In Gwalior, an incident involving defaced wall art sparked reflection on everyday disrespect toward women. Public wall paintings showing women in yoga poses were vandalised in a vulgar manner, with scratches deliberately made around intimate areas, distorting the artwork and s*xualising what was meant to represent health and discipline. The act highlighted how even faceless, symbolic depictions of women are not spared from indecent behaviour. What stood out, however, was the response. A young man took it upon himself to repaint and fix the damaged graffiti, covering the vulgar markings and restoring the yoga figures to their original form. His action sent a clear message that such defacement should not be normalised. The repair became a small but meaningful stand against casual misogyny in public spaces. From '19-Minute MMS Video' Mystery to Smriti Jain Jaisalmer Case: The Viral Leaks and Digital Voyeurism of 2025.
Gwalior Wall Art Defaced in Vulgar Manner
Women are not safe even in Grafitti
In Gwalior, Madhya Pradesh, a young man tried fixing graffiti of Yoga poses on the wall which was defaced by miscreants. pic.twitter.com/LwnoFOWUiX
— Piyush Rai (@Benarasiyaa) January 5, 2026
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