I seriously love women. I thank my lucky stars I am blessed enough to be one!
One day, while I watched in fear and fascination as the maintenance team at work tried to manhandle an exceedingly heavy and obnoxiously shaped piece of art up the elevator shaft, one of my bosses said, "Because women don't have muscles like men, we have to use our brains, rather than our bodies, to get things done." Maybe that is an obvious observation, but it is one that had never struck me before.
The article below demonstrates the triumph of female creativity over brute strength and/or brutality.
YOU GO, GIRLS!!
- Alison :)
Valentine's panty protest hits Hindu extremists
by Elizabeth Roche Elizabeth Roche – Wed Feb 11, 10:42 pm ET
AFP/File – Activists of the hardline Hindu organisation the Sri Ram Sena (Lord Ram's Army) attacking customers
NEW DELHI (AFP) – Nisha Susan is founder of the "Consortium of Pub-going, Loose and Forward Women" -- a group she set up as a provocative response to a recent attack by Hindu extremists on young women drinking in a bar in southern India.
Susan is a busy lady on an unusual Valentine's Day mission, sorting out piles of cards, letters and lots of pink underwear -- all destined for a right-wing Hindu vigilante group.
"There are many of these coming every day, these ones for instance are from Jaipur" in western India, said the 20-something Susan, holding up a pair of vivid pink panties.
Television footage of Sri Ram Sena (SRS, or Army of Lord Ram) activists chasing, slapping and kicking the terrified women prompted widespread condemnation and outrage.
The attackers, who style themselves as guardians of traditional Hindu values, were briefly detained and then released on bail, prompting Susan to take matters into her own hands.
Using the Facebook social networking site, she appealed to Indian women to send in their pink "chaddis" -- a colloquial Hindi term for underwear.
The panties would then be sent to the SRS as a special "gift" for Valentine's Day -- an event the right-wing group denounces as Western and decadent.
"We want to tell these people that there are other ways of protesting, particularly the non-violent way," Susan said.
The activists of one of India's largest Hindu nationalist organisations are sometimes disparagingly referred to as "chaddi-wallahs" because of the khaki shorts they wear for official functions.
The Consortium of Pub-going, Loose and Forward Women already has 20,000 Facebook members and the underwear is coming in thick and fast.
Contributions -- some of them from men -- have arrived from across the country and from all age groups, said Isha Manchanda, a member of the campaign.
"One of the contributors was a 55-year-old woman who said she had not been to a pub in her life or celebrated Valentine's Day but was joining our cause because she was horrified by what she saw on television," Manchanda said.
In the wake of the pub attack, India's Women and Child Development Minister Renuka Chowduri compared the SRS to the Taliban in Afghanistan, but the group's leadership was unrepentant.
Not only did it defend the violence, but it also warned that any shops buying into the Valentine's Day market would face attack.
"Drinking, socialising, celebrating Valentine's Day is all part of Western culture which is corrupting our Indian culture," SRS general secretary V.K. Rajesh told AFP.
"We are not against love. But we are against loose morals we see among the younger generation which is blindly aping the West. And we will not spare these people and take whatever action needed within the law."
Rajesh did not seem fazed by the impending deluge.
"We welcome the gifts. Those who send us the underwear, we will send them pink saris. It is symbolic of Indian culture," he said.
But for Susan and her co-campaigners, it is the SRS that is breaking the social taboos.
"Indian culture does not say beat up women. What do these people have to say about that?" she asked.
According to Aswini Shetty, a member of the group from Mumbai, the panty protest was about protecting women's rights.
"Today they say don't go to pubs. Tomorrow they will say don't go to work. Then they can demand that we cover our faces. It can get out of control," she said.