Add You
#1 in Business Subscribe Email Print

You are here: Home > Relationships > Sexuality > Romancing the Rapist

Tags

  • mahabharata
  • middle
  • perceiving
  • about marrying
  • family honor
  • chastity equals

  • Links

  • Exploring Wineries in Ithaca, New York
  • Get Out of Pain With Chiropractic
  • Why We Don't Eat Salt
  • Add You - Romancing the Rapist

    Project Management - Begin With the End in Mind
    As with any goal or activity to get any percentage chance of success, you need to know what success is.What are you aiming for? What is the purpose of beginning the activity? The same applies with projects.A project, be it a multi-million dollar construction development, or a scrapbook, needs to have an end point - that particular final event which marks completion. Whatever the scope the end point needs to be identified before the project begins. It could be domestic, a new kitchen installed, decorated and working; paint a bedroom; install a water heater etc. It could be industrial, install and commission a piece of machinery; implement a safety management system; design and build an accounting package etc. Or it could be personal, run a marathon; drop 2 clothes sizes, walk the Kokoda Trail; climb Everest etc.Each project is different and each has a unique defined end point. To be successful in managing a project, you need to define (or have defined for you) that end point. So begin with the en
    marrying the rapist is horrendous, then one must realize that it is perhaps a "kinder" option that the society offers the victim in some countries, where the victim is frequently expected to atone for her "sin" by killing herself, or a male member of the family kills her.

    In such societies, women are considered the property of the males in their family. The owner of the property has the right to decide its fate. The society perceives the man who refrains from "washing shame with blood" as "less than a man, a coward who is not worthy of living."

    The United Nations Commission on Human Rights reports show that honor killings have occurred in Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Great Britain, Brazil, Ecuador, Egypt, India, Israel, Italy, Jordan, Pakistan, Morocco, Sweden, Turkey, Iraq, Iran and Uganda. The governments in many Islamic countries perceive the crimes as excusable or understandable.

    But murder is not th
    What is RSS and Its Marketing Benefits
    It's getting increasingly difficult to reach your targeted audience these days by simply using email. Even if you have a large ezine list there's no guarantee your message will be read. This is because today’s' spam filters and firewalls may block or delete your email before it even reaches your intended audience. A great alternative solution is to use RSS.In this series of articles I will discuss:1. What is RSS? 2. Benefits of RSS Marketing 3. What are RSS Feeds and Why You Need a RSS Reader? 4. RSS Tools You Need 5. How to Get Started With RSS 6. How to Create an RSS Feed for Your Web Site 7. How to Syndicate Your RSS FeedWhat is RSS?RSS stands for Really Simple Syndication. It's a new way for people to publish and distribute their content ie news, headlines, newsletters, articles etc. It's a Web content syndication format. An RSS file is written in a simple language called XML. It is a lot like HTML, only simpler. An XML file contai
    An Indian woman who was allegedly raped by her father-in-law was ordered last August by a Muslim council of community elders to marry him. Imrana, a young mother of five was allegedly raped by her father-in-law. The village council ruled that the woman had become haram for her husband, and could no longer live with him. So the council suggested that she could live with her father-in-law as his wife and treat her present husband as her son.

    In another instance, the courts had offered marriage to the rapist as an option for the nurse who was raped and also had her eyes gouged out by a ward boy.

    That the court even entertained the offer of marriage is a telling testimony to the mindset of people regarding women, marriage and chastity. The fact that the victim, a nurse at a hospital in east Delhi, rejected the offer, tells another tale of the rising defiance of women against the societal diktats that compromise their self dignity.

    Here’s a recent story from the neighboring country of Pakistan. A doctor was beaten, raped and left semiconscious while at work in Pakistan. After she reported the rape, local authorities locked her up in a psychiatric hospital and her husband's grandfather, the family patriarch, called for a mob to kill her because she had "stained" the family honour.

    At the core of such incidents is the patriarchal society's felt need to control women's sexuality: women's chastity equals a community's, caste's or family's honor. If a woman's izzat is 'looted', it's blot on the community's honor. The society constrains women to be the custodians of culture and tradition. It venerates her, for example, if she performs sati, that is, burn herself at the funeral pyre of her husband; or loathes her if she's raped. Instead of perceiving the violated woman as a victim who needs protection, she is seen as someone who debased the family honor that must be redeemed somehow, may be by marrying the rapist. That a woman has a right to her body, and violating it without her consent even within marriage is a crime, is not recognized even in the statute books.

    What’s disgusting about marrying the rapist? Such an act legitimizes the crime, trivializes the trauma and reinforces the belief that the victim’s reputation has been so much besmirched that the only chance of rehabilitation is through marriage, made possible by the largesse of the rapist. While the rape victim is traumatised, stigmatised, ostracised, defiled and considered "easy game", she is also penalised for being the victim. It’s common in the court trials to accuse that the victim must have "invited" the rape, cast aspersions on her character and let free the rapist.

    The incidents cause deep revulsion in many of us, but one should nevertheless attempt to understand it, so that we can understand it in the correct social and cultural context. The ancient Indian text Manusmriti recognizes eight types of marriages. In Gandharva marriage the maiden and her lover, overcome by love and desire, simply exchange garlands and consummate their union, without undergoing any specific rituals. The Rakshasa type of marriage involves forcible abduction of a maiden from her home after her kinsmen have been slain or wounded. Here though the woman has been abducted, once the marriage is consummated, her loyalty lies with the abductor; though the family of the maiden may nurse feelings of shame. In the Indian epic of Mahabharata Krishna abducts Rukmini and marries her, but Rukmini's brother becomes the sworn enemy of Krishna.The History is full of incidents where the victorious soldiers have taken away girls from the vanquished, raped and married them.

    If you thought marrying the rapist is horrendous, then one must realize that it is perhaps a "kinder" option that the society offers the victim in some countries, where the victim is frequently expected to atone for her "sin" by killing herself, or a male member of the family kills her.

    In such societies, women are considered the property of the males in their family. The owner of the property has the right to decide its fate. The society perceives the man who refrains from "washing shame with blood" as "less than a man, a coward who is not worthy of living."

    The United Nations Commission on Human Rights reports show that honor killings have occurred in Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Great Britain, Brazil, Ecuador, Egypt, India, Israel, Italy, Jordan, Pakistan, Morocco, Sweden, Turkey, Iraq, Iran and Uganda. The governments in many Islamic countries perceive the crimes as excusable or understandable.

    But murder is not the
    The Desire to Make Money Easily
    How much money do you usually make in a day? How much money do you want to make? Would you take an average wage or a big salary? We all work in different spheres and that is why we all earn differently. Depending on our position in life and the career we have built up, we make different incomes. Even so, the human desire to earn more and more remains unchanged. What is it in this cash that makes us to want to get more? You will want more money even if you are shoveling in millions. Maybe this is just one of the human characteristics. What is more, they want to make money easily.Just imagine the cavemen. They didn’t need to be rich. They were not able to buy anything. Why did they need this? The reason is that people always want to make money. They always want to make money easily. The more money, the better. Nowadays, it is even possible to make money easily enjoying the comfort of your home. I will bet that you are impatient to make money easily! Of course you are. If I were you, I also would be impatient. Th
    se their self dignity.

    Here’s a recent story from the neighboring country of Pakistan. A doctor was beaten, raped and left semiconscious while at work in Pakistan. After she reported the rape, local authorities locked her up in a psychiatric hospital and her husband's grandfather, the family patriarch, called for a mob to kill her because she had "stained" the family honour.

    At the core of such incidents is the patriarchal society's felt need to control women's sexuality: women's chastity equals a community's, caste's or family's honor. If a woman's izzat is 'looted', it's blot on the community's honor. The society constrains women to be the custodians of culture and tradition. It venerates her, for example, if she performs sati, that is, burn herself at the funeral pyre of her husband; or loathes her if she's raped. Instead of perceiving the violated woman as a victim who needs protection, she is seen as someone who debased the family honor that must be redeemed somehow, may be by marrying the rapist. That a woman has a right to her body, and violating it without her consent even within marriage is a crime, is not recognized even in the statute books.

    What’s disgusting about marrying the rapist? Such an act legitimizes the crime, trivializes the trauma and reinforces the belief that the victim’s reputation has been so much besmirched that the only chance of rehabilitation is through marriage, made possible by the largesse of the rapist. While the rape victim is traumatised, stigmatised, ostracised, defiled and considered "easy game", she is also penalised for being the victim. It’s common in the court trials to accuse that the victim must have "invited" the rape, cast aspersions on her character and let free the rapist.

    The incidents cause deep revulsion in many of us, but one should nevertheless attempt to understand it, so that we can understand it in the correct social and cultural context. The ancient Indian text Manusmriti recognizes eight types of marriages. In Gandharva marriage the maiden and her lover, overcome by love and desire, simply exchange garlands and consummate their union, without undergoing any specific rituals. The Rakshasa type of marriage involves forcible abduction of a maiden from her home after her kinsmen have been slain or wounded. Here though the woman has been abducted, once the marriage is consummated, her loyalty lies with the abductor; though the family of the maiden may nurse feelings of shame. In the Indian epic of Mahabharata Krishna abducts Rukmini and marries her, but Rukmini's brother becomes the sworn enemy of Krishna.The History is full of incidents where the victorious soldiers have taken away girls from the vanquished, raped and married them.

    If you thought marrying the rapist is horrendous, then one must realize that it is perhaps a "kinder" option that the society offers the victim in some countries, where the victim is frequently expected to atone for her "sin" by killing herself, or a male member of the family kills her.

    In such societies, women are considered the property of the males in their family. The owner of the property has the right to decide its fate. The society perceives the man who refrains from "washing shame with blood" as "less than a man, a coward who is not worthy of living."

    The United Nations Commission on Human Rights reports show that honor killings have occurred in Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Great Britain, Brazil, Ecuador, Egypt, India, Israel, Italy, Jordan, Pakistan, Morocco, Sweden, Turkey, Iraq, Iran and Uganda. The governments in many Islamic countries perceive the crimes as excusable or understandable.

    But murder is not th
    Now Is The Time To Fix Your Bad Credit Score
    Most people been in a situation where we need to get some form of financial assistance from lending institutions such as banks. We may have to get a car loan or maybe a home loan. We may even want apply for loans to cover during emergency situations. However, when you go to these lending institutions to get some financial help, they first need to do a credit check before granting you a loan. Of course, these institutions are usually private companies who don't want to risk losing their money to somebody with a bad credit score.Credit reports contain all your loan transactions. If you have had previous loans that you were not able to pay, then they will contribute to giving you a bad credit scor or rating, which will consequentially require you to fix your bad credit score. All your loan transactions are summarized and rated which gives you your credit score.The higher your credit score, the better. That means you've been a responsible loan payer. A lower credit score may mean that you don't have enough c
    en as someone who debased the family honor that must be redeemed somehow, may be by marrying the rapist. That a woman has a right to her body, and violating it without her consent even within marriage is a crime, is not recognized even in the statute books.

    What’s disgusting about marrying the rapist? Such an act legitimizes the crime, trivializes the trauma and reinforces the belief that the victim’s reputation has been so much besmirched that the only chance of rehabilitation is through marriage, made possible by the largesse of the rapist. While the rape victim is traumatised, stigmatised, ostracised, defiled and considered "easy game", she is also penalised for being the victim. It’s common in the court trials to accuse that the victim must have "invited" the rape, cast aspersions on her character and let free the rapist.

    The incidents cause deep revulsion in many of us, but one should nevertheless attempt to understand it, so that we can understand it in the correct social and cultural context. The ancient Indian text Manusmriti recognizes eight types of marriages. In Gandharva marriage the maiden and her lover, overcome by love and desire, simply exchange garlands and consummate their union, without undergoing any specific rituals. The Rakshasa type of marriage involves forcible abduction of a maiden from her home after her kinsmen have been slain or wounded. Here though the woman has been abducted, once the marriage is consummated, her loyalty lies with the abductor; though the family of the maiden may nurse feelings of shame. In the Indian epic of Mahabharata Krishna abducts Rukmini and marries her, but Rukmini's brother becomes the sworn enemy of Krishna.The History is full of incidents where the victorious soldiers have taken away girls from the vanquished, raped and married them.

    If you thought marrying the rapist is horrendous, then one must realize that it is perhaps a "kinder" option that the society offers the victim in some countries, where the victim is frequently expected to atone for her "sin" by killing herself, or a male member of the family kills her.

    In such societies, women are considered the property of the males in their family. The owner of the property has the right to decide its fate. The society perceives the man who refrains from "washing shame with blood" as "less than a man, a coward who is not worthy of living."

    The United Nations Commission on Human Rights reports show that honor killings have occurred in Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Great Britain, Brazil, Ecuador, Egypt, India, Israel, Italy, Jordan, Pakistan, Morocco, Sweden, Turkey, Iraq, Iran and Uganda. The governments in many Islamic countries perceive the crimes as excusable or understandable.

    But murder is not th
    How Drop Shipping Can Save You a Small Fortune
    Starting an online store, or any business venture, can be a scary prospect - especially if you need to come up with a large amount of money for that initial inventory purchase. Drop shipping removes the axiety and the big inventory bill. So, what is drop shipping and how does it work?Product wholesalers usually only deal with retailers - shipping them products in bulk quantities. However, many wholesalers will now ship directly to the end customer - this is drop shipping.What this means for online retailers is that they do not need to keep any inventory in stock. When a customer places an order, the retailer forwards the order to the wholesaler. The wholesaler ships directly to the customer. A good drop shipper will ship with a generic return address label or even the retailers label and inserts. Some drop shippers will even handle returns!Let's consider an example. Suppose you want to start a site that sells women's shoes. If you had to stock inventory just the initial purchase might run
    nderstand it, so that we can understand it in the correct social and cultural context. The ancient Indian text Manusmriti recognizes eight types of marriages. In Gandharva marriage the maiden and her lover, overcome by love and desire, simply exchange garlands and consummate their union, without undergoing any specific rituals. The Rakshasa type of marriage involves forcible abduction of a maiden from her home after her kinsmen have been slain or wounded. Here though the woman has been abducted, once the marriage is consummated, her loyalty lies with the abductor; though the family of the maiden may nurse feelings of shame. In the Indian epic of Mahabharata Krishna abducts Rukmini and marries her, but Rukmini's brother becomes the sworn enemy of Krishna.The History is full of incidents where the victorious soldiers have taken away girls from the vanquished, raped and married them.

    If you thought marrying the rapist is horrendous, then one must realize that it is perhaps a "kinder" option that the society offers the victim in some countries, where the victim is frequently expected to atone for her "sin" by killing herself, or a male member of the family kills her.

    In such societies, women are considered the property of the males in their family. The owner of the property has the right to decide its fate. The society perceives the man who refrains from "washing shame with blood" as "less than a man, a coward who is not worthy of living."

    The United Nations Commission on Human Rights reports show that honor killings have occurred in Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Great Britain, Brazil, Ecuador, Egypt, India, Israel, Italy, Jordan, Pakistan, Morocco, Sweden, Turkey, Iraq, Iran and Uganda. The governments in many Islamic countries perceive the crimes as excusable or understandable.

    But murder is not th
    Horizontal Growth Versus Web 2.0: SEO - Search Engine Optimization
    My whole argument, which I have put forth below, is based on the popular quote of Jack Welch, the former General Electric CEO, saying “An organization's ability to learn, and translate that learning into action rapidly, is the ultimate competitive advantage.”The above quote, for me, is a thought-provoking dose that has doped my guts to assess an organization’s ability to learn and translate that learning into action rapidly. I don’t have any ounce of doubt at the ‘Ability’ of some of e-business sectors to translate the learning into action except a word –Rapidly! Although I don’t hold any management degree yet I do understand the significance of the word ‘Rapidly’ in a world where parivartan is taking place faster than the Einsteinian’s e = mc 2. The search driven model on the Internet displays fastest result and then comes user’s experience to click the site. For example, Google, the fastest grown search engine, displays the fastest results (0.05 seconds touches 300 to 700 Google machines across the country).<
    marrying the rapist is horrendous, then one must realize that it is perhaps a "kinder" option that the society offers the victim in some countries, where the victim is frequently expected to atone for her "sin" by killing herself, or a male member of the family kills her.

    In such societies, women are considered the property of the males in their family. The owner of the property has the right to decide its fate. The society perceives the man who refrains from "washing shame with blood" as "less than a man, a coward who is not worthy of living."

    The United Nations Commission on Human Rights reports show that honor killings have occurred in Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Great Britain, Brazil, Ecuador, Egypt, India, Israel, Italy, Jordan, Pakistan, Morocco, Sweden, Turkey, Iraq, Iran and Uganda. The governments in many Islamic countries perceive the crimes as excusable or understandable.

    But murder is not the sole remedy for rape or other violations of a woman's chastity. An alternative is marrying the woman off with the person who violated her honor, although marrying her to someone else is a possibility too. For instance, in cases where the rapist is a brother, and marriage is impossible, the family may find someone else who will marry the victim. This procedure of getting the woman married is felt to rectify the offense supposedly committed by the rape victim against her family and as such has won the legal approval of the state. If a rapist-victim marriage takes place in Jordan or some other Middle Eastern states, the criminal investigation is stopped, though the rapist may still face criminal charges if he divorces his wife within five years without a legitimate reason. However, Islamic authorities both in Jordan and Egypt have recently expressed opposition to this law, claiming such a procedure is not prescribed by Islam, and have demanded its abolition.

    The murder of women to salvage their family's honor results in good part from the social and psychological pressure felt by the killers, as they explain in their confessions.

    The December 2000 issue of the Middle East Quarterly magazine reports that a 25-year-old Palestinian who hanged his sister with a rope: "I did not kill her, but rather helped her to commit suicide and to carry out the death penalty she sentenced herself to. I did it to wash with her blood the family honor that was violated because of her and in response to the will of society that would not have had any mercy on me if I didn't.” Ten thousand people attended his sister's funeral; once she was dead, society again embraced the family.

    In India the largest number of edicts against women are issued by caste panchayats or village councils that pose a challenge both to the parliamentary processes and judicial structures. These have no legal standing, yet they function with impunity, backed by the narrow caste politics practiced by bourgeois landlord parties, for whom a caste means a vote bank.

    There is little doubt that India's criminal and legal apparatuses, shackled by conditioned thinking and age-old practices, are ill-equipped to tackle the issue. Those working in the field of women and violence have argued that the people responsible for the criminal-justice system in the country - the police, the courts - have played a decisive role in reinforcing existing biases. It is they who persist with making the unconscionable link between rape and marriage. They must be taught to reform the manner they handle such cases and protect the self-confidence of the assaulted.

    This cannot happen without simultaneous and substantive reform in existing law — the very fact that rape within marriage is not recognized as a crime in the statute books indicates the significant gaps in our jurisprudence. We should recognize a woman’s right to her bodily integrity and incorporate it in our criminal-judicial processes and, more fundamentally, in the way we think.

    The statistical figures with the National Crime Records Bureau of India indicate that despite the high incidence of rapes in the country, the conviction rate of rapists is not more than 2%. The fact that most rapists get away with their crime must be the main reason for its high incidence.

    Therein lies the solution. If the law has to act a deterrent, plug the loopholes in it and convict the guilty without undue judicial delays.



    HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
    <a href="http://www.addyou.info/article/210033/addyou-Romancing-the-Rapist.html">Romancing the Rapist</a>

    BB link (for phorums):
    [url=http://www.addyou.info/article/210033/addyou-Romancing-the-Rapist.html]Romancing the Rapist[/url]

    Related Articles:

    Looking For An Investor In The Capital Venture Directory

    Riding The Popularity Cycle

    A Mortgage Calculator Is A Very Useful Tool

    Bookmark it: del.icio.us digg.com reddit.com netvouz.com google.com yahoo.com technorati.com furl.net bloglines.com socialdust.com ma.gnolia.com newsvine.com slashdot.org simpy.com shadows.com blinklist.com