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The nowhere children
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The long silence about child sexual abuse seems to be breaking. Work to protect the child, says GEETA PADMANABHAN
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Photo: Mahesh Kumar A.
Bitter truth Empower children to speak, to confide
The Indian genie in the skit is an instant hit. “Jeeee Boombaa” shout the 400-odd middle and high-school girls of Avvai Home in welcome. Good. Now JB and friends can make their pitch.
Using situations familiar to the students, teacher-trainees and moms in the audience, the Nalamdana troupe unveils its theme: Respect children’s rights to education, medical care and safety from sexual abuse.
The message goes home. Girls climb the stage with feedback. “My body is mine,” says one bravely. “I’ll learn to protect myself. I’ll help my friends in trouble.” A 15-year-old breaks down narrating abuse by an uncle. Another pleads, “If I have rights, why don’t my parents allow me to take part in sports, music and dance?” Finally, the rapid-fire round: “Can we use mobiles to call 1098? Are abusers caught and punished?”
You have to live in an opaque, sound-proof bubble to deny that child sexual abuse (CSA) exists. Hard-drives of documented cases are available with NGOs working in this field (you don’t want to read them).
Reports from the media, UNESCO and the government are awash with evidence. The long silence and denial about CSA seem to be breaking. It is mainstream, occupying public and political space. You can’t argue the need for it.
Accept, say the NGOs, and work to protect the child. Know the facts.
There’s a high percentage of child-trafficking in the sex trade. Paedophiles stalk websites in search of unwary, curious kids. Abusers target unsupervised children of busy parents, children from broken families. Kids who run away from home (violence? drunkenness?) are specially vulnerable. Child labourers and street children are easy prey. There is CSA in middle and upper middle-class families; it just goes unreported.
Activists are taking the matter head-on. Nalamdana enacts plays to spread awareness. Tulir talks of safety through posters, billboards, illustrated do’s and don’ts in newspapers and advocacy; it works with sexually abused kids and their families, conducts training workshops.
Currently it’s campaigning for a legal definition of child pornography. Ashraya runs workshops in educational institutions and the Police Training College. All of them distribute informative flyers and booklets among schools. Rotary Club has Project Selvi.
Language is an important component.
“It’s a sensitive topic,” said Nitya Balaji of Nalamdana. “So programmes have soft names – safe child, life skill teaching, adolescent health program. Do we talk to kids about their physical and emotional changes in a scientific way?” Vidya Reddy of Tulir wants “shame” removed from the child’s awareness of his body. “Terms should be simple and age appropriate. Saying, ‘Don’t allow anyone to touch you,’ puts the burden of responsibility on the child. Say, ‘It is not all right for anyone to touch you except for medical reasons.’ Empower kids. Their reporting is necessary to ensure their safety.”
Who is an abuser?
There are no psychological tools to profile them. “He could be the “nice” uncle in a stormy home,” said Nitya. “There are far more people with sexual interest in kids than we can count,” warned Vidya.
Abuse takes several forms, can happen under a parent’s gaze. Tickling and hugging can be unsafe for the child. “Abusers are manipulative and clever and abuse often goes on for years.” All kids are at risk.
At what age should kids know?
“Good touch and bad touch at the primary level,” said Nandi Shah of Ashraya. “Body parts and functions at secondary, then sexuality, right to privacy, safety and choice. Parents, teachers, care-givers and counsellors should be sensitised and trained to support.” Nitya said, “People will take what they’re capable of. We should impart info in a non-sensational way.”
How does theatre help?
“Theatre has variety- such as role play, puppetry, story telling,” said Nitya. “Children could choose the issues, perform in different languages. Scripts could be based on first-hand stories. Theatre is most effective in schools with kids from challenged homes/backgrounds.”
A pre and post performance questionnaire gives direction to Nalamdana’s work. “But counselling by experts must follow.”
What can we do?
Nitya wants a Kids’ Forum. “If kids are trained to retort in groups, the abuser will be kept at bay. Why can’t TV serials mainstream the issue?” Ready and quick help when they need it, said Nandi. “Tell the abused child it is not her fault,” say activists. Listen when they complain, or they’ll clam up. The abuser is often someone the kid loves and trusts or a person in authority. “Take it seriously, without showing alarm or distress,” said Vidya. “Respond calmly and do something about it.”
“Parents should create an atmosphere where the child feels free to talk without fear of ridicule or criticism. Schools must be pro-active on protection against abuse. We need clear, stern laws and a child-friendly investigating system. Or we victimise the child many times over.”
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