The protests in Delhi demanding justice after the Dec. 16 gang rape may have wound down, but many women here, including Reecha Upadhyay, a 34-year-old filmmaker, continue to feel a âdeep sense of outrage.â
âWe canât be on the streets physically every day, but surely thereâs something we can do,â Ms. Upadhyay said in an interview Wednesday. âI felt the need to continue the movement to demand safety for women.â
On Thursday, as India participates in One Billion Rising, a global campaign that uses dance to call for an end to violence against women, Delhi will have a full day of events, including a flash mob, organized by Ms. Upadhyay and her small crew, at 5 p.m. on Parliament Street.
The international reaction to One Billion Rising, spearheaded by Eve Ensler, th author of âThe Vagina Monologues,â has been strong: nearly 200 countries are expected to participate, and dance troupes are expected to pop up on street corners and at public squares around the world.
In India, the issue is particularly raw. The problem of violence against women has dominated public discussions and debate for nearly two months. The trial of the five men accused of the rape and murder of a 23-year-old physiotherapy student is being watched closely, and legislative and judicial changes are afoot.
âThis is a new struggle for freedom,â Kamla Bhasin, the South Asia coordinator for the campaign, said of One Billion Rising. âFreedom from patriarchal mindsets, patriarchal families and patriarchal religious traditions.â
The campaign in India seeks to shift the focus from the lapses of the state to individuals who can drive change in their homes, communities and families. âGove! rnments donât rape; people do,â Ms. Bhasin said. âWe should ask: What are we as a society doing to our girls and womenâ
The One Billion movement urges people to âwalk out, dance, rise up and demand an end to violence against women.â
On Thursday, women from low-income colonies in Delhi will organize candle marches in their localities. In Andhra Pradesh, those who benefit from the National Rural Employment Guarantee program will pledge not to participate in or tolerate violence. In Mumbai, popular actors and singers will attend public events.
The movement is designed to bring thousands to the streets, Ms. Bhasin said, and seeks to âreclaim the streetsâ for women.
A month ago, Ms. Upadhyay began organizing âDelhi Rising.â Through Facebook, she brought together 30 young professionals - dancers, communications experts, filmmakers, writers, researchers - who shared her desire to keep the movement going, at her Hauz Khas Village studio in south Delhi.
âAt this meting, I realized that the sentiment is real and alive,â said Ms. Upadhyay. âIt just needs a different form, a different thrust, a different outlet.â
Soon, the campaign had a couple of videos (see here and here), an anthem and a choreographed routine for a flash mob. One of the short promotional videos, which has over 34,000 hits on YouTube, features four young unnamed women who have faced harassment in their homes, on the streets and in their communities and now pledge to rise up against that kind of treatment.
âI had stayed mute too long; I had stayed mute too often,â one of them says in the video. âBut now I want to strike.â
Sakshi Bhalla, a 25-year-old dancer who hopes to pursue a career in development, shares this sentiment. She met Ms. Upadhyay through Facebook and quickly became an integral part of Delhi Risingâs core team. An Indian classical dancer ! since she! was very young and now a salsa instructor, Ms. Bhalla was tasked with choreographing dance moves for a flash mob that would be easy to learn and powerful to watch.
Ms. Bhalla, who said she resents the stereotypical portrayal of women in Indian cultural and educational material like mythological stories and textbooks, put âeverything else on hold,â including her job hunt, to work on the choreography.
Set to âJago Delhi Jago,â (âRise Delhi Riseâ) a song composed for the event that urges women to stand up to silence and oppression, the dance routine closely echoes the lyrics. An instructional video was posted online to stir people to learn and participate in the flash mob.
In the last four weeks, Ms. Bhalla reached out to several dozen dance studios, teaching dance instructors the routine, who then taught their students. She also connectd with nonprofits and student groups, including those in lower-income areas where school dropout rates are high because of sexual harassment. She estimated that she and her friends have taught the dance routine to some 200 young men, women and children.
âDance allows you to express emotions - outrage, anger, hope - that sometimes words donât allow you to,â said Ms. Bhalla. âItâs a really powerful experience because you embody everything youâre thinking.â
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