The Jamia Review

Women on Sale: Use Code ‘Islamophobia’ for Discount

Syed Taqui Haider

Syed Taqui Haider

Published

Share

Women on Sale: Use Code ‘Islamophobia’ for Discount

Sulli” is a slang or a hateful attribute for Muslim women, often mentioned to degrade the identity of Muslims in general. The page, Sulli Deals, offered pictures and information of some Muslim women who were students, activists, or journalists. If you are a woman and at some point, you have raised your voice against injustice, there are higher chances that you could find yourself on the platform. To be a woman with a voice makes you a sinner but to be a Muslim woman with a voice makes you deal of the day!

The news spread like wildfire when the co-founder of DO Politics and writer of several books, Ajeet Bharti tweeted and asked people to welcome the open-source which is bringing good to the general mass. According to Bharti, the unethical ‘sale’ of women being auctioned online was not a matter of concern but something to be welcomed. The Sulli Deals incident has thrown us back to the era where women who had a say were prosecuted or shamed in public. The only difference being the advanced technology that has given space to the filthy minds on the internet to do the same.

“When I first heard about the Sulli deals, I was not shocked. Why should I be? This wasn’t the first time Muslim women were besmirched for being outspoken against the right-wing Hindutva Majoritarianism. It is more traumatizing than it is appalling, you can’t feel safe in your own skin nowadays.”

– SIDRA ZAIDI, A STUDENT OF JAMIA MILLIA ISLAMIA

If this does not jiggle you, what will? As disturbing as this news is, so is the fact that it is not for the first time that this degree of objectification of women has been put upon such a level. In the past few years, the cases of slut-shaming and the prevailing rape culture have grown indefinitely. Incidents such as the Boys Locker Room, provide evidence of the objectification of women as a norm; or when a minister in the Parliament asked for the night rate of a ticket, show how insensitive and inhumane people have become.

“It is just a representation of a patriarchal mindset. If they were willing to trigger Muslims they could have added the pictures of men too but they pick up women as they think they are weak, which for sure we are not!”

– MIRZA SHAINA BEG, A STUDENT OF JAMIA MILLIA ISLAMIA

The bigger question is that “Is it just patriarchy, misogyny, and rape culture, or all of it coupled with Islamophobia?” For a nation where it is completely fine to raise violent slogans against minorities or asking an audience to kill and rape women, in the presence of police and media, Sulli Deals stands comparatively low.

The escalation of Islamophobia each day is making the environment more suffocating. If they could ask to kill and rape specific communities within societies, they are more likely to bring their plans into action someday. It is not the stance of the uneducated which hurts, it is the remarks of all those well-educated beings who stand to justify such acts of communal hatred and misogyny.

No arrests have been made regarding the Sulli Deals incident, which hasn’t surprised the masses. GitHub deleted the platform after the FIR but no names were brought to light. The fact that Sulli Deals was not actually selling women, raises a whole new set of questions. The most obvious one: Why?

“They are not trying to target us sexually but their motive is to induce fear in our minds, they want us to believe that we’ll face atrocities if we raise our VOICES.”

– AMBER, A STUDENT OF JAMIA MILLIA ISLAMIA

Their main plan could be spreading distress and panic among the ‘woke’ youth. Keeping in mind the whole atmosphere of Indian households after finding a picture of their daughter on such a platform, families will create pressure resulting in something which the offender actually wants.

Women are unstoppable. Regardless of gender if anyone speaks about the injustice which prevails in society they deserve applause and respect. Certainly not a place in some human trafficking sale or ill-remarks by the blind followers of communalism.

Syed Taqui Haider is a student pursuing English Literature from Jamia Millia Islamia.

Edited by: Reda Aamna

Syed Taqui Haider

Syed Taqui Haider

undefined...

Read More

Related Articles

Muslim Vote Bank in Bihar and Clerics as Political Brokers

Muslim Vote Bank in Bihar and Clerics as Political Brokers

The hour is up for Bihar's Muslims to wake up. The community has to grow autonomous, responsible leadership committed to their common good. They have ...

Politics

4 min read

 SIR: Decoding Bihar's Voter List Verification Drive

SIR: Decoding Bihar's Voter List Verification Drive

In the politically vibrant Bihar landscape — a state that is synonymous with intricate social hierarchies and grassroots democracy — an administrative...

Opinion

8 min read

The IMF, Pakistan, and a Crisis No One’s Fixing

The IMF, Pakistan, and a Crisis No One’s Fixing

Amidst ongoing and escalating tensions with India, Pakistan receives a $1.1 billion IMF bailout in May 2025. However, this isn't the first time the co...

Economy

5 min read

Madleen Kulab: The Palestinian woman who inspired Freedom Flotilla's mission to break Israel's aid blockade in Gaza

Madleen Kulab: The Palestinian woman who inspired Freedom Flotilla's mission to break Israel's aid blockade in Gaza

Madleen Kulab, Gaza's first and only fisherwoman, who embodies strength, resistance and resilience, gave her name and spirit to the Madleen, the Freed...

Never miss a story

Catch up on the most important headlines with a roundup of essential Jamia stories, delivered to your inbox daily.