Trigger warning: This post deals with violence against women and may be distressing for some readers.
The stories being reported out of India recently have been devastating.
Last month two teenaged cousins were gang-raped and found hanged from a tree in the impoverished Katra village. Two more women have since been found hanging from trees in the state with at least one a possible victim of a so-called “honour killing“. And last week, a woman claimed she had been gang-raped by four police officers.
But against this frightening and oppressive backdrop, the courage of one group loudly fighting the system is difficult to ignore.
That group is the Gulabi Gang, and they’re different to any gang you’ve heard of before. They all wear bright pink saris; they all wield sticks; and they’re all unified by one aim: the struggle against discrimination and violence.
The gang’s leader Sampat Pal Devi, who married an older man at the age of 11 and bore her first child at 15, says her own turbulent experiences in her early life shaped her desire to fight for women’s rights.
“I used to listen to the women around me. They used to get beaten by their men a lot,” she tells Al Jazeera. “So I thought, nowadays man and women are like the two wheels of a vehicle… Why do women put up with this slavery?”
When she witnessed her neighbour attacking his wife, Devi stepped in and beat the attacker away with a stick — and unintentionally became a local heroine. News of her brave move spread quickly and by 2006, so many local women were seeking Devi’s help that she decided the group needed a uniform and a name. She chose pink to signify “womanhood and understated strength,” according to the group’s website, and the Gulabi Gang was born.