Monday, April 27, 2026

When Borders Cannot Bury Love: Displacement, Memory, and the Quiet Defiance of the Human Heart

 From a funeral across the Line of Control to ships of indenture and the scattered Indian diaspora—an exploration of how people move, suffer, adapt, and yet never truly leave home

-Ramphal Kataria

There are moments that do not make history in the conventional sense. They do not redraw maps, topple governments, or ignite revolutions. Yet, they unsettle something far deeper—they question the very assumptions upon which our political and social worlds are built. The funeral of Liyaqat Ali Khan in the small village of Keran was one such moment. It unfolded quietly along the Line of Control, that heavily guarded line which has, for decades, symbolized hostility, suspicion, and unresolved history between two nations.

On one side of the Kishanganga River, his body lay, surrounded by those who could reach him. On the other side stood those who could not—his brothers, his relatives, his own flesh and blood—watching from across a river that had become a border, mourning from a distance that politics had imposed upon them. They had not come as citizens of another nation; they had come as family. They stood there not to challenge sovereignty, not to make a statement, but to perform the most basic human act: to say goodbye.

In that fragile, deeply human moment, the abstraction of borders seemed almost absurd. It raised a question that lingers long after the funeral has faded into the deep in earth: can a line on a map truly divide the human heart?

This question is neither new nor confined to Kashmir. It echoes across centuries and continents, wherever people have been displaced—by war, by empire, by economics, by ambition, or by sheer survival. The story of humanity is, in many ways, a story of movement. Yet, every movement leaves behind a residue—of memory, of longing, of identity—that refuses to be erased.

Migration is often discussed in numbers—millions displaced, thousands relocated, percentages assimilated. But beneath these statistics lies a more intimate reality. Every migrant carries an invisible archive: the smell of their village, the sound of their language, the rhythm of their festivals, the stories of their ancestors. These are not easily surrendered. They travel quietly, embedding themselves in new lands, reshaping both the migrant and the society that receives them.

Few chapters of history illustrate this more poignantly than the migration of Indian indentured labourers in the 19th century. After the abolition of slavery, colonial powers sought new sources of cheap labour. The solution they devised was contractual, legal on paper, but often coercive in practice. Men and women from the Bhojpuri and Awadhi belts of North India, from regions that today include Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, and parts of Haryana, were recruited—sometimes deceived, sometimes compelled—to board ships that would carry them across oceans.

These ships sailed toward destinations that were little more than names—Guyana, Suriname, Trinidad and Tobago, and beyond. Between 1838 and 1917, hundreds of thousands made this journey. The first group to Guyana, aboard ships like the Whitby and Hesperus, numbered just a few hundred. By the time the system ended, nearly a quarter of a million Indians had arrived there alone.

The journey itself was often brutal. Weeks stretched into months at sea. Disease spread easily. Food was scarce. Many died before ever seeing land. Those who survived were deposited into plantation economies that demanded relentless labour. Contracts promised return passages after a fixed number of years, but for many, return was neither feasible nor possible. They stayed, built lives, raised families.

Yet, even as they adapted, something within them remained anchored to the land they had left behind.

They recreated India in fragments. They celebrated Diwali under unfamiliar skies. They sang folk songs that spoke of distant rivers and forgotten monsoons. They spoke Bhojpuri and Awadhi, even as these languages evolved, mingling with English, Dutch, and Creole influences. They cooked food that resembled what they remembered, adjusting ingredients to what was available. Culture, in this sense, became both memory and innovation—a way of holding on while moving forward.

Over generations, these communities transformed. They became citizens of their new countries, contributing to their economies, politics, and cultural landscapes. In Guyana, leaders like Cheddi Jagan and Bharrat Jagdeo emerged from Indo-Guyanese communities, shaping the nation’s political trajectory. In Trinidad and Tobago, figures like Basdeo Panday rose to prominence. The literary world found a powerful voice in V. S. Naipaul, whose works explored the complexities of identity and displacement with unflinching honesty.

In the world of cricket—a sport that itself traveled through empire—names like Rohan Kanhai, Alvin Kallicharran, Shivnaryan Chanderpaul and many more became legends, their artistry on the field transcending national and ethnic boundaries. These individuals were not merely products of migration; they were embodiments of its possibilities—proof that displacement, even when born of exploitation, can lead to renewal and achievement.

Yet, to focus only on success would be to miss the deeper emotional currents that run beneath these histories.

For every story of achievement, there is a quieter story of longing.

This longing often manifests in unexpected ways. It appears in the persistence of rituals, in the preservation of surnames, in the curiosity of younger generations who seek to trace their ancestry. It appears in the story I came across—of my Facebook friend, Barbara Beharry-Watley, who lives in Virginia yet carries within her a connection to a village in present-day Haryana. When she shared that receipt—issued to her great-grandfather in the 1850s as he embarked on his journey to Guyana—it was not merely an act of remembrance. It was an assertion of identity.

That fragile document, preserved across generations, speaks volumes. It tells us that migration does not erase origins; it reframes them. It tells us that even when physical return is impossible, emotional return remains alive. Barbara’s attachment to a place she has never seen challenges conventional notions of belonging. It suggests that identity is not solely determined by geography, but by memory, narrative, and inheritance.

This phenomenon is not unique to the Indian diaspora. Across the world, displaced populations exhibit similar patterns. Jewish communities maintained a connection to ancestral homelands across millennia. African diasporic communities, shaped by the trauma of the transatlantic slave trade, continue to explore and reclaim their roots. Armenian communities, scattered after the genocide, preserve language, culture, and memory across continents.

What unites these diverse experiences is a shared psychological condition—a sense of being both here and elsewhere. Scholars in sociology and psychology have described this as diasporic consciousness, but such terms only approximate the lived reality. At its core, it is a feeling—a persistent awareness that one’s story extends beyond one’s immediate surroundings.

This awareness can be both enriching and unsettling. It allows individuals to navigate multiple cultural worlds, to draw from diverse traditions, to develop a broader sense of identity. At the same time, it can create a sense of incompleteness—a feeling that something essential lies just beyond reach.

The Partition of India offers perhaps the most immediate and profound example of this duality in the South Asian context. When India was divided, millions were forced to leave their homes, often under conditions of extreme violence. Families were separated, communities dismantled, lives uprooted.

And yet, decades later, the memories persist.

People who migrated from what is now Pakistan to India—and vice versa—often speak of their ancestral villages with a tenderness that defies the violence of history. They remember the layout of streets, the location of wells, the festivals they celebrated together. They recall friendships that transcended religious identities, relationships that were severed not by choice but by circumstance.

Over time, the immediate pain of displacement may soften, but it rarely disappears. Instead, it transforms—becoming part of family narratives, passed down through generations. Children and grandchildren grow up hearing stories of places they have never seen, forming emotional connections to landscapes that exist primarily in memory.

In Haryana, in Punjab, in Uttar Pradesh, these stories are still alive. Similarly, in Pakistan, echoes of shared cultural traditions—language, music, art—continue to reflect a past that was once common. The Saang tradition from Meham, for instance, found its way across borders, preserved and performed in new contexts. Haryanvi dialects, songs, and customs still resonate in unexpected places, carried by those who migrated decades ago.

This persistence of culture highlights an important aspect of migration: it is not merely a process of loss; it is also a process of transmission. Migrants carry their cultures with them, adapting and reshaping them in response to new environments. The result is not a simple replication of the past, but a dynamic, evolving synthesis.

This synthesis enriches both the migrant and the host society. It introduces new ideas, new practices, new perspectives. It challenges existing norms, creating space for innovation and diversity. Over time, what was once foreign becomes familiar, integrated into the social fabric.

At the same time, migration can also generate tensions. Differences in language, religion, and culture can lead to misunderstandings, conflicts, and struggles for acceptance. The process of integration is rarely smooth. It involves negotiation, compromise, and, at times, resistance.

Yet, despite these challenges, history suggests that societies tend toward accommodation. Over time, diversity becomes normalized, even celebrated. What begins as displacement can eventually lead to the creation of vibrant, pluralistic communities.

Returning to the image of the funeral in Keran, one is struck by the simplicity of the act and the complexity of its implications. It was not a political event, yet it carried profound political significance. It did not challenge the existence of borders, yet it revealed their limitations.

It showed that while states may define citizenship, they cannot fully define belonging.

Belonging operates on a different plane—one shaped by relationships, memories, and emotions. It is this deeper sense of belonging that drives people to stand on opposite banks of a river, to mourn together despite being separated by a line they did not draw.

And perhaps it is this sense of belonging that offers hope.

In a world where political narratives often emphasize division, stories like these remind us of our shared humanity. They suggest that beneath the surface of conflict, there exists a reservoir of connection—one that can, under the right circumstances, be tapped into.

India and Pakistan, despite their fraught history, share a common cultural and historical heritage. Language, food, music, traditions—all bear the imprint of a shared past. The divisions of the present, while real and significant, do not erase this underlying continuity.

Moments like the one in Keran, or stories like Barbara’s, serve as quiet counterpoints to dominant narratives of hostility. They do not deny the realities of conflict, but they offer an alternative perspective—one that emphasizes connection over division, empathy over enmity.

They remind us that while politics may shape the contours of our world, it does not fully determine our relationships. Those are shaped by deeper forces—by history, by culture, by shared experiences.

As long as people continue to remember, to seek, to connect, the possibility of reconciliation remains.

Hope, in this context, is not a grand, abstract ideal. It is something more modest, more fragile, yet more enduring. It is present in the act of remembering, in the desire to reconnect, in the willingness to see beyond divisions.

It is present in a woman in Virginia holding onto a receipt from the 1850s. It is present in a family standing across a river, mourning together. It is present in the countless stories of migration that continue to unfold around the world.

These stories do not offer easy solutions. They do not resolve conflicts or erase borders. But they do something equally important: they remind us of what lies beneath.

They remind us that, ultimately, we are not defined solely by the nations we belong to, but by the relationships we sustain, the memories we carry, and the connections we seek.

And as long as these endure, the lines on maps—however rigid they may appear—will never fully contain the human spirit.

 

Sunday, April 26, 2026

Domestic Violence in India: Dowry as Structural Violence and the Limits of Legal Reform

  A Critical, Field-Grounded Appraisal of the Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005 with Special Reference to Haryana

-Ramphal Kataria

Abstract

Domestic violence in India persists as one of the most pervasive and structurally embedded forms of gender-based violence, sustained by patriarchal norms and the economic institution of dowry. This paper offers a comprehensive and field-grounded analysis of domestic violence through the prism of dowry as a systemic driver of coercion. It critically evaluates the Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005 (DV Act), examining its object, intent, and implementation architecture, particularly within the Women & Child Development (WCD) framework. Drawing upon empirical data from the National Crime Records Bureau and National Family Health Survey, along with Haryana-specific administrative structures, district-level trends, and field-style observations, the paper argues that domestic violence is not merely a legal aberration but a structural condition. While the DV Act has expanded legal recognition, its transformative potential is constrained by administrative overload, weak enforcement, and the persistence of dowry as an economic system of violence. The study concludes that meaningful reform requires not only legal strengthening but a reconfiguration of institutional capacity and socio-economic structures.

Keywords

Domestic Violence; Dowry; DV Act 2005; Haryana; WCD; PPO; NCRB; NFHS; Gender Justice; Institutional Capacity; Structural Violence

1. Introduction: Law, Society, and the Paradox of the Home

Domestic violence in India occupies a deeply paradoxical space. It is simultaneously recognized, legislated against, and yet normalized within the private domain of the household. The home, idealized as a site of protection, often becomes a locus of control, coercion, and sustained violence. This contradiction reflects not a failure of law alone but the endurance of social structures that legitimize inequality.

Within this landscape, dowry emerges as a central organizing principle. Far from being a relic of tradition, it continues to operate as a dynamic economic institution that shapes marital relations. Violence, in this context, is not incidental but instrumental—deployed to enforce compliance, extract resources, and maintain hierarchies.

2. Conceptualizing Domestic Violence as Structural Coercion

Domestic violence must be understood as a continuum rather than a discrete act. It encompasses physical harm, emotional degradation, sexual coercion, and, critically, economic control. The DV Act’s recognition of economic abuse represents a significant conceptual advance, yet in practice, economic coercion—particularly through dowry—remains inadequately addressed.

Dowry transforms the household into an economic arena where a woman’s position is contingent upon her ability to meet material expectations. This structural dependency creates conditions where violence becomes both normalized and rationalized.

3. Empirical Landscape: Scale and Silence

Table 1: NCRB Data on Domestic Violence (Recent Trends)

Category

Annual Cases (Approx.)

Share in Crimes Against Women

Cruelty by husband/relatives (498A IPC)

1,10,000 – 1,25,000

~30–32%

Dowry deaths (304B IPC)

6,000 – 7,000

~2%

Total crimes against women

~4,50,000+

100%

Source: National Crime Records Bureau

The NCRB data establishes domestic violence as the single largest category of crimes against women. The dominance of cruelty-related cases indicates that violence within the household is not peripheral but central to women’s lived experience.

Table 2: NFHS-5 Findings on Domestic Violence

Indicator

Percentage

Ever-married women experiencing spousal violence

~29%

Women not seeking help

~77%

Violence justified by women

~45%

Table 3: Nature of Violence Experienced by Women

Type of Violence

Percentage

Physical

~28%

Emotional

~13%

Sexual

~6%

Source: National Family Health Survey

These tables reveal a disturbing duality: while violence is widespread, it is also internalized. The high percentage of women justifying violence underscores the depth of social conditioning.

Table 4: Reporting and Institutional Response Gap

Indicator

Observation

Women seeking help

<25%

Conviction rates

Low–moderate

Case disposal time

Prolonged

Enforcement of protection orders

Weak

This table highlights the systemic gap between legal recognition and institutional response, where law exists but enforcement falters.

4. The DV Act: Intent and Institutional Design

The Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005 marked a shift from punitive to protective jurisprudence. Its emphasis on residence rights, protection orders, and economic relief reflects a rights-based approach. However, the effectiveness of this framework depends heavily on institutional mechanisms, particularly within the WCD Department.

5. Haryana as a Case Study: Structure Meets Reality

Haryana presents a compelling site for examining the interaction between law and administration. Despite economic growth, patriarchal norms remain deeply entrenched, and dowry continues to structure marital relations.

Table 5: Administrative Structure under DV Act in Haryana

Level

Functionary

Key Role

State

Director, WCD

Policy and oversight

District

DPO

Supervision

District

PPO

Core implementation

District

DCPO

Child convergence

Block

CDPO

Field coordination

Convergence

Police/Judiciary

Enforcement

This structure appears robust but is weakened by role overlap and insufficient capacity, particularly at the district level.

6. PPO: The System’s Fulcrum Under Strain

Table 6: PPO Workload Distribution

Parameter

Situation

DV cases/year

150–300+

Probation cases

100–200+

Field visits

High

Support staff

Minimal

Table 7: Functional Burden

Function

Challenge

DIR preparation

Time-intensive

Court liaison

Delays

Victim support

Limited resources

Enforcement monitoring

Weak

These tables illustrate a clear reality: the PPO is structurally overburdened, resulting in procedural compliance rather than substantive intervention.

7. District-Level Realities: Uneven Visibility

Table 9: District-wise Domestic Violence Patterns (Haryana)

District

DV Cases

Dowry Deaths

Pattern

Gurugram

400+

15–20

High reporting

Faridabad

350+

14–18

Industrial

Sonipat

280–320

12–15

Semi-urban

Panipat

250–300

12–14

Mixed

Rohtak

240–270

10–13

Moderate

Karnal

220–250

10–12

Agrarian

Ambala

200–230

8–10

Moderate

Hisar

200–220

9–11

Rural

Bhiwani

150–200

7–9

Underreported

Sirsa

140–180

6–8

Underreported

This table reflects a reporting gradient, not necessarily an incidence gradient. Urban districts show higher reporting due to access and awareness, while rural districts mask violence through silence.

Table 10: PPO Load vs District Burden

Category

Burden

Capacity

Gap

High (Gurugram, Faridabad)

Very High

Single PPO

Severe

Medium

Moderate

Single PPO

Significant

Low (reported)

Low

Single PPO

Hidden

This mismatch highlights a fundamental administrative flaw: uniform staffing for unequal demand.

8. Field Observations: Violence in Practice

Field-style observations reveal that domestic violence operates differently across contexts but remains structurally consistent. In urban districts, dowry manifests as lifestyle demands; in rural areas, it appears as overt coercion. Institutional response, however, remains uniformly weak—characterized by delayed intervention, mediation bias, and limited follow-up.

9. Institutional Convergence: Fragmentation and Its Consequences

The DV Act envisages coordination among WCD, police, and judiciary, yet in practice, these institutions operate in silos. Police often prioritize reconciliation, the judiciary struggles with delays, and WCD lacks enforcement capacity. The result is a system where responsibility is diffused and accountability diluted.

10. Synthesis: Dowry as the Structural Core

Across all levels—data, administration, and field reality—one conclusion emerges with clarity: dowry is not peripheral but central to domestic violence. It provides the economic logic that sustains coercion and legitimizes violence within the household.

11. Conclusion: From Law to Transformation

Domestic violence in India, particularly in Haryana, reveals the limits of legal reform in the absence of institutional strength and social change. The DV Act represents a significant normative achievement, yet its impact remains constrained by administrative overload, weak enforcement, and entrenched socio-economic practices.

A transformative response requires more than incremental reform. It demands a reconfiguration of institutional design—strengthening PPO systems, enabling convergence, and adopting data-driven deployment. More fundamentally, it requires confronting dowry not as a cultural artifact but as an economic system of violence.

The future of domestic violence jurisprudence in India will depend not on the expansion of law alone, but on the capacity of institutions and society to translate legal recognition into lived justice.

References

1. National Crime Records Bureau, Crime in India Reports.

2. National Family Health Survey (NFHS-5).

3. Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005.

4. Dowry Prohibition Act, 1961.

5. Indian Penal Code, Sections 498A & 304B.

6. V.D. Bhanot v. Savita Bhanot.

7. Hiral P. Harsora v. Kusum Narottamdas Harsora.

8. Indra Sarma v. V.K.V. Sarma.