Clad in
pink colored Saris and armed with sticks, a gang of women is fighting rapists,
corrupt officials and patriarchy in India.
Deutsche Welle, 3 June 2014
An ordinary
woman living in a village in northern India saw a man mercilessly beating his
wife. Her attempts to intervene backfired and she too ended up with a beating.
The next day she returned with a lathi (a bamboo stick) and five other women
and gave the man a beating just like the one he had given his wife. News spread
and this ordinary woman, Sampat Pal Devi, was hailed as a warrior and her group
was soon known as the Gulabi Gang or the Pink Gang. Devi specifically chose the
color pink to signify "womanhood and understated strength."
"Women
are always treated like dirt by men, especially in rural villages, where most
women are illiterate and have no knowledge about their rights," she told
DW.
Today,
Sampat Pal Devi's group today has over 300,000 members spread across the
villages in the state of Uttar Pradesh. She has opened schools and training centers
for women where they learn to sew, weave baskets, and other skills that can
help them make money and become independent.
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| Sampat Pal Devi, the leader of the Gulabi Gang, is an inspiring story of revolution in rural India |
Warriors in
pink saris
Sampat
herself was denied education and was married off at the age of 13. Having borne
her first child at a tender age, she suffered abuse at the hand of her in-laws,
who were unrelenting until she later gave birth to a boy. In the male-dominated
Indian society, Sampat believes that by giving women an option to earn a
livelihood is just the first step. "Women need to be educated and made
aware of their rights so they can fight back abusive husbands who try to chain
them to their household chores, stripping them away of all freedom."
On a daily
basis Sampat meets young women who were forcibly wed to older men, suffer
domestic violence and are harassed for dowry. "These men they think too
much of themselves; you have to show them where they stand."
While the
members of the gang are trained to use bamboo sticks and are prepared to use
them on tyrannical men, Sampat says that the media has wrongly portrayed her
group as a bunch of women who do nothing else but beat up on men just for fun. "I
don't believe in violence, but a woman needs to protect herself. The stick is
self-defense."
Beyond the household, the Pink Gang has been able to put
pressure on corrupt government officials by exposing illegal activities such as
siphoning off wheat and rice allotted to the poor of the village.
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| The Pink Warriors are ordinary women who have come together in solidarity to fight against injustice |
Inspiration for film
In a deeply patriarchial part of the world controlled by
feudal landlords, Sampat and her warriors are fighting to bring about a change
in society. Her story inspired Nishtha Jain, a documentary filmmaker based in
Mumbai. Jain herself is from Bundelkhand in central India, which is also the
birthplace of the gang. The story was close to Jain who spent several years
making the film Gulabi Gang - A Documentary, which was recently screened at the
14th New York Indian Film Festival. The documentary follows women in the rural
landscape of Uttar Pradesh narrating their tales of woe.
Jain deeply admires Sampat and has been inspired by her
film's protagonist and her feminism. "The film was an exercise in telling
a nuanced story, an attempt not to romanticize, simplify or look for resolution
within the framework of the film," she told DW.
Her film was received very well in India, though she said it
might not resonate as well with audiences in the West for cultural reasons.
There is, for example, a in the film which shows Sampat advising a woman who
had been beaten by her husband to go back home. Sampat believes a woman's
rightful place is her husband's home.
"What other options does a woman have once her husband
kicks her out? My aim is not to uproot women from the society they live in, but
ensure them a place of dignity in their own household," Sampat explains.
Larger than life role model
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| Juhi Chawla plays the role of a corrupt politician in the Bollywood film Gulab Gang |
Sampat's group has also inspired a Bollywood film titled
Gulab Gang. Although the film is a work of fiction and is a commercial product
with sharp dialogues and larger-than-life scenes with unimaginable fighting
sequences, it draws upon Sampat's struggle.
The character of Sampat is played by Madhuri Dixit who
stubbornly and courageously challenges corrupt officials.
The corrupt politician is played by Juhi Chawla, a veteran
actress who tries to coax Rajjo (played by Madhuri Dixit) into supporting her
in the coming elections. Like Sampat, Rajjo and her pink gang fight against
corrupt officials and abusive husbands. They become vigilantes and bring about
a change in the society around them.
"In a
way, our film salutes these women," Juhi Chawla told DW. "They have
been very brave, they have very little for themselves but they stand up for
others, and help other people, and that is a big, brave thing to do. With very
few resources, they stand up and fight against injustice."




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