India is taking this Bollywood star to task over his stupid rape comments and it's glorious
Bollywood superstar Salman Khan made some dumb and horrible comments about the grueling shoots for his wrestling film Sultan. Here’s the quote:
“While shooting during those six hours, there’d be so much of lifting and thrusting on the ground involved. That was tough for me because if I was lifting, I’d have to lift the same 120-kilo guy 10 times for 10 different angles. And likewise, get thrown that many times on the ground. This act is not repeated that many times in the real fights in the ring. When I used to walk out of the ring after the shoot, I used to feel like a raped woman walking out.”
An actor who has the double privilege of being both a man in India and one of the most successful movie stars in the world would like you to know that he too suffers, “like a raped woman.” For the “bad boy” of Indian cinema to make such a remark in a country where rape is the fourth most common crime committed against women, underlines and perpetuates the nation’s deep-rooted misogyny.
Many claim Khan was misquoted because he appears to backtrack, but he did not address the actual rape comment and her certainly hasn’t apologized. Oddly enough, his own father apologized for him, taking to Twitter to plead for forgiveness.
It’s been almost four years since the horrific Delhi bus gang rape in which five men boarded a bus and brutally assaulted, raped, and disemboweled a young woman known as Nirbhaya. Rape culture still is a massive issue in India. Every fifteen minutes a woman in India is raped. In remote villages led by councils not recognized by the government it’s not unusual for rape to be used as a punishment, even if the original crime was committed by a family member and not the woman herself. But even in India’s sophisticated cities, the dialogue surrounding the safety of women largely puts the responsibility on women. While the government expanded the definition of rape, it still refuses to recognize marital rape as rape.