Bhanwari Devi -

In the annals of Indian social justice, certain names echo through courtrooms and legislative chambers: Nirbhaya, Shakti Mills, Bilkis Bano. But before any of these became national symbols, there was Bhanwari Devi. A sathin (friend) of the state’s women’s development program, Bhanwari Devi was a potter from a small village in Rajasthan whose courage in the face of feudal brutality gave birth to the legal framework that now protects millions of working women across India: the Vishakha Guidelines .

To honor Bhanwari Devi is to understand that legal frameworks are meaningless without social transformation. It is to recognize that the #MeToo movement in India did not begin in newsrooms or film studios. It began in a potter’s hut in Rajasthan, in the dirt, where a poor, Dalit woman refused to look away from injustice—even when it cost her everything. bhanwari devi

They warned her: “You have no business telling us what to do. Remember, you are a potter’s wife.” On the night of September 22, 1992, Bhanwari Devi’s husband was away. Five upper-caste Gujjar men—including the landlord’s brother and son—came to her home. They dragged her outside, pinned her down, and gang-raped her in front of her husband’s nephew. According to her testimony, as they assaulted her, they screamed casteist slurs: “Take this, potter-woman. This is your reward for trying to be a big shot.” In the annals of Indian social justice, certain

She reminds us that the fight against sexual violence is inseparable from the fight against caste. Her rapists were not just men; they were upper-caste men enforcing a feudal order. The Vishakha Guidelines, now the PoSH Act, were born from the rape of a Dalit woman who dared to tell a landlord that child marriage was illegal. To honor Bhanwari Devi is to understand that

It was in this moment of absolute despair that Bhanwari Devi found an unlikely ally: a group of feminist lawyers and human rights activists in Jaipur. They filed a public interest litigation (PIL) not to retry the rape—though that would come later—but to define what workplace sexual harassment meant in a country that had no law against it. At the time of Bhanwari Devi’s rape, India had no specific law against sexual harassment at the workplace. The Indian Penal Code only covered rape and outraging modesty, but it did not address the systemic power dynamics of harassment. The Supreme Court of India took up the PIL (titled Vishakha & Ors v. State of Rajasthan ), using Bhanwari Devi’s case as the foundational fact.

Yet, on November 28, 1995, the trial judge acquitted all five men. The reasoning was stunning in its patriarchal audacity. The judge argued that since Bhanwari Devi was a sathin who moved freely among men for her work, she was not "chaste." More infamously, the judge reasoned that a high-caste Gujjar man would not “lower himself” to rape a Dalit woman because she was untouchable. The judgment stated: “It is unbelievable that an upper-caste person would touch a lower-caste woman… It is difficult to believe that they would like to pollute their mouth by kissing a lower-caste woman.”

Yet, in a rare turn of events, the Supreme Court intervened. In 2017, on the 25th anniversary of her rape, the Supreme Court upheld the conviction of Badri Lal, restoring the life sentence. The court observed that lower courts had been swayed by "caste prejudices and patriarchal mindsets." As of today, Bhanwari Devi continues to fight for the conviction of the remaining four accused. Now in her 60s, Bhanwari Devi lives in a modest house on the outskirts of Jaipur, still fighting for her children’s education and her own safety. She is no longer a sathin . The government pension she receives is meager. She has been forgotten by the same state machinery she once served.