The trauma about undergoing syphilis check-ups is writ large on the faces of the women in copper plate engravings. In one, she is wailing, her hair grabbed by a Tommy, a colonist ready to prod with a finger, and male medico ready to perform surgery; another plate shows a group of hassled women on a boat being chased by a crocodile, and CDA 1968 stamp. But the film doesn’t delve into details of the ‘torturous’ medical procedures. “The infected women,” says Dr Chakravarti when asked to elaborate, “were hosed down with powerful jets of water and disinfectants. Syphilis sores form on and around the gentitals and so every checkup meant the women were forced to reveal themselves to the doctors. The intrusions were conducted in a hurried manner without care if it caused them pain. The women could not leave the locked hospitals till they recovered, which could mean two-three months, the women could not earn any income, which is why many tried to escape.” Inclusion of the fact that infected Tommies were not put through the same rigmarole of check-ups, lock ups and shame, would have demonstrated how patriarchal narratives mostly blame a woman, make her atone alone, for an act beyond her control.
The narrative does not extend to the Criminal Tribes Act 1871 that allowed the Company to perform similar medical check-ups of transsexuals and hijras—a section of whom would join sex work—as it intended to systemically eliminate the community. Chakravarti says her research didn’t extend to the third gender. “Sonagachi largely had cis-gender women sex workers, not many trans and hijras. The hijra akhadas (nodes) where the leader, called amma, designates duties like begging, offering blessings at festivities, sex work, have their own coded language… it’s a whole different grammar, and I didn’t want to get into that.”