SRK teaches his sons Aryan and li'l AbRam to see women with equality
SRK teaches his sons Aryan and li'l AbRam to see women with equality
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Superstar Shahrukh Khan is not only an outstanding actor but also a dotting father as he is proud daddy of three kids Aryan, Suhana and AbRam.

As the little one AbRam is very little to teach life lesson, though SRK gives Aryan life lessons to Aryan about respecting women and see them with equality. King Khan in an exclusive interview with women's magazine i.e., Femina speaks about teaching his big boy life lessons.

Here's the excerpts of interview: Can Aryan go shirtless?

He says, "I’m bringing up my sons to treat all as equals; as boys, they will have no extra privileges over girls. Sometimes I’m a bit conservative. I believe that a man in his house doesn’t have the right to go shirtless in front of his mother, sister or women friends. I tell Aryan to put on a T-shirt all the time."

What will Aryan's reaction if Suhana came out without a T-shirt?

"If you’d feel uncomfortable seeing your mother, daughter, sister, women friends without their clothes on, why would you expect them to accept you shirtless? It’s got nothing to do with having breasts or not—don’t do something a girl can’t do."

When SRK was asked about Equality, he states, "Equality should not be an excuse to lose your chivalry. I tell Aryan that tu-tadak is unacceptable when he’s addressing a girl. ‘Tu pizza le aa’, ‘tu idhar aa’ is not how you address women. Show some respect. Now it’s reached a point where the other day my little one, AbRam, was horsing around with the nanny and he pulled her hair. Aryan was so incensed, he said, ‘Let him turn five and I will discipline him!’ I tell Aryan and even AbRam never hurt a woman. If you do, I'll nehead you and no, times have not changed. A girl is not your chhadi-buddy; Show some respect."

Lastly Shahrukh said, "I’m very comfortable around women I work with. But I come from a place where opening the door for a girl or pulling a chair out for her are basics. It does not mean she can’t take care of herself, it just means that you, as a man, care for her. I have lost out on a lot of edgy cinema because I refuse to work in films where women are not respected. Adi (director Aditya Chopra) and I always have fights over dialogue where I’m supposed to say to my mother in Punjabi, ‘Tu kya kar rahi hai.’ How can I address my screen mother with ‘tu’—but they forced me to in Jab Tak Hai Jaan."

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