Aamir Khan’s thoughts in his column in HT’s 7th
May edition titled Daughters are Precious and his 6th May launch of
Satyamev Jayate has seen a lot of euphoria (never mind the copying of the tune
of the Euphoria band) being expressed all around. He is the new hero to take up
cudgels for lost social causes and stir the emotions and guilt of the middle
classes. He does this indeed very successfully.
The first episode deals with the burning issue of sex
selection which has created a gender disaster in India. The child sex ratio
over the last four decades has witnessed a rapid descent leading to a huge
deficit of the girl child in Indian society. Aamir Khan has captured this
social disaster very well with powerful cases being brought into our drawing
rooms that shame us and overwhelm us with guilt and tears. (Dil pe lagegi as
Aamir tells us). The daughter aversion depicted through the cases are indeed a
very powerful exposure of the social ills linked to patriarchy but two very
powerful by products of this message will cause more harm than good.
The first is the use of the term female feticide. Yes female
feticide should not happen but the actual problem is sex selection facilitated
by the use of medical technologies by medical professionals. The second is the
undue emphasis on abortions and relating it to killings. The two taken together
is not only an emotional trap but also fodder for the right wing enthusiasts. I
am afraid the womens’ right to abortion comes under threat by projecting such a
stance. Aamir and his research team perhaps lack the expertise to vet such
sensitivities – the program development when tackling such sensitive social
issues, and I believe the forthcoming ones would be even more so, needs
consultation and debate with appropriate experts/activists who have devoted
their lives to these issues.
Fortunately the column in HT refrains from discussing
feticide and abortion and looks more at female discrimination within our social
customs and mores. Again the views of Aamir in this column are well appreciated
but like the TV show the column too has failed to take head on the root cause
of this malevolence.
While there may still be a lot of social acceptance for
sex-selection in our patriarchal world, the real perpetrators of this crime
(yes it’s a crime today because there is a law that prohibits sex-selection and
sex-determination) is the medical profession. Neither the TV show nor the
column deals with the role of medical professionals as being central to this heinous
issue. The complete absence of ethics in medical practice and the unfettered
commercialization of medical care is the root cause for the deficit of girls we
face today. If the doctors learn to say NO then the problem will be taken care
of substantially. I say substantially because the misuse of medical technology is
only one, though the overwhelming axis of the problem. The other axis is the
post-birth discrimination and elimination of girls which also needs to be dealt
with through social action.
The humungous documentation through sting operations by the
two journalists from Jaipur was shown on the TV program and I think that is the
real target for action. While I have no problems with writing letters to a
chief minister, and why only Rajasthan – the sting operations were across 8 to
10 states, the focus of the larger public action must be on the medical
profession. Doctors have to be booked like they did in South Korea.
Finally something about the audience also made me uncomfortable. There was no significant participation from the audience except for the emotional expression of tears which have been used impactfully by the program designers. To me things looked staged, even the few contributions of the external audience, like the comment on Salman Khan. I guess creating the drama around this program is part of the strategy but it could obviate away from the main cause and the proposed action.