I will veer away from the
personalities involved or the motives implied by some critics on the people
behind the show. I am an observer from a very distant place connected through
technology of the internet. And to me, awareness
does make a difference. It can make people question their own morals
and move them to action. It can make them change or want change.
The show has so far highlighted sensitive social issues
prevailing in India such as female foeticides, child sexual abuse, dowry, medical malpractice, honor
killings, physical disabilities, domestic
violence, pesticide poisoning and alcoholism.
If there is one sure way to gain media mileage and
awareness on these issues, it would be to touch the chords of the viewers’
hearts and this show has done that in the episodes I’ve watched. Wouldn’t you
be when you see a mother recounting her horrid experience on female foeticide
where she was forcibly made to abort the baby in her womb not three or five times
but eight times by her own husband and even female in-laws for the simple reason that the child’s sex was female?
Or when a mother tells her story of how a well-dressed, educated-looking woman spat
on her baby with skin disease simply because she found the baby ugly and shameful
for the mother to carry her around in public?
Whether the show will move people enough to take action on
a bigger scale remains to be seen. It
has undoubtedly created awareness and has moved people to take action and try
to do something about these social ills.
What is significant to note
is the finding in one of the surveys that
such acts are not just committed by the rural,
tribal, poor, or illiterate people, but were in fact also among the
educated, even wealthy and professional class in society. How our simple minds can sometimes easily associate
such horrors to the less fortunate because they don’t have enough education or wealth
and therefore stereotyped as unable to understand what is acceptable, moral or just,
is sad. Nothing could be farther from the truth and this show had revealed that.
There are in fact professionals conniving to commit such horrid acts of female foeticide
on their own relatives. But what can really be disheartening is when the
authorities or experts expected to be help save lives and bring forth justice seem
to avoid that responsibility as well. Is it because that they themselves believe
the crime is justified?
What’s important is that the show has helped spread awareness,
the stories are not told in whispers and the victims have been emboldened to
speak of their plight. Now more people in the world know, and the victims have
to somehow be given the justice they deserve and be compensated for their
sufferings, and hopefully not exploited for profit.
I’m looking forward to watching an even more sensitive
issue tackled in the show...human trafficking. It can indeed be something more
dangerous for victims to come out when such activities can be highly organized
up to an international level.
I end this article with a quoted poem on Satyameva Jayate:
“Truth alone triumphs; not falsehood.
Through truth the divine path is spread out by which
the sages whose desires have been completely fulfilled,
reach where that supreme treasure of Truth resides.”
Through truth the divine path is spread out by which
the sages whose desires have been completely fulfilled,
reach where that supreme treasure of Truth resides.”
* (“Satyameva
Jayate” when translated means “Only Truth Prevails” or “Truth Alone Triumphs” a
Hindu mantra from
the ancient scripture Mundaka Upanishad. The slogan was popularized by Pandit Madan Mohan Malaviya in 1918
when serving his second of four terms as President of the Indian National Congress. (source:
Wikipedia)