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HOME | NEWS | ELECTIONS '98 | INDIA SPEAKS! |
January 30, 1998
NEWS
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'When I have a child, I will not let him have any religion'
I am not a politically aware or politically conscious person. I am least interested in the political scene either. But I am aware of the social problems as I was a victim of one. I find our society very narrow minded, even now. It still looks at a person as a Hindu or a Muslim or a Christian, and not as a human being. Just because I married a man who was born in a Muslim family, I was ostracised, victimised and persecuted. Just because I married him, a Muslim, I could not see my father or mother for ten long years. I really suffered. You can understand how painful it is to be isolated from your own family, your own relatives and your own parents. I myself do not know how I survived the pain. I belong to a very orthodox Naidu family. In my own community, it is unthinkable to even marry a person belonging to another sub sect. It was then that I went ahead and married a man from a Muslim family. They could not tolerate my impudence at all! It was only recently that my father accepted me as a married woman. I went to see him after ten long years and told him that after all I was his daughter. You see, education makes a lot of difference to a person's attitude and thinking. My brother who is educated has always been supportive of me. It was he who made my father change his mind. Oh! it was a tough, long and slow process. I am happy that now I can go to my house. It was tough for me to adjust to my husband's household also. I wear a burkha when I go to my mother-in-law's place. I remove my pottu and taali also. I will not say it was difficult for me to change myself to a woman in a burkha. It was a different experience. The only reason why I wear it is that I do not want to hurt the feelings of my husband's mother. His sister wears a burkha at home, even though she is a lecturer in a college. Between us, we have no problems at all. He allows me to follow my religion and I also don't interfere in his religion. I have a pooja room in my house where I have kept the pictures of Hindu gods like Ganapathi and I do small poojas on Friday and Tuesday. But when I have to attend some of their functions, I feel very lonely. They separate us during such functions because men and women don't sit together in their functions. Naturally I feel quite out of place and left out there. I just watch everything. The most difficult part at such functions is that I become the centre of attraction. Whether it be a function in our community or theirs, people, without any qualms, point to me and whisper, 'Yes, she is the girl who married a Muslim.'
Threats to my husband's life have always been there. It worries me a lot. My husband Shihan Hussaini is a karate master and has now started drawing the image of Ganapathi to achieve communal harmony. We have started receiving threatening calls regularly. I worry for his safety because here people look at him not as human being but as Muslim who dared draw a Hindu God. I am worried about bomb blasts. I am worried about communal clashes. I am worried about the hatred people have for each other in the name of religion. Don't you think all people are the same? Do you find any difference in a Hindu or a Muslim? I don't see any difference. I have not voted in my life. He might have told you we do not have a ration card and our names are not there in the voters list. So, I could not exercise my franchise at all. When I got married, my father got so angry that he cut off my name from the list. Here they refused to enter my name. What can I do except watch the elections from far? I don't believe in religion. I don't believe in rituals. But I do believe in God. I dream about an India where there is no religion and where there is no caste. I dream about an India where all people live in harmony. When I have a child, I will not let him have any religion. Let him learn all religions. Let him learn about the good things in all religions. I believe there are good things in all religions. I studied in a Christian convent. I have attended church, participated in the choir. But I am a Hindu, now married to a Muslim. As told to Shobha Warrier. |
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