THE HINDU Editorial Vocabulary- February 8, 2018 - Topic 2
Khap menace
Each time the Supreme Court feels impelled to
remind khap panchayats and the society at large that they have no
business interfering in the life choices of individuals regarding marriage and love, it is an implicit
commentary on our times. The frequency with which one hears the court’s
warnings against groups and individuals obstructing inter-faith or inter-caste
relationships reaffirms the fact that the social milieu continues to be under
the sway of the medieval-minded.
The court’s latest observations that khap
panchayats should not act as though they are conscience-keepers of society and
that no one should interfere in relationships between adults came while it was
hearing a writ petition seeking a ban on such community organisations and
guidelines to put an end to “honour
killings”. In 2011, the highest court termed such khaps
“kangaroo courts”, declared them illegal and wanted them stamped out
ruthlessly. Similar observations were made in other cases too, some of them in
the context of “honour killings”. It is a grave misfortune that parents and
self-appointed guardians of social mores continue to use coercion and
harassment, and even resort to murderous violence, as a means to enforce their
exclusionary and feudal prejudices. The recent murder of Ankit Saxena, a
photographer who was in love with a Muslim girl, allegedly by members of her
family, is one more extreme indication of families choosing the penal
consequences of violence over the perceived dishonour caused by an
inter-religious relationship. While the popular narrative situates community
pride as a source of unconscionable violence in rural India, such murders are a
reality in cities and among educated and presumably socially advanced sections
too.
The other dimension is that these khap
organisations in north India seek to enforce age-old taboos such as the
prohibition on sagothra marriages among Hindus. Their grouse is
that the present law on Hindu marriage allows sapindarelationships up to a particular degree; they
would prefer a limitless bar on any degree of such relationship in lineal
ascendancy, which would prevent any marriage with one presumed to be descended
from an ancestor belonging to the same gothra. Such views can only be eradicated with a change
in social attitudes. The Law Commission in 2012 prepared a draft bill to
prohibit interference in marriage alliances. Key provisions that seek to
address the problem of khap panchayats in this draft say such informal groups
would be treated as an ‘unlawful assembly’ and decisions that amount to
harassment, social boycott, discrimination or incitement to violence should be
punishable with a minimum sentence. Whether the solution is social
transformation or legislative change, high-handed mediation or interference
should brook no sympathy.
Vocabulary
Impel: drive, force, or urge
someone to do something.
Example: Financial difficulties impelled
him to desperate measures
Synonyms: force, compel, constrain, oblige, require, make, urge
Antonyms: expel
Interfering: take part or intervene in an
activity without invitation or necessity.
Example: She tried not to interfere in her
children's lives
Synonyms: butt into, barge
into, pry into, intrude into, intervene in
Antonyms: avoid, hold aloof, hold off, keep aloof, keep
away
Reaffirm: state again as a fact;
assert again strongly.
Example: The prime minister reaffirmed his
commitment to the agreement
Conscience: an inner feeling or voice
viewed as acting as a guide to the rightness or wrongness of one's behavior.
Example: He had a guilty conscience about
his desires
Synonyms: sense of right and
wrong, moral sense, inner voice, morals, standards
Ruthless: having or showing no pity or
compassion for others.
Example: A ruthless manipulator
Synonyms: merciless, pitiless, cruel, heartless, hard-hearted, cold-hearted
Antonyms: merciful
Harassment: aggressive pressure or
intimidation.
Example: They face daily harassment by the
police
Synonyms: persecution, intimidation, pressure, force, coercion, hassle
Indication: a sign or piece of
information that indicates something.
Example: The visit was an indication of the
improvement in relations between the countries
Synonyms: sign, signal, indicator, symptom, mark, manifestation, demonstration
Antonyms: contraindication
Perceive: become aware or conscious of
(something); come to realize or understand.
Example: His mouth fell open as he
perceived the truth
Synonyms: discern, recognize, become
aware of, see, distinguish, realize
Antonyms: fail of, ignore, lose, misapprehend, misconceive
Prevent: keep something from
happening or arising.
Example: Action must be taken to prevent
further accidents
Synonyms: stop, put a stop
to, avert, nip in the bud, fend off, stave off
Antonyms: allow, permit, let
Ancestor: a person, typically one more
remote than a grandparent, from whom one is descended.
Example: My ancestor Admiral Anson
circumnavigated the globe 250 years ago
Synonyms: forebear, forefather, predecessor, antecedent, progenitor, primogenitor
Antonyms: descendent, descendant
Interference: the action of interfering or
the process of being interfered with.
Example: He denied that there had been any
interference in the country's internal affairs
Synonyms: intrusion, intervention, intercession, involvement, trespass
Antonyms: noninterference, nonintervention
Incitement: the action of provoking
unlawful behavior or urging someone to behave unlawfully.
Example: This amounted to an incitement to
commit murder
Synonyms: aggravation, provocation, exhortation
