Defying blessings of the goddess and the community: Disputes
over sati (widow burning) in contemporary India
Masakazu Tanaka.
1.Introduction.
This article aims to make clear the nature of ritual violence
through the analysis of disputes over sati in contemporary India,
pointing out the difficulties in defying it and investigating
the possibilities of overcoming it. Originally, Sati referred
to chaste women and the goddess symbolising chastity and not to
the custom of Hindu widows being burned or buried with the husbandfs
corpse(1). It was the British colonial rulers who understood
the word sati as the act of burning widows. The idea is that the
life on this earth literally comes to an end there and the husband
and wife live together for ever in heaven. The British prohibited
sati as a brutal custom in the beginning of the nineteenth century.
Many researchers have already attempted analyses of sati in those
days and of the disputes leading to the prohibition of sati(2).
Here I deal with the sati that took place in India in 1987 and
its repercussions. I had visited the village concerned around
six months after the incident, but the atmosphere was still such
that no research could be conducted openly(3). For this reason,
newspaper and magazine articles on the incident will be used here
as the objects of analysis. The number of articles on this topic
comes to about two hundred ranging from those that just report
the facts of the sati incident and the names of people arrested
to special reports of several pages in length(4). In addition
to these there are many research articles by historians, religious
studies specialists and anthropologists that have been published
till recently. In this article, I first present a brief account
of the incident in 1987 and then analyse the disputes over sati
appearing in newspapers. What I want to focus on in particular
are the beliefs behind sati, the pro-sati views of those who praise
and defend sati and the anti-sati views of those who criticise
it as an evil tradition of the past.
Ritual violence refers to two things: patterned or formalised
violence and violent elements in ritual. In other words this is
community violence in the sense that it is socially sanctioned(5),
and it is divine violence in the sense that it is linked to a
supernatural being. As we will see later, sati is also ritualised
violence which is worshipped by many people and blessed by the
goddess. Widows who can receive the blessings of the goddess are
limited. The widow must also show a miracle in the act of sati.
Once this is accepted those who oppose the sati are cursed by
the divine beings. Thus to reproach sati means the same as criticising
the community and its system of belief. This is not just a matter
of criticising violence as evil, since in order to criticise it,
the community and the supernatural beings have to be reprimanded.
Disputes over sati teach us the difficulties in this kind of criticisms
of violence.
2. Deorala, a Site of sati
On 4th September 1987 in Rajasthan, a state in northeast India,
a young woman was cremated along with her husband who had died
a few hours ago. To be more accurate, the word cremated applies
only to the husband since the woman was still alive when she was
burned. The first article in an English language newspaper reporting
this incident was only a short one of about a hundred words (Indian
Express 6th September 1987)(6). In an article "A young woman
commits sati" dated 5th September, it is said the police
reported that an eighteen-year-old woman has committed sati and
that four relatives have been arrested for aiding the suicide.
There is no comment in particular.
Let me first present what were reported as facts. The village
of Deorala is located eighty kilometres north of the state capital
Jaipur and just twenty kilometres off the main road leading to
Delhi, the capital city and it is by no means an isolated village
in the middle of nowhere. The population is 13,000 and there are
300 households of Rajputs who are the dominant caste and own 70
percent of the land in the entire village. The village is well
off, it has five primary schools and the level of education is
higher than in other regions(7).
Roop Kanwar's sati was the fourth one in this village as far
as it is known and the last sati took place seventy years ago.
Thirty-eight people have committed sati in Rajasthan since Independence
and all have been in the Shekawati district which Deorala is a
part of.
Roop Kanwar was eighteen years old, when she married the twenty-four
year old Man Singh on 17th January 1987. The husband did not have
a job. He had been trying to become a medical student, and had
taken a university entrance examination before and after the marriage.
He was taken into hospital on 3rd September with a stomach pain,
but he died next morning(8). This happened eight months after
the marriage. Taking into account the period that she had spent
in her fathers house after marriage, Roop Kanwar and Man Singhs
time together seems to have been much shorter - some say just
three weeks. She saw her husband's corpse and expressed her will
to perform sati. She immediately put on her red wedding clothes
and went with the funeral procession to the cremation ground.
This was around one o'clock in the afternoon. As the villagers
watched, she sat on the wood piled up to burn the corpse. The
fifteen year-old younger brother of Singh lit the funeral pyre
as the chief mourner(9). There were said to have been four to
five thousand spectators(10). Roop Kanwars parental house got
to know about their daughters sati in the newspapers next morning.
Roop Kanwar was born in a well-to-do family in Jaipur, the
capital city of Rajasthan. Her father ran a transportation business
there. She was born and brought up in Ranchi in the state of Bihar,
and there was a temple of sati nearby. Speculations that this
might have influenced her were also reported. She was educated
up to eighth class in Ranchi. She went on to high school in Jaipur,
but she gave up her studies for marriage. Her father-in-law was
an English teacher in Deorala village.
Roop Kanwar's sati attracted neighbouring villagers and several
thousand worshippers visited every day even after the incident.
The cremation place was called sati stal and was covered by a
yellow canopy mixed with light pink. Four Rajput youths with open
swords stood in front of the place and twenty-seven youths circled
it without stop, guarding the cremation ashes twenty-four hours
a day(11).
The number of participants reached a climax on the morning of
16th September, when the ritual ending the mourning period called
the chunari festival took place. A chunari (an expensive gold-embroidered
silk shawl worn by a bride at her wedding) was taken along with
other items from Roop Kanwar's natal house to her in-laws house
and then to the cremation ground. There the chunari was burned
in the sacred fire amidst the crowd shouting "Victory to
goddess Sati!" and priests chanting the Gayatri mantra. The
priests cooled the ashes down, gathered them in a pot and buried
it. It was said that the ashes were saturated with sacred power
(sakti). A trident was positioned where it was buried, worship
was performed and more chunari shawls were placed on top. Around
300,000 people participated and some had even walked barefoot
from six hundred kilometres away
. Many souvenir shops were set up and many composite pictures
were sold of Roop Kanwar and her husband showing the couple enveloped
in flames. Even after the chunari festival, two to three thousand
people came to Deorala every day. In Roop Kanwars house the wedding
photograph was displayed on the veranda and in the room where
she decided to commit sati, the red and silver sari which she
was wearing at the time was spread out on display. Elite members
of the village decided to collect funds to build a temple for
Roop Kanwar at the place of cremation. It is said 2,000,000 -
3,000,000 yen was collected just on the day of the chunari festival.
Women activists reminded the Chief Minister of Rajasthan of the
anti-sati act of 1827, demanding an explanation from him, but
were turned away. On 14th September, around three hundred and
fifty members of thirteen womens organisations took part in a
silent demonstration in Jaipur criticising the government for
not taking any action on 14th September. They took the matter
to the Rajasthan High Court and on 15th September an order was
passed banning the chunari festival. However, this ban was not
implemented, the government remained silent and there were even
some members of the state assembly who participated in it. At
this point, only Roop Kanwars younger brother-in-law who had
lit the funeral pyre had been arrested. On 21st September a demonstration
was organised in Delhi demanding that the Chief Minister should
resign and that the central government should prevent the construction
of the temple. On 26th over fifty widows joined a demonstration
against sati and government relief measures for widows.
Rajiv Gandhi who was the Prime Minister at the time sent a minister
on 22nd September for investigation into the incident and statement
of the central governments position. The state government reacted
under pressure, and on 19th September the father-in-law and three
other relatives were arrested for aiding suicide. Twenty-eight
people were arrested by 27th September. Policemen were posted
in the village and all souvenir shops were banned by 2nd October.
The state government issued a law prohibiting the practice and
encouragement of sati on 1st October. On 20th October the police
demolished a Roop Kanwar monument and on 31st October they arrested
five people belonging to the Association for Protection of the
Righteousness of Sati (Sati Dharma Rakshya Samiti) for encouraging
the glorification of sati.
Against these moves of the anti-sati lobby, the pro-sati groups
responded by organising a demonstration of around five hundred
Rajput men in Jaipur on 19th September as a protest against the
arrests made on that day. They demanded that the government should
not interfere in religious matters. On 27th September the first
meeting of the Association for Protection of the Righteousness
of Sati was held in Deorala, and the core members were the Rajputs
living in Jaipur. On 8th October they hosted a pro-sati demonstration
in Jaipur of about fifty thousand people, which was the largest
demonstration organised after the incident. Kalyan Singh Kalvi
who was a central figure in the Association for Protection of
the Righteousness of Sati and the leader of the states Janata
Party also participated and gave a speech at the demonstration.
The influence of anti-sati movements went beyond Rajasthan and
on 2nd October a womens organisation criticised the procession
at a festival of a temple dedicated to sati in Bombay. Festivals
were also banned in a sati temple in Calcutta. Thirty-six womens
organisations demonstrated in Delhi on 4th November demanding
the establishment of a law prohibiting sati for the whole of India.
In response to this, a new prohibition law was passed in the Lower
House and Upper House by 16th December. The Chief Minister of
Rajasthan resigned on 18th January, and one of the reasons is
said to be his inadequate response to Roop Kanwars sati incident.
However, those arrested were later released without bail and no
trials have been carried out. Furthermore, in spite of the legal
regulations, eight thousand people gathered in Deorala for the
first anniversary of Roop Kanwars death.
Let me make a brief summary of the points of dispute. First
of all, the pro-sati viewpoint sees sati as an honoured tradition
particular to the Rajputs or Hindus and is antagonistic to the
state. By considering sati as religious, it criticises state intervention.
The anti-sati viewpoint held most strongly by womens organisations,
criticises sati as savage and emphasises the importance of education
and the improvement in status of widows. For them, sati is a womens
problem and a custom that symbolises the low status of women in
India. There is no question of it being a miraculous divine deed
and there is no such thing as voluntary sati. They argue that
sati cannot be said to be religious and that it is a means of
making money at the expense of women. Their attack is also directed
against the government as they declare that the government is
not sincerely trying to outlaw sati and that the legal prohibitions
are merely a gesture. But what they actually did was to call for
government action. They not only demanded the urgent arrest of
the relatives involved in Roop Kanwar's sati, but also acted against
temples commemorating sati in the past in Calcutta and
Bombay, saying that they glorify sati.
3. Sati as miracle
Here I would like to consider the beliefs behind sati. The anthropologist,
Harlan gives the following explanation(12). In Rajasthan, the
value of a woman is determined by her chastity towards the husband
(pati). By this the husband is protected from all kinds of danger.
The practice of this value is called pativrata. The woman performs
another practice when the husband dies. This is sativrata and
by this her body gets hot. That is why it is said that when she
chooses her death on the funeral pyre, she does not feel the heat
of the flames at all. When she dies, she is called sati mata (Sati
goddess). Sati is the manifestation of the moral goodness (sat)
in women. In the newspapers, sat is expressed as something that
takes hold of a widow, or it is explained that only a widow who
has received a revelation from the goddess leaves everything behind
and performs sati (Telegraph 10th October 1987).
Let us take a more detailed look at the process between the husbands
death and the act of sati. When the widow tells her family of
her intension to commit sati, she puts her finger near a candle
flame and proves that it does not get burned. Next she takes a
bath in a river and changes into her bridal clothes. If it is
raining, it will stop and the suns rays will shine on the funeral
pyre. The widow jumps on to the pile of wood. It is said that
the husband comes to life for a moment to acknowledge his wifes
sati. No one lights the pyre. Flames appear from the heat of the
widows body itself, as she receives the goddess's blessing. For
the widow, it feels like bathing in water and is literally called
"bathing in flames" (agni snana).
Roop Kanwar was filled with power and due to this power she
was able to perform sati. Then, she became a goddess and gained
the power to grant the wishes of other people. People came into
contact with this sacred power at the cremation ground and sought
for all kinds of worldly benefits.
From the point of view of other women, Roop Kanwars sati signified
her exceptional strength. The power of the widow who has decided
to perform sati appears as a blessing and at the same time a curse
to people. People cannot stop sati in fear of her curse. It is
said that the lineage of the man who tried to prevent the sati
in Deorala seventy years ago came to an end after that. It is
also said that the policeman who arrested Roop Kanwars father-in-law
fell ill.
Whatever the status given to sati in the scriptures, the explanations
above seem to be enough to tell us about the beliefs that bring
about sati. However, there is a contradiction here. For instance,
a woman who commits sati is destined to be so, that means she
is a chaste woman who has always been serving her husband. But,
if that is the case, why does the husband die before her cannot
be explained? Why did she not die before her husband? This is
surely a major contradiction if we take into consideration the
fact that a widow is often said to be the cause of her husbands
death. Moreover, emphasis on the miracle may also lead to the
denial of the sati that actually occurred. As some of the villagers
point out, the fact that it was the younger brother-in-law who
lit the funeral pyre and that there were some people arrested
in Roop Kanwars sati led to the denial of its authenticity (Times
of India 11th December 1987). There is also a view that sat could
not have manifested in Roop Kanwar since she was too young(13).
In this way, the logic of the people supporting sati seems comprehensive
at first sight if we accept the concepts that are presupposed,
such as the existence of sat and its power. But it is by no means
so, and even if the beliefs themselves were not denied by facts,
the authenticity of each of the incidents would be questioned.
Roop Kanwars sati was also not exempt from this inspection.
Furthermore, it is believed that the one who commits sati takes
away not only the sins of her own, but also those of her husband,
the ancestors and the descendents. This is a belief that deeply
reflects the sacrificial nature of sati. I heard for instance
that in the case of Roop Kanwars sati, there was plenty of rain
and abundant crops that year thanks to her. It would not be impossible
here to identify the aspect of human sacrifice. There are various
aspects to sati that cannot be understood simply as beliefs regarding
chaste women.
4. Sati as resistance
Roop Kanwars father said that he was proud of what his daughter
had done. She has made both our family and the in-laws family
immortal (Indian Express 11th September 1987). But this was not
all. As we will see below, her death can be interpreted as not
only making her family and relatives immortal, but also as being
used politically to make the Rajputs and their land Rajasthan
immortal.
As we have already seen, from the beginning of the sati incident,
there was a conspicuous attempt to understand and defend this
in relation to the Rajput caste. Demonstrations were organised
many times with the Rajputs as the core. Why the Rajputs? If we
take note of the fact that sati is a phenomenon particular to
the Rajputs of Rajasthan, it is necessary to consider the conditions
that the Rajputs are in when thinking about contemporary sati.
Rajputs are a royal caste of northwestern India and were highly
regarded as warriors even in the colonial period. They used to
rule over Rajasthan, but their power has been weakened in recent
years, externally due to the emergence of other castes and internally
due to land reforms(14). This is a crisis for the Rajputs. Sati
originates from the act of women committing suicide after losing
their husbands in battle to prevent being shamed by the enemy,
thus, is a suitable symbol for demonstrating their past glory
both internally and externally. Sati can be seen as a means of
resistance to overcome the crisis of Rajput identity or tradition(15).
A member of a pro-sati organisation, Kalyan Singh Kalvi, did
not stop defending sati as a part of his (Rajput) tradition, in
spite of the criticisms of sati by the Congress party members
in the centre (Times of India 16th September 1987). Kalvi later
weakened his view a little and said that the Rajasthan state government
should have deterred sati in accordance with the law, but it was
not right that the government should intervene in the chunari
festival, and the construction of a memorial since these were
only a part of family rituals (Times of India 29th September 1987).
Here the relationship between politics and religion and that between
the state and the family are put to question. Moreover, he even
went on to state that the actions of the government and the police
were wounding the religious sentiments of the Hindus, especially
the Rajputs, and to hurt their pride would be very dangerous for
the country since the Rajputs are emotional people and it is because
of this that they have produced many martyrs as soldiers of the
country (Times of India 30th September 1987).
Other pro-sati people emphasise similar points. According to
them, enforced sati is a crime and should be reprimanded, but
voluntary sati cannot be opposed or deterred. To do so, they say,
would be government intervention in religious matters. They state
that matters regarding religion should not be decided by the government
or the courts, but by religious men such as the Shankararcharyas
who head the four most important Hindu monasteries in India.
In this way, the defence of sati is reconsidered as the tradition
of not only Rajputs but of Hindus in general, and its authority
is sought in a sphere outside secular power. Here lies the reason
why many articles point to the relationship between defenders
of sati and contemporary Hindu nationalism, which calls to make
Hinduism the state religion and India a Hindu state. It is thought
that just as religion is only a tool for gaining political power
in Hindu nationalism, sati is also only a tool in the power politics
for politicians(16).
What I want to emphasise here is the point that it is not only
because sati is a custom particular to India that it becomes a
symbol. Not only this, but also more generally there is a historical
relationship between Indian women and Hindu nationalism in the
past. That is to say, in India as the anti-British movements became
popular at the end of the nineteenth century, it came to be understood
that women were the source and storehouse of Indian tradition.
Unlike the men who worked outside, women who stayed at home were
transformed into unpolluted beings, who were not influenced by
the effects of modernisation and westernisation and were the basis
of nationalism dreaming for a future independent state. Here the
women who were idealised belonged to the upper castes observing
social segregation (purdah). It was not only the British and Indian
men who were put in opposition to this category. Westernised Hindu
women and lower caste women who had no choice but to work outside
along with men were also compared to these upper caste women.
In this way, although it was paradoxical, a discourse was born
according to which subjectivity was granted to the very women
whose place was inside(17).
A similar rhetoric can be seen the dispute regarding Roop Kanwar's
sati. That is to say, sati contains the paradox that it recognises
true subjectivity in women who are subjugated to their husbands.
Moreover, sati differentiates Rajput women from other low caste
women in the region ("Their sati is not real.")(18)
and at the same time it functions to negate the urban and westernised
women and the secularism that they represent. Sati becomes the
ultimate tradition to be observed by Rajput women. This tradition
is ultimate for women in the sense that they are its true heirs
and thus to prove themselves as Rajput women they have to choose
death. Their subjectivity can only be actualised by death.
5. Resistance against sati
Most of the English language newspapers reporting Roop Kanwar's
sati criticises it(19). For instance, Indian Express dated 11th
September published an editorial with a title saying that a "barbarian
tradition" has come back to life. In the editorial titled
"Savage and primitive" published on the fourteenth day
after the incident when the chunari ritual came to and end, it
pointed out that, despite being an educated man, the father-in-law
did not prevent the sati nor think that it was against the law.
It also states that Roop Kanwar's death is related to violence
against women, such as dowry murders and abortion of female foetuses
after testing for its sex. It deplores that this incident proves
India to be still very far from the twenty-first century. In other
newspapers, sati is seen as "savage act" (Hindu 17th
September 1987) and expressions such as "shame" and
"inhuman act" are used and the word superstition is
repeatedly employed (Hindustan Times 18th September 1987). The
many opinions published in the newspapers were much the same.
What is common in these editorials is the significance of education
and administrative leadership beyond political interests. They
criticise that the state government did hardly anything after
the sati occurred in fear of what might happen to the results
of the next elections. They also approve of the establishment
of the new legal measures, but question the efficacy of the law.
Sati was understood above all as the symbol of the pathetic
condition of widows in India. The fact that demonstrations by
widows were organised points to this. In Hindu society, particularly
among upper castes, widows are considered to be most inauspicious(20).
This is because the cause of the husbands death is thought to
be the wife who is still alive. Widow remarriage is accepted only
among low castes. When a woman becomes a widow, various measures
are taken to hide her sexuality which is potentially dangerous(21).
The widow must shave the long hair which is a symbol of womanhood,
take off all her jewellery and wear white or plain light colour
sari. She is prohibited from taking her meals with other family
members and is not allowed to participate in her own sons wedding.
She is considered very inauspicious and so is not fit for an auspicious
occasion such as marriage. A married woman who dies before her
husband is the complete opposite to the widow. If the couple has
a son then she is perfect. A married woman whose husband is alive
has important roles in rituals, such as marriage, as an auspicious
being. So it was said that if there were no such discrimination
against widows, no one would want to commit sati.
Moreover, sati is said to be a means of deterring the wifes
inheritance right. Especially in the case of Roop Kanwar who had
no children, the large amount of dowry in cash and kind given
to the husband at the time of the wedding was supposed to be returned
when she became a widow(22). For this reason it was also interpreted
and reported that the in-laws who did not want to do so forced
the sati to take place.
There was also the criticism that contemporary sati is not a
honourable tradition, but merely a religious show put up by the
entire village aiming to gain the enormous amount of donations
that would come from it. It was argued that this is not tradition
but a contemporary phenomenon in a society penetrated by the market
economy(23).
Furthermore, there were doubts regarding the incident itself.
In a newspaper dated 25th September, a teacher who had taught
Roop Kanwar in Ranchi was reported to have said that she was forced
to sit on the funeral pyre and that she did not seem particularly
religious when she was a student (Times of India 25th September
1987). But, the fact that she was forced has not been proved.
A newspaper dated 29th September expresses doubts whether Roop
Kanwar really committed sati of her own accord (Hindu 29th September
1987). According to one view, when Man Singh's body was carried
into the house, the members of the household blamed Roop Kanwar
that she had brought misfortune to the house and said that even
greater misfortunes will befall the house in the future. It was
written that even if she had tried to escape, it would have been
impossible due to the way in which the wood was piled up and her
screaming would not have been heard due to the cheering of the
crowds. Later, on 2nd October, a police report was published saying
that Roop Kanwar had been trying to escape from the flames that
were burning her body.
Reports based on actual statements began to appear only after
mid October. First, a report was published by three representatives
of the Bombay Union of Journalists (Indian Express 23rd October
1987)(24). There it was pointed out that Roop Kanwar was hiding
in a shed. After this, the tendency to discuss Roop Kanwars sati
as murder grew stronger(25). However, even in these reports the
truth is obscure.
The above criticisms moved the government, but were nullified
in the face of enthusiasm of those actually involved. Those who
were against sati were to face some dilemmas themselves. These
were the problems concerning the subjectivity of women and the
fact that, however justified their argument was, it nonetheless
could lead to supporting the control and punishment of minority
groups, the Rajputs here, by state power.
To totally deny the existence of voluntary sati would be to accept
the view of women as being powerless and as victims. In the case
of sati the object of violence is a woman. But to criticise sati
as the ultimate violence of patriarchal society and to talk of
women as victims of evil customs could lead to denying the nature
of women as agents from the start. As a result, one ends up supporting
the typical view of women in patriarchal society, that they are
dependent and cannot decide anything for themselves. It would
then seem that the pro-sati discourse praising the heroism of
women who commit sati was recognising the subjectivity of women,
though it may not apply to women in general, as it denies the
agency of those widows who have failed to commit sati.
On the other hand, if they accept voluntary sati, not only would
they be unable to deny sati itself, but they would also be strengthening
the image of women as being tied to tradition in this case as
well. This is because the decision to commit sati is made by a
woman who wants to be subjugated to her husband and sacrifice
everything for him. This clearly shows that sati is literally
the ultimate ideological apparatus which establishes a womans
subjected subjectivity(26). There is a very fine line between
seeing her as the victim of tradition and seeing her as the agent
of positive choice, since the latter also aims at voluntary subjection.
Thus highly educated urban women try to side with the woman and
as a result end up constructing an image of women different from
themselves(27).
Moreover, the anti-sati lobby emphasised the need for legal
reforms prohibiting sati and the glorification of sati. This signifies
the demand for state intervention and hence it differs little
from the nineteenth century imperialist view. In the nineteenth
century, legal system was prepared as a means to civilise India
whose backwardness was symbolised by sati and thus colonial rule
was legitimised(28). At that time, episodes of British people
rescuing widows just as they were about to throw themselves into
the flames were often reported. It can be said that in 1987 this
picture was replaced by that of urban intellectuals civilising
savage rural Indians. In this way, the intellectuals, especially
the activists in women's organisations in this case, came to be
seen as the enemies of "nationalism". They were criticised
as women poisoned by western thought who did not understand tradition,
and also as agents of the state oppressing the local community.
The Rajputs have come to positively accept the position as a minority
opposing the modern nation state(29).
6. Sati in the west coast of Sri Lanka
On 5th October 1982, an elder of the Tamil fishing village
in the west coast of Sri Lanka where I was staying for my fieldwork
died. He was seventy-one years old. A funeral was to take place
in his house the next morning. Two barbers were to conduct the
funeral. There is a division of labour so that members of the
barber caste usually officiate in family rituals such as funerals,
which involve impurity, and Brahman priests in those that do not,
such as marriage. In the case of funerals too, the Brahman officiates
the ritual at the end of mourning when the impurity disappears.
First, the corpse is carried out the house on to a platform set
up in the courtyard. The male relatives pour water on the corpse
to clean it. Then the women do the same. The barber shaves the
old mans beard and moustache. Those who are present rub turmeric
and sesame oil on the forehead of the corpse. The women then wash
the body with soap. After being washed, the corpse is moved on
to a wooden bed placed in the courtyard. There the body is rubbed
with sacred ashes and dressed in white waistcloth with gold embroidered
borders and white shirt which is the formal wedding attire. The
body is sprinkled with perfume and decorated with flowers.
Then the old wife who has been inside the house until then appears
in the courtyard led by the hand by another woman. She wears a
bright red wedding sari. Not only does this seem to be a mismatch
for a funeral atmosphere but also the fact that it is an old woman
wearing it makes it appear strange. The wife seems ready to collapse
at any moment. She goes round the corpse once and throws the paddy
in a mortar on to the corpse. She then sits next the corpse. After
receiving the blessings of the women, she lies down on the right
hand side of the corpse. A white cloth is placed covering the
two bodies and the relatives through paddy over it followed by
other participants. When this is finished the wife gets up. Then
three women cut and take off her gold necklace called tari
which was presented by the husband at the wedding and is the symbol
of married women and hence of auspiciousness. A new plain sari
is presented to the wife by a male relative. The corpse is then
carried to the burial ground. Only men accompany this and the
women stay at home.
What I want point out here is that the funeral for the dead is
conducted in such a way as to remind us of a wedding and that
the farewell to the dead man is also extended to the wife. Both
wear a wedding costume and moreover the wife lies next to the
corpse. A white cloth is put over them and the unity of the husband
and wife is emphasised in a dramatic way. The people bid farewell
to both of them. The wife is thought to die along with the husband.
She then becomes a widow. The villagers explained this custom
in which the wife lies next to the husband as sati.
What kind of an attitude can an anthropologist take towards an
alien custom in another country such as sati? First he
can clarify the beliefs behind sati. This is what I have
presented in the above accounts of the view on ideal women regarding
sati and the beliefs regarding blessing and curse. The
anthropologist Harlan focused on the word sat, and there
is a similar word in Tamil called karpu. This word is also
related to concepts such as chastity, heat and protection of husband.
If this point is more generalised, much of it overlaps with the
discussion above and can become an explanation of the prominent
view on women in Hindu society.
In Hindu society, death or funeral has been understood by the
concepts impure and inauspicious. Certainly death is impure and
the children and the spouse of the deceased have to undergo a
certain period of mourning. They accept the impurity caused by
death and they are also inauspicious. However, from this point
of view, the reason why in Sri Lanka the wife must lie next to
the husbands corpse wearing a wedding costume cannot be explained.
Wedding dress is a symbol of auspiciousness, and marriage is one
of the few life cycle rites that do no cause impurity. Why a wedding
dress in a funeral? In order to answer this question we have to
take womens sexuality into account.
An ideal life of a woman is that in which her mature sexuality
is always controlled by her husband. There are three cases of
deviation from this ideal, that is, getting married after menstruation
starts, the husband dying before the wife and adultery. Mature
sexuality begins with menarche. Therefore an ideal marriage should
take place before first menstruation. After first menstruation
the woman goes to live with her husband. However, child marriages
were legally prohibited by the series of reforms in the colonial
period. Today, marriage takes place in most castes after first
menstruation, but in cases where first menstruation is ritually
celebrated as in South India, the first menstruation ritual itself
sometimes assumes a form resembling the marriage rites. Thus first
menstruation ritual is also the confirmation and at the same time
the control of sexuality, though it is insufficient compared to
marriage. In contrast there are cases as those in North India
where the first menstruation is ritually completely ignored. I
would like to leave the various interpretations of first menstruation
and marriage rites for a separate article, but what is important
here is that the husbands death should be seen as the end of
this kind of control. That is to say, sati is a voluntary
proposal of death by women as a means of resistance against the
ending of the control of their sexuality that was completed at
marriage.
Coming back to the funeral in Sri Lanka, if it were not for the
comment that this is a kind of sati we might have found
a more romantic and positive meaning for the scene where the widow
appears dressed in her wedding dress. We might even have overlooked
the glimpse of ritual violence in the cutting off of the tari.
But we cannot just interpret this as a symbol of the strength
of the love between husband and wife. This is because it is precisely
this kind of discourse that has been legitimising sati
and it is because of this that it has been the object of criticism.
It is also insufficient to ignore the example observed in Sri
Lanka as just being symbolic, since by doing so there is the possibility
of misjudging the effect and the extent of the violence that is
at work in sati. In this way, we can say that the analyses
of the funeral in Sri Lanka and the sati in Rajasthan make
possible a deeper understanding of each.
Here I want to point out that in the case of the example from
Sri Lanka, even if the sati was conducted symbolically,
there is no way that the widows status is raised or divinised.
It can be said then that the example from the Sri Lankan fishing
village is just a poor imitation of sati. This brings to
mind the discourse that true sati is only possible for
Rajput women. Here the discussion goes back to the previous questions.
Why is it the Rajputs who bring about sati? Why Roop Kanwar?
To answer these questions, the explanations such as the misery
of widows and control of sexuality seem to be much too general.
At the same time, these explanations ignore the nationalist view
of women which has been historically constructed in India as I
have mentioned above. Analytical perspectives such as comparison,
investigation of meaning and holistic view which characterise
cultural anthropology certainly can be said to contribute to a
deeper understanding by linking Sri Lanka and Rajasthan, by not
ignoring the symbolism and by taking into consideration the aspect
of womens sexuality. By doing so, some light can be shed on the
relationship between death and sexuality which has been neglected
in previous studies of funerals that emphasis impurity and inauspiciousness.
However, it might be said that the anxiety of previous cultural
anthropological explanations, which emphasise the whole and meaning,
lays in the fact that the better the explanations are the more
they end up accepting the violence that is the object of analysis.
In the last section, I would like to return to the disputes over
sati keeping in mind how far it might be possible to break
the link between explanation, understanding and acceptance.
7. From blessing to violence and to pain
Sati is violence in the name of blessing exercised by a goddess
choosing one woman out of many widows. It is the family of her
in-laws, the village, and the Rajputs who actually exercise the
goddess violence. Sati is carried out in the name of the goddess
and the community. The chosen widow becomes a goddess, blesses
the people in turn and chooses another widow.
In order to deny this belief and to accuse sati as being murder,
one would have to deny the power of the goddess and of the community.
This is rationalism and secularism which is anti-religious, and
also individualism which is anti-community. This is indeed the
anti-sati stance. It is said that only the spread of education
based on these ideals will truly liberate women. However, in reality,
those who are against sati have no choice but to appeal to the
state to prohibit sati. From the point of view of the sati defenders,
this is state interference in religion and against secularism
(guarantee of religious freedom) and in so far as sati is seen
as a family problem, it is state intervention in the private life.
In other words, the pro-sati lobby also happens to respond using
the same logic of secularism and individualism as the anti-sati
lobby.
The dilemma against this violence called sati does not end here.
For instance, if sati is seen as murder, the people who lit the
fire or were directly involved in the sati would indeed be arrested
and judged in the name of the law, but the collective nature of
the violence would be ignored. Moreover, if the act of murder
were emphasised, the violence at the symbolic level would be missed.
The everyday discrimination or violence exercised against widows
within the home would remain unseen. Furthermore, the power of
discourse that distinguishes and differentiates between widows
and married women whose husbands are alive would also be overlooked.
These points can be said to illustrate the difficulties in criticising
violence, especially ritual violence that is legitimised by religion
(community) and which is usually only one element in a ritual.
The way to criticise ritual violence such as that represented
by sati would be to deny the discourse that it is a divine blessing,
that is to say, to make clear that it is not a blessing but violence,
and that it does not involve happiness but pain for the one concerned
and sorrow for the close relations(30).
For instance, Asahi newspaper dated 13th October 1987 reports
Roop Kanwar's sati as follows. The headline was "A young
wife in flames embracing her husband who died from illness".
The story begins with the sentence 'Kanwar sat on the wood piled
up for her husband's cremation and put his head on her lap. She
smiled as her body burned in the raging fire and then fell collapsing'.
The words "in flames" in the headline and "smiling"
are indeed none else than expressions that mystify sati. In Japan,
which is far away from India, sati was just a convenient incident
to satisfy the curiosity about the mysterious country where anything
goes. I will not question their irresponsible attitude here. The
denial of mystification or of the negation of pain typically found
in the word "smiling", that is to say, the complete
denial of the legitimacy of the violence by the divine beings
is one of the few ways of going against the divine and communal
violence. In other words, we have to ask questions regarding the
body of Roop Kanwar which was enveloped in flames and not regarding
sati as an institution and Hindu or Rajput nationalism. By doing
so we can shift the point of discussion from the problem of rational
subject who can make decisions to the problem of embodied subject
that feels pain(31).
The dilemma faced by the anti-sati lobby, which emphasises the
subjectivity of women, is similar to the dilemma that anthropologists
feel when confronted with ritual violence of othercultures such
as "female circumcision". This is because anthropologists
cannot find a decisive solution as to how they can talk about
the victims of violence, how they can resolve the violence itself,
and whether they as anthropologists should really say they ought
to do so in the first place. This difficulty lies in the fact
that they have the beliefs and institutions legitimising violence
as their framework of explanation. As long as cultural anthropology
respects other cultures from the point of view of cultural relativism,
it is not possible to criticise ritual violence. This is more
so if it has to do with the identity making of individuals. It
is probably necessary to somehow disengage the connection that
to understand violence leads to approving and defending it. To
focus on pain here would be to point out that the individual is
not necessarily totally bound to the systems of meanings or beliefs
and social institutions, and does not necessarily become a completely
subjected subject. The very fact of a body that responds to and
resists pain shows us that there are aspects which cannot be subjectified.
Desire and pain rooted in the body undermine the ideologically
constructed subject. At that moment, the individual momentarily
overcomes the subjected subject. We must not overlook this moment.
The focus on pain, however, should not mean considering the individual
as an isolated body. Rather, we should make clear the "community
of sorrow" which is hidden by the mystification of pain(32).
This is not about accusing the relatives of acting out of self-interest
and dividing up the pro-sati lobby which emphasises honour. It
is rather about looking for people who accept the pain of sati
as their own. It is by changing the analytic perspective from
blessing to violence and then to pain, from the community of honour
to the community of sorrow that the anthropology of violence can
overcome many difficulties and open up new frontiers.
ENDNOTES
(1) For details of interpretation of sacred texts and historical
sources regarding sati, see V.N. Datta, Sati: Widow Burning in
India, Manohar, New Delhi, 1988, Sakuntala Narasimhan, Sati: A
Study of Widow Burning in India, Viking, New Delhi, 1990, and
Arvind Sharma, Sati: Historical and Phenomenological Essays, Moti
Lal Banarsidas, New Delhi, 1988.
(2) For instance, see Vasudha Dalmia-Luderitz, 'Sati' as a Religious
Rite; Parliamentary Papers on Widow Immolation, 1821-30, Economic
and Political Weekly 27(4), 1992, pp.58-64, Veena Das, Gender
Studies, Cross-Cultural Comparison and the Colonial Organization
of Knowledge, Berkshire Review 21, 1986, pp.58-76, Hanne Georgeson,
Representations of Hindu Women through Some of the Rewritings
on Widow-burning, TAJA 3(3), 1992, pp.150-174, Lata Mani, Contentious
Traditions: The Debate on SATI in Colonial India, Cultural Critique
7, 1887, pp.119-156, the Female Subject, the Colonial Gaze: Reading
Eyewitness Accounts of Widow Burning, in Tejaswini Niranjana,
P.Sudir and Vivek Dhareshwar (eds.), Interrogationg Modernity:
Culture and Colonialism in India, Seagull Books, Calcuttta, 1993,
pp.273-290, Gayatri Chakravorty Spavik, Can the Subaltern Speak?
in Cary Nelson and Lawrence Grossberg (eds.), Marxism and the
Interpretation of Culture, University of Illinois Press, Urbana,
1988, pp.271-313, Dorothy K Stein, Women to Burn: Suttee as a
Normative Institution, Signs 4(2), 1978, pp.253-273. Of course,
although the nineteenth century disputes over sati centering in
Bengal are not exactly the same as those I deal with in this article,
they are not unrelated. In fact, in 1987 the nineteenth century
disputes were often mentioned in the newspapers and there the
British government was praised. In order to consider the post-colonial
condition that India faces, it is necessary to keep the nineteenth
century disputes on sati in view.
(3) When I visited Deorala in March 1988, there was a police
checkpoint on the road on the way to the village where I had to
leave my camera.
(4) Since I deal mainly with English language newspapers and
magazines, the opinions are mostly against sati, but I have tried
as much as possible to include the pro-sati views found in Hindi
language newspapers through translation of them. I would also
like to point out that I have not given the sources of the opinions
which recur many times in different articles.
(5) Already around a hundred years ago, Durkheim had declared
sati to be a collective intentional suicide enforced by a group
in his work Suicide [1897]. He said that this occurs in a society
where individuals are almost buried in the society and individual
personalities are not respected, and when the society neglects
life and takes it for granted that individuals give their lives
for it without any important reason. See also for R. S. Gandhi,
Sati as Altruistic Suicide, Contributions to Asian Studies 10,
1977, pp.141-157. As it will become clear later on, those who
criticise sati is faced with the dilemma of having to accept this
kind of view of Indian society.
(6) The first newspaper to report this incident was the local
paper Rajasthan Patrika (5th September 1987), but it is said that
it was treated in much the same way [Sharada Jain, Nirja Misra
and Kavita Srivastava, Deorala Episode: Women's Protest in Rajasthan,
Economic and Political Weekly 22(45), 1987, pp.1891-1894].
(7) The literacy rate is 70 percent and 40 percent for women.
This is very high considering that the average literacy rate in
Rajasthan is only 2 percent for women.
(8) There are many speculations regarding the cause of death,
such as intestinal inflammation and acute appendicitis. According
to one speculation, he committed suicide due to the news he received
fifteen days before his death of the failure in his repeated attempt
at the entrance examination. The doctor who saw Man Singhs death
went into hiding just afterwards and did not respond to police
questions.
(9) This is usually done by the eldest son, but the couple had
no children. It is said that in the case of sati, a minor is usually
chosen in fear of police arrest.
(10) There are several views about the number of spectators.
Some reports say that the number was four to five hundred since
no one openly said that they saw it in fear of police arrest.
(11) This was because it was feared that the ashes might be misused
by magicians (tantri).
(12) Here I have referred in particular to Lindsey Harlan, Perfection
and Devotion: Sati Tradition in Rajasthan, in John S. Hawley
(ed.), Sati: The Blessing and the Curse:The Burning of Wives in
India, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1994, pp.112-181. See
also Kumkum Sangari and Sudesh Vaid, Institutions, Beliefs, Ideologies:
Widow Immolation in Contemporary Rajasthan, in Kumari Jayawardena
and Malathi de Alwis (eds.), Embodied Violence: Communalising
Women's Sexuality in South Asia, Zed Books, London, 1996, pp.240-296,
Sudesh Vaid, Politics of Widow Immolation, Seminar 342,pp.20-23,
1988.
(13) Shobha Kavita, Kanchan Shobita and Sharada, Rural Women
Speak, Seminar 342, pp.40-44, 1988. In this article many critical
voices against sati by the general populace are recorded.
(14) The Rajasthan Land Reform and Resumption of Jagirs Act
was established in 1952. Two years later, the first sati after
independence took place in Rajasthan.
(15) See Vaid, Politics of Widow Immolation for this point.
(16) For instance see the statement by a member of the communist
party given in Times of India (27th September 1987). But at least
Advani, the leader of the BJP (Bharatiya Janata Party) which is
thought to be representative of Hindu nationalism, criticised
sati and stood in opposition against the party members in Rajasthan.
Moreover, the World Hindu Association (Viswa Hindu Parishad),
which called for the demolition of the mosque regarding the Ayodya
problem, also declared a position of opposing all sati since a
distinction cannot be drawn between enforced and voluntary sati
(Indian Express 17th October 1987). The same goes for the religious
sphere, and all were silent except the Shankaracharya of Puri,
or took the opposing position as the Arya Samaj did (The Illustrated
Weekly of India 2nd May 1988). This exposes the fact that sati
is not necessarily all mighty as the symbol of Hindus.
(17) See Partha Chatterjee, Colonialism, Nationalism, and Colonialized
Women: the Contest in India, American Ethnologist 16(4), 1989,
pp.622-633, for this point.
(18) Sati by low castes are criticised as just being a means
for raising status by imitating Rajputs [Harlan, Perfection and
Devotion: Sati Tradition in Rajasthan, p.82].
(19) However, there are subtle differences in the same newspaper,
for instance in the Rajasthan version there is a strong pro-sati
view.
(20) T.N. Kitchlu, Widows in India, Ashish, New Delhi, 1993,
gives a detailed account of widows.
(21) This is by no means an unrealistic anxiety. It was thought
that young widows like Roop Kanwar would commit a "mistake"
at some time or other, even if she were to remain in the in-laws
house or go back to her parent's house and bring dishonour to
both houses.
(22) Since Roop Kanwars parental house was well off, the dowry
included around 460 grams of gold, a fixed bank deposit of 300,000
yen, apart from radio, colour television, refrigerator and so
on.
(23) See Madhu Kishwar and Ruth Vanita, the Burning of Roop
Kanwar, Race & Class 30(1), 1988, pp 59-67, for this point.
(24) I have not read the report Meena Menon, Geeta Sheshu and
Sujata Anandan Trial on Fire: A Report on Roop Kanwars Death,
Bombay: Bombay Union of Journalists, 1987, but its details can
be estimated from Veena Talwar Oldenburg, the Roop Kanwar Case:
Feminist Responses, in John S. Hawley, (ed.), Sati:The Blessing
and the Curse.
(25) There were other reports that Roop Kanwar was drugged and
she was hardly conscious (Times of India 3rd October 1987). It
was also reported that her husband was impotent and she had a
lover so there was no way she would have committed sati [Oldenburg,
the Roop Kanwar Case: Feminist Responses, p.116].
(26) It is indeed ultimate in the sense that the actual woman
involved dies, but subjectification in the sense of Althusser
and Foucault fails. Rather, we should say that sati as a spectacle
functions as a pre-modern ideological apparatus that teaches other
women how they should live or die.
(27) Problems of womens subjectivity regarding sati have been
pointed out by DasGender Studies, Dalmia-LuderitzC 'Sati' as
a Relitious Rite, Julie Leslie, Suttee or Sati: Victim or Victor?
in J. Leslie (ed.), Roles and Rituals for Hindu Women. Pinter,
London, 1991, Rajeswari Sunder Rajan, The Subject of Sati: Pain
and Death in the Contemporary Discourse on Sati, Yale Journal
of Criticism 3(2), 1990, pp.1-28.
(28) See Krishna Iyer, V.R. Maha Sati: Death to Innocents,
Main Stream 26(4), 1987, pp.22-26.
(29) For this point, see Kishwar and Vanita, The Burning of
Roop Kanwar, pp.64-65, In particular. Veena Das, Critical Events:
An Anthropological Peerspective on Contemporary India, Oxford
University Press, Delhi, 1995, considers similar problems regarding
the glorification of sati.
(30) On the one hand, we should not deny the heartfelt pain of
the widow mourning her husband (not necessary due to the misery
of the life as a widow) and the possibility of suicide as a reaction
to this. The problem then no longer becomes the evaluation of
sati, but that of whether suicide is right or wrong. In cases
such as female circumcision or female genital mutilation (FGM)
where the pain is not denied or hidden and is positively valued
as something to overcome, it seems that slightly different arguments
to sati need to be made. For this point see C J. Walley, Searching
for "Voices": Feminism, Anthropology, and the Global
Debate over Female Genital Operations, Cultural Anthropology
12(3), 1997, pp.405-438.
(31) Rajan, The Subject of Sati, focuses on pain from a similar
point of view. Oldenburg, the Roop Kanwar Case: Feminist Responses,
p.125, takes this up and points out that the widows body as a
subject of desire is also hidden in the representation of sati
and argues that the problem should focus on the widow as an embodied
being. Of course, we should not forget the fact that the discourses
about pain in social science, law and medicine transform pain
as it is and disengage it from the people who experience it [Das,
Critical Events, p. 175, also, Language and Body: Transactions
in the Construction of Pain, Daedalus 125(1), 1996, pp.67-91,
Arthur W. Frank, The Wounded Storyteller: Body, Illness, and
Ethics, The University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 1995, pp.178-179,
E.ScarryCThe Body in Pain: the Making and Unmaking of the World,
Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1985].
(32) This corresponds to the concept of "a collective
subjectivity of agents" by Ania Loomba, Dead Women Tell
no Tales: Issues of Female Subjectivity, Subaltern Agency and
Tradition in Colonial and Post-Colonial Writings on Widow Immolation
in India, History Workshop 36, 1993, pp.209-227, which was triggered
off by Rajan, The Subject of Sati. Das, Critical Events, pp.194-196,
proposes anthropology of pain and emphasises the significance
of research on this kind of community.
Masakazu TANAKA, Ph.D.(London), Associate Professor(Institute
for Research in Humanities, Kyoto University).