INTERNATIONAL PERSECUTION REPORTS
Women Still Traumatized
from Christmas Attacks
in India
Psychological disorders
persist in female
Christians in Orissa
state, study shows.
By Vishal Arora
NEW
DELHI,
Preliminary findings of
an ongoing study on
gender violence shows
that female victims of
attacks in Orissa state
last Christmas season
are struggling with
post-traumatic
disorders.
The study, conducted by
local Christians and led
by Dr. John Dayal,
secretary general of the
All India Christian
Council, records
accounts of premature
births, sexual
molestation and
attempted rape during
the violence that began
on Christmas Eve and
lasted for more than a
week in Kandhamal
district. The violence,
allegedly led by
extremists of the
Vishwa Hindu Parishad
(World Hindu
Council), left at least
four Christians dead and
730 houses and 95
churches burned.
According to the study,
at least seven Christian
women victims are facing
psychological disorders.
Sabita Digal, 30, from
Barakhama village went
insane after her close
brush with the
attackers. On Christmas
day, a mob of around 200
Hindu extremists stormed
the village and set the
house of Christians on
fire. Digal, along with
other Christians, ran
toward a jungle.
She fainted from fright
and had to be assisted
by the others to the
jungle, where she
remained without food or
medicine. The study says
that Digal, whose
husband is poor and
jobless, has been
behaving abnormally
since then.
Similarly, a 65-year-old
nun, Sister Christa, and
30-year-old Anjali Nayak
from the Mt. Carmel
Convent in Balliguda,
still have bouts of
anxiety and depression.
Lengthy counselling
sessions with
psychologists have
yielded little
improvement.
While Sister Christa and
Nayak were decorating
their church for
Christmas, a mob came
and set the building on
fire. The two women,
along with others, hid
in a room, where they
could see nothing but
thick smoke.
Although all the women
were finally able to
escape, memories of the
attack continue to haunt
them. Nayak, who refused
to go back to the
convent in Balliguda and
was therefore sent to a
convent in Phulbani
district, finds it
difficult to sleep. She
often shouts in the
middle of the night,
saying, “They are coming
to kill us.”
In the same way, Sister
Siba, Sister Hemanti
Minz, Sister Rohini
Pradhan and Sister
Jerina Kollammaparambil
of the Mt. Carmel
Convent in Phulbani have
not been able to go back
to their normal daily
routine since they
witnessed attacks in
their convent.
Further, Sasmita
Sualsing, a 15-year-old
orphan girl at a convent
in Padangi and student,
is unable to concentrate
on her studies since she
saw her church being
vandalized and burned by
the Hindu extremists.
How these cases will be
handled, Dayal said,
would be a test for the
state administration and
India’s criminal justice
system.
“For the Sangh
Parivar (family of
groups linked to the
Rashtriya Swayamsevak
Sangh, India’s chief
Hindu nationalist
body),” he added, “the
gender violence,
thoroughly exposes all
their pretence at
respect for women, which
they seem to have in the
same measure as they
have respect for the
laws – zero.”
Many victims are still
in the jungles fearing
further physical attack,
while hundreds of
displaced Christians in
Kandhamal remain in
various relief camps set
up by the state
government.
Sexual Assaults
There were many
unreported cases of
attempted rape and
molestation during the
attacks, Dayal said.
“Even nuns suffered
physical attacks in the
Kandhamal violence,”
Dayal told Compass,
adding that he had asked
the National Commission
of Women to inquire into
those incidents. He said
he would send a detailed
report to the Justice
Basudev Panigrahi
Enquiry Commission,
which is investigating
into the attacks.
At least two Christian
women were raped by
Hindutva (Hindu
nationalist) extremists
and were not willing to
report it to police,
Dayal said. Due to the
stigma of rape in rural
parts of India, many
victims do not like to
disclose or report it.
The study, however,
highlights several cases
of abuse of women.
On December 25, a group
of extremists sexually
assaulted a 16-year-old
Christian girl, Kumari
Sonali Digal, from
Barakhama village. The
incident took place in a
jungle near Barakhama,
where Christians had
fled.
As Digal was running
along with the other
girls to the jungle, a
nail pierced her foot
and it started bleeding.
Left behind, she had to
spend the night alone.
The following day, she
decided to go to a
village close by in
search of drinking
water. On the way, a
group of Hindu
extremists saw her and
assaulted her sexually.
One of the boys from the
group also put vermilion
on her forehead to mark
her “conversion” to
Hinduism.
The same day, another
group of rioters tried
to sexually assault five
women, including two
nuns, and a 17-year-old
girl.
The five women, Sister
Sujata, Sister Sitara
Kujur, Jyosona Joni,
Ranjita Digal and
Padmini Pradhan, along
with 17-year-old Rajani
Ekka, were hiding under
the staircase of the Mt.
Carmel Convent’s
building in Balliguda.
The Hindu extremists had
set the building on
fire.
Although the women were
choking on the smoke,
they wanted to wait for
the attackers to leave
before they could move
out. But rioters
searching for Christians
spotted the women. The
attackers caught them
and began trying to
manhandle them with the
intention of sexually
assaulting them, but the
women held each other
and managed to flee.
Premature Births
According to the study,
at least four Christian
women gave premature
births in abject
conditions in jungles
and without medical
attention in the
December cold.
A 23-year-old woman who
was eight months
pregnant, Jhunuta Digal,
was in her father’s
house in Barakhama
village on Christmas day
when the violence broke
out. Her parents were
not home, and she and
her husband ran to save
their lives. Due to the
chaos, she was separated
from her husband.
Alone in the Penukupudi
jungle, she developed
labor pains. The baby
was born prematurely
that night.
Likewise, 26-year-old
Muktimeri Parichha from
Ulipadar village, then
eight months pregnant as
well, also gave birth to
a boy before her due
date.
Early on Christmas day,
Christians in Ulipadar
ran to the Panagadu
hills to escape the
attacks. The Christians
remained there till
December 28 without food
and water. During the
period, Parichha
delivered a baby boy.
Though she had family
members close at hand,
there were no medical
facilities or even a
knife to cut the
umbilical cord. The
family had to use sharp
stones to cut the cord.
After the birth, they
wrapped the baby with
leaves, as it was cold
and there was no clean
cloth available.
Another Christian woman
from Ulipadar village,
26-year-old Kumudini
Nayak, developed labor
pains in a jungle in
Turanipani village in
neighboring Gajapati
district, 10 kilometers
(6.2 miles) from
Ulipadar, where she had
fled with her family. A
local villager gave them
shelter, but she
delivered a premature
baby without any medical
assistance.
Similarly, 27-year-old
Manimala Pradhan from
Bamunigam village
delivered her baby
before the due date. As
she reached a nearby
jungle with her family,
she fainted from
exhaustion. As there was
nothing to keep her
warm, the family members
lit a fire with dry
leaves.
She gave birth and
remained without food or
medical help for hours.
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