Speak, memory? Not in a country where tongues are cut off, literally and metaphorically. And capital punishment awaits the offender, by the roadside and in country fields. There바카라s enough 바카라real life바카라 in India, too much of it바카라but let us consider fiction. Remember Article 15? Two young girls had asked for a hike in their daily wage, by a mere three rupees. The contractor taught them a lesson. (By raping and killing them. Since you ask, that바카라s the normal currency in these parts.) How dare a 바카라lower caste바카라 ask questions? How dare these dispossessed people, supposed to sell their labour the way it바카라s defined in the holy scriptures, demand rights? How dare they speak? The film, noticed, among other things, for placing a do-gooder Brahmin cop in the centre of the frame바카라was based loosely on real life, the Badaun gangrape-cum-murder case. Remember Paatal Lok? A Dalit mother was raped by a hundred men바카라it was retribution for her rebel son standing up to dominant caste bullying. The Dalits and oppressed castes have to be terrorised and disciplined in order to ensure dominance, and what could be a more complete way to do it than violating a Dalit woman바카라s body? It accomplishes real and symbolic violence together. That바카라s why rape and gendered violence have always been used as a political tool to contain power within the sway of the ruling class/castes for a long time now. From the old 바카라nidan바카라 of a Shudra woman having to produce her first child with the 바카라grace바카라 of a Brahmin man to the horrific Laxmanpur Bathe incident of 1997 where Ranvir Sena militia casually mixed rape with massacre, the Dalit woman바카라s body has been created and recreated as a site of violence to rip apart the aspirations of the marginalised.