouldn\'t have done teased her is a valid point.But come on now!!! Where do we not find instances of hooting and name-calling?? At some places even the girls resort to rowdyism. Now can we call that adam-teasing??