Imagine you were a member of the National Commission for Women when the law for domestic violence was being made. Write a diary entry on one of your days during that time, describing your experience of participating in the movement to bring about the new law.
Answers
Answer:
please thanks me
Explanation:
If all men are born free, how is it that all women are born slaves?”
Mary Astel 1668-1731: Some Reflections upon Marriage (1706 ed.)
Dear friends, I am deeply honoured by the trust you have reposed in me and elected me to the highest office of the Indian Psychiatric Society. At this point of time, I would like to pay my respects to my revered teachers and seniors who taught me the ABC of psychiatry, mentored and blessed me all along my journey to this point. I salute (Late) Professor BB Sethi who admitted me to psychiatry. Dear Sirs, Prof. A. K. Agarwal, Prof. N. Lal, Prof. S. C. Gupta, Prof. Mata Prasad, Prof. C. K. Rastogi, Prof. A. K. Tandon, Prof. Prabhat Sitholey, and Dr. Ashok Trivedi, I thank you all wholeheartedly for all that you have taught me. I would like to give the credit to you all for this achievement. At this moment, I would like to remember my father (Late) Pandit Harish Chandra Sharma, a practicing lawyer at the Allahabad High court, for the enthusiasm he infused in me and for his lofty ideals, a few of which I have imbibed. I would like to dedicate this address to him.
I have chosen “Violence against Women: Where are the Solutions?” as the theme of my address on the following accounts:
Violence against women is a social, economic, developmental, legal, educational, human rights, and health (physical and mental) issue.
It is a preventable cause of morbidity and mortality in women
The relationship between violence against women and mental illness has not been adequately explored.
Application of laws related to violence in the setting of mental illness is difficult
Despite the social and religious sanctions against it in all cultures, it has continued.
Responses by communities, religious institutions, government (various commissions), international conventions, stringent legislations and penal measures have failed miserably in containing the menace.