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Bhanwari Devi

Bhanwari Devi (also spelled Bahveri Devi) is an Indian social-worker from Bhateri, Rajasthan, who was gang raped in 1992 by men angered by her efforts to prevent a child marriage in their family. Her subsequent treatment by the police, and court acquittal of the accused, attracted widespread national and international media attention, and became a landmark episode in India's women's rights movement.[2][3][4]

Bhanwari Devi
Born1951 or 1952 (age 71–72)[1]
NationalityIndian
Known forVishaka Judgement
AwardsNeerja Bhanot Memorial Award for her "extraordinary courage, conviction and commitment"

Biography edit

Bhanwari Devi belongs to a caste kumhar (potter) family and lived in Bhateri, a village in the Indian state of Rajasthan, located 55 kilometres (34 mi) from Jaipur, the state's capital. Most people of the village belonged to the Gurjar community of milkmen, which is higher in the caste hierarchy than that of Bhanwari's. In the 1990s child marriages were common in the village, and the caste system was dominant. Bhanwari was married to Mohan Lal Prajapat when she was around five or six years old and her husband was eight or nine. [5] She came to live in Bhateri while still in her early teens. They have four children together; two daughters and two sons. The eldest daughter is uneducated, her two sons live & work in Jaipur , while the youngest daughter Rameshwari graduated with a Bachelor of Education degree and teaches English language in a school.[6]

As a saathin edit

In 1985, Bhanwari Devi became a saathin ("friend"), a grassroots worker employed as part of the Women's Development Project (WDP) run by the Government of Rajasthan. As part of her job, she took up issues related to land, water, literacy, health, Public Distribution System, and payment of minimum wages at famine relief works.[7] In 1987, she took up a major issue of the attempted rape of a woman from a neighbouring village. All of these activities had the full support of the members of her village. However, in 1992, Bhanwari found herself alienated, when she took up the issue of child marriage[7] which was still widely practiced in India despite being illegal.[8]

Bhanwari's intervention edit

In 1992, the state government of Rajasthan decided to launch a campaign against child marriage during the fortnight preceding the festival of Akha Teej, which is considered an auspicious date for marriages. Many child marriages take place during this festival.[9] WDP members were tasked with convincing local villagers not to conduct child marriages, a task that Bhanwari took up, along with prachetas and members of the District Women's Development Agency (DWDA). The campaign was largely ignored by the villagers and faced disapproval from local leaders, including the village headman or pradhan.[10]

One family which had arranged such a marriage was that of Ram Karan Gurjar, who had planned to marry off his nine-month-old daughter.[5] Bhanwari made attempts to persuade the family against carrying out their wedding plans. Since many Gujar families seemed determined to go ahead with child marriages, the Sub-Divisional Officer (SDO) and the Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP) started making rounds of the village. On 5 May, the day of Akha Teej, the Deputy Superintendent of Police (DSP) and SDO went to Bhateri village to stop the marriage of Ram Karan Gurjar's infant daughter. While they succeeded in preventing the marriage from taking place on the day of Akha Teej, the marriage took place at 2 a.m. the next day. No police action was taken against this. However, the villagers associated the police visits with Bhanwari Devi's efforts. This resulted in social and economic boycott of Bhanwari and her family. The villagers stopped selling milk to the family or buying the earthen pots they made. Bhanwari was forced to leave her job when her employer was roughed up, while her husband was beaten up by another Gujar.[7]

The gang rape edit

According to Bhanwari Devi, at dusk on 22 September 1992, while her husband and she were working in their field, five men from the dominant and affluent Gurjar caste from her village attacked her husband with sticks, leaving him unconscious.[5] In her complaint with the police she named the five men: brothers Ram Sukh Gujjar, Gyarsa Gujjar and Ram Karan Gujjar, the latter whose daughter's child marriage she attempted to stop, and their uncle Badri Gujjar, along with one Shravan Sharma.[11] She claimed that while Ram Sukh held her, Badri and Gyarsa took turns in raping her. She added that the rape occurred shortly after the said incident happened.[1] The accused of Gurjar caste were arrested and tried in the court, but they were backed by the local MLA, Dhanraj Meena. Meena hired a lawyer called Purohit to defend the accused.

Police and medical procedures edit

Bhanwari reported the incident to Rasila Sharma, the pracheta (block-level worker), who took her to the Bassi police station to lodge a First Information Report (FIR). The FIR was lodged after surmounting police scepticism and indifference, a phenomenon several rape complainants have faced in the world. Scholar Savitri Goonesekere notes that all across South Asia, police are reluctant to record rape cases and show callousness and indifference towards women with complaints of rape.[12] At the police station, Bhanwari was asked to deposit her "lehanga" (long skirt) as evidence. She had to cover herself with her husband's blood-stained saafa (turban) and walk 3 km to the nearest saathin's village Kherpuria, at about 1 a.m. in the night.[13]

This indifference continued at the Primary Health Centre (PHC) in Bassi, where the male doctor refused to medically examine Bhanwari, while no female doctor was present. The PHC doctor referred her to Sawai Man Singh (SMS) Hospital in Jaipur, but wrote in his referral that she was being sent for a test "confirming the age of the victim."[13]

The Medical Jurist at Jaipur refused to conduct any tests without orders from a Magistrate; the Magistrate refused to give the orders until the next day, as it was past his working hours.[13] As a result, the vaginal swab was taken more than 48 hours after the alleged rape, although Indian law requires this to be done within 24 hours.[13][14] Her scratches and bruises were not recorded, and her complaints of physical discomfort were ignored.[5]

Media coverage edit

On 25 September 1992, the Rajasthan Patrika, a major local newspaper, carried a small news item stating that a woman from Bhateri village had registered an FIR in Bassi thana (police station) alleging gang rape.[7] Following this, a number of local Hindi dailies as well as national dailies reported the incident. On 2 October, the Rajasthan Patrika carried an editorial article Kroor Hadsa ("Brutal Incident") condemning the incident. Soon after this, many Jaipur-based women's groups and other social organizations began making inquiries about it. However, Bhanwari Devi was accused of fabricating the entire incident by the alleged rapists and their supporters, and faced public humiliation in her village.[7] Bhanwari Devi refused monetary compensation to discourage such allegations.[15]

The court case edit

Summary of evidence edit

The summary of evidence in the court case stated that:[16]

  • The semen of five different men were indeed found in Bhanwari's vaginal swab and upon her lehenga (long skirt)[16]
  • There was not even a single match between any of these five semen traces and the semen of any of the five accused (including two who she had accused of raping her and three whom she had accused of pinning her down).[16]
  • Bhanwari's husband's semen was not found in the vaginal swab (none of the five semen traces were his).[16]

District court judgment edit

In its verdict on 15 November 1995, the district and sessions court in Jaipur dismissed the case and acquitted all the five accused.[1] Five judges were changed, and it was the sixth judge who ruled that the accused were not guilty, stating inter alia that Bhanwari's husband couldn't have passively watched his wife being gang-raped.[15]

Under pressure from women's groups, the State Government decided to appeal against the judgment. The judgement led to a nationwide campaign for justice for Bhanwari Devi.[15] However, by 2007, 15 years after the incident, the Rajasthan High Court held only one hearing on the case and two of the accused were dead.[15]

Criticism of the judgment edit

Women's activists were critical of some of the judicial remarks made in the case. The judgment stated in passing that Bhanwari's husband couldn't have passively watched his wife being gang-raped. This was taken as prejudice and bias by the women's groups. The accused included an uncle-nephew pair, and the judge said that a middle-aged man from an Indian village could not possibly have participated in a gang rape in the presence of his own nephew.[15]

Aftermath edit

A state MLA belonging to the Bharatiya Janata Party, Kanhaiya Lal Meena, organised a victory rally in the state capital Jaipur for the five accused who were now declared not guilty, and the women's wing of his political party attended the rally to call Bhanwari a liar.[17][14]

Social boycott edit

Bhanwari and her family were ostracized by villagers in Bhateri and by members of her own caste living elsewhere. When her mother died, her brothers and others did not allow her to participate in the funeral. Following this incident, Bhanwari handed over to them the sum of 25,000 which she had received from Prime Minister Narasimha Rao. Her brothers spent this money on organizing a Kumhar caste panchayat, where people were asked to accept her back into the community. In spite of this effort, her acceptance in the community remained nominal and her son Mukesh had a difficult time finding a family willing to give their daughter in marriage to him.[15]

The New Indian Express journalist Sukhmani Singh interviewed Bhanwari in 2001 and reported: "Feisty, outspoken, innately hospitable, she openly expressed her resentment against both the women's groups and the government, all of whom have been fiercely guarding her like their pet mannequin all these many years."[18] He reported that she was "weary, resigned and bitter" after all these years. He also reported that Bhanwari wanted to leave Bhateri, but couldn't afford to do so. Her sole source of income was a buffalo, as her two bighas of land had become unproductive due to three years of drought. Most of the money that she received as part of the Neerja Bhanot Memorial Award in 1994 was locked away in a trust to aid women.[19]

Official honours edit

Bhanwari received honours both nationally and internationally. She was invited to be a part of the United Nations Fourth World Conference on Women in Beijing. In 1994, she was awarded the Neerja Bhanot Memorial Award carrying 1 lakh cash prize, for her "extraordinary courage, conviction and commitment".[20]

In 2002, the then-Chief Minister of Rajasthan, Ashok Gehlot, allotted a residential plot to Bhanwari Devi and announced a grant of 40,000 for construction of a house on the plot. He also sanctioned an additional amount 10,000 for the education of her son.[21]

Impact edit

Bhanwari's case shaped the women's movement in India. The Bhanwari case is said by some to have encouraged more rape victims to prosecute their rapists.[22]

By 2007, the average age of the first-time mother in Rajasthan had gone up to 16.5 years. This change was brought about by the efforts of women's groups, catalyzed by the Bhanwari case.[15]

The Vishaka judgment edit

Women's activists and lawyers have propagated the view that Bhanwari attracted the ire of her rapists solely on the basis of her work. A number of groups which championed the latter view filed a Public Interest Litigation (PIL) in the Supreme Court of India, under the collective platform of Vishakha.[23] The petition, filed by Vishakha and four other women's organizations in Rajasthan against the State of Rajasthan and the Union of India, resulted in what are popularly known as the Vishakha Guidelines. The judgment of August 1997 provided the basic definitions of sexual harassment at the workplace and provided guidelines to deal with it. It is seen as a significant legal victory for women's groups in India.[22]

In films edit

In 2000, Jag Mundhra released a film, Bawandar, based on Bhanwari's story.[24]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Jungthapa, Vijay (15 December 1995). "Women's group shaken after Jaipur court dismisses Bhanwari Devi rape case and clears accused". India Today. Retrieved 28 January 2018.
  2. ^ Dalrymple, William (2004). "The sad tale of Bahveri Devi". The Age of Kali: Indian Travels and Encounters. Penguin Books India. pp. 97–110. ISBN 978-0-14-303109-3.
  3. ^ Mathur, Kanchan (10 October 1992). "Bhateri Rape Case: Backlash and Protest". Economic and Political Weekly. 27 (41): 2221–2224. JSTOR 4398990.
  4. ^ Vij, Shivam (13 October 2007). . Tehelka. Archived from the original on 20 May 2015. Retrieved 19 May 2015.
  5. ^ a b c d Pandey, Geeta (17 March 2017). "Bhanwari Devi: The rape that led to India's sexual harassment law". BBC. Retrieved 28 January 2018.
  6. ^ Rashme Sehgal, Rashme (19 February 2016). "Why we must join Bhanwari Devi in her fight for justice". Rediff.com. Retrieved 28 January 2018.
  7. ^ a b c d e Kanchan Mathur (10 October 1992). "Bhateri Rape Case: Backlash and Protest". Economic and Political Weekly. 27 (41): 2221–2224. JSTOR 4398990.
  8. ^ (PDF). Ministry of Women and Child Development, Government of India; UNICEF; HAQ. Archived from the original (PDF) on 21 October 2014. Retrieved 25 June 2014.
  9. ^ "Rajasthan govt issues advisory against child marriage". Times of India. 4 May 2014. Retrieved 25 June 2014.
  10. ^ Mathur, Kanchan (10 October 1992). "Bhateri Rape Case: Backlash and Protest". Economic and Political Weekly. 27 (41): 2221–2224. JSTOR 4398990.
  11. ^ "Sunil Gurjar". Oneindia. Retrieved 4 December 2018.
  12. ^ Goonesekere, Savitri (2004). Violence, Law and Women's Rights in South Asia. SAGE. pp. 97–99. ISBN 9780761997962.
  13. ^ a b c d Taisha Abraham (2002). "The Politics of Patriarchy and Sathin Bhanwari's Rape". Women and the politics of violence. Har-Anand Publications. pp. 277–279. ISBN 9788124108475.
  14. ^ a b Pinki Virani (4 March 2001). "Long wait for justice". The Hindu. Retrieved 7 April 2010.[dead link]
  15. ^ a b c d e f g Shivam Vij (13 October 2007). . Tehelka. Archived from the original on 27 May 2012. Retrieved 7 April 2010.
  16. ^ a b c d [The Age of Kali by William Dalrymple, p.136-38]
  17. ^ Basu, Amrita (2015). Violent Conjectures in Modern India. Cambridge University Press. p. 270. ISBN 978-1107089631.
  18. ^ Smriti Ananth (28 December 2001). . The Music Magazine. Archived from the original on 21 June 2002. Retrieved 7 April 2010.
  19. ^ Sukhmani Singh (23 November 2001). "Rape victim enters Bollywood filmscript but stays an outcast". Indian Express. Retrieved 7 April 2010.
  20. ^ . PUCL Bulletin Vol. XIV No. 10. People's Union for Civil Liberties. October 1994. Archived from the original on 16 July 2011. Retrieved 7 April 2010.
  21. ^ "Government extends financial help to Bhanwari Devi". Rediff.com. 10 January 2002. Retrieved 7 April 2010.
  22. ^ a b Apurva (26 January 2010). "Sexual harassment at workplace". Indian Express. Retrieved 7 April 2010.
  23. ^ Aurina Chatterji (9 February 2006). . InfoChange India. Archived from the original on 29 August 2008. Retrieved 7 April 2010.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  24. ^ IANS (5 September 2011). . Hindustan Times. Archived from the original on 24 May 2015. Retrieved 18 May 2015.

bhanwari, devi, 2011, murder, jodhpur, murder, case, folk, singer, singer, neutrality, this, article, disputed, relevant, discussion, found, talk, page, please, remove, this, message, until, conditions, 2015, learn, when, remove, this, message, also, spelled, . For the 2011 murder in Jodhpur see Bhanwari Devi murder case For the folk singer see Bhanwari Devi singer The neutrality of this article is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met May 2015 Learn how and when to remove this message Bhanwari Devi also spelled Bahveri Devi is an Indian social worker from Bhateri Rajasthan who was gang raped in 1992 by men angered by her efforts to prevent a child marriage in their family Her subsequent treatment by the police and court acquittal of the accused attracted widespread national and international media attention and became a landmark episode in India s women s rights movement 2 3 4 Bhanwari DeviBorn1951 or 1952 age 71 72 1 NationalityIndianKnown forVishaka JudgementAwardsNeerja Bhanot Memorial Award for her extraordinary courage conviction and commitment Contents 1 Biography 2 As a saathin 2 1 Bhanwari s intervention 2 2 The gang rape 2 3 Police and medical procedures 3 Media coverage 4 The court case 4 1 Summary of evidence 4 2 District court judgment 4 3 Criticism of the judgment 5 Aftermath 5 1 Social boycott 5 2 Official honours 6 Impact 6 1 The Vishaka judgment 7 In films 8 See also 9 ReferencesBiography editBhanwari Devi belongs to a caste kumhar potter family and lived in Bhateri a village in the Indian state of Rajasthan located 55 kilometres 34 mi from Jaipur the state s capital Most people of the village belonged to the Gurjar community of milkmen which is higher in the caste hierarchy than that of Bhanwari s In the 1990s child marriages were common in the village and the caste system was dominant Bhanwari was married to Mohan Lal Prajapat when she was around five or six years old and her husband was eight or nine 5 She came to live in Bhateri while still in her early teens They have four children together two daughters and two sons The eldest daughter is uneducated her two sons live amp work in Jaipur while the youngest daughter Rameshwari graduated with a Bachelor of Education degree and teaches English language in a school 6 As a saathin editIn 1985 Bhanwari Devi became a saathin friend a grassroots worker employed as part of the Women s Development Project WDP run by the Government of Rajasthan As part of her job she took up issues related to land water literacy health Public Distribution System and payment of minimum wages at famine relief works 7 In 1987 she took up a major issue of the attempted rape of a woman from a neighbouring village All of these activities had the full support of the members of her village However in 1992 Bhanwari found herself alienated when she took up the issue of child marriage 7 which was still widely practiced in India despite being illegal 8 Bhanwari s intervention edit In 1992 the state government of Rajasthan decided to launch a campaign against child marriage during the fortnight preceding the festival of Akha Teej which is considered an auspicious date for marriages Many child marriages take place during this festival 9 WDP members were tasked with convincing local villagers not to conduct child marriages a task that Bhanwari took up along with prachetasand members of the District Women s Development Agency DWDA The campaign was largely ignored by the villagers and faced disapproval from local leaders including the village headman or pradhan 10 One family which had arranged such a marriage was that of Ram Karan Gurjar who had planned to marry off his nine month old daughter 5 Bhanwari made attempts to persuade the family against carrying out their wedding plans Since many Gujar families seemed determined to go ahead with child marriages the Sub Divisional Officer SDO and the Deputy Superintendent of Police DSP started making rounds of the village On 5 May the day of Akha Teej the Deputy Superintendent of Police DSP and SDO went to Bhateri village to stop the marriage of Ram Karan Gurjar s infant daughter While they succeeded in preventing the marriage from taking place on the day of Akha Teej the marriage took place at 2 a m the next day No police action was taken against this However the villagers associated the police visits with Bhanwari Devi s efforts This resulted in social and economic boycott of Bhanwari and her family The villagers stopped selling milk to the family or buying the earthen pots they made Bhanwari was forced to leave her job when her employer was roughed up while her husband was beaten up by another Gujar 7 The gang rape edit According to Bhanwari Devi at dusk on 22 September 1992 while her husband and she were working in their field five men from the dominant and affluent Gurjar caste from her village attacked her husband with sticks leaving him unconscious 5 In her complaint with the police she named the five men brothers Ram Sukh Gujjar Gyarsa Gujjar and Ram Karan Gujjar the latter whose daughter s child marriage she attempted to stop and their uncle Badri Gujjar along with one Shravan Sharma 11 She claimed that while Ram Sukh held her Badri and Gyarsa took turns in raping her She added that the rape occurred shortly after the said incident happened 1 The accused of Gurjar caste were arrested and tried in the court but they were backed by the local MLA Dhanraj Meena Meena hired a lawyer called Purohit to defend the accused Police and medical procedures edit Bhanwari reported the incident to Rasila Sharma the pracheta block level worker who took her to the Bassi police station to lodge a First Information Report FIR The FIR was lodged after surmounting police scepticism and indifference a phenomenon several rape complainants have faced in the world Scholar Savitri Goonesekere notes that all across South Asia police are reluctant to record rape cases and show callousness and indifference towards women with complaints of rape 12 At the police station Bhanwari was asked to deposit her lehanga long skirt as evidence She had to cover herself with her husband s blood stained saafa turban and walk 3 km to the nearest saathin s village Kherpuria at about 1 a m in the night 13 This indifference continued at the Primary Health Centre PHC in Bassi where the male doctor refused to medically examine Bhanwari while no female doctor was present The PHC doctor referred her to Sawai Man Singh SMS Hospital in Jaipur but wrote in his referral that she was being sent for a test confirming the age of the victim 13 The Medical Jurist at Jaipur refused to conduct any tests without orders from a Magistrate the Magistrate refused to give the orders until the next day as it was past his working hours 13 As a result the vaginal swab was taken more than 48 hours after the alleged rape although Indian law requires this to be done within 24 hours 13 14 Her scratches and bruises were not recorded and her complaints of physical discomfort were ignored 5 Media coverage editOn 25 September 1992 the Rajasthan Patrika a major local newspaper carried a small news item stating that a woman from Bhateri village had registered an FIR in Bassi thana police station alleging gang rape 7 Following this a number of local Hindi dailies as well as national dailies reported the incident On 2 October the Rajasthan Patrika carried an editorial article Kroor Hadsa Brutal Incident condemning the incident Soon after this many Jaipur based women s groups and other social organizations began making inquiries about it However Bhanwari Devi was accused of fabricating the entire incident by the alleged rapists and their supporters and faced public humiliation in her village 7 Bhanwari Devi refused monetary compensation to discourage such allegations 15 The court case editSummary of evidence edit The summary of evidence in the court case stated that 16 The semen of five different men were indeed found in Bhanwari s vaginal swab and upon her lehenga long skirt 16 There was not even a single match between any of these five semen traces and the semen of any of the five accused including two who she had accused of raping her and three whom she had accused of pinning her down 16 Bhanwari s husband s semen was not found in the vaginal swab none of the five semen traces were his 16 District court judgment edit In its verdict on 15 November 1995 the district and sessions court in Jaipur dismissed the case and acquitted all the five accused 1 Five judges were changed and it was the sixth judge who ruled that the accused were not guilty stating inter alia that Bhanwari s husband couldn t have passively watched his wife being gang raped 15 Under pressure from women s groups the State Government decided to appeal against the judgment The judgement led to a nationwide campaign for justice for Bhanwari Devi 15 However by 2007 15 years after the incident the Rajasthan High Court held only one hearing on the case and two of the accused were dead 15 Criticism of the judgment edit Women s activists were critical of some of the judicial remarks made in the case The judgment stated in passing that Bhanwari s husband couldn t have passively watched his wife being gang raped This was taken as prejudice and bias by the women s groups The accused included an uncle nephew pair and the judge said that a middle aged man from an Indian village could not possibly have participated in a gang rape in the presence of his own nephew 15 Aftermath editA state MLA belonging to the Bharatiya Janata Party Kanhaiya Lal Meena organised a victory rally in the state capital Jaipur for the five accused who were now declared not guilty and the women s wing of his political party attended the rally to call Bhanwari a liar 17 14 Social boycott edit Bhanwari and her family were ostracized by villagers in Bhateri and by members of her own caste living elsewhere When her mother died her brothers and others did not allow her to participate in the funeral Following this incident Bhanwari handed over to them the sum of 25 000 which she had received from Prime Minister Narasimha Rao Her brothers spent this money on organizing a Kumhar caste panchayat where people were asked to accept her back into the community In spite of this effort her acceptance in the community remained nominal and her son Mukesh had a difficult time finding a family willing to give their daughter in marriage to him 15 The New Indian Express journalist Sukhmani Singh interviewed Bhanwari in 2001 and reported Feisty outspoken innately hospitable she openly expressed her resentment against both the women s groups and the government all of whom have been fiercely guarding her like their pet mannequin all these many years 18 He reported that she was weary resigned and bitter after all these years He also reported that Bhanwari wanted to leave Bhateri but couldn t afford to do so Her sole source of income was a buffalo as her two bighas of land had become unproductive due to three years of drought Most of the money that she received as part of the Neerja Bhanot Memorial Award in 1994 was locked away in a trust to aid women 19 Official honours edit Bhanwari received honours both nationally and internationally She was invited to be a part of the United Nations Fourth World Conference on Women in Beijing In 1994 she was awarded the Neerja Bhanot Memorial Award carrying 1 lakh cash prize for her extraordinary courage conviction and commitment 20 In 2002 the then Chief Minister of Rajasthan Ashok Gehlot allotted a residential plot to Bhanwari Devi and announced a grant of 40 000 for construction of a house on the plot He also sanctioned an additional amount 10 000 for the education of her son 21 Impact editBhanwari s case shaped the women s movement in India The Bhanwari case is said by some to have encouraged more rape victims to prosecute their rapists 22 By 2007 the average age of the first time mother in Rajasthan had gone up to 16 5 years This change was brought about by the efforts of women s groups catalyzed by the Bhanwari case 15 The Vishaka judgment edit Main article Vishaka Guidelines Women s activists and lawyers have propagated the view that Bhanwari attracted the ire of her rapists solely on the basis of her work A number of groups which championed the latter view filed a Public Interest Litigation PIL in the Supreme Court of India under the collective platform of Vishakha 23 The petition filed by Vishakha and four other women s organizations in Rajasthan against the State of Rajasthan and the Union of India resulted in what are popularly known as the Vishakha Guidelines The judgment of August 1997 provided the basic definitions of sexual harassment at the workplace and provided guidelines to deal with it It is seen as a significant legal victory for women s groups in India 22 In films editIn 2000 Jag Mundhra released a film Bawandar based on Bhanwari s story 24 See also editWomen in IndiaReferences edit a b c Jungthapa Vijay 15 December 1995 Women s group shaken after Jaipur court dismisses Bhanwari Devi rape case and clears accused India Today Retrieved 28 January 2018 Dalrymple William 2004 The sad tale of Bahveri Devi The Age of Kali Indian Travels and Encounters Penguin Books India pp 97 110 ISBN 978 0 14 303109 3 Mathur Kanchan 10 October 1992 Bhateri Rape Case Backlash and Protest Economic and Political Weekly 27 41 2221 2224 JSTOR 4398990 Vij Shivam 13 October 2007 A Mighty Heart Tehelka Archived from the original on 20 May 2015 Retrieved 19 May 2015 a b c d Pandey Geeta 17 March 2017 Bhanwari Devi The rape that led to India s sexual harassment law BBC Retrieved 28 January 2018 Rashme Sehgal Rashme 19 February 2016 Why we must join Bhanwari Devi in her fight for justice Rediff com Retrieved 28 January 2018 a b c d e Kanchan Mathur 10 October 1992 Bhateri Rape Case Backlash and Protest Economic and Political Weekly 27 41 2221 2224 JSTOR 4398990 Handbook on the Prohibition of Child Marriage Act 2006 PDF Ministry of Women and Child Development Government of India UNICEF HAQ Archived from the original PDF on 21 October 2014 Retrieved 25 June 2014 Rajasthan govt issues advisory against child marriage Times of India 4 May 2014 Retrieved 25 June 2014 Mathur Kanchan 10 October 1992 Bhateri Rape Case Backlash and Protest Economic and Political Weekly 27 41 2221 2224 JSTOR 4398990 Sunil Gurjar Oneindia Retrieved 4 December 2018 Goonesekere Savitri 2004 Violence Law and Women s Rights in South Asia SAGE pp 97 99 ISBN 9780761997962 a b c d Taisha Abraham 2002 The Politics of Patriarchy and Sathin Bhanwari s Rape Women and the politics of violence Har Anand Publications pp 277 279 ISBN 9788124108475 a b Pinki Virani 4 March 2001 Long wait for justice The Hindu Retrieved 7 April 2010 dead link a b c d e f g Shivam Vij 13 October 2007 A Mighty Heart Tehelka Archived from the original on 27 May 2012 Retrieved 7 April 2010 a b c d The Age of Kali by William Dalrymple p 136 38 Basu Amrita 2015 Violent Conjectures in Modern India Cambridge University Press p 270 ISBN 978 1107089631 Smriti Ananth 28 December 2001 A film album supervised by Vishwamohan Bhatt The Music Magazine Archived from the original on 21 June 2002 Retrieved 7 April 2010 Sukhmani Singh 23 November 2001 Rape victim enters Bollywood filmscript but stays an outcast Indian Express Retrieved 7 April 2010 A Defiant Dalit Woman s Fight for Justice PUCL Bulletin Vol XIV No 10 People s Union for Civil Liberties October 1994 Archived from the original on 16 July 2011 Retrieved 7 April 2010 Government extends financial help to Bhanwari Devi Rediff com 10 January 2002 Retrieved 7 April 2010 a b Apurva 26 January 2010 Sexual harassment at workplace Indian Express Retrieved 7 April 2010 Aurina Chatterji 9 February 2006 Sexual harassment Battling unwelcome sexual attention InfoChange India Archived from the original on 29 August 2008 Retrieved 7 April 2010 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link IANS 5 September 2011 Filmmaker Jagmohan Mundhra dead Hindustan Times Archived from the original on 24 May 2015 Retrieved 18 May 2015 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bhanwari Devi amp oldid 1220090406, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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