Discussing the taboos and stereotypical practices in an Indian
society, the act of compartmentalization is trains and buses is quite common -
general compartment, ladies compartment, ladies seat, general seat and so on.
But how bizarre can it be if I talk of compartments in auto
rickshaws? Supposedly, not much an unknown issue to the regular female
passengers of it. For perhaps, every two out of five women must have faced
(read 'been facing') this tumult that has already shaped itself like a cliche (because
I've even spectated women giggling about it).
Right from the first day of form submission at my university,
I've been noticing a rush from the university gate towards the auto rickshaw
stand. Attending the classes everyday, the reason for the rush eventually
attained my acknowledgement. The rat-race was strongly participated by the
female students who struggle everyday to win a seat at the back row of the
auto. But again, I was perplexed at the thought of what comfort the back row
could provide to its female passengers that the front row couldn't. Days passed
by as I managed myself at the back row seats of the auto, until one day arrived
that cleared the fog for me.
It was a lazy afternoon as I reached the auto
stand, dead-tired attending long lectures at the university. The moving vehicle
warned me to sit tight and not to lean outside. Moving on, my doziness met a
sudden halt when a humerus bone hit the muscles of my left breast. Pacing
myself with the motion, I felt my body and my mind jammed. It was the right
elbow purposely moved by the driver, utilizing the opportunity of every turn
and every crack on the road. Yes I couldn't win the rat-race that day and so
was this prize for me, being hit at the breast recurrently. Stuck in motion, I
could feel the blood rush to my head, boiling and fuming, like every blood cell
praying for a protest! I could hear my heart beats louder than the creaking
sound of the auto-engine, until when a voice shrieked : "Darao!" (My
mannerism barred me from addressing him as 'tui'; oh but why?). I could feel my
lips pulsating the word three to four times, growing stronger and louder with every
time. Hesitatingly though, the driver looked at me like a flash and finally
applied the brakes. I rushed out of the auto and dropped my bag off the
shoulder to the seat. Pushing the bag to his elbow I said aloud : "Now hit
my bag with that secondary organ of yours as much as you want. Good luck to
you, if that may appease your desires (read 'lust')." Escorting myself
back to the seat, I turned back to check the faces of the winning rats of the
day. I could the read the empowered eyes among which a girl smirked at the
driver saying : "I hope you're at peace now. So let's move."
I don't know what better I could've done that
day. But I remember the silent fear in his eyes, as I pushed my bag hitting his
elbow. Respite or remorse, this incident engulfed nothing but burned like a
flame of protest. It not only created assuage to my heart for the miles left to
reach my home that day, but also made the co-passengers realize, that a word of
protest can bring a change to any ill-situation. Running the rat-race to escort
oneself to the back-row seats of an auto isn’t a solution to the molestation
practiced recurrently. If one girl gets a seat at the back, the girl left for
the front row noway deserves to be a victim. If one voice of protest can stop
the offender for a day, more voices of protest can eventually stop the offence.
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