Gender/Sexuality and Feminism

Asma Jahangir on freedom of religion and belief in India

asmaj3.jpgAsma Jahangir is the Special Rapporteur on freedom of religion or belief of the United Nations Human Rights Council. She recently visited India, and made a statement on 20th March 2008. Some excerpts from the statement; the full text is available at The Hindu.

[…]Indeed, due to the religious diversity of India, this country visit has been an enriching experience for the mandate I hold since 2004. I will be submitting a detailed report with conclusions and recommendations to the United Nations Human Rights Council, therefore this press statement will only cover some preliminary impressions that I have formed during the past 2« weeks. In this press statement it would be impossible to make a general assessment of the current state of freedom of religion or belief in the whole of India. In fact, this was not the first visit of the mandate, as my predecessor undertook a mission to India in 1996 (see UN Doc. E/CN.4/1997/91/Add.1). Consequently, my forthcoming report will also be a follow-up on developments during the past twelve years, in order to analyze what has changed and why.

[…]Many of my interlocutors have pointed to the positive impact of Indian secularism as embodied in the Constitution. By and large, Indians do value secular principles and I was told time and again that the term “secularism” does not necessarily mean the same as in other countries. Historically, there have been believers of a whole range of religions and beliefs living in India. The central Government has developed a comprehensive policy pertaining to minorities, including religious ones. In this context, I would like to compliment various recent reports on religious minorities, for example drafted by the Committees headed by Justice Rajender Sachar in 2006 and by Justice Renganath Misra in 2007. Such Committees mandated by the Government are a good example of mechanisms put in place to analyse the situation and put forward recommendations for the Government to take action upon.

The National Commission for Minorities, too, has taken up several challenges. Their members took prompt action and issued independent reports on incidents of communal violence with concrete recommendations. However, the performance of various Human Rights Commissions depends very much on the selection of its members and the importance various Governments attach to their mandates. It is vital that members of such commissions have acute sensitivity to human rights issues and must reflect the diversity - particularly in terms of gender - as women are one of the worst sufferers of religious intolerance. At the same time, I noticed that women’s groups across religious lines were the most active and effective human rights advocates in situations of communal tensions.

All individuals I met recognised that a comprehensive legal framework to protect their rights exists, yet many of them - especially from religious minorities - remained dissatisfied with its implementation. By and large, the Indians respect the diversity of religions and beliefs. At the same time, organised groups based on religious ideologies have unleashed the fear of mob violence in many parts of the country. Law enforcement is often reluctant to take any action against individuals or groups that perpetuate violence in the name of religion or belief. This institutionalised impunity for those who exploit religion and impose their religious intolerance on others has made peaceful citizens, particularly the minorities, vulnerable and fearful.

I have received numerous reports of attacks on religious minorities and their places of worship as well as discrimination of disempowered sections of the Hindu community.

[…]Less than three months ago, there was widespread violence in the Kandhamal district of Orissa, targeting primarily Christians in Dalit and tribal communities. I received credible reports that members of the Christian community alerted the authorities in advance of the planned attacks of 24-27 December 2007. The police, too, had warned Christian leaders about anticipated violence. The National Commission for Minorities stated in a recent report: “Destruction on such a large scale in places which are difficult to access could not have taken place without advance preparation and planning.” Even today, the tensions are prevalent and the anti-conversion legislation is being used to vilify Christians in general.

Concerning the 2002 Gujarat massacre, I have read numerous reports, both of official bodies and civil society organisations and I met a large number of eyewitnesses and people who visited Gujarat during the trouble. The State Government reported that, prior to the Godhra incident, Gujarat had witnessed 443 major communal incidents between 1970 and 2002. As such, the warning was there. However, the massacre that took place after the tragic deaths at Godhra in 2002 is all the more horrifying since by all accounts at least a thousand people were systematically killed. Even worse, there are credible reports that inaction by the authorities was evident and most interlocutors alleged complicity by the State Government. In my discussions with victims I could see their continuing fear which is exacerbated by the distress that justice continues to evade most victims and survivors. Even today there is increasing ghettoization and isolation of Muslims in certain areas. The assertion of the State Government that development by itself will heal the wounds does not seem to be realistic. It is crucial to recognise that development without a policy of inclusiveness of all communities will only add to aggravate resentments.

Furthermore, I am disturbed that at various meetings with members of the civil society during my visit in Gujarat, plain-clothed Government agents took names of all my NGO interlocutors and also made their presence felt afterwards. On several occasions, I had to insist that police officers leave the room during my NGO meetings. The terms of reference of fact-finding missions by Special Rapporteurs (see UN Doc. E/CN.4/1998/45, Appendix V) are very clear in this regard. These terms of reference guarantee confidential and unsupervised contact with witnesses and other private persons as well as assurance by the Government that no persons, official or private individuals who have been in contact with the Special Rapporteur in relation to the mandate will for this reason suffer threats, harassment or punishment or be subjected to judicial proceedings.

[…]I was deeply touched to hear of the exodus of the Kashmiri Pandits in 1990s following a campaign of threats and violence. They remain dislocated to this day despite the fact the de-escalation of violence in Jammu and Kashmir has had a positive impact on religious tolerance. There have been public statements inviting the Hindu Pandits to return to Kashmir. Places of worship are now more accessible and the tensions are reducing. At the same time, many interlocutors have confirmed a continuing bias amongst security forces against Muslims who also face problems with regard to issuing of passports and security clearances for employment purposes. There are also reports of discrimination against them outside of Jammu and Kashmir, such as the refusal of hotel bookings.

At all places where I met with members of the Muslim community in India, I was informed that a number of them have been arrested on ill-founded suspicions of terrorism. They are disturbed that terrorism is associated with their religion despite various public statements from Muslim leadership denouncing terrorism. There was though recognition of the Government’s efforts in ensuring that Indian Muslims’ rights are protected when arrested abroad.

[…]The vast majority of Indians respects secular traditions and keenly follows the teachings of the nation’s founding fathers. I have noticed encouraging signs in the fight against religious intolerance and I am impressed by the outstanding degree of human rights activism in India. There are innumerable examples where individuals have come to each other’s rescue, crossing all religious boundaries. Indeed, in Gujarat, a large number of victims recognised the positive role played by some national media and other courageous individuals who effectively saved lives. It is a crucial - albeit difficult - task for the State and civil society to challenge the forces of intolerance.

I have written about issues of fundamentalisms before and some of the difficulties we face, fighting these fundamentalisms, particularly as feminists; one of those reflections was provocatively called The Fundamentalisms of the Progressive. I’ve been thinking about these issues quite a bit again recently - not that they ever ‘go away’ - but because I helped coordinate a fascinating workshop on fundamentalisms with young women from across the world, late last year, and because a few friends here in the US have been discussing our possible roles as Indians from afar (I’m not fond of the term NRIs, mostly because it has this - however mistaken - image of smug elsewhereness which I hope to hell we don’t have; we certainly don’t feel like Non Responsible Indians). This statement from Asma Jahangir only adds to the general tumult of thought. Watch this space for more sedition and unrest over the next while. Please feel free to chime in with ideas; dissent and debate welcome, hatred unacceptable.

Image from Jazbah.org

Gender/Sexuality and Feminism
Fundamentalisms
Politics
India
California/USA

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My ColdFusion feminist…

jolt_new_logo.gifSo, in the continuing spirit of celebrating my feminist family - their shrieks of protest are but faintly heard - I wanted to come in, very late, on a matter of great joy for Ashwin. He was on the engineering team for ColdFusion 8, the Adobe server, which won the Jolt Awards 2008 (he assures me that these are the tech Oscars, only much more fun). Damon Cooper, Director of Engineering, has a blog post that lists everyone on the team - which Ashwin said was the best he had ever worked with. One of my fondest memories of the team is when we all went to watch Casino Royale together; it was quite a thrill to be sitting with a gang of Adobe while James Bond’s sidekick talked of photoshopping. sigh. These little pleasures of being a geek’s wife get to me.

And the funniest YouTube video yet is of Borat (aka Adam Lehman) extolling the virtues of ColdFusion. Ashwin and I marked the news of the Jolt Awards - sadly far away from the team - by laughing hysterically at the video. It’s a sobering thought, however, that I actually understood the techie references. These little pleasures of being a geek’s wife *really* get to me!

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Gender/Sexuality and Feminism
Science/Technology

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Celebrating Women’s Day with my family of feminists

So another Women’s Day rolls by. This year, this month, I think it fitting to celebrate the feminists in my life who are special to me, and who inspire me in different ways, at different moments of the year. The past month has been particularly significant for me in terms of the writing of two women in my family, and this post celebrates the sis-in-law, who is also friend, feminista and fun. Some time down the line I’ll write about the mother, who is a little difficult to describe in words, which is why I need more time to mull over her. chuckle.

Anindita won the Toto Funds The Arts (TFA) award for creative writing last month in Bangalore. Both awards in this section went to Bongs in Bengaluru, which is interesting enough in itself, but even more so, as Ani - and the rest of us - saw it, was that the award was presented by Amitav Ghosh. Now if that isn’t a matter for joint celebration and collective swooning, I don’t know what is. :-)

Anindita’s poetry is archived at her poetry blog, but here’s a taste of her crisp craftsmanship. I chose this one because it speaks of a woman with a history and a future different from ours, of a woman who “bears the hollows in deep places”. Women’s Day is about celebration, but it is also about consciousness, that sharp poet’s eye for life - for a woman’s living - that can otherwise pass us by in a mundane flurry. Thank you for that watchfulness, and your own, bright, particular voice, Ani.

<meta content="OpenOffice.org 2.3 (Linux)" name="GENERATOR" /> <style type="text/css"> <!-- @page { margin: 0.79in } P { margin-bottom: 0.08in } --> </style></p> <blockquote> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in" class="western"><font face="Arial, sans-serif"><font size="2"><strong>Parvati</strong><br /> <em>the migrant’s wife</em></font></font></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in" class="western"><font face="Arial, sans-serif"><font size="2">when the wind comes down from the hills<br /> and palm trees fling their leaves about<br /> like Sufi saints stepped off the edge, </font></font></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in" class="western"><font face="Arial, sans-serif"><font size="2">she lies on a mat on the floor,<br /> arms out,</font></font></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in" class="western"><font face="Arial, sans-serif"><font size="2">and listens to coconuts falling on the roof<br /> like tough-shelled meteors.</font></font></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in" class="western"><font face="Arial, sans-serif"><font size="2">in her, quiet,<br /> is the cry of marauding elephants<br /> grey. heavy. it flattens her. </font></font></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in" class="western"><font face="Arial, sans-serif"><font size="2">Parvati, woman of the foothills,<br /> woman of hard hands and bright teeth,<br /> woman who endlessly waits. </font></font></p> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in" class="western"><font face="Arial, sans-serif"><font size="2">woman whose waiting is a wound<br /> that will not let skin<br /> close over it<br /> </font></font><br /> <font face="Arial, sans-serif"><font size="2">a wound full of tree, grass, rain<br /> and the smell of mud<br /> </font></font><br /> <font face="Arial, sans-serif"><font size="2">woman who bears the hollows in deep places<br /> but feels herself break<br /> with the slow burn, the stench in the night<br /> of things growing old.</font></font></p></blockquote> <p style="margin-bottom: 0in" class="western"> <!-- <rdf:RDF xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:trackback="http://madskills.com/public/xml/rss/module/trackback/"> <rdf:Description rdf:about="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2008/03/09/celebrating-womens-day-with-my-family-of-feminists/" dc:identifier="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2008/03/09/celebrating-womens-day-with-my-family-of-feminists/" dc:title="Celebrating Women’s Day with my family of feminists" trackback:ping="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2008/03/09/celebrating-womens-day-with-my-family-of-feminists/trackback/" /> </rdf:RDF> --> </div><!-- END POST-ENTRY --> </div><!-- END POST-CONTENT --> </div><!-- END-CONTAINER --> <div class="post-header"> <h3 class="post-date">2008 03 09</h3> <p class="post-categories"><a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/category/feminism/" title="View all posts in Gender/Sexuality and Feminism" rel="category tag">Gender/Sexuality and Feminism</a><br/> <a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/category/india/" title="View all posts in India" rel="category tag">India</a><br/> <a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/category/poetry/" title="View all posts in Poetry/Music" rel="category tag">Poetry/Music</a><br/> <a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/category/bangalore/" title="View all posts in Bangalore/Karnataka" rel="category tag">Bangalore/Karnataka</a><br/> <a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/category/writing/" title="View all posts in Writing" rel="category tag">Writing</a></p> <p class="post-comments"><a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2008/03/09/celebrating-womens-day-with-my-family-of-feminists/#comments" title="Comment on Celebrating Women's Day with my family of feminists">Comments (3)</a></p> <p class="post-permalink"><a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2008/03/09/celebrating-womens-day-with-my-family-of-feminists/" title="Permalink to Celebrating Women’s Day with my family of feminists" rel="permalink">Permalink</a></p> </div><!-- END POST-FOOTER --> </div><!-- END POST --> <div id="post-118" class="post"> <div class="post-container"> <div class="post-content"> <h2 class="post-title"><a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2008/02/21/beyond-comment/" title="Permalink to Beyond comment" rel="bookmark">Beyond comment</a></h2> <div class="post-entry"> <h3> <div style="text-align: center"><img id="image119" alt="how_it_works.png" src="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/wp-content/uploads/2008/02/how_it_works.png" /></div> </h3> <p>From <a target="_blank" href="http://xkcd.com/385/">xkcd</a>. </p> <!-- <rdf:RDF xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:trackback="http://madskills.com/public/xml/rss/module/trackback/"> <rdf:Description rdf:about="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2008/02/21/beyond-comment/" dc:identifier="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2008/02/21/beyond-comment/" dc:title="Beyond comment" trackback:ping="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2008/02/21/beyond-comment/trackback/" /> </rdf:RDF> --> </div><!-- END POST-ENTRY --> </div><!-- END POST-CONTENT --> </div><!-- END-CONTAINER --> <div class="post-header"> <h3 class="post-date">2008 02 21</h3> <p class="post-categories"><a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/category/feminism/" title="View all posts in Gender/Sexuality and Feminism" rel="category tag">Gender/Sexuality and Feminism</a><br/> <a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/category/science/" title="View all posts in Science/Technology" rel="category tag">Science/Technology</a></p> <p class="post-comments"><a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2008/02/21/beyond-comment/#comments" title="Comment on Beyond comment">Comments (4)</a></p> <p class="post-permalink"><a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2008/02/21/beyond-comment/" title="Permalink to Beyond comment" rel="permalink">Permalink</a></p> </div><!-- END POST-FOOTER --> </div><!-- END POST --> <div id="post-117" class="post"> <div class="post-container"> <div class="post-content"> <h2 class="post-title"><a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2008/02/19/tagged-tugged/" title="Permalink to Tagged. Tugged." rel="bookmark">Tagged. Tugged.</a></h2> <div class="post-entry"> <p>So <a target="_blank" href="http://blackmamba.wordpress.com/2008/01/30/a-smart-tag/">Black Mamba</a> tagged me the other day:</p> <blockquote><p>Post 5 links to 5 of your previously written posts. The posts have to relate to the 5 key words given (family, friend, yourself, your love, anything you like). Tag 5 other friends to do this meme. Try to tag at least 2 new acquaintances (if not, your current blog buddies will do) so that you get to know them each a little bit better.</p></blockquote> <p>I was determined to do this, not only because I like Black Mamba (and I do), but because I had to prove <a target="_blank" href="http://nomologic.blogspot.com/">Tabula Rasa</a> wrong; he said BM wouldn’t get a cheep out of me (this childish tit-a-tat has, in fact, gone on since we were about ten. I love it.).</p> <p>Result: near failure. Not because of my lack of output - though it certainly could be a lot more consistent than it is now - but because I rarely seem to write about anything other than politics and the big bad world outside. Of course, there’s a lot of me in there - the personal is political and vice-versa - but not in ways that are necessarily familiar or familial. sigh. Looking back, I think it was because I was determined, when I started out, not to make this a blog of the kind that led the blog-o-boom: the vicarious exploration of other people’s private lives and lesions. Frankly, I found that sort of blogging both terrifying and self-indulgent. I also felt I had nothing to offer of value online, that could remotely interest a set of unknown readers. Ashwin persuaded me otherwise; a lot of his argument had to do with the description of the blogging community he comes from: the techies. Clearly there was a space for blogging about one’s interests, one’s passions, rather than about oneself.</p> <p>I realise now that I have - somewhere along the way - gone to the other extreme of the pendulum and am dangling hopelessly from an oblique position of self-denial. I find that many of the blogsters I read, write about themselves and theirs with humour and insight. I kid you not: I *like* reading them! If I don’t see these blogs as self-indulgent, is there possibly space for me to sneak back in a bit of me and mine into this blog? Black Mamba, you didn’t think you’d lead to an orgy of reflexivity now, did ya??</p> <p>With this long preamble, here’s my meagre offering for the tag.</p> <p>Family: A bit of a stretch, but to my extended family in <a target="_blank" href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2006/11/01/janmadinnada-subhashagalu-karnataka/">Raichur</a>. Also a cheeky <a target="_blank" href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2007/06/28/organic-phew-el-er/">aside</a> to my pun-tashtic family (not really a post at all, but wothehell, I love <a target="_blank" href="http://xkcd.com/">xkcd</a>).</p> <p>Friend: about a friend in Gujarat, and her struggles with <a target="_blank" href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2007/06/07/the-fear-of-fundamentalisms/">fundamentalisms</a>.</p> <p>Yourself: a post about ‘<a target="_blank" href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2007/03/12/being-an-action-hero/">being an action hero</a>‘. Also my previous stab at being <a target="_blank" href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2006/08/18/bag-it-tag-it-sell-it-to-the-butcher-at-the-store/">tagged</a>.</p> <p>Your love: music and poetry. Unsurprisingly, a post about <a target="_blank" href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2006/11/28/caste-untouched/">Gangubai Hangal</a> that conveys both my awe-struck admiration and her comments on caste. And a tribute to <a target="_blank" href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2006/08/01/flower-and-fire-a-tribute-to-kaifi-azmi/">Kaifi Azmi</a>.</p> <p>Anything you like: a whimsical post on <a target="_blank" href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2007/10/15/durga-ma-vs-jk-rowling-mahishasura-mardhini/">Durga Puja and JK Rowling</a>. And a diatribe against the <a target="_blank" href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2006/07/27/news-bhi-kabhi-news-thi/">news</a> in India today.</p> <p>…and I tag those I haven’t tagged before: <a target="_blank" href="http://aninditasengupta.wordpress.com/">Anindita</a> (in the spirit of disclosure and familial-ity, my gorgeous sis-in-law who normally tags _me_), <a target="_blank" href="http://hemanginigupta.blogspot.com/">Mangs</a>, <a target="_blank" href="http://bodypolitics.blogspot.com/">Lalit</a> and (relatively new) blog buddies: <a target="_blank" href="http://silkboard.wordpress.com/">Pranav</a> and <a target="_blank" href="http://bangalorebuzzz.blogspot.com/">Suzanna</a> (whose blog I promised some time ago I would explore, and this is a great way to begin!). </p> <!-- <rdf:RDF xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:trackback="http://madskills.com/public/xml/rss/module/trackback/"> <rdf:Description rdf:about="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2008/02/19/tagged-tugged/" dc:identifier="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2008/02/19/tagged-tugged/" dc:title="Tagged. Tugged." trackback:ping="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2008/02/19/tagged-tugged/trackback/" /> </rdf:RDF> --> </div><!-- END POST-ENTRY --> </div><!-- END POST-CONTENT --> </div><!-- END-CONTAINER --> <div class="post-header"> <h3 class="post-date">2008 02 19</h3> <p class="post-categories"><a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/category/whatever/" title="View all posts in Whatever" rel="category tag">Whatever</a><br/> <a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/category/feminism/" title="View all posts in Gender/Sexuality and Feminism" rel="category tag">Gender/Sexuality and Feminism</a><br/> <a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/category/fundamentalisms/" title="View all posts in Fundamentalisms" rel="category tag">Fundamentalisms</a><br/> <a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/category/politics/" title="View all posts in Politics" rel="category tag">Politics</a><br/> <a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/category/india/" title="View all posts in India" rel="category tag">India</a><br/> <a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/category/caste/" title="View all posts in Caste" rel="category tag">Caste</a><br/> <a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/category/media/" title="View all posts in Media" rel="category tag">Media</a><br/> <a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/category/poetry/" title="View all posts in Poetry/Music" rel="category tag">Poetry/Music</a><br/> <a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/category/bangalore/" title="View all posts in Bangalore/Karnataka" rel="category tag">Bangalore/Karnataka</a><br/> <a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/category/writing/" title="View all posts in Writing" rel="category tag">Writing</a></p> <p class="post-comments"><a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2008/02/19/tagged-tugged/#comments" title="Comment on Tagged. Tugged.">Comments (5)</a></p> <p class="post-permalink"><a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2008/02/19/tagged-tugged/" title="Permalink to Tagged. Tugged." rel="permalink">Permalink</a></p> </div><!-- END POST-FOOTER --> </div><!-- END POST --> <div id="post-109" class="post"> <div class="post-container"> <div class="post-content"> <h2 class="post-title"><a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2008/01/03/a-message-from-pakistan/" title="Permalink to A message from Pakistan" rel="bookmark">A message from Pakistan</a></h2> <div class="post-entry"> <p><img align="left" title="187px-Benazir_Bhutto.jpg" id="image108" alt="187px-Benazir_Bhutto.jpg" src="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/wp-content/uploads/2008/01/187px-Benazir_Bhutto.jpg" />Farida Shaheed, one of the founders of <a target="_blank" href="http://www.shirkatgah.org/">Shirkat Gah</a> (a women’s resource centre in Pakistan) and <a target="_blank" href="http://www.wluml.org/english/index.shtml">WLUML</a> (the network for women living under Muslim laws), wrote in from Pakistan. With her consent, I share this. It seems clear that despite her shortcomings, Benazir represented a hope for Pakistan that has been horrifically snuffed out.</p> <blockquote><p><em> Dear friends thank you for all your notes of concern,</em></p> <p><em>As a new year starts, I sit here still numbed by the events, paralysed by the events that seem to have shut down our ability to think and act, unable to concentrate (like many others).</em></p> <p><em>Only after her assassination have we come to realize just how many of our hopes were pinned on Benazir, her presence and leadership of the only mainstream party that consistently speaks of the federation, of the poor, the peasants, the workers; spoke of equality for all, especially the minorities and women. The one party with supporters until now across a deeply divided and troubled country, who gave us hope that, maybe – just maybe we could turn this nightmare around, if elections were held and if they were not entirely rigged, and if we received some breathing space…so many if’s and still we dared to hope.</em></p> <p><em>I met <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asma_Jahangir">Asma [Jahangir]</a> on the 29th and thanked her for having inviting Benazir that night last month as soon as they lifted the house arrest on Asma and Benazir both. Asma said ‘but no, I didn’t call the meeting. Perhaps she was meant to meet us all that last time because it was she who phoned and asked for a meeting with civil society’…A meeting we were pleasantly surprised at, that left us commenting on how much she had matured. She listened to all of us with great patience and grace, answered with patience and good cheer, even some of the sillier points made/questions asked. She reserved her fire for a short passionate intervention on how the fight with the extremists was our own fight not someone else’s agenda and on how precarious Pakistan’s situation was, and how it was time to act.</em></p> <p><em>And yes, it was important that she was a woman, a woman of great courage of defiance and of passion who led from the front foot (as they say in cricket). I am old enough to remember the day she became Prime Minister in 1988 and how immediately – and I do mean immediately – after eleven years of brutal and increasing oppression of women (and others) under Zia, the atmosphere shifted the sense of oppression in the streets lifted and women felt the burden lighten. And if she didn’t always deliver (and often she didn’t), as peasants said of her father, at least she made us the promises, and gave us hope.</em></p> <p><em>Right now, it is difficult to foresee the future, whether and when elections will take place – what will happen during Muharram and ashura, around the corner, when nerves are ragged anyway and the menace of potential violence lurks.</em></p> <p><em>We can only hope that some sense prevails somewhere, that elections are held as quickly as possible and that we find a way out of this spiral descending to madness…</em></p> <p><em>Farida</em></p></blockquote> <p>Image from the Wikipedia entry on <a target="_blank" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benazir_Bhutto">Benazir Bhutto</a>. </p> <!-- <rdf:RDF xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:trackback="http://madskills.com/public/xml/rss/module/trackback/"> <rdf:Description rdf:about="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2008/01/03/a-message-from-pakistan/" dc:identifier="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2008/01/03/a-message-from-pakistan/" dc:title="A message from Pakistan" trackback:ping="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2008/01/03/a-message-from-pakistan/trackback/" /> </rdf:RDF> --> </div><!-- END POST-ENTRY --> </div><!-- END POST-CONTENT --> </div><!-- END-CONTAINER --> <div class="post-header"> <h3 class="post-date">2008 01 03</h3> <p class="post-categories"><a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/category/feminism/" title="View all posts in Gender/Sexuality and Feminism" rel="category tag">Gender/Sexuality and Feminism</a><br/> <a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/category/fundamentalisms/" title="View all posts in Fundamentalisms" rel="category tag">Fundamentalisms</a><br/> <a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/category/politics/" title="View all posts in Politics" rel="category tag">Politics</a><br/> <a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/category/terror/" title="View all posts in Terror" rel="category tag">Terror</a></p> <p class="post-comments"><a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2008/01/03/a-message-from-pakistan/#comments" title="Comment on A message from Pakistan">Comments (2)</a></p> <p class="post-permalink"><a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2008/01/03/a-message-from-pakistan/" title="Permalink to A message from Pakistan" rel="permalink">Permalink</a></p> </div><!-- END POST-FOOTER --> </div><!-- END POST --> <div id="post-104" class="post"> <div class="post-container"> <div class="post-content"> <h2 class="post-title"><a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2007/11/04/sarah-baartman-speaks/" title="Permalink to Sarah Baartman Speaks" rel="bookmark">Sarah Baartman Speaks</a></h2> <div class="post-entry"> <p>Last month, I sent this piece around by email, by facebook, by almost every method of communication, but not by blog post, strangely enough. However, it is well worth having up for transient posterity on these pages; to those who might be interested, this is an extraordinary and powerful challenge to the editors of the recently published <a target="_blank" href="http://www.wwnorton.com/college/titles/english/nalw3r/">Norton Reader</a> on Feminist Literary Theory and Criticism, an ambitious work seeking to ‘trace the historical evolution of feminist writing about literature in English from the Middle Ages to the twenty-first century’.</p> <p><a target="_blank" href="http://zeleza.com/blogging/u-s-affairs/disappearing-me-softly-open-letter-sandra-m-gilbert-and-susan"> </a><a target="_blank" href="http://zeleza.com/blogging/u-s-affairs/disappearing-me-softly-open-letter-sandra-m-gilbert-and-susan">Pius Adesanmi</a> asks the editors why - in an edited volume spanning over 100 contributors - they did not see fit to include an article by an African feminist theorist:</p> <blockquote><p>It is your awareness of these things that makes your excision of African feminist theories and theorists from your volume all the more alarming. Could it be that you imagined that the voices of the African American women you selected adequately speak for those of their continental sisters? Possibly. If this is the case, I must tell you that African American women cannot be made to stand in and speak for continental African women. According to an African proverb, the monkey and the gorilla may claim oneness, monkey is monkey and gorilla gorilla. Perhaps you imagined that African women would be better served to find some space inside the Third World/postcolonial/transnational feminist umbrella you represented with the voices of Gayatri Spivak and Chandra Mohanty? Possibly. Could it be that you are simply unaware of the considerable body of African feminist intellection, right there in your back of the wood in the US academy? Possibly. Could it be that you just simply elected to disappear them like you disappeared me? Possibly.</p></blockquote> <p>I think his challenge goes beyond that of acknowledging the critical presence of African feminist thought - though that is clearly the immediate provocation - and pushes us all to think about issues of inclusion, exclusion and legitimacy in academic circles. Important indeed. </p> <!-- <rdf:RDF xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:trackback="http://madskills.com/public/xml/rss/module/trackback/"> <rdf:Description rdf:about="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2007/11/04/sarah-baartman-speaks/" dc:identifier="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2007/11/04/sarah-baartman-speaks/" dc:title="Sarah Baartman Speaks" trackback:ping="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2007/11/04/sarah-baartman-speaks/trackback/" /> </rdf:RDF> --> </div><!-- END POST-ENTRY --> </div><!-- END POST-CONTENT --> </div><!-- END-CONTAINER --> <div class="post-header"> <h3 class="post-date">2007 11 04</h3> <p class="post-categories"><a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/category/feminism/" title="View all posts in Gender/Sexuality and Feminism" rel="category tag">Gender/Sexuality and Feminism</a><br/> <a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/category/racism/" title="View all posts in Racism" rel="category tag">Racism</a><br/> <a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/category/politics/" title="View all posts in Politics" rel="category tag">Politics</a><br/> <a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/category/praxis/" title="View all posts in Praxis" rel="category tag">Praxis</a></p> <p class="post-comments"><a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2007/11/04/sarah-baartman-speaks/#respond" title="Comment on Sarah Baartman Speaks">Comments (0)</a></p> <p class="post-permalink"><a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2007/11/04/sarah-baartman-speaks/" title="Permalink to Sarah Baartman Speaks" rel="permalink">Permalink</a></p> </div><!-- END POST-FOOTER --> </div><!-- END POST --> <div id="post-103" class="post"> <div class="post-container"> <div class="post-content"> <h2 class="post-title"><a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2007/10/21/some-faith-restored-in-rowling/" title="Permalink to Some faith restored in Rowling" rel="bookmark">Some faith restored in Rowling</a></h2> <div class="post-entry"> <p>Dumbledore is <a target="_blank" href="http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5hNg5H19at3hLVhUrhW6ejnlOvV-AD8SCM5HO2">gay</a>. </p> <!-- <rdf:RDF xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:trackback="http://madskills.com/public/xml/rss/module/trackback/"> <rdf:Description rdf:about="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2007/10/21/some-faith-restored-in-rowling/" dc:identifier="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2007/10/21/some-faith-restored-in-rowling/" dc:title="Some faith restored in Rowling" trackback:ping="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2007/10/21/some-faith-restored-in-rowling/trackback/" /> </rdf:RDF> --> </div><!-- END POST-ENTRY --> </div><!-- END POST-CONTENT --> </div><!-- END-CONTAINER --> <div class="post-header"> <h3 class="post-date">2007 10 21</h3> <p class="post-categories"><a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/category/whatever/" title="View all posts in Whatever" rel="category tag">Whatever</a><br/> <a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/category/feminism/" title="View all posts in Gender/Sexuality and Feminism" rel="category tag">Gender/Sexuality and Feminism</a><br/> <a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/category/politics/" title="View all posts in Politics" rel="category tag">Politics</a></p> <p class="post-comments"><a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2007/10/21/some-faith-restored-in-rowling/#comments" title="Comment on Some faith restored in Rowling">Comments (14)</a></p> <p class="post-permalink"><a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2007/10/21/some-faith-restored-in-rowling/" title="Permalink to Some faith restored in Rowling" rel="permalink">Permalink</a></p> </div><!-- END POST-FOOTER --> </div><!-- END POST --> <div id="post-100" class="post"> <div class="post-container"> <div class="post-content"> <h2 class="post-title"><a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2007/10/20/the-double-helix-racism-and-gender-discrimination/" title="Permalink to The double helix: racism and gender discrimination" rel="bookmark">The double helix: racism and gender discrimination</a></h2> <div class="post-entry"> <div style="text-align: center"><img id="image102" alt="img-5121-1-small.jpg" src="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/wp-content/uploads/2007/10/img-5121-1-small.jpg" /></div> <p>Coincidentally, this post is about the not-so-noble laureate James Watson, widely known, along with Francis Crick and Maurice Wilkins, for the double-helix model of DNA, for which they won the Nobel in 1962.</p> <p>The <a target="_blank" href="http://www.indianexpress.com/story/230333.html">Indian Express</a> runs an article saying that Dr Watson has been suspended from his New York based scientific laboratory for allegedly saying, in a Sunday Times interview on October 14, that he was “inherently gloomy about the prospect of Africa” because “all our social policies are based on the fact that their intelligence is the same as ours — whereas all the testing says not really.” <a target="_blank" href="http://www.reuters.com/article/newsOne/idUSN1844930820071019">Reuters</a> also reported that he has cut short his book tour - for <em>Avoid Boring People: Lessons from a Life in Science</em> (how apt) - and returned home to the United States.</p> <p>While there has been understandable furore over his remarks, his own apology in a statement he issued at the Royal Society on Thursday, adds to the utter ridiculousness of his previous comment, though he does say it has no scientific basis: “To all those who have drawn the inference from my words that Africa, as a continent, is somehow genetically inferior, I can only apologize unreservedly […] That is not what I meant. More importantly from my point of view, there is no scientific basis for such a belief.”</p> <p>His scientific peers are horrified. The trustees of his lab have said they “vehemently disagree with these statements and are bewildered and saddened if he indeed made such comments” while Robert Sternberg, a prominent researcher on race and IQ at Tufts University, called Watson’s statement “racist and most regrettable.”</p> <p>In the <a target="_blank" href="http://www.chicagotribune.com/services/newspaper/printedition/friday/chi-watson19oct19,0,4157889.story?coll=chi_sports_util">Chicago Tribune</a>, Sternberg, a critic of traditional intelligence testing, comments that intelligence can mean something different for different cultures. In parts of Africa, a good gauge of intelligence might be how well someone avoids infection with malaria — a test of cleverness that most Americans likely would flunk. In the same way, for many Africans who take Western IQ tests, “our problems aren’t relevant to them,” Sternberg said.</p> <p>Watson has made other extraordinary comments in the past, as this article in the <a target="_blank" href="http://news.independent.co.uk/sci_tech/article3067222.ece">Independent</a> reports.</p> <blockquote> <p align="left">In 1997, he told a British newspaper that a woman should have the right to abort her unborn child if tests could determine it would be homosexual. He later insisted he was talking about a “hypothetical” choice which could never be applied. He has also suggested a link between skin colour and sex drive, positing the theory that black people have higher libidos, and argued in favour of genetic screening and engineering on the basis that ” stupidity” could one day be cured. He has claimed that beauty could be genetically manufactured, saying: “People say it would be terrible if we made all girls pretty. I think it would great.”</p> </blockquote> <p align="left">This sort of prejudice is not new, but when it is demonstrated by someone of Watson’s stature, it gains currency in exceedingly dangerous ways, not least by the way it is portrayed in the media. Cameron Duodo comments in the <a target="_blank" href="http://commentisfree.guardian.co.uk/cameron_duodu/2007/10/here_we_go_again_.html">Guardian</a> about the front page headline in the Independent of October 17, ‘Africans are less intelligent than Westerners, says DNA pioneer’:</p> <blockquote> <p align="left">[I]n emphasising Professor James Watson’s proficiency with regard to DNA research, without making it sufficiently clear that his work on DNA does not necessarily make him an expert in the determination of human intelligence, Milmo elevated Watson’s racist rant into the semblance of authoritative scientific opinion.</p> </blockquote> <p align="left">My surprise is at those commentators who see Watson as being ‘an obsolete product of a bygone time’ (Laura Blue in <a target="_blank" href="http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1673952,00.html">Time.com</a>) and others in the blogosphere who are dismissing his remarks as being ‘<a target="_blank" href="http://atheistexperience.blogspot.com/2007/10/ig-nobel-fellow-but-one-to-be-censured.html">senile</a>‘. Watson’s prejudices are not new, and certainly, they can’t be excused as the possible ramblings of old age.</p> <p align="left">For me, the story that has always been told far too little is that of Rosalind Franklin, the<img align="right" alt="franklin.gif" id="image101" title="franklin.gif" src="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/wp-content/uploads/2007/10/franklin.gif" /> woman who, if she had been alive in 1962, should have also won the Nobel for her work on DNA. One <a target="_blank" href="http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aso/databank/entries/do53dn.html">account</a> tells of how the race was on between the teams of Wilkins and Franklin, working at King’s College, London and Crick and Watson, at Cambridge. Watson attended a lecture of Franklin’s and based on a rather unclear recollection of the facts she presented - while ‘critical of her lecture style and personal appearance’ - created a failed model. Franklin worked mostly alone (another story talks of how even when there was conversation amongst them, it was so patronising that she didn’t take it further), and didn’t want to publish her findings until more confident about her theory that DNA was helical. Wilkins grew frustrated and in January 1953, showed her results to Watson, without apparently her knowledge or consent. This account also quotes Wilkins as admitting, “I’m afraid we always used to adopt - let’s say, a patronizing attitude towards her.”</p> <p align="left">When Watson and Crick published their paper on DNA in Nature in 1953, they made no <a target="_blank" href="http://www.ba-education.demon.co.uk/for/science/dnadiscovery1.html">acknowledgment</a> beyond the statement: “We have also been stimulated by a knowledge of the general nature of the unpublished results and ideas of Dr. M.H.F. Wilkins, Dr. R.E. Franklin, and their co-workers at King’s College London.”</p> <p align="left">In 1962 Watson, Crick and Wilkins together received the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine. In their Nobel lectures they cite 98 references, none are Franklin’s. Only Wilkins included her in his acknowledgments. Franklin died in 1958 at the age of 37 of cancer. The Nobel Prize is not awarded posthumously, only to living persons.</p> <p align="left">Much after her <a target="_blank" href="http://www.accessexcellence.org/RC/AB/BC/Rosalind_Franklin.html">death</a> (and presumably, the Nobel), Watson and Crick made it abundantly clear in public lectures that they could not have discovered the structure of DNA without her work. But how much of this was too little, too late, and carefully so? Franklin’s name is hardly associated with work on the DNA model, certainly not in the way Watson’s and Crick’s are, to any school child in most parts of the world. What is even more upsetting is the counter-factual possibilities of her having been acknowledged for her work; would the resulting fame (and some fortune) have helped her in her battle against cancer? Worse still, she never knew that Watson and Crick had accessed her results; she communicated with them till she died.</p> <p align="left">Even those at <a target="_blank" href="http://nobelprize.org/educational_games/medicine/dna_double_helix/readmore.html">Stockholm</a> wonder. Since all archives related to nominees are closed for fifty years after it is awarded, we will know in 2008 - next year - whether Rosalind Franklin was even a nominee for the Nobel prize that her three colleagues - without her knowledge - won based upon her work.</p> <p align="left">Dr James Watson may still be in our textbooks, but he has been a scientist and a human being of bias and prejudice, and certainly, in Rosalind Franklin’s case, all these and more: a man with tragic, unethical, lack of generosity towards a fellow scientist.</p> <p align="left"> <p align="left"> <p align="left"><em>The image of the DNA helix is of a sculpture at the Lawrence Hall of Science, UC Berkeley, taken by <a target="_blank" href="http://www.eyeondna.com/">Hsien-Hsien Lei</a>. The image of Rosalind Franklin is from the article by <a target="_blank" href="http://www.accessexcellence.org/RC/AB/BC/Rosalind_Franklin.html">David Ardell</a>.<br /> </em> </p> <!-- <rdf:RDF xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:trackback="http://madskills.com/public/xml/rss/module/trackback/"> <rdf:Description rdf:about="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2007/10/20/the-double-helix-racism-and-gender-discrimination/" dc:identifier="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2007/10/20/the-double-helix-racism-and-gender-discrimination/" dc:title="The double helix: racism and gender discrimination" trackback:ping="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2007/10/20/the-double-helix-racism-and-gender-discrimination/trackback/" /> </rdf:RDF> --> </div><!-- END POST-ENTRY --> </div><!-- END POST-CONTENT --> </div><!-- END-CONTAINER --> <div class="post-header"> <h3 class="post-date">2007 10 20</h3> <p class="post-categories"><a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/category/feminism/" title="View all posts in Gender/Sexuality and Feminism" rel="category tag">Gender/Sexuality and Feminism</a><br/> <a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/category/racism/" title="View all posts in Racism" rel="category tag">Racism</a><br/> <a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/category/politics/" title="View all posts in Politics" rel="category tag">Politics</a><br/> <a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/category/science/" title="View all posts in Science/Technology" rel="category tag">Science/Technology</a><br/> <a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/category/media/" title="View all posts in Media" rel="category tag">Media</a></p> <p class="post-comments"><a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2007/10/20/the-double-helix-racism-and-gender-discrimination/#comments" title="Comment on The double helix: racism and gender discrimination">Comments (2)</a></p> <p class="post-permalink"><a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2007/10/20/the-double-helix-racism-and-gender-discrimination/" title="Permalink to The double helix: racism and gender discrimination" rel="permalink">Permalink</a></p> </div><!-- END POST-FOOTER --> </div><!-- END POST --> <div id="post-99" class="post"> <div class="post-container"> <div class="post-content"> <h2 class="post-title"><a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2007/10/19/noble-at-last/" title="Permalink to Noble at last" rel="bookmark">Noble at last</a></h2> <div class="post-entry"> <p><img align="left" title="lessing.jpg" id="image98" alt="lessing.jpg" src="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/wp-content/uploads/2007/10/lessing.jpg" />A bit late in the week, but I do feel good - overall - about this year’s bunch of <a target="_blank" href="http://nobelprize.org/">Nobel prizes</a>. Particularly those to the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and Al Gore for Peace, in ‘informing the world of the dangers posed by climate change’, and to Doris Lessing, ‘whose prolific writing extends from the realistic to the fabulous’ and who is only the eleventh woman to win it for Literature (and in this case, feminist science fiction; yay!).</p> <p><a target="_blank" href="http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/lists/women.html">34</a> women have won Nobels across the disciplines since their inception in 1901; out of a <a target="_blank" href="http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/lists/all/">total</a> of 777 individuals and 20 organisations. However much people can mutter on about politics (and political correctness), all awards are inherently political and subjective (especially on artistic merit), and I’m glad when that politics and subjectivity coincide with mine. :)</p> <p>Now my heart will be full when <a target="_blank" href="http://www.ursulakleguin.com/">Ursula Le Guin</a> wins it.</p> <p>Three quotes from Doris to leave you with:</p> <p>“<a target="_blank" href="http://www.dorislessing.org/thegolden.html"><em>The Golden Notebook</em></a> for some reason surprised people but it was no more than you would hear women say in their kitchens every day in any country.”</p> <p>“You are in the process of being indoctrinated. We have not yet evolved a system of education that is not a system of indoctrination. We are sorry, but it is the best we can do. What you are being taught here is an amalgam of current prejudice and the choices of this particular culture. The slightest look at history will show how impermanent these must be. You are being taught by people who have been able to accommodate themselves to a regime of thought laid down by their predecessors. It is a self-perpetuating system. Those of you who are more robust and individual than others, will be encouraged to leave and find ways of educating yourself - educating your own judgment. Those that stay must remember, always and all the time, that they are being moulded and patterned to fit into the narrow and particular needs of this society.”</p> <p>“I’ve won all the prizes in Europe, every bloody one, so I’m delighted to win them all, the whole lot, OK? It’s a royal flush… I’m sure you’d like some uplifting remarks.” (on winning the Nobel) </p> <!-- <rdf:RDF xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:trackback="http://madskills.com/public/xml/rss/module/trackback/"> <rdf:Description rdf:about="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2007/10/19/noble-at-last/" dc:identifier="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2007/10/19/noble-at-last/" dc:title="Noble at last" trackback:ping="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/2007/10/19/noble-at-last/trackback/" /> </rdf:RDF> --> </div><!-- END POST-ENTRY --> </div><!-- END POST-CONTENT --> </div><!-- END-CONTAINER --> <div class="post-header"> <h3 class="post-date">2007 10 19</h3> <p class="post-categories"><a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/category/feminism/" title="View all posts in Gender/Sexuality and Feminism" rel="category tag">Gender/Sexuality and Feminism</a><br/> <a href="http://blogs.sanmathi.org/anasuya/category/politics/" 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