“The Witch’s Mirror”: A Review of Scholarship on Witchcraft and a Reassessment Based on the Intersectional Lived Experiences of Dalits and Adivasis
Abstract
:1. Definitions
2. Introduction and Argument
An important aspect of the caste system is that those who have dominated the means of production have also tried to dominate the means of symbolic production. This symbolic hegemony then allows them to control the very standards by which their rule is evaluated, so that the perspective of the lower castes has no place in it.
About a year ago, 45-year-old Parwati Devi Chaudhary was beaten to death. She was severely abused throughout the night. The villagers accused her of witchcraft and were determined to kill her. While Parwati Devi was attacked, many villagers stood by and no one did anything to save her. Nothing can make up for the trauma of women who, for example, are forced to eat urine and human feces because they are accused of witchcraft. These women are ostracized and humiliated to such an extent that it is too bad to express in words”.4
“It is hard to believe that in the 21st century women from marginalized communities are being accused of witchcraft and are being punished or even killed on that ground. The present legal system is not sufficient in terms of laws and implementation to protect women against this. Recently I dealt with a case of a Dalit woman in the Kathmandu Valley who was imprisoned for fourteen years because she was supposedly a witch. Her family-in-law had drawn this conclusion because she gave birth to a mentally handicapped child. The woman had two more children and was not allowed to hug or touch her children, not even their clothes. The family treated the woman very cruelly. One day they wanted to kill her in a well-known way here in Nepal: to hit her on the head with a bamboo stick with a rope with a sharp iron tip on it. But the woman survived and managed to escape. However, since she had been locked up all these years, she had no idea how to find her way to a safe place. By chance, she was recognized and returned to her parents. Her husband was sentenced to two years in prison and a fine. Her sister-in-law tried to defend the family, arguing that they had been ordered by a Goddess to act so cruelly. The victim is doing well according to circumstances. She now works in a crèche and this gave her the insight and confidence that she is not a witch, because she had come to believe that herself.”.
3. Research on Witchcraft in South Asia
(…) a seemingly micro conflict between men and women, as it becomes a macrolevel conflict that is the outcome of oppressive relations between the plantation management and workers. I argue that the alienation experienced by the workers, who have no opportunities for social mobility or protest, is the dominant cause behind witch hunts. As seen in similar situations, the workers deal with stress caused by economic, social, and medical factors by looking for a scapegoat. As protest against the real causes of misfortune is not possible because of their alienation, the Adivasi women provide the perfect scapegoat for witchcraft accusations.
Witchcraft practices are telling us a lot about the failure of our discourses of practical reason, rational economics, established religion and moral issues that vex people in their daily lives. They show us occurrences at moments when the hold of mainstream modernist institutions and categories is slipping. They are an effort to embody, to bring down to earth, abstract forces that seem to dictate the rhythm of peoples’ lives; to attribute to human agents the experience of loss, of inequality, of threat, to give fear hand and feet.
Even when they escape with their lives, their stories are silenced by others who dominate the narrative and distance us from the immediacy of the victim’s experience. (…) Women’s lives do not become public easily, and when they do, they tend to be of the ‘man bites dog’ variety–dowry deaths, rape, sati, kidnapping, suicide, infanticide, trafficking etc. While clichéd treatment of ṭonhī [witch] stories will portray women as victims ‘in need of saving’ or ‘in conflict’, contradictions and ambiguities can and do exist.
4. Witchcraft and Lived Experience in Writing and Film
Connected to the issue of witchcraft, I would like to delve deeper into Amitayu Chakraborty’s analyses of a story by Sowvendra Shekhar Hansda called The Mysterious Ailment of Rupi Baskey:Stories have been the oldest and staunchest allies of Dalits, where ideologies and governments have failed, our storytellers have preserved the most honest of our memories. Our stories, in our hands, have paved the way for a community of trillions to find its voice across borders, religions, and ethnolinguistic backgrounds.
Witch-hunting can be construed as violent means through which ‘gender and social tensions’ are resolved and gender discrimination institutionalised. In fact, denial of land rights, control over women’s sexuality, prevalence of comprehensive taboo regimes, and absence of political representation, formed some of the many ‘established traditions’ in Chotanagpur.
Chudails leave no DNA. We don’t leave bodily fluids, marks, hair, imprints or indentations of any kind. Hell, we don’t even leave our shadows. I was sad that I would remain invisible to them, once again.
I crossed him as he hauled cement onto the road. He was working hard and I could see his muscles roiling with the effort of hauling and unloading. (...) Bhim’s people have spent years in Bombay serving the whims of corrupt contractors. (…) All at once, I see myself in his eyes. In all my terrible beauty, unmasked and free. He gives a great big cry and I turn and I flee. I saw my lover and he saw me. I run faster, deeper into the dark, alone, scared, terrified but understanding the meaning of love for the first time in my 500 years.
A diversity of various vernacular fates and beliefs which coexist and influence one another. They see the genre as a representation of folk-inspired pan-South Asian creatures such as ghouls, jinns and chudails fused with Hindu beliefs. This results in a transcultural, all-encompassing bhoot (ghost), which transcends and permeates all the religious traditions of the subcontinent and which presents a critical commentary on social and political tensions in the subcontinent.
5. New (Counter-Hegemonic) Knowledge Production
This is a necessary reality that will continue to haunt the minds of the South Asian postcolonial elite in American and other academic circles who raise questions and initiate debates on who is authorized to “redeem” a social condition, while Dalit women are raped every day, and thirteen Dalits are murdered every week.
(…) publishing repeatedly in the same journals, the quoting circle syndrome and examining each other’s graduate students—that focuses on works and academics located in the metropolitan centres. What we see is an embarrassing desperation to be internationally recognised within the ‘publish or perish’ paradigm—which essentially means having connections and publications in European or American contexts.
The reason for the neglect of the nature and processes of witch persecutions is possibly related to the preoccupation with the ideology of witchcraft beliefs and their meaning, rather than the practical consequences of these beliefs, manifested as witch persecutions. An obsession with meaning can blind us to the murderous consequences of beliefs.”.
6. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | The more accurate term for Dalit is Dalit-Bahujan, as it offers a broader definition of the oppressed, including Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes, Other Backward Classes and lower-caste Muslims. In this article, the term ‘Dalit’ refers to ‘Dalit-Bahujan’. |
2 | An interesting work in this regard is that of Sunaina Arya’s Dalit Feminist Theory (Arya and Rathore 2019). |
3 | Between 2007–2015, I got involved with the issue of caste discrimination and Dalits through a Dutch-based NGO that was part of the International Dalit Solidarity Network. Between 2015–2019, I carried research out on the same topic in India, Nepal and Sri Lanka, which resulted in a book published in the Dutch language in The Netherlands. Presently, I am doing PhD research with the Radboud University Nijmegen in The Netherlands, after a career as advisor in several human rights and peace organisations since my graduation in Cultural Anthropology in 1993. |
4 | As cited in Brunnekreef, J. De Karma Revolutie (Brunnekreef 2019). |
5 | For more interesting work on this see also: Inden, Ronald. 2001. Imagining India. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. And: Saletore, R. N. 2003. Indian Witchcraft: A Study in Indian Occultism. Rajasthan: Abhinav Publications. |
6 | A rather new phenomenon outside the scope of this article is that of South Asian women using European Wicca traditions as a means of women’s empowerment and solidarity. In this new phenomena, Wicca is mixed with elements of witchcraft rooted in Vedic Hindu religion, such as parts of Tantra. There is a thriving Wiccan-based witch community in South Asia, mostly practiced by women, and especially by joining through social media and mixing with pop culture (Ancuta 2022). It would be interesting to investigate this practice of South Asian Wicca from the perspective of lived experience and what it may show us. |
7 | @dalitqueerproject is a community-driven initiative that uses visual narratives to challenge what it means to be Dalit and queer the ways in which our discourse has been set by Caste. See also: Available online: www.outlookindia.com/national/glimpses-of-the-dalit-queer-movement-in-india (accessed on 29 June 2022). Interesting sources of information for further reading on this are, for instance: A Critical Discourse on Dalit Literature and Literary Theory by Babar (2018), Writing Resistance; The Rhetorical Imagination of Hindi Dalit Literature by Brueck (2014). For Nepal a good example of contemporary storytelling and Dalits is the work of Sarita (Pariyar 2021a, 2021b). |
8 | More interesting sources on the Chudail can be found in: Spano, I., ed. 2021. Un Churel Mandir in Gujarat: Note sulla Diffusione delle Rappresentazioni Della Figura Della Strega in India. In Etnografie del Contemporaneo. Palermo: Museo Pasqualino, vol. 4 |
9 | See also: Mythopolitics in South Asia. København: University of Copenhagen Nordic Institute of Asian Studies, Department of Political Science (2022), and: Storyworlds: A Journal of Narrative Studies. 2023. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. |
10 | Interesting works in this respect are: Agarwal (2016), Available online: https://www.historians.org/research-and-publications/perspectives-on-history/summer-2016/the-rise-of-dalit-studies-and-its-impact-on-the-study-of-india-an-interview-with-historian-ramnarayan-rawat (accessed on 1 November 2022); Available online: https://www.rajivmalhotra.com/books/snakes-in-the-ganga/noteworthy-excerpts/the-indianization-of-critical-race-theory (accessed on 1 November 2022), and: Available online: https://www.outlookindia.com/national/glimpses-of-the-dalit-queer-movement-in-india (accessed on 1 November 2022). |
11 | For instance, I believe that the articulation of awareness of how my own lived experience with intersectionality differs from that of Dalits and Adivasis has played a part in being accepted as an ally. I have been in an intercultural marriage with a Sri Lankan man since 1987. Moreover, he suffers from a chronic illness; as a man of colour with an illness, life in The Netherlands has proved to hold particular challenges, for him in the first place, but also for me for me as a partner. In addition, I am a woman. As such, I have lived, to some degree, with intersectionality. It has enhanced my understanding of how intersectionality can work. This does not mean I can claim to have a lived understanding of other intersections. Moreover, it is of crucial importance to show awareness of privileges attached to other identity factors connected to me, such as being white. |
12 | Fascinating information about the village of Sajozaka in Hungary where there is a Ambedkar-inspired movement “Jai Bhim Hungary” can be found in: J. Brunnekreef (2019). De Karma Revolutie. |
13 | In Sri Lanka, there are no groups who identity as “Dalit”; yet, caste dynamics play an integral throughout all levels of the Sri Lankan society, including untouchabilty and discrimination based on caste. |
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Brunnekreef, J. “The Witch’s Mirror”: A Review of Scholarship on Witchcraft and a Reassessment Based on the Intersectional Lived Experiences of Dalits and Adivasis. Religions 2023, 14, 401. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14030401
Brunnekreef J. “The Witch’s Mirror”: A Review of Scholarship on Witchcraft and a Reassessment Based on the Intersectional Lived Experiences of Dalits and Adivasis. Religions. 2023; 14(3):401. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14030401
Chicago/Turabian StyleBrunnekreef, Jolanda. 2023. "“The Witch’s Mirror”: A Review of Scholarship on Witchcraft and a Reassessment Based on the Intersectional Lived Experiences of Dalits and Adivasis" Religions 14, no. 3: 401. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14030401
APA StyleBrunnekreef, J. (2023). “The Witch’s Mirror”: A Review of Scholarship on Witchcraft and a Reassessment Based on the Intersectional Lived Experiences of Dalits and Adivasis. Religions, 14(3), 401. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14030401