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Home EDITORIAL

Homes Shouldn’t Hurt Women

Editor by Editor
November 1, 2025
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In the quiet corners of homes across Jammu & Kashmir, a storm brews—unseen, unheard and often unspoken. It does not roar like conflict or flash like headlines, yet its impact is profound and enduring. Domestic violence, has emerged as one of the most pressing social crises. The recent revelation of nearly 2,900 cases in just two years and a staggering 121.61% rise in the last financial year, is not merely a statistic; it is a collective cry for justice.

These numbers, drawn from Sakhi centres and Mission Shakti dashboards, reflect both progress and pain. More women are reaching out, seeking help, breaking the silence. But the surge also reveals a deeper truth: violence within homes remains pervasive, normalized and often invisible. It thrives in the shadows of tradition, under the weight of economic stress and within the silence imposed by shame.

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Too often, domestic violence is cloaked in euphemisms “family matter,” “marital discord,” “private issue.” These phrases serve as veils, shielding abusers and isolating survivors. But violence, no matter how quietly it unfolds, is never private. Its consequences ripple outward, affecting children who grow up normalizing abuse, communities that fail to intervene and generations that inherit silence as legacy. Breaking this cycle requires not just institutional reform, but a cultural awakening. We must name the violence, confront its roots and build a society where compassion is louder than control and where every woman’s safety is seen as a measure of our collective humanity.

For many women, the journey from victimhood to voice is long and fraught. The home, meant to be a haven, becomes a battleground. Emotional wounds fester behind closed doors. Physical scars are hidden beneath layers of clothing and fear. And yet, in the face of the darkness, there is light—centres that offer shelter, counselling, legal aid and hope. Helplines that connect women to safety. Networks that remind them: you are not alone.

But support systems, while vital, are not enough. The real challenge lies in transforming the societal fabric that allows such violence to persist. We must ask: Why does silence still feel safer than speaking out? Why are women still told to endure for the sake of family honour or children’s futures? Why is dignity negotiable?

To truly confront domestic violence, we must shift from reaction to prevention. Awareness must begin in classrooms, where children learn not just arithmetic, but empathy. Gender equality must be woven into education and public discourse. Economic empowerment must be prioritized, because financial dependence often traps women in cycles of abuse. Legal literacy must be expanded, especially in rural and remote areas, so that rights are not just written in law but lived in reality.

And above all, we must listen. To the voices that tremble but speak. To the stories that hurt but heal. To the women who, despite everything, choose courage over silence. Their resilience is not just personal, it is political. It challenges the status quo and demands a future where safety is not conditional and freedom are not a privilege.

Domestic violence is not a women’s issue; it is a societal wound. Healing it requires collective introspection, policy reform and cultural transformation. It demands that we see beyond the numbers to the lives they represent. That we replace silence with solidarity, shame with support and fear with freedom.

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