Turning Girls Into “Trade-Offs” Is Misogyny: Santosh Verma’s Remarks Reveal the Disturbing Rise of Brahminphobia
by https://www.facebook.com/tfipost, TFI Desk · TFIPOST.comThe recent remarks made by IAS officer Santosh Verma, suggesting that reservation should continue “until his son forms a relationship with a Brahmin girl,” have shaken public conscience. His statement reduces a girl—any girl, Brahmin or otherwise—into an object to be exchanged in some imagined barter for social justice. This is not merely a distasteful joke or a casual remark. It is a disturbing revelation of deep misogyny coupled with a growing trend of Brahminphobia—a form of targeted prejudice that is increasingly visible in public discourse.
No girl is a “gift,” a “donation,” or a “bargaining chip.” Girls are not prize money to be traded to settle the balance sheet of social justice. Whether a girl belongs to a Brahmin family or to any other community, she is a human being with dignity, will, and autonomy—not an object in a socio-political transaction.
Santosh Verma’s words therefore deserve unequivocal condemnation—not because they target only Brahmins, but because they attack both a woman’s personhood and a community’s dignity. And Brahminphobia gets firm.
Misogyny at the Core: Women Are Not Social Currency
To imply that a Brahmin girl must be “given” in order to create social harmony is not only degrading but rooted in oppressive patriarchy. This thinking carries forward archaic notions where women were treated as property—passed, exchanged and “given away” as part of alliances or settlements.
In a modern constitutional democracy, such a mindset of Brahminphobia from a civil servant is alarming. The role of a public officer is to protect people’s dignity—not trivialize it. A senior bureaucrat uttering such statements on a public platform normalizes the idea that:
- women can be traded,
- their consent is irrelevant, and
- they exist as tools for social engineering.
This is misogyny, plain and simple.
Endogamy Is a Social Practice, Not A Crime
The attempt to frame endogamous marriages—marriages within one’s own caste or community—as “discrimination” is intellectually dishonest. India has been an endogamous society for millennia, across all communities:
- upper castes marry within their groups,
- so-called lower castes do the same,
- many tribal groups exclusively practice marriage within their particular tribe or clan.
Even globally, ethnic, religious, and cultural endogamy is common. Endogamy is a choice, a social practice, not an act of oppression by default. Millions of inter-caste marriages do happen in India and should be supported—but it is equally wrong to shame communities that continue endogamous marriages by choice.
To use this natural social pattern as justification to objectify a girl is not only irrational, it is dangerous.
The Troubling Rise of Brahminphobia
Santosh Verma’s comment does not exist in isolation. It fits into a pattern of open hostility, stereotyping, and dehumanization directed at the Brahmin community—something that has grown in recent years in universities, political circles, and social campaigns.
Some disturbing instances include:
1. Anti-Brahmin graffiti and slogans in JNU
Several episodes have been reported in Jawaharlal Nehru University where walls were defaced with slogans like:
- “Brahmin Bharat Chhodo”
- “Brahmins Leave the Campus—There Will Be Blood”
Such slogans are not dissent. They are direct intimidation against an entire community.
2. Violent and hateful slogans
The infamous slogan “Tilak, Tarazu aur Talwar, inko maro jute chaar”—originally directed at Brahmins, Banias and Thakurs—has resurfaced in recent protests. Some student groups have used it along with inflammatory phrases labelling Brahmins as “terrorists” or calling for violence.
This is not social justice. This is hate speech. And theadministrative scenario retains a weird silence to Brahminphobia and its rising threats.
3. Politicians declaring Brahmins “outsiders”
In recent years, some Bihar politicians have described Brahmins as “outsiders” or “foreign implants” who supposedly do not belong in the state. Such rhetoric mirrors the kind of dangerous ethno-nationalist language used historically to justify violence against targeted groups.
4. Anti-Brahmin rhetoric in Tamil Nadu politics
Several political leaders and commentators in Tamil Nadu have repeatedly used derogatory, sweeping generalizations against Brahmins, often attributing all historical or contemporary social issues to one community—something that would never be considered acceptable if directed at any other caste.
These examples point toward something more sinister than casual prejudice. They point toward a developing genocidal mindset, where an entire community is portrayed as inherently evil or disposable.
History has shown repeatedly: Whenever a group is dehumanized—whether through slogans, insults, or political rhetoric—violence follows.
The Dual Threat: Misogyny + Caste-Targeted Hate
What makes Santosh Verma’s remarks particularly dangerous is that they combine:
- misogyny → reducing a Brahmin daughter to a negotiable object
- Brahminphobia → implying that a Brahmin girl’s body must be part of a “deal” to justify reservation or equality
This is not “progressive thought.”
This is not “social justice.”
This is not “reform.”
It is the use of a woman’s body as an ideological battleground and a community as a punching bag.
A society cannot call itself progressive if it fights caste-based prejudice by encouraging another form of caste hatred—and certainly not by furthering misogyny.
Time to Deal with Brahminphobia
India must safeguard women’s dignity and protect all communities—majority or minority—from hateful stereotyping. Criticism of privilege is legitimate; calling for violence or treating someone’s daughter as tradeable capital is not.
Santosh Verma’s remarks reveal the urgent need for a wider conversation:
not only about misogyny,
not only about constitutional conduct,
but also about the very real rise of Brahminphobia in sections of academia, politics, and online activism.
Social justice cannot be built upon dehumanization—of women or of any caste.