A Tehsildar in Rajasthan's Kota district has written a letter on the occasion of Raksha Bandhan appealing to the public to make women voluntarily give up their rights from the khatedari (parental agricultural land). The letter has drawn wide criticism from the women’s rights groups, who have termed it as patriarchal.
On August 21, Dilip Singh Prajapati, a Tehsildar in Digod Tehsil, wrote a letter titled, 'make Raksha Bandhan memorable, get sisters to voluntarily give up their rights'.
"After the demise of a khatedar, the name of his daughter, son and wife are mentioned in his place. However, there is a tradition since generations that sisters and daughters don’t take their share from parental agricultural land and immovable property and instead take her share from the assets of her in-laws. Some women want to voluntarily give up this right, but this doesn't happen due to the negligence and carelessness of farmers".
The letter adds, "That at times when land is acquired by the government, the cheque for compensation often gets issued in the name of sisters-daughters and in some situations sisters don’t return the amount of the cheque to their brothers. And it creates a division between the bonding of sister and brother. And in most of the cases, siblings die without speaking to each other".
Prajapati added in the letter, "Those sisters who are ready to voluntarily relinquish her rights can make Raksha Bandhan memorable, by voluntarily giving up on her share in the property.”