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2014 印度獵巫數千婦女被折磨並處決

(2024-07-25 05:39:52) 下一個

印度獵巫行動中數千名婦女被指控使用巫術,遭到折磨並處決

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/morning-mix/wp/2014/07/21/thousands-of-women-accused-of-sorcery-tortured-and-executed-in-indian-witch-hunts/

作者:Terrence McCoy 2014 年 7 月 21 日,美國東部時間上午 4:50

Terrence McCoy 是《華盛頓郵報》裏約熱內盧分社社長。他曾兩次獲得喬治·波爾克獎,並被提名為 2023 年普利策獎決賽入圍者。

2005 年,印度賈坎德邦帕拉尼村的一個大地主家庭將 Pusanidevi Manjhi 打上巫師的烙印,並折磨了她四天。 (拉瑪·拉克希米/華盛頓郵報)

如果事情的開始和其他人一樣,那麽薩拉斯瓦蒂·德維將被謀殺的第一個跡象就是對薩滿的指控。也許她冒犯了某人。也許有人病了,不知道原因。也許社區裏的一口井突然幹涸了,需要有人指責。也許他們選擇她是因為德維是低種姓,因為她是女性,而且他們很可能逃脫懲罰。

凶手於周六來找她。她的兩個兒子試圖救她,但沒能救她,還遭到毆打。他們的懲罰比不上德維。警方告訴《印度斯坦時報》,在 14 名村民對她造成嚴重傷害並奪走她的生命之前,他們“強迫她吃人類排泄物”。

雖然以幾乎任何標準來看這起謀殺案都令人震驚,但它並不是獨一無二的。在印度農村地區,這種謀殺案甚至並不罕見。

根據印度報紙《Mint》收集的犯罪記錄,在迷信和私刑重疊、小謠言可能致命的地方,2000 年至 2012 年間,有近 2,100 名被指控使用巫術的人被殺害。其他人認為這個數字是 2,500;其他人則認為這個數字更高。“就像眾所周知的冰山一角,現有數據掩蓋了社會根深蒂固的問題的大部分現實,”新德裏法律發展夥伴組織表示。“隻有最可怕的案件才會被報道——大多數獵巫案件都沒有報道和記錄。”

Chhutni Mahatani 回憶起 2000 年 6 月在印度東部比哈爾邦 Bholadi 村附近的家中發生的事件,這些事件導致她被稱為女巫。1995 年,Mahatani 因村裏一個孩子生病而遭到姐夫的折磨。 (Saurabh Das/AP)

盡管這個問題很普遍,但在印度以外卻很少報道,在印度,它幾乎每周都是報紙的頭條。《印度時報》報道稱,上周在錢德拉普爾,一名男子被私刑處死,他的“女同夥因施行黑魔法而被暴徒毆打”,該報稱該男子“被 500 多名村民組成的暴徒當場抓獲”。另一名被指控使用巫術的婦女被攜帶“傳統武器”的親戚抓住並毆打致死。去年年底,在賈坎德邦,一名 50 歲的婦女和她的女兒因被指控使用巫術而被砍死。

專家表示,這些殺戮事件主要發生在部落人口眾多的印度各邦,其驅動力既有文化因素,也有經濟和種姓因素。雖然最簡單的解釋是,憤怒的暴徒將突發疾病或農作物歉收與巫術混為一談,並實施報複,但事情很少這麽簡單。更常見的情況是,這不是迷信,而是性別和階級歧視。那些被指控使用巫術的人往往來自類似的背景:女性、貧窮和低種姓。

“獵巫本質上是我們社會對婦女暴力的遺留問題,”印度社會研究所的拉凱什·辛格寫道。“因為幾乎無一例外,被打上巫師烙印的都是[低種姓]婦女。通過懲罰那些被視為卑鄙和野蠻的人,壓迫者可能想向婦女傳達一個不那麽微妙的信息:溫順和家庭生活會得到獎勵;其他任何事情都會受到懲罰。”

其他人說,迷信的麵紗隻會掩蓋殺戮背後的真正動機。 “迷信隻是一個借口,”社會福利官員 Pooja Singhal Purwar 在 2005 年告訴《華盛頓郵報》的 Rama Lakshmi。“通常,一個女人被打上巫婆的烙印,這樣你就可以把她趕出村子,奪走她的土地,或者為了報仇、家庭爭鬥,或者因為有權勢的男人想懲罰她拒絕他們的性挑逗。有時,它被用來懲罰那些質疑社會規範的女人。”

如果有一個州最容易發生巫術殺人案,那就是東部的賈坎德邦,這片土地遍布茂密的森林和部落。據《新聞一分鍾》報道,2013 年,54 名被指控使用巫術的女性在那裏被殺,這是全國最高的。盡管當地立法試圖打擊謀殺案——沒有針對巫術殺人案的國家法律——但謀殺案仍在繼續,甚至有所增加。那裏的模式值得研究,以了解恐怖是如何展開的。

據印度刊物《Mint》報道,該刊物曾廣泛報道過這一主題,人們可以通過各種方法來識別女巫。

懷疑有巫術的人通常會谘詢一位名叫“ojha”的巫醫。巫醫使用草藥,部分技能是用來對抗被稱為“daayan”的巫師的黑暗力量的。

2000 年 6 月,卡魯娜·德維在印度東部比哈爾邦 Bholadi 村的家中擺姿勢拍照。1996 年,德維的兒子去世後,她的姐夫指控她為巫師。後來,印度教聖城伽耶的一位巫醫為她洗脫了罪名。(Saurabh Das/AP)

然後,ojha 開始著手找出巫師。據 Mint 報道,這需要念咒語,可能還需要娑羅樹的樹枝。ojha 將所有涉嫌巫術的人的名字寫在樹枝上,樹枝枯萎的人的名字就被定罪為巫師。有時,人們會用印有名字的布包住米飯,然後把米飯放在白蟻巢裏。螞蟻吃掉哪個袋子就代表哪個女巫。另一種方法是喝藥水。2011 年,一名印度巫師強迫 30 名婦女喝下藥水,以證明她們不是女巫。這種藥水是用一種有毒的草藥製成的,所有婦女都病倒了,巫師也被捕了。

選出女巫後,她們要麽被迫做不可說的事情,要麽遭受折磨。“在最近報道的許多案件中,被打上女巫烙印的婦女被迫赤身裸體穿過村莊,遭到輪奸,乳房被割掉,牙齒被打斷或頭發被剪掉,還被村子排斥,”Live Mint 報道。她們“被迫吞下尿液和人類糞便,吃人肉,或喝雞血。”

這也是薩拉斯瓦蒂·德維 (Saraswati Devi) 的命運,她是最新一位被指控為巫術、遭受折磨和謀殺的女性,但可能不是最後一位。

Thousands of women, accused of sorcery, tortured and executed in Indian witch hunts

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/morning-mix/wp/2014/07/21/thousands-of-women-accused-of-sorcery-tortured-and-executed-in-indian-witch-hunts/

By  

Terrence McCoy is The Washington Post's Rio de Janeiro Bureau Chief. He has twice won the George Polk Award and was named a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in 2023.

In 2005, Pusanidevi Manjhi was branded a witch and tortured for four days by a powerful landowning family in the village Palani, in the Jharkhand state of India. (Rama Lakshmi/The Washington Post)

If it began like the others, the first sign that Saraswati Devi would be murdered was an accusation delivered to a shaman. Perhaps she had offended someone. Perhaps someone had fallen sick and had wondered why. Perhaps a community well had suddenly dried and someone needed blaming. Perhaps they chose her because Devi was lower caste, because she was a woman, and because they’d probably get away with it.  

The killers came for her on Saturday. Two of her sons tried to save her, but couldn’t and were beaten. Their punishment wouldn’t match Devi’s. Before the 14 villagers inflicted injuries so severe they would claim her life, they “forced her to consume human excreta,” police told the Hindustan Times.

Though shocking by nearly any standard, the murder was not unique. It was not even uncommon in pockets of rural India.

In places where superstition and vigilantism overlap and small rumors can turn deadly, nearly 2,100 people accused of witchcraft have been killed between 2000 and 2012, according to crime records gathered by the Indian newspaper Mint. Others placed the number at 2,500; others higher still. “Like the proverbial tip of a very deep iceberg, available data hides much of the reality of a problem that is deeply ingrained in society,” according to New Delhi-based Partners for Law in Development. “It is only the most gruesome cases that are reported — most cases of witch-hunting go unreported and unrecorded.”

Chhutni Mahatani recalls the incidents that led to her being named a witch at her home near Bholadi village in the eastern Indian state of Bihar in June of 2000. In 1995, Mahatani was tortured by her brother-in-law after a child fell ill in her village. (Saurabh Das/AP)

It’s an issue that despite its prevalence is rarely covered outside of India, where it’s almost weekly newspaper fodder. Last week in Chandrapur, one man was lynched and his “woman accomplice thrashed by a mob for practicing black magic,” reported the Times of India, which said the man “was caught red-handed by the mob of over 500 villagers.” Another woman accused of witchcraft was grabbed by relatives carrying “traditional weapons” and beaten to death. Late last year, in Jharkhand, a 50-year-old woman and her daughter were hacked to death after they were accused of practicing witchcraft.

The forces driving the killings, which occur predominantly in Indian states with large tribal populations, are as much cultural as they are economic and caste-based, experts said. While the easiest explanation is that angered mobs confuse a sudden illness or crop failure with witchcraft and exact their revenge, it’s rarely that simple. Much more often, it isn’t superstition but gender and class discrimination. Those accused of sorcery often come from similar backgrounds: female, poor and of a low caste.

“Witch-hunting is essentially a legacy of violence against women in our society,” wrote Rakesh Singh of the Indian Social Institute. “For almost invariably, it is [low caste] women, who are branded as witches. By punishing those who are seen as vile and wild, oppressors perhaps want to send a not-so-subtle message to women: docility and domesticity get rewarded; anything else gets punished.”

The veil of superstition, others said, only hides the true motive behind the killings. “Superstition is only an excuse,” Pooja Singhal Purwar, a social welfare official, told The Washington Post’s Rama Lakshmi in 2005. “Often a woman is branded a witch so that you can throw her out of the village and grab her land, or to settle scores, family rivalry, or because powerful men want to punish her for spurning their sexual advances. Sometimes, it is used to punish women who question social norms.”

If there is a state most susceptible to witchcraft killings, it’s the eastern state of Jharkhand, a land pervaded by dense forest and tribes. In 2013, 54 witchcraft-accused women were killed there, reported the News Minute, the highest rate in the country. Despite local legislation to try and clamp down on the murders — no national law exists that addresses witchcraft killings — they have continued if not increased. And patterns there are worth examining to understand how the horror unfolds.

According to Mint, an Indian publication which has written extensively on the subject, a witch is identified through various methods. The person who suspects witchcraft will often consult a witch doctor called an “ojha.” The witch doctor, who uses medicinal herbs, in part learned their skills to counter the darker powers of the witches, called “daayan.”

Karuna Devi poses in her home in Bholadi village in the eastern state of Bihar, India, in June of 2000. After her son died in 1996, Devi was accused of being a witch by her brother-in-law. She was later cleared of the charge by a witch doctor in the Hindu holy city of Gaya. (Saurabh Das/AP)

The ojha then goes about the business of sussing out the witch. This involves incantations, Mint reports, and possibly the branches of a sal tree. The ojha writes the names of all those suspected of witchraft onto the branches of the tree, and the name that’s on the branch that withers is condemned as a witch. Other times, rice is wrapped in cloth emblazoned with names. Then the rice is placed inside a nest of white ants. Whichever bag the ants eat out identifies the witch. Another method: potions. One Indian shaman in 2011 forced 30 women to drink a potion to prove they weren’t witches. The concoction was made out of a poisonous herb, all women fell ill, and the shaman was arrested.

After a witch is chosen, they are either forced to do unspeakable things or tortured. “In many reported cases recently, women who are branded as witches were made to walk naked through the village, were gang-raped, had their breasts cut off, teeth broken or heads tonsured, apart from being ostracized from their village,” reported Live Mint. They “were forced to swallow urine and human feces, to eat human flesh, or drink the blood of a chicken.”

This, too, was the fate of Saraswati Devi, the latest woman, though likely not the last, to be accused of witchcraft, tortured and murdered.

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