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How Women In India Are Branded ‘Witch’ To Settle Legal Disputes

Witch-Hunting: A Dark Spell on India

Think witch-hunting is a thing of the past? Think again.

Unfortunately, this horrific narrative is not unheard of for the Dalit and Adivasi residents in Jharkhand’s hinterland, where witch-hunting is a common practice. According to the National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB),  2,097 murders were committed, motivated by “witch-hunting”, between the years 2000 and 2012. People, mostly women, are targeted and branded witches whenever a calamity befalls the village – be it death, disease or drought. Witch doctors known as ojhas, mostly men, are called upon to undo the supposedly evil influences of a witch. Many a times, victims and survivors of witch-hunting are also women suffering from mental illnesses.

Unable to cure or heal people, ojhas evade responsibility by claiming the existence of a “witch” somewhere in the vicinity. One word from an ojha is enough to turn local residents into a frenzied mob, out to seek blood-thirsty vengeance and hunt a “witch”, usually a weak, lower-caste woman, and bring her to “justice”.

In 2015, five women were brutally murdered after a youth’s untimely death in Jharkhand — an entire mob of villagers attacked them after an ojha accused them of practising witchcraft and causing his death. The women were jolted awake from their sleep, dragged out of their home and bludgeoned to death. It isn’t just men who victimise them either; women can be just as brutal.

According to a research conducted by Partners for Law in Development,  witch-hunting is rooted in patriarchy, financial disputes, superstition and other personal and social conflict. More often than not, these conflicts arise out of jealousy or tension between the victim and their relatives, friends or acquaintances.

Given that India has a shortage of 83% specialist medical professionals in community health centres and lower levels of education in all these areas, people’s belief in ojhas, who serve as medicine-men, is strong. The lack of such infrastructure is partly responsible for the myriad atrocities, including physical and psychological torture, inflicted on vulnerable women across remote regions of the country. The “punishment” meted out ranges from death to being banished from their homes.

Although witch hunting is practised across 12 states in India, only seven states have laws criminalising the practice – Jharkhand, Bihar, Chhattisgarh, Maharashtra, Rajasthan and Assam. However, a large number of perpetrators are still let out on bail, and there is no system in place to re-arrest them. “I still see my mother’s murderers roaming freely in front of me. I feel scared while going to school,” says an adolescent girl, whose mother was murdered after being branded a witch. There are no guarantees that the girl will not suffer the same fate as her mother. If the perpetrators escaped a crime once, will the second time be any different?

The villagers tried to kill her three times and every time she went to the police, they asked her to forget about it.

Jharkhand ranks highest in these crimes against women (and in certain cases, also men and child victims) in which “witchcraft” is the only charge against the victims. Other states such as Chhattisgarh, Rajasthan, Assam and Bihar also report witch-hunting deaths, though under-reported. An analysis of NCRB data between 2010 and 2012 reveals that while there were 77 instances of death, only nine cases were registered in Jharkhand. The figures also don’t take into account other kinds of “vengeance” exacted by a village, like forcing the victim to parade naked in the village square, to eat faeces, banishment and ostracisation; none of these acts of violence warrants police action.

In most cases, the reason is not limited to superstition; almost invariably someone who would like to settle a land or financial dispute or a personal vendetta, can settle on witch-hunting as a solution, especially if the victim is from a lower caste. As one victim’s husband states, jealousy can be an important factor contributing to a lynching. While immediate family members usually do protect the victims, they do so at great danger to themselves. Currently, India faces a profound paradox – while on the one hand, the country has developed tremendously, adopting new technologies and modern lifestyles, age-old traditions and rituals still exist, lying open to interpretation and misuse according to the perpetrators’ whims and fancies.

The hope in the story is that while some people are attempting to hunt down “witches” and offer them nothing but pain and distress, others can step forward to stop this tradition forevermore. In a country that looks to the future, how long can we allow such inhuman acts to continue?

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Featured photo credit: Soma Basu
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