Written by Ketki Angre
New Delhi:
He chokes as he speaks. His words barely audible as he tries
to compose himself in between sobs. For a man in his mid-30s, he's aged
beyond his years in the last one year. But the trauma, pressure and
despair that he has been staring at, could weaken even the most
resilient.
When his three-and-a-half-year-old daughter went to
play-school on December 17, 2012, it was just a regular day. His family
not entirely aware of the emotional and physical trauma another family
in Dwarka was only just beginning to understand.
It was barely
eight hours after the 23-year-old paramedic student was gang-raped in a
moving bus last year last that his daughter came home feeling ashamed,
violated and unsure of what she must do. When his daughter explained
what had happened to her, he and his wife realised she had been sexually
abused at her supposedly 'safe' play-school, by her principal's
husband.
Delhi and India was seething with rage as horrific
details of the December 16 gang-rape case started coming to light.
That's perhaps where the similarities between the two cases end. As
India battled for a 23-year-old's fight for justice, this family
soldiered on, alone.
The mother of the toddler told NDTV, "He
(the accused) threatened my daughter and said if you tell your mom and
dad, I will hang you from the fan." Her husband adds, "Mentally she is
traumatised. Her physical wounds will heal. But what about her
psychological scars? Many nights she wakes up screaming."
The
police lodged an FIR. The child was also made to sign as complainant,
though her signature was nothing more than a few letters of the alphabet
she had learned at school, something, that she, not surprisingly,
couldn't remember the next time she was asked about it.
The child
even identified the accused in a police line-up, gave a statement to a
magistrate but the case hasn't moved much in the last one year. On the
other hand, the accused, who is in his forties, was arrested, and got
bail in a few weeks.
The attempt to buy this family's silence
came just a few days before the bail application. Her mother says, "The
accused's sister came a few days before the bail hearing and offered us
money. She said they would give us
Rs.
4-5 lakh, even more, to stop pursuing the case. They tried to
intimidate us by saying it's about our child's honour and that they had
enough money to get away. We told them, our daughter's honour is not for
sale."
The four-year-old has spent most of the last one year
between the court room and the police station. In her case, there was no
public outcry for justice - not even a fast-track court. The biggest
irony: for her to get justice she has had to remember every detail of
her trauma during the court hearings that she is trying so hard to
forget.
The family has been threatened, intimidated, even lured.
They have had little social support, save an NGO that is helping them
with legal aid but the father is the only earning member, who does two
jobs to keep the house running.
Ask him how he finds the
strength to fight, the father says, "My daughter is my inspiration.
Whenever I look at her, it strengthens my determination to fight. I want
to see her smile without any fear. I want my daughters to succeed. Most
of all, I don't want this to happen to anyone else."
It's this single-minded determination and hope that has kept him going.
One
year after Delhi's gang-rape, many have talked of keeping the flame
Delhi's brave-heart lit alive. It's a spirit that this father and mother
strive for every day no matter what the odds are.
Source: http://www.ndtv.com/article/cities/lonely-battle-for-justice-the-three-year-old-braveheart-that-delhi-forgot-459942?ndtv_rhs