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Find your voice against gender violence

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    Talking about empowerment is odd,
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    because when we talk about empowerment,
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    what affects us most are the stories.
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    So I want to begin with an everyday story.
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    What is it really like to be a young woman in India?
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    Now I've spent the last 27 years of my life
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    in India, lived in three small towns,
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    two major cities,
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    and I've had several experiences.
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    When I was seven,
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    a private tutor who used to come home
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    to teach me mathematics molested me.
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    He put his hand up my skirt.
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    He put his hand up my skirt and told me
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    he knew how to make me feel good.
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    At 17, a boy from my high school
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    circulated an email
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    detailing all the sexually aggressive things
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    he could do to me
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    because I didn't pay attention to him.
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    At 19, I helped a friend
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    whose friends had forcefully
    married her to an older man
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    escape an abusive marriage.
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    At 21, when my friend and I were walking
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    down the road one afternoon,
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    a man pulled down his pants
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    and masturbated in front of us.
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    We called people for help, and nobody came.
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    At 25, when I was walking home one evening,
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    two men on a motorcycle attacked me.
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    I spent two nights in hospital
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    recovering from trauma and injuries.
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    So throughout my life, I've seen women
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    — family, friends, colleagues —
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    live through these experiences,
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    and they seldom talk about it.
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    So in simple words, life in India is not easy.
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    But today I'm not going to talk to you about this fear.
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    I'm going to talk to you about an interesting path
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    of learning that this fear took me.
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    So what happened one night in December 2012
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    changed my life.
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    So a young girl, a 23-year old student,
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    boarded a bus in Delhi with her male friend.
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    There were six men on the bus, young men
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    who you might encounter every day in India,
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    and the chilling account of what followed
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    was played over and over again
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    in the Indian and international media.
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    This girl was raped repeatedly,
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    forcefully penetrated with a blunt rod,
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    beaten, bitten, and left to die.
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    Her friend was gagged, attacked,
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    and knocked unconscious.
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    She died on the 29th of December.
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    Another time, when most of us here
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    were preparing to welcome the new year,
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    India plunged into darkness.
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    For the first time in our history,
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    men and women in Indian cities
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    woke up to the horrific truth
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    about the true state of women in the country.
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    Now, like many other young women,
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    I was absolutely terrified.
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    I couldn't believe that something like this
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    could happen in a national capital.
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    I was angry and I was frustrated,
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    but most of all, I felt utterly, completely helpless.
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    But really, what do you do, right?
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    Some write blogs, some ignore it,
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    some join protests.
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    I did all of it. In fact, that's what everyone was doing
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    two years ago.
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    So the media was filled with stories about
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    all the horrific deeds
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    that Indian men are capable of.
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    They were compared to animals,
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    sexually repressed beasts.
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    In fact, so alien and unthinkable was this event
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    in an Indian mind
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    that the response from the Indian media,
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    public, and politicians, proved one point:
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    no one knew what to do.
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    And no one wanted to be responsible for it.
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    In fact, these were a few insensitive comments
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    which were made in the media
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    by prominent people
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    in response to sexual violence
    against women in general.
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    So the first one is made by a member of parliament,
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    the second one is made by a spiritual leader,
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    and the third one was actually
    the defendants' lawyer
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    when the girl was fighting for her life
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    and she passed away.
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    Now, as a woman watching this day after day,
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    I was tired.
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    So as a writer and gender activist,
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    I have written extensively on women,
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    but this time, I realized it was different,
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    because a part of me realized
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    I was a part of that young woman too,
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    and I decided I wanted to change this.
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    So I did something spontaneous, hasty.
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    I logged on to a citizen journalism platform
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    called iReport,
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    and I recorded a video talking about
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    what the scene was like in Bangalore.
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    I talked about how I felt,
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    I talked about the ground realities,
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    and I talked about the frustrations of living in India.
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    In a few hours, the blog was shared widely,
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    and comments and thoughts poured in
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    from across the world.
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    In that moment, a few things occurred to me.
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    One, technology was always at hand
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    for many young women like me.
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    Two, like me, most young women
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    hardly use it to express their views.
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    Three, I realized for the first time
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    that my voice mattered.
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    So in the months that followed,
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    I covered a trail of events in Bangalore
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    which had no space in the mainstream news.
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    A Cubbon Park, which is a big park in Bangalore,
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    I gathered with over a hundred others
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    when groups of young men came forward
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    to wear skirts to prove that clothing
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    does not invite rape.
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    When I reported about these events,
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    I felt I had charge, I felt like I had a channel
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    to release all the emotions I had inside of me.
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    I attended the town hall march
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    when students held up signs saying
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    "Kill them, hang them."
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    "You wouldn't do this to your mothers or sisters."
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    I went to a candlelight vigil
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    where citizens gathered together
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    to talk about the issue of sexual violence openly,
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    and I recall a lot of blogs
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    in response to how worrying the situation was
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    in India at that point.
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    Now, the reactions confused me.
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    While supportive comments poured
    in from across the world,
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    so did vicious ones.
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    So some called me a hypocrite.
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    Some called me a victim, a rape apologist.
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    Some even said I had a political motive.
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    But this one comment kind of describes
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    what we are discussing here today.
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    But I was soon to learn that this was not all.
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    As empowered as I felt
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    with the new liberty that this
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    citizen journalism channel gave me,
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    I found myself in an unfamiliar situation.
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    So sometime last August, I logged onto Facebook
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    and I was looking through my news feed,
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    and I noticed there was a link
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    that was being shared by my friends.
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    I clicked on the link: it led me back
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    to a report uploaded by an American girl
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    called Michaela Cross.
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    The report was titled,
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    "India: The story you never wanted to hear."
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    And in this report, she recounted her firsthand
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    account of facing sexual harassment in India.
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    She wrote, "There is no way to prepare for the eyes,
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    the eyes that every day stared
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    with such entitlement at my body,
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    with no change of expression
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    whether I met their gaze or not.
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    Walking to the fruit seller's or the tailor's,
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    I got stares so sharp
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    that they sliced away bits of me piece by piece."
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    She called India a traveler's
    heaven and a woman's hell.
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    She said she was stalked, groped,
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    and masturbated at.
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    Now, late that evening, the report went viral.
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    It was on news channels across the world.
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    Everyone was discussing it.
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    It had over a million views,
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    a thousand comments and shares,
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    and I found myself witnessing
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    a very similar thing.
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    The media was caught in this vicious cycle
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    of opinion and outburst
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    and no outcome whatsoever.
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    So that night, as I sat wondering
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    how I should respond,
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    I found myself filled with doubt.
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    You see, as a writer, I approached this issue
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    as an observer,
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    as an Indian, I felt embarrassment and disbelief,
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    and as an activist, I looked
    at it as a defender of rights,
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    but as a citizen journalist,
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    I suddenly felt very vulnerable.
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    I mean, here she was, a young woman
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    who was using a channel to talk about
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    her experience just as I was,
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    and yet I felt unsettled.
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    You see, no one ever tells you
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    that true empowerment comes from giving yourself
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    the permission to think and act.
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    Empowerment is often made to sound as if
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    it's an ideal, it's a wonderful outcome.
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    When we talk about empowerment, we often
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    talk about giving people access to materials,
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    giving them access to tools.
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    But the thing is, empowerment is an emotion.
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    It's a feeling.
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    The first step to empowerment
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    is to give yourself the authority,
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    the key to independent will,
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    and for women everywhere,
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    no matter who we are or where we come from,
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    that is the most difficult step.
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    We fear the sound of our own voice,
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    for it means admission, but it is this that gives us
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    the power to change our environment.
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    Now in this situation where I was faced
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    with so many different kinds of realities,
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    I was unsure how to judge,
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    because I didn't know what it would mean for me.
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    I feared to judge because I
    didn't know what it would be
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    if I didn't support the same view as this girl.
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    I didn't know what it would mean for me
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    if I was challenging someone else's truth.
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    But yet, it was simple.
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    I had to make a decision:
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    should I speak up or should I stay quiet?
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    So after a lot of thought,
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    I recorded a video blog in response,
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    and I told Michaela, well,
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    there are different sides to India,
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    and I also tried to explain, you know,
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    I tried to explain that things would be okay
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    and I expressed my regret for what she had faced.
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    And a few days later, I was invited to talk
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    on air with her,
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    and for the first time, I reached out to this girl
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    who I had never met, who was so far away,
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    but yet I felt so close to.
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    Since this report came to light,
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    more young people than ever
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    were discussing sexual harassment on the campus,
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    and the university that Michaela belonged to
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    gave her the assistance she needed.
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    The university even took measures
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    to train its students to equip them
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    with the skills that they need
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    to confront challenges such as harassment,
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    and for the first the time, I felt I wasn't alone.
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    You see, if there's anything that I've learned
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    as an active citizen journalist
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    over the past few years,
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    it is our dire lack as a society to actively find
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    avenues where our voices can be heard.
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    We don't realize that when we are standing up,
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    we are not just standing up as individuals,
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    we are standing up for our communities,
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    our friends, our peers.
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    Most of us say that women are denied their rights,
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    but the truth is, oftentimes,
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    women deny themselves these rights.
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    In a recent survey in India,
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    95 percent of the women who work in I.T.,
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    aviation, hospitality, and call centers,
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    said they didn't feel safe returning home alone
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    after work in the late hours or in the evening.
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    In Bangalore, where I come from,
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    this number is 85 percent.
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    In rural areas in India,
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    if anything is to go by the recent
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    gang rapes in [Badar?] and acid attacks in Odisha
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    and Aligarh are supposed to go by,
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    we need to act really soon.
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    Don't get me wrong:
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    the challenges that women will face
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    in telling their stories is real,
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    but we need to start pursuing
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    and trying to identify mediums
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    to participate in our system
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    and not just pursue the media blindly.
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    Today, more women than ever
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    are standing up and questioning
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    the government in India,
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    and this is a result of that courage.
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    There is a sixfold increase in women
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    reporting harassment,
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    and the government passed
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    the Criminal Law (Amendment) Act in 2013
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    to protect women against sexual assault.
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    As I end this talk,
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    I just want to say
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    that I know a lot of us in this room have our secrets,
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    but let us speak up.
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    Let us fight the shame and talk about it.
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    It could be a platform, a community,
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    your loved one, whoever or whatever you choose,
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    but let us speak up.
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    The truth is, the end to this problem
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    begins with us.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Find your voice against gender violence
Speaker:
Meera Vijayann
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
13:58

English subtitles

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