ON LADY DRIVERS
The Motor car was reportedly first seen on Indian roads in 1897 and of course was for long, driven only by men . The first Indian lady to drive a car is reported to be Mrs. Suzanne RD Tata in 1905. I have no idea when a lady would have first ventured to take to the wheels in Kerala. It could not have been too far in the past, otherwise the men in the state would not be still staring at women drivers with awe /envy even in this twenty first century !
It was in the early eighties that I decided to take the steering
wheels in my hands ! Even in a city like Cochin , those days, one could count
the lady car drivers on your fingers .There
was just one driving school in this city
then, which afforded driving lessons to women.
The
first car that I bought was a Fiat owned by a
lady doctor. She was very frank when she gave me the reason for selling
it. She
had to drive to a hospital a little distance away from the city and every
day she was literally chased by a bus on the way. The bus driver derived some sadistic pleasure of scaring the
hell out of her by almost scraping against the car even when she gave enough room for him to pass. The
passengers in the bus also seemed to enjoy the intimidation of the doctor, by
the bus driver. What she told me, I think really instilled in me a kind of vindictive
attitude ,may be because I was a
fighter against injustice of all kinds, and I resolved never to be cowed
down by such intimidation tactics of any driver, be it a light or heavy vehicle. Although
initially I was wary about buses behind me honking away to glory even when it
was evident that I could not move my car forward
an inch, in course of time I
developed a kind of sinister pleasure in not
giving way, even if I could ! After all, I also had equal rights to usage of the road.
When the
Supreme Court gave its final ruling on
the ban of tinted glasses and sunshields on motor vehicles, it is women
like me we who were really adversely
affected .For women like me who have been a minority on the roads, even
in a city like Cochin , the advent of the sun film on car windows was
a boon. Apart from the fact that it saved our skin form the harsh rays while driving in the scorching sun , it
afforded a kind of shield from the men on the roads who looked into (looked down would be the right
word !) the vehicles driven by a woman , as if seeing an extraterrestrial creature.
This was very irritating especially
while waiting at traffic junctions for the green lights. The looks
that emanated from men in the vehicles alongside , was framed with sarcastic
and sardonic expressions and derision .It certainly was and is , an intrusion into our privacy .
There were days
when I had to leave my office after sundown and the sun film on the car
gave me a kind of secure feeling to drive home . In those days Cochin though considered the commercial
capital of Kerala was like a sleepy
village by 7 pm. The shops would down their shutters by then and the roads were
near empty. The number of cars on the roads
was also hardly ten percent of what it is today. Mostly Ambassadors and Fiats with the
little Maruti coming on to the scene by
the mid eighties. I remember an incident
in the nineties. On the
Annual Financial Closing day, the bank branches had to submit , to the
local administrative office, what was referred to as the Closing Returns of the branch office. This was to be submitted on the same day , even if it was late into the night. That was much before the
banks were computerized and the preparation of the statements which
were done manually, often could be completed only by 10
pm or later. On that particular day, by the time we got everything ready at our branch, it was about 11 pm and as the
HOD ,I insisted that I shall deliver the papers to the Administrative office myself ,on my way home and refused
offers from other male colleagues to undertake the assignment. The fact that
the windows of my car had the sunscreen film added to my confidence as I felt
that it would not be apparent that a
woman was at the wheels, to anyone on the road who had any evil designs! After
handing over the cover I took the road home. The roads were totally deserted. I
noticed the headlight of a two wheeler which appeared to be following me. I
decided not to take the shortcut to my house and kept driving
at maximum speed possible on the main road. Finally I
reached the by lane to the house and my foot was fully pressed on
the accelerator. The two wheeler disappeared ! The next day when I narrated the
incident to my colleagues, everyone had a hearty laugh. It was then that I came
to know that the rider of the two wheeler was none other than a colleague who
was deployed by the others to follow me till I reached a safe distance from my home ! That was a day when I realized that chivalry
was certainly not totally dead !
But
not all of the male species are chivalrous
and most still have the chauvinistic attitude, which is an undisputed
fact. When we women try to believe that
the attitude of men towards women
is certainly improving , some experience
pulls us back to the old track. Like what happened the other day. I got
a SOS call from my niece who was coming to Cochin by train ,on
an emergency trip. The train was reaching the city at an unearthly hour of 3 am
and her parents were not in town. She
wanted me to pick her up from the
Railway station. I was out on the road by about 2.45 am. The fact that the
car’s windows were not tinted did make
me feel a little insecure, but I
proceeded. Just when I was nearing the Railway Station ,I saw a couple of men
in uniform on the left side of the road. I did not expect to be stopped , but
was. By then I had overshot by a few feet and one of the policemen came running
to the car. “Sir it’s a woman ! “ he shouted
to the other man. The senior strode to the car. I pulled down the window
glass. He wanted to know where I was going to, at this odd hour. Understandable . But his next remark wasn’t. Don’t you have men
at home , was his question. I suppressed the rage I
felt and intuitively decided to keep my
cool. Without answering his question I asked him in Malayalam ,”Son, do you want to see my papers or not ?”.He stared at me for a
few seconds , may be gauging my age .May be my expression and tone warned him
that I would not tolerate any nonsense, or
maybe he realized that I was not a young lady out for a jaunt at that hour ! He
just
gestured me to leave !That sure was not a case of chivalry, nor a
question of concern for a woman driving
at an odd hour. It was absolute chauvinism and gender bias ! It is the
tribe of this kind ,who by their behavior still infuse a kind of insecure feeling even in comparatively braver women like me . Well ,when
even the so called God- men and ministers including even women ministers , keep
questioning the propriety of women venturing out in the dark ,what can we
expect from the common man? It will be ages till the mindset of the average man
changes to accommodate the concept that
there cannot be two different
standards for men and women.


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