Nepali Times
MALLIKA ARYAL
INTERESTING TIMES
Re-inventing Tij


MALLIKA ARYAL


MIN RATNA BAJRACHARYA

On Sunday, Hindu women in Nepal will be decked up in different hues of red as they make their way to temples to worship Shiva and Parbati, the divine couple who epitomise the ultimate conjugal bliss.

Tij starts with dar khane din, the day of feast, as women get together and eat into the night to prepare for the next day of fasting. Tij is when the women replicate the fast observed by Parbati in order to 'obtain' Shiva as consort, and later that night the fast is broken with puja and fruits.

Tij is the day Nepalis celebrate womanhood. Single, married and even widowed women, break out in songs about relationships, their daily lives, pining for their husbands who have gone abroad, loneliness, inequality, discrimination, abuse, bigotry and war. It is Nepal's own version of International Women's Day.

As the structure of our society changes, so does the way we celebrate our festivals. Till a few years ago, it was only Bahun and Chettri women who observed fasts, today women from different ethnicities have embraced this custom as their own as well. And there are even some husbands who mark Tij with a 'solidarity fast'.

"I will fast for my husband's long life if he fasts for me, why is it that only women have to give pain to their bodies?" asks an educated married Bahun woman from Kathmandu. She says she is not a feminist, "but unlike our rural sisters I see this as a practice started by men so that they can feel good about themselves."

She has a point. But what she finds repressive is found to be liberating by many. In rural Nepal women look forward to this day so that they can pack their bags and go to their maternal home where their mothers and sisters are waiting. It is the time women reconnect, vent their feelings and find comfort in other women. And in the cities, women are not frowned upon if they are not wearing red on Tij, if they observe the fast or if they do Shiva puja.

In the last few years, private institutions and NGOs working on women's issues and small women's groups have started celebrating Tij together. It has been used as an opportunity to raise funds through 'Tij mela' where they eat, buy goods, play dohori and other games and dance all day.

Tij may have started out as a male construct, but it doesn't have to remain that way. It can be the day when women celebrate each other's successes. Nepali women's rights groups, and even individuals can use this day to push for more political and economic rights.

In Kathmandu and other urban areas, Tij may be becoming a consumerist festival, but there are ways to turn this around as well. Renting a space out so that women can get together and dance, play games and eat is one way of being creative about the festival but it doesn't have an impact.

Valentine's Day in the US is a very consumerist affair, and those who find that unacceptable have come up with a different way to celebrate it. Instead of celebrating romantic love, they talk about issues relating to women: domestic violence, rape, discrimination against women. Campaigns such as 'Take back the night' and staging of the Vagina Monologues, are examples of how they spread awareness.

Giving or not giving up meals for a day is fine if that is what you want to do, you can sulk about the 'maleness' of the festival or find liberation in hunger. Nepali women have known for a very long time that they have to fight their own battles: let us use this day to spread awareness in our circles about maternal mortality, domestic violence, health, and celebrate the big and small victories of Nepali women.

Perhaps by coming out in red, the colour of revolution, in large numbers outside Singha Darbar every year we will achieve what years of lobbying hasn't.



LATEST ISSUE
638
(11 JAN 2013 - 17 JAN 2013)


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