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During Navaratri, we revere various Goddess forms and celebrate her values that are intrinsically feminist, but do not flinch while being violent to the women she represents. Why this double standard?
Run a quick search for ‘Navaratri’ and the most common description of the festival will be about how it “celebrates the divine feminine”. Indeed, women goddesses are worshipped all around the country these 9 days – be it in the form of Durga-Lakshmi-Saraswathi or the Navadurgas or other Devi forms.
Whereas the treatment of Indian women in general, and especially during such festivals is quite the opposite.
When I talk of Navaratri, my childhood days flash in front of my eyes. Since I am from Chennai, my memories are of Golu times. My mother was a working woman, but she made sure every festival was celebrated memorably. Navaratri evenings were always exciting as I got dressed up, got to eat special food, and also met my friends and acquaintances.
While I am very thankful to her for the memories, I view them differently as a mother today.
Starting from arranging the golu, to menu planning and cooking, attending to numerous guests, dressing me up, to doing the actual Puja early every morning, I imagine she might have been very exhausted. Behind all my fond memories, this woman was working tirelessly to shoulder the additional work that came in with festivities apart from her regular duties. I am sure that most Indian households will have a similar story to share.
Even if the men of the house were ‘magnanimous’ enough to pitch in – that’s where their role started and ended, as support artists. It was the women of the household who painstakingly ensured that rituals of her husband’s lineage were followed year after year.
If we truly wanted to celebrate the feminine, would we let her slog alone in the kitchen much before sunrise, while the rest of the family was in deep slumber? Would we let her shoulder the mental burden of planning every single detail by herself? Would we expect her to serve everyone with a smile, after all this singular effort?
I believe not.
Do we really care about celebrating the feminine then? And no, the toxic glorification of her ‘Shakti’ to manage everything with a smile, giving women the dubious tag of ‘superwoman’ doesn’t count as a celebration. It is simply a patriarchal narrative cleverly designed to continue exploiting the endless labor that women are systematically made to do with a smile.
Our caste and gender hierarchies have successfully subordinated women into roles of servitude. The saddest part of this is women willingly adhering to such narratives, reducing them to beings much lesser than men. The concept of the Mother Goddess in her earliest form, much before the advent of the Vedic era, is a far cry from what we consider ‘feminine’ today.
A recent study of cave paintings at Bhimbetka from 5000 BC has theorized that Goddess worship began after witnessing women in nurturing roles. Women during pregnancy, childbirth, and motherhood have been depicted as the figure of a mother goddess in such paintings. It is not far-fetched to say that since a woman had ‘life-giving’ powers, she was the origin of the concept of worshipping a ‘higher power’- in this case, the Mother Goddess. There is also similar evidence from the Mesopotamian region that points to the reverence of the Mother Goddess.
This also does not mean that the role of women was reduced to motherhood and nurturing as it is today. When we look at how women were portrayed in the Mesolithic period in India – the paintings show women holding equal importance in the economy as men did. There is evidence to suggest that women participated in group hunting, while also taking care of the crucial task of gathering in hunter-gatherer tribes. It can be said that such tribal communities before the rise of Brahmanical patriarchy were some of the most egalitarian societies. Women and men were seen as separate, but equal.
Let us look at some devi forms that are widely celebrated across our country today, along with some significant aspects or values attached to each form.
During the 9 days of Navaratri when all these divine forms are celebrated signifying various feminist principles, an Indian woman in real life is subjected to various forms of violence. We do not flinch as we continue to believe in practices that segregate her purely based on her gender. Her rights are violated, and she is consistently reduced to someone who exists to serve men.
This Navaratri, let us pledge to celebrate the feminine in every way possible. Let us not close our eyes to the violence she is subjected to, every day. Only when we truly celebrate a real woman for all that she is, can we claim to revere Shakti or feminine power.
Image source: stills from the films Antarmahal and Agnisakshi
Spatika Mozhi - The crystal clear language of my soul, untarnished by societal expectations. I am passionate about women's issues, and I sincerely try to expand my understanding of events beyond my current social standing. read more...
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