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Karnataka: Dalit Family Fined Rs 60,000 After a Teen 'Touches' Hindu Deity Idol| Family throws all idols in trash, replaces with Ambedkar photo

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The village elders ruled that the boy had touched the pole connected to the idol of Sidiranna, a prominent south Indian village deity, during a procession and the idol had turned "impure".


New Delhi: A Dalit family from Karnataka’s Kolar district has been fined Rs 60,000 after a 15-year-old boy allegedly touched a pole attached to an idol of a Hindu deity during a procession and village elders ruled that the idol had turned “impure” due to the touch of an “untouchable”, Indian Express reported.


On September 8, the villagers in Ullerahalli in Malur taluk of the Kolar district, located 60 kilometres from Bengaluru, held the Bhootayamma fair. Dalits were proscribed from attending the event and attending the village deity’s temple. As part of the fair, the villagers took out the procession of Sidiranna, a prominent south Indian village deity.

The 15-year-old happened to be present in the path of the procession and allegedly laid his hands on the pole connected to the idol of the deity. One of the villagers, Venkateshappa, noticed it and alerted others while also ordering the boy and his family to appear before the village elders.

The next day, on September 9, when the boy did appear before village elders along with his mother, Shobhamma, they were asked to cough up Rs 60,000 as a fine. They were served an ultimatum to pay the amount by October 1. Failing to do so, the village elders said they would be “thrown out of the village”.

According to the locals, there are about 75-80 families in the village, and most of them belong to Vokkaliga community, categorised as ‘upper caste’ in Karanataka. Shobamma’s family is among 10 Scheduled Caste (SC) families which live on the fringes of the village. Her son is now a Class X student in nearby Tekal village.

Shobhamma is the only breadwinner of the family and makes about Rs 13,000 a month working as a housekeeping staff in Whitefield in Bengaluru. Her husband is mostly ill and cannot contribute to the family income.

“I take a train every morning at 5:30 am to Bengaluru and work as a housekeeping staff at an apartment in Whitefield and return by 7:30 pm. I get a salary of Rs 13,000 and that is all we have to run the house. The Rs 60,000 penalty came as a shock for us,” Indian Express quoted Shobhamma as saying.

When asked what was she told about the penalty imposed on her family, she said that, according to the village elders, the idol had “turned impure” since a Dalit boy had touched it, and they would need the money to “purify” it and repaint the idol.

“If God doesn’t like our touch or if people want to keep us away, what is the point of us offering prayers? Like any other person, I also have spent money, offered donations for God. Hereafter, I will not do any such thing and will only offer prayers to Dr. B.R. Ambedkar,” Shobhamma told Indian Express.

Although the incident took place on September 8 and the penalty was imposed on September 9, the incident came to light after 10 days following the intervention of Dalit organisations.

Local activist Sandesh of the Ambedkar Seva Samithi visited the family soon after he became aware of the incident. “I went to their home and helped them file a police complaint. Even after 75 years of independence, if such social evils are still in practice, where will the poor people go?” he asked.

Meanwhile, Kolar deputy commissioner Venkat Raja said he had visited the family and assured help. “We have given them a plot to construct a house and have paid them some money. We will provide a job for Shobamma in the social welfare hostel as well. I have also informed the police to arrest the accused at the earliest and they are at it,” Indian Express quoted Raja as saying.

The police also booked a number of villagers over the incident and invoked provisions of the Protection of Civil Rights Act against former Gram Panchayat member Narayanaswamy; Venkateshappa, the husband of the Gram Pradhan; panchayat vice-president; and a few others.

Such incidents of caste discrimination are not new in Karnataka. Last year, a Dalit family of Miyapur village in Koppal district was fined Rs 25,000 after its two-year-old child entered a temple in the village. Following such recurring incidents, the state government had already launched a programme named ‘Vinaya Samarasya Yojana’, an awareness programme meant to eradicate untouchability.

https://thewire.in/caste/karnataka-dalit-family-fined-rs-60000-after-a-teen-touches-hindu-deity-idol
 
the boy had touched the pole connected to the idol of Sidiranna
T-BOSSMAN2.JPG
 
The village elders ruled that the boy had touched the pole connected to the idol of Sidiranna, a prominent south Indian village deity, during a procession and the idol had turned "impure".


New Delhi: A Dalit family from Karnataka’s Kolar district has been fined Rs 60,000 after a 15-year-old boy allegedly touched a pole attached to an idol of a Hindu deity during a procession and village elders ruled that the idol had turned “impure” due to the touch of an “untouchable”, Indian Express reported.


On September 8, the villagers in Ullerahalli in Malur taluk of the Kolar district, located 60 kilometres from Bengaluru, held the Bhootayamma fair. Dalits were proscribed from attending the event and attending the village deity’s temple. As part of the fair, the villagers took out the procession of Sidiranna, a prominent south Indian village deity.

The 15-year-old happened to be present in the path of the procession and allegedly laid his hands on the pole connected to the idol of the deity. One of the villagers, Venkateshappa, noticed it and alerted others while also ordering the boy and his family to appear before the village elders.

The next day, on September 9, when the boy did appear before village elders along with his mother, Shobhamma, they were asked to cough up Rs 60,000 as a fine. They were served an ultimatum to pay the amount by October 1. Failing to do so, the village elders said they would be “thrown out of the village”.

According to the locals, there are about 75-80 families in the village, and most of them belong to Vokkaliga community, categorised as ‘upper caste’ in Karanataka. Shobamma’s family is among 10 Scheduled Caste (SC) families which live on the fringes of the village. Her son is now a Class X student in nearby Tekal village.

Shobhamma is the only breadwinner of the family and makes about Rs 13,000 a month working as a housekeeping staff in Whitefield in Bengaluru. Her husband is mostly ill and cannot contribute to the family income.

“I take a train every morning at 5:30 am to Bengaluru and work as a housekeeping staff at an apartment in Whitefield and return by 7:30 pm. I get a salary of Rs 13,000 and that is all we have to run the house. The Rs 60,000 penalty came as a shock for us,” Indian Express quoted Shobhamma as saying.

When asked what was she told about the penalty imposed on her family, she said that, according to the village elders, the idol had “turned impure” since a Dalit boy had touched it, and they would need the money to “purify” it and repaint the idol.

“If God doesn’t like our touch or if people want to keep us away, what is the point of us offering prayers? Like any other person, I also have spent money, offered donations for God. Hereafter, I will not do any such thing and will only offer prayers to Dr. B.R. Ambedkar,” Shobhamma told Indian Express.

Although the incident took place on September 8 and the penalty was imposed on September 9, the incident came to light after 10 days following the intervention of Dalit organisations.

Local activist Sandesh of the Ambedkar Seva Samithi visited the family soon after he became aware of the incident. “I went to their home and helped them file a police complaint. Even after 75 years of independence, if such social evils are still in practice, where will the poor people go?” he asked.

Meanwhile, Kolar deputy commissioner Venkat Raja said he had visited the family and assured help. “We have given them a plot to construct a house and have paid them some money. We will provide a job for Shobamma in the social welfare hostel as well. I have also informed the police to arrest the accused at the earliest and they are at it,” Indian Express quoted Raja as saying.

The police also booked a number of villagers over the incident and invoked provisions of the Protection of Civil Rights Act against former Gram Panchayat member Narayanaswamy; Venkateshappa, the husband of the Gram Pradhan; panchayat vice-president; and a few others.

Such incidents of caste discrimination are not new in Karnataka. Last year, a Dalit family of Miyapur village in Koppal district was fined Rs 25,000 after its two-year-old child entered a temple in the village. Following such recurring incidents, the state government had already launched a programme named ‘Vinaya Samarasya Yojana’, an awareness programme meant to eradicate untouchability.

https://thewire.in/caste/karnataka-dalit-family-fined-rs-60000-after-a-teen-touches-hindu-deity-idol
 
The village elders ruled that the boy had touched the pole connected to the idol of Sidiranna, a prominent south Indian village deity, during a procession and the idol had turned "impure".


New Delhi: A Dalit family from Karnataka’s Kolar district has been fined Rs 60,000 after a 15-year-old boy allegedly touched a pole attached to an idol of a Hindu deity during a procession and village elders ruled that the idol had turned “impure” due to the touch of an “untouchable”, Indian Express reported.


On September 8, the villagers in Ullerahalli in Malur taluk of the Kolar district, located 60 kilometres from Bengaluru, held the Bhootayamma fair. Dalits were proscribed from attending the event and attending the village deity’s temple. As part of the fair, the villagers took out the procession of Sidiranna, a prominent south Indian village deity.

The 15-year-old happened to be present in the path of the procession and allegedly laid his hands on the pole connected to the idol of the deity. One of the villagers, Venkateshappa, noticed it and alerted others while also ordering the boy and his family to appear before the village elders.

The next day, on September 9, when the boy did appear before village elders along with his mother, Shobhamma, they were asked to cough up Rs 60,000 as a fine. They were served an ultimatum to pay the amount by October 1. Failing to do so, the village elders said they would be “thrown out of the village”.

According to the locals, there are about 75-80 families in the village, and most of them belong to Vokkaliga community, categorised as ‘upper caste’ in Karanataka. Shobamma’s family is among 10 Scheduled Caste (SC) families which live on the fringes of the village. Her son is now a Class X student in nearby Tekal village.

Shobhamma is the only breadwinner of the family and makes about Rs 13,000 a month working as a housekeeping staff in Whitefield in Bengaluru. Her husband is mostly ill and cannot contribute to the family income.

“I take a train every morning at 5:30 am to Bengaluru and work as a housekeeping staff at an apartment in Whitefield and return by 7:30 pm. I get a salary of Rs 13,000 and that is all we have to run the house. The Rs 60,000 penalty came as a shock for us,” Indian Express quoted Shobhamma as saying.

When asked what was she told about the penalty imposed on her family, she said that, according to the village elders, the idol had “turned impure” since a Dalit boy had touched it, and they would need the money to “purify” it and repaint the idol.

“If God doesn’t like our touch or if people want to keep us away, what is the point of us offering prayers? Like any other person, I also have spent money, offered donations for God. Hereafter, I will not do any such thing and will only offer prayers to Dr. B.R. Ambedkar,” Shobhamma told Indian Express.

Although the incident took place on September 8 and the penalty was imposed on September 9, the incident came to light after 10 days following the intervention of Dalit organisations.

Local activist Sandesh of the Ambedkar Seva Samithi visited the family soon after he became aware of the incident. “I went to their home and helped them file a police complaint. Even after 75 years of independence, if such social evils are still in practice, where will the poor people go?” he asked.

Meanwhile, Kolar deputy commissioner Venkat Raja said he had visited the family and assured help. “We have given them a plot to construct a house and have paid them some money. We will provide a job for Shobamma in the social welfare hostel as well. I have also informed the police to arrest the accused at the earliest and they are at it,” Indian Express quoted Raja as saying.

The police also booked a number of villagers over the incident and invoked provisions of the Protection of Civil Rights Act against former Gram Panchayat member Narayanaswamy; Venkateshappa, the husband of the Gram Pradhan; panchayat vice-president; and a few others.

Such incidents of caste discrimination are not new in Karnataka. Last year, a Dalit family of Miyapur village in Koppal district was fined Rs 25,000 after its two-year-old child entered a temple in the village. Following such recurring incidents, the state government had already launched a programme named ‘Vinaya Samarasya Yojana’, an awareness programme meant to eradicate untouchability.

https://thewire.in/caste/karnataka-dalit-family-fined-rs-60000-after-a-teen-touches-hindu-deity-idol
Replacing one stupid belief with another. Kab sudhrenge log.
 
They should be charged for charging the family with a fine. Under constitutional equality it is a crime and they should read universal declaration of human rights. Why should the family be fined for a boy touching the pole. They touch the pole along with the idol themselves. And, why does the victim need to replace one idol with another. How about no idols. We don't worship ourselves, why worship someone else. On the level of love and respect, parents come first, and I don't worship them, certainly will not worship anyone other than unseen God.
 
I don’t see the appeal in Hindu religion where people are born into a status that is even worse than that of an animal.
religion shiligion gya tel lene.. pahay hai, sab vadiya..

abject poverty me kisi small village me born to fir aapki halaat out hi rahegi, ultimate handicap

and then people har type ka chutiyapa and badsulook krenge aap ke saath

all about the money
 
I don’t see the appeal in Hindu religion where people are born into a status that is even worse than that of an animal.
Yes, Hindu religion is literally, Brahman/Upper caste religion. Hinduism is by Brahman, of Upper caste, for Upper castes. This is a very basic thing that anyone can confirm by reading any Hindu scripture.

How, majority OBC SC St are kept in Hinduism? By Anti-Conversion Laws. If any OBC SC ST converts to Islam or Christianity, his reservation is taken away to de-incentivize it on paper. To convert have give declaration in News Paper and take permission from government, This is how Brahman/Upper caste have a reservation on followers for their Brahman/Hindu religion. This are bureaucratic hurdles to stop any poor person from changing religion, also after the media declaration Upper caste organization like RSS start giving threats to deter conversion, psychological pressure. Organization like PFI, Bhim Army etc assist the poor to convert, Dawah done by PFI is one of the reason it was banned extra-judicially by Upper castes.

India’s Anti-Conversion Laws: a Violent attack on the Dignity of Dalits, Adivasis and Women?​

https://mainstreamweekly.net/article12263.html

In the end its all about money and resources, caste system is racist apartheid used to kill competition from OBC SC St.
 


Dalits Standing on dome your Brahmani Temple, Hindutwa Saffron flag thrown down and replaced with Blue Ambedkarite flag. Temple captured. Honor of Dalit Family restored.
I think vast majority of Dalits function as maintainers or foot soldiers of Brahminical superiority as part of Hindutava. Brahman caste was originally the 'middle-man' between the Kshatriya ruling caste and the masses. This was on the Indus. But, later in history newly arriving Scythians settling along the Ganges adopted the caste system and installed Brahmans at the top of the hierarchy. They make people chant Jai Shree Ram, who was an original Kshatriya, who did not practise idolatry, and despised it. Yet, they are getting people abused, lynched, raped and killed in his name.
 
Dalits Standing on dome your Brahmani Temple, Hindutwa Saffron flag thrown down and replaced with Blue Ambedkarite flag. Temple captured. Honor of Dalit Family restored.


Get used to it, from now, this will be the response. You can
View attachment 883302
LOL

what makes you think I give a fvck ?
 
The village elders ruled that the boy had touched the pole connected to the idol of Sidiranna, a prominent south Indian village deity, during a procession and the idol had turned "impure".


New Delhi: A Dalit family from Karnataka’s Kolar district has been fined Rs 60,000 after a 15-year-old boy allegedly touched a pole attached to an idol of a Hindu deity during a procession and village elders ruled that the idol had turned “impure” due to the touch of an “untouchable”, Indian Express reported.


On September 8, the villagers in Ullerahalli in Malur taluk of the Kolar district, located 60 kilometres from Bengaluru, held the Bhootayamma fair. Dalits were proscribed from attending the event and attending the village deity’s temple. As part of the fair, the villagers took out the procession of Sidiranna, a prominent south Indian village deity.

The 15-year-old happened to be present in the path of the procession and allegedly laid his hands on the pole connected to the idol of the deity. One of the villagers, Venkateshappa, noticed it and alerted others while also ordering the boy and his family to appear before the village elders.

The next day, on September 9, when the boy did appear before village elders along with his mother, Shobhamma, they were asked to cough up Rs 60,000 as a fine. They were served an ultimatum to pay the amount by October 1. Failing to do so, the village elders said they would be “thrown out of the village”.

According to the locals, there are about 75-80 families in the village, and most of them belong to Vokkaliga community, categorised as ‘upper caste’ in Karanataka. Shobamma’s family is among 10 Scheduled Caste (SC) families which live on the fringes of the village. Her son is now a Class X student in nearby Tekal village.

Shobhamma is the only breadwinner of the family and makes about Rs 13,000 a month working as a housekeeping staff in Whitefield in Bengaluru. Her husband is mostly ill and cannot contribute to the family income.

“I take a train every morning at 5:30 am to Bengaluru and work as a housekeeping staff at an apartment in Whitefield and return by 7:30 pm. I get a salary of Rs 13,000 and that is all we have to run the house. The Rs 60,000 penalty came as a shock for us,” Indian Express quoted Shobhamma as saying.

When asked what was she told about the penalty imposed on her family, she said that, according to the village elders, the idol had “turned impure” since a Dalit boy had touched it, and they would need the money to “purify” it and repaint the idol.

“If God doesn’t like our touch or if people want to keep us away, what is the point of us offering prayers? Like any other person, I also have spent money, offered donations for God. Hereafter, I will not do any such thing and will only offer prayers to Dr. B.R. Ambedkar,” Shobhamma told Indian Express.

Although the incident took place on September 8 and the penalty was imposed on September 9, the incident came to light after 10 days following the intervention of Dalit organisations.

Local activist Sandesh of the Ambedkar Seva Samithi visited the family soon after he became aware of the incident. “I went to their home and helped them file a police complaint. Even after 75 years of independence, if such social evils are still in practice, where will the poor people go?” he asked.

Meanwhile, Kolar deputy commissioner Venkat Raja said he had visited the family and assured help. “We have given them a plot to construct a house and have paid them some money. We will provide a job for Shobamma in the social welfare hostel as well. I have also informed the police to arrest the accused at the earliest and they are at it,” Indian Express quoted Raja as saying.

The police also booked a number of villagers over the incident and invoked provisions of the Protection of Civil Rights Act against former Gram Panchayat member Narayanaswamy; Venkateshappa, the husband of the Gram Pradhan; panchayat vice-president; and a few others.

Such incidents of caste discrimination are not new in Karnataka. Last year, a Dalit family of Miyapur village in Koppal district was fined Rs 25,000 after its two-year-old child entered a temple in the village. Following such recurring incidents, the state government had already launched a programme named ‘Vinaya Samarasya Yojana’, an awareness programme meant to eradicate untouchability.

https://thewire.in/caste/karnataka-dalit-family-fined-rs-60000-after-a-teen-touches-hindu-deity-idol
Very good action by dalit family , idols will not give you anything , get good education and enlightment with social reforms .
 

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