TRIGGER WARNING: This article deals with an account of rape/sexual assault and may be triggering for survivors of abuse.
When the Delhi metro pulled into the station on my first morning in India and it became apparent that it was not only shoulder-to-shoulder crowded, but with mostly men, dread washed over my body. I was trying to stay cool – of course news travels quickly overseas about brutal crimes and hatred against women in India, but these things happen everywhere, right?
But, thrown into daily life on the streets of Delhi, I couldn’t help but be reduced from a confident traveler to a blonde girl in a sea of potential predators, a stereotype that I must constantly keep in mind in the name of staying safe.
The stares are relentless – some obviously from curiosity, some more sinister. Whether I’m on a train, walking down a street or even eating in a restaurant. I’ve covered my head since day two in India, but you can’t cover a pale face and blonde eyebrows. (It doesn’t help that I’m currently beach-blonde after two months in Southeast Asia.)
I hear the voices of my parents in my head repeatedly, telling me to come home. That attitudes in India are different and it’s not a safe place for a traveling woman. That was all before the latest news of the rape and murder of two teenage girls in Uttar Pradesh, the state I was currently in, emerged on the global scene.
The two girls were around 14 and 15, innocent except for their gender and birth into a country, especially a state, where crime towards women is common, often tolerated and even met with inaction. These two girls made the news, but what about the other women that were attacked or gang-raped in Uttar Pradesh in the last week? That happened too.