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Social media gave me more love than hate: student activist Gurmehar Kaur

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Press Trust of India New Delhi
Last Updated : Sep 12 2018 | 6:10 PM IST

After having been at the receiving end of online abuse, and her posts being reduced to memes, student activist Gurmehar Kaur on Wednesday said the "hate" would never match to the level of "love" and support she received from people through social media.

Last year, Kaur was trolled online for her stand against campus violence and for appearing in an earlier recorded video in which she was seen holding a placard that read, "Pakistan did not kill my father but war did".

"Everyone wants to know about the gossipy bit 'How did you feel', 'Were you scared when that happened'. But nobody asked me how many friends I made, how many women stood up, how many messages of solidarity I got.

"Hate comes in a very orchestrated way, it is a 9 to 5 thing with the hate. But the love I got is impossible (to explain). I don't think I would have survived if it wasn't for the love of the people that I received throughout," said Kaur, while speaking here at the 6th edition of the annual SHEROES Summit - 'Building Communities'.

Describing social media as a "public space" similar to a street, Kaur said that women should occupy this space to make it more "safe" and not shy away from it for the "fear of trolls".

"Everyone is online, everyone is putting up their opinion, it is not a virtual world anymore it is a public space.

"We need to occupy these spaces so that many young girls sitting in a tiny town, who have an idea or a thought, can put their opinion out there without any fear," the 21-year-old student activist added.

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Kaur, who made it clear that her activism didn't start at once after she joined Delhi University, said speaking up has been important for her since the school days.

"Speaking up is important because when you speak up, face the brunt of it, and survive it... you then give courage to at least ten other women to speak their mind.

"They say 'she spoke up, she survived the distress, now I think I can also do that.' This is how they get the courage to raise their voice," she said.

At SHEROES Summit, an initiative by a women's online community platform, diverse women professionals and businesses come together, with choices at the center of it all.

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First Published: Sep 12 2018 | 6:10 PM IST

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