Worship of naked girls in south Indian temples abuse, slavery: NHRC


Chennai, Sep 27 (Reuters): The practice of keeping young girls in village temples to be worshipped as goddesses as part of rituals in south India amounts to abuse and slavery, the national rights commission said.

The rituals in which girls are dressed as brides and then “their dresses are removed, virtually leaving them naked” is a form of the banned devadasi system, the National Human Rights Commission said in a report published on Monday.

Practice in the southern states of Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh and parts of western India, the devadasi system, which “dedicates” girls to a life of sex work in the name of religion, continues despite being outlawed in 1988.

“They are denied to live with their families and have education. They are forced to live in Mathamma temples, deemed to be ... public property and face sexual exploitation,” the commission said in a statement.

The report was referring to a 15-day festival in parts of Tamil Nadu, which concluded on Tuesday, where local goddesses are worshipped and seven young girls are chosen by the community to stay in the temple.

The state government has denied accusations of abuse.

“Our child protection team has visited the temple in question and parents are there to take care of the girls,” said K Veera Raghava Rao, the administrative head of Madurai district in Tamil Nadu.

“These are 200 year old traditions that are practise in many village temples across the region. We have not found any case of abuse and our officials are monitoring the functions. We have asked them to cover the girls with a shawl.”

But campaigners said that in the name of tradition, hundreds of girls between the ages of seven and 10 years are made to stay in the temple premises during the festivities.

These girls, or Mathammas as they are referred to in parts of Tamil Nadu, are then forbidden to marry and must earn their living by dancing at the Hindu temples.

In some cases young girls being initiated into the practice have to be bare-chested with only garlands and jewels covering them, while in others they are made to carry pots of liquor as part of the celebrations, child rights campaigners added.

“As you travel through the region, the names keep changing, but the fact is that women are being forced into prostitution in the name of rituals,” said Priyamvada Mohan Singh, a criminology professor who carried out a survey in 2016 on the devadasi tradition for the Indian government.

“The tradition exists in Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka and Maharashtra. We have documented many cases during our research.”

The National Human Rights Commission said the practices violated the children’s rights and asked both the Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh governments to respond in four weeks.

  

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Comment on this article

  • L n T, Mumbai

    Thu, Sep 28 2017

    Can't understand in the name of worship ritual why the need young girls on topless.

    DisAgree Agree [2] Reply Report Abuse

  • Rita, Germany

    Thu, Sep 28 2017

    I cant understand how their parents are willing to leave their girls in tempels to exploit in the name of religion and old rituals.can they be so blind ?In the first place today girls are not respected but seen as only sex object in India.and does anyone say these young girls are safe and only dance? hahaha.

    DisAgree Agree [3] Reply Report Abuse

  • Vantage Point, Mangalore

    Wed, Sep 27 2017

    Part of our great Sanskari heritage which empowered women...

    DisAgree Agree [5] Reply Report Abuse

  • pnto, mangalore

    Wed, Sep 27 2017

    this is not the only such horrible n in human issue in India look at khap panchayaths to name one govt has so much to work on these issues and come out with guidence or law. but unfortunatly our govt. is busy playing cast, religion and cow politics and making laws for people to what to eat, dress, talk etc. these are the acche dhin promissed. devadasi n such systems must be banned completly

    DisAgree Agree [12] Reply Report Abuse

  • Dr Mohan Prabhu, LL.D, QC, Mangalore (Kankanady)/Ottawa, Canada

    Wed, Sep 27 2017

    This was a pre-Christian Roman practice of Vestal Virgins which was stopped centuries ago. It is a shame to have this in Indian temples. Perhaps a PIL in the Supreme Court should be initiated by NHRC rather than asking state governments concerned to respond in four weeks. If the tradition was banned in 1988, why does it have to ask the state governments; it must initiate prosecution if it has evidence of abuse and slavery.

    DisAgree [2] Agree [22] Reply Report Abuse

  • leslie, udupi

    Thu, Sep 28 2017

    Agree
    Dr Mohan
    Life has to sustain... Not at the cost of life...
    Small and innocent mind is neither male nor female...
    it is a part of God himself...

    DisAgree Agree Reply Report Abuse

  • HENRY MISQUITH, Bahrain

    Wed, Sep 27 2017

    We produce doctors, engineers, scientists and above all nonsense rituals and traditions..

    DisAgree Agree [4] Reply Report Abuse


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