Torchbearer of gender justice (1927-2013)
Dr. Lotika Sarkar who played a central role in several path-breaking and crucial legislations for gender justice and empowerment of women during 1975-2005, passed away at the age of 86 on 23 February 2013. In the women’s rights movement, she was known as Lotikadee. When other stalwarts of women’s studies touched our hearts with inspirational speeches at women’s movement gathering, Lotikadee floored us with her legal acumen. She was the first Indian woman to graduate from Cambridge. Lotikadee was at the peak of her career, when she was asked to join the Committee on Status of Women in India, 1972 that prepared ‘Towards Equality Report’, 1974. As a pioneer in the fields of law, women’s studies and human rights, she prepared the chapter on laws concerning women in the Status of Women’s Committee Report with gender sensitivity and analytical clarity for furthering women’s rights. Dr. Lotika Sarkar was the first woman teacher of law faculty at the University of Delhi and taught Criminal law and was a mainstay of the Indian Law Institute, Delhi during 1980s and 1990s.
In 1980, along with Dr. Veena Mazumdar, Lotikadee founded the Centre for Women’s Development Studies. Along with three professors of Law from Delhi University- Prof. Upendra Baxi, Prof. Raghunath Kelkar, Dr. Vasudha Dhagamwar, Lotikadee wrote the historic ‘Open Letter to the Chief Justice of India’ in 1979, challenging the judgment of the apex court on the Mathura rape case. I remember cutting stencil and making copies on our cyclostyling machine of the 4-page long letter for wider circulation. Wide circulation of the Open Letter resulted in birth of the first feminist group against rape, Forum Against Rape in January 1980.
When Lotikadee came to Mumbai for the first conference on Women’s Studies in April 1981 at SNDT Women’s University, we, young feminists, were awe-struck!! Lotikadee’s commitment to the left movement did not prevent her from interacting meaningfully with liberals, freethinkers and also the new-left like me. Indian Association of Women’s Studies (IAWS) was formed in this gathering.
At the initiative of her students, Amita Dhanda and Archana Parashar, a volume of essays, Engendering Law: in Honour of Lotika Sarkar was published in 1999 by Eastern Book Company, Delhi.
After her journalist husband Chanchal Sarkar passed away, she was under immense trauma and grief. Taking advantage of this situation her cook and the police officer whose education they had sponsored, usurped her property and house. Her students, India’s top lawyers and judges mobilised support and signed an open letter studded with such names as Justice V.R. Krishna Iyer, Soli Sorabjee, Gopal Subramaniam and Kapila Vatsyayan. Jurists, advocates, academics, bureaucrats, journalists and human rights activists had signed the open letter demanding justice for her. Finally, during her last days, Lotika Sarkar’s property was transferred back to her and her assets handed over to her to allow her to live her life in peaceful serenity, which she so deserved. Lotikadee’s traumatic experience invited serious attention to safeguarding the rights of senior citizens by both state and civil society.
Lotikadee was a conscience keeper not only for policy makers and legal fraternity but also of women’s studies scholars and women’s movement activists. The most appropriate tribute to Lotikadee is to proactively pursue the mission she started with her team in 1980 to fight against rape and various forms of structural and systemic violence against women and to strive for social justice, distributive justice and gender justice. Resurgence of activism against sexual violence and feminist debate around Justice Verma Commission’s Report as well as Criminal Law (Amendment) Ordinance, 2013 constantly reminds us of pioneering work of Lotikadee in terms of creating a strong band of committed and legally aware feminists who are following her footsteps.Let us salute Lotikadee, the torchbearer of gender justice, by continuing her heroic legacy.