Sunday, July 13, 2014

What's the big deal with 'rape'?

Question: What’s the big deal if I say “Brazil were raped by Germany tonight.”?

A couple of days ago The Logical Indian (TLI), a Facebook page, shared a post condemning the use of the word ‘rape’ in the context of Brazil’s 7-1 defeat at the hands of Germany at the FIFA World Cup.

The comments were predictable: “lol..u supported Brazil, didn’t you?” said one fellow, and this comment quickly received 285 likes (at the time of writing). Another chap said, “Brazil weren’t raped. They were gang-raped.”

The more insightful ones were of the opinion that the usage was figurative and hence meant no harm. Someone said, “What they meant in the figurative usage is that, Brazil didn't get defeated, they got destroyed and humiliated beyond limits.” (490 likes for this one). Some witty ones went “The Logical Indian is being illogical.”

There were, of course, several who supported TLI’s stand, which isn’t a surprise, really. But the question remains: What is the big deal? If words like ‘vanquish’ and ‘crush’ are okay, what’s wrong with ‘rape’?

Here’s my two cents.

Rape is a heinous act. It leaves in its wake trauma of the highest degree. Many would argue it is a crime worse than murder. To use it flippantly, therefore, is to take away from the seriousness of the crime. I have no evidence to support that using the word in this manner actually encourages rape, but it does show utter insensitivity and disrespect towards victims and those who have suffered with them. No one means any offence or harm, I’m sure, but why use it when there are alternatives?

Those who argue that words like ‘vanquish’, ‘thrash’, ‘rout’ and ‘crush’ are equally bad couldn’t be further from the truth. Take an example: I can jokingly say to a friend, “I’ll thrash you if you touch my guitar” but can I say “I’ll rape you”? Imagine how they’d feel.

Some of my friends have used ‘rape’ in such contexts in the past. The ‘balatkaar’ speech from 3 Idiots went viral a few years ago. I laughed and cringed at the same time. I sat on the fence. Now I think that was wrong.

I’m not saying this is how we can stop rape. All I’m saying is: think before you speak. And to the gentleman with the 490 likes, by equating rape with humiliation, sir, you’ve shown us exactly what the problem is. Please, let us get rid of these dangerous parallels, because the issue is much more deep-rooted than we think. It’s in our heads, and it is a big deal.

Saturday, October 17, 2009

Arbit IV

All you need for happiness, sometimes, is a different kind of love. The mute kind, that doesn't show itself, doesn't speak, but ripples just below the surface. Like when they met so many weeks and months after a painful separation, and it was like the good old days. The love was there all right, a silent undercurrent bridging the gap, reminding them why they'd fallen in love in the first place. The love didn't utter a word, but he was happier than he'd been in ages, and she laughed for real after a long, long time.

Friday, October 2, 2009

Arbit III

I don't want more. Well, maybe a little more, but not a lot more. But I definitely don't want less. And, for me, the long term is more important than the short term. So, to not have less in the long term, I can afford to lose a little in the short term. But where does the short term end, and the long term begin? When do I stop losing and start gaining? What if life's like a rainbow, a real rainbow, where you know the extremes are different, but there are no lines, no boundaries, no watersheds? Maybe you can see and tell if a point is distinguishable from another ten years later, but can't tell it from the ones next to it. Can you tell where to stop and where to begin? Where you can start getting at least as much as you used to before you started having a little less? Can you draw the lines?

And what if life is like the rainbow we know, the perceived rainbow of seven colours, where you can tell red from orange, indigo from violet? That tells you what stage to end, and which to begin. Maybe what you really want by the time you get, say, from blue to green, is a gain in X and Y. But when you get there, you realize you've lost so much of X that you can never have it all back. And Y just keeps growing purposelessly till you reach red.

Thursday, September 10, 2009

Arbit II

He seemed to be hearing things meant for someone else. But no, they were meant for him all right. She repeated, she wept. But he wasn't speechless. He spoke, made her laugh. He spoke of love and unwavering faith. He hung up. He stared at the ceiling, then slept.

He tried. He travelled and pleaded and argued and reasoned. Then gave up.

He travelled some more, argued some more. He gave up again.

Every time he tried, he failed.

I think he still loves her. But he says he has no time for her now.

Friday, August 28, 2009

Arbit

God created Man
And they were quite all right for a while;
Then Man created gods
And they lived happily never after.