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Life As A Dalit - A Curse In Casteist India

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Life As A Dalit - A Curse In Casteist India
Article 17 of the Indian Constitution abolishes the practice of untouchability. However, what’s interesting is that ‘untouchability’ is not defined anywhere in the Indian Constitution.
V Venkateswara Rao06 October 2020

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File photo
Dalit man beaten by some 'upper caste' people


“We are punished for being born dalits. Our only sin is our birth as Dalits,” one of the distraught relatives of the Hathras victim was quoted as saying. "My birth is my fatal accident" a young dalit scholar at the University of Hyderabad, Rohith Vemula cried out his heart in his suicide note in 2016. But the young, brilliant dalit boy's cry could not move the hearts of our high and mighty.

All those, including from the upper castes, who have experienced deprivation, discrimination or a disadvantaged social status in some or other form - would be moved by the heartfelt cries of these unfortunate souls. To mock their cries would be nothing short of a savage mindset.

This isn’t just Hathras’ hour of shame. It’s India’s collective shame. The gruesome rape of a 19-year-old girl, breaking her spinal cord and strangulating her, for the curse of her being born a dalit, are too horrific to make our nation repulsive. The pathos of her hasty cremation, without even providing a last chance to the girl's mother to grieve, should haunt us all Indians.


eing born into a dalit family, particularly in India's heartland, is a curse - a curse from one's previous life being redeemed in this life in this holy land. The sad and violent secrets of caste-based oppression linger in the picturesque countryside. “How can such ugliness co-exist with the innocent beauty of the ruralscape?” we wonder.




In Bhojpur area of Moradabad in UP, situated at about 20 km from the district headquarters, the Salmani haircutters would refuse to cut the hair of the people belonging to the Balmiki community. The Balmikis are Dalits, most of whom still follow their ‘traditional’ vocation and work as sweepers and manual scavengers.

A dalit boy, 21-year-old Pradeep Rathod, was killed in Timbi village in Gujarat state, for owning and riding a horse. A dalit mother would be stripped and paraded naked in a village, as a punishment for his teen son fighting with an upper caste boy.




Dalits would be served in separate glasses in village tea stalls. Dalits are prohibited from wearing sandals or holding umbrellas in front of upper caste men, in many parts of the hinterland. Dalit men who go to the market to buy essentials are instructed by shopkeepers to stand at a distance, while their purchases are thrown to them.

"I came across a news report on a short film that’s attracting attention The Discreet Charm of the Savarnas, with a provocative premise: Three people with a deadline to complete a project, go in search of a character to be cast as a dalit! Raising the key question: what does a dalit look like? One of those shortlisted for the role is outraged! He is a brahmin! And it was “below his dignity” to play a dalit. Writer-director Rajesh Rajamani says his main intention was to put the “ruling classes” under public glare, for “they are the ones who are perpetuating the caste system” wrote columnist Shobhaa De in a recent article.

Many powerful movies have been made and many powerful books have been written on this disturbing subject over the years. One such powerful book is journalist and writer Nirupama Dutt's "The Ballad of Bant Singh: A Qissa of Courage".

Nirupama Dutt tells Bant Singh's story in this powerful book, which is both the biography of an extraordinary human being and a comment on the deep fault lines in Indian society. On the evening of 5th January 2006, Bant Singh, a Dalit agrarian labourer and activist in Punjab's Jhabar village, was ambushed and brutally beaten by upper-caste Jat men armed with iron rods and axes. He lost both his arms and a leg in the attack. It was punishment for having fought for justice for his minor daughter who had been gang-raped. But his spirit was not broken, and he continues to fight for equality and dignity for millions like him, inspiring them with his Udasi’s songs and his courage.

"What, after all, does a Dalit labourer have? He has neither money nor influence. All he has is his own body, which he must use to earn a livelihood. And, as for the body of the Dalit woman, it is very easy for it to be seen as an object of casual, easy abuse."

Article 17 of Indian Constitution abolishes the practice of untouchability in India in any form. But a fascinating fact is, the word "untouchability" is not defined in the constitution.


Jai Singh vs. Union of India case of Rajasthan High Court and Devrajiah vs B. Padmana case of Madras High Court defined the word untouchability. The court said that in article 17, the word ‘Untouchability’ is placed under inverted commas, which means the word is not to be taken by its literal or grammatical interpretation. The meaning of the word is to be derived from historical development and historical practices. Untouchability refers to the social disability imposed on certain classes of a person because of their birth in a specific backward class. Therefore, the word untouchability in article 17 only means ‘Caste-based untouchability’.

We, the people of India, have given ourselves the Constitution of India and caste upon the judiciary, the responsibility to protect and implement the constitutional provisions. The judiciary, with its vast powers, is responsible to bring to justice, the culprits - be it individuals or institutions - in cases of caste-based oppression and violence.

According to the 2011 census of the Indian government, the number of Dalits in the country has been calculated as 16.6% of the total population. Uttar Pradesh has the maximum Dalit population with 20.5% of the total Dalit population. As per 2011 census, the population of Dalits was reported to be 20.14 crores. Our so-called “upper” castes continue to perpetuate the prejudices that have kept a quarter of country's fellow citizens from daring to dream of a better tomorrow.


 
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India is an Apartheid nation, the only country where untouchability is practiced...why India is called a democracy, just because elections are held.

India hides this ugly caste ridden real India from west and rest of the world...
 
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India is an Apartheid nation, the only country where untouchability is practiced...why India is called a democracy, just because elections are held.

India hides this ugly caste ridden real India from west and rest of the world...

Genetic studies have actually shown that Pakistan is also a casteist society, although it hides it better. Why do I refer to genetic studies as opposed to sociological studies? It is because the level of endogamy practised in India is also practised in Pakistan suggesting tribalism that goes beyond that of mere geographical proximity. To compare, Bangladesh does not have this endogamy and there is a free flow of genes as is the case in the Han Chinese population.

Also, due to centuries of outside rule, there is a huge inferiority complex in the subcontinent in regards to skin colour, this is probably the bigger issue. Skin bleaching is a huge industry in India, Bangladesh and to some extent in Pakistan. No other group of people do this in the world, not even the dark skinned blacks of Africa.
 
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Genetic studies have actually shown that

Genetics has nothing to do with caste system, intrinsic and ingrained in Hinduism.

Ethnic divisions, different clans and tribes, is a different things....no provision of caste in Islam as a religion.



And India is the most racist as well, Pakistan the least...caste leads to racism and vice versa...

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Please I have seen many pakistanis on internet claiming to be Rajputs, jatts, gujjars etc

These are clans and biradari as it is called in Pakistan, it is not that Rajputs are superior to say Gujjars...

Caste is a different system of dividing human beings into higher to lower caste and Dalits being out of the caste and called untouchables and treated as achoot. And with it the job description and the roles the should follow in the society....like Dalits will be doing menial/janitorial things.

Brahmins getting the higher roles in the society...
 
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Genetics has nothing to do with caste system, intrinsic and ingrained in Hinduism.

Ethnic divisions, different clans and tribes, is a different things....no provision of caste in Islam as a religion.



And India is the most racist as well, Pakistan the least...caste leads to racism and vice versa...

View attachment 682348

There is a level of endogamy in Pakistan that can only really be attained through a casts like system, you talk of "clans" but you must also know that castes are basically also thousands of different clans. David Reich talks about this in his book "Who We Are and How We Got Here" this clannishness is also seen in Ashkenazi Jews.

Bengali geneticist Razib Khan talks about this here


As far as hierarchy goes, there is also a colour gradient in Pakistan (similar to India and Latin American countries) where the fairer skinned folk are higher in status than darker skinned people.
 
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Family Tortures Young Dalit Man For Allegedly Having An Affair With Daughter
The man's family members had also claimed that an iron rod was inserted into his rectum but the police have denied all such claims


Family Tortures Young Dalit Man For Allegedly Having An Affair With Daughter

Representational Image
Suspecting that the man was having an affair with a girl of their family, a 22-year-old Dalit man was allegedly held captive and tortured by four people in Uttar Pradesh's Lakhimpur Kheri, informed the police.


The victim's family claimed that an iron rod was inserted into his rectum. However, the officer in-charge of investigating the case, circle officer Pradeep Kumar Verma has denied all such allegations, saying that the medical examination and probe so far indicate this is not true.
The accused have been arrested and the victim is under treatment at the district hospital. His condition has been stated to be serious, police said.
On Wednesday night, the Dalit man was mercilessly beaten up by the accused, causing injuries to his private parts, according to police.


Tikonia Station House Officer Gyan Prakash Tiwari said, "On the complaint by the victim's brother, an FIR was registered against four persons."
They have been charged under Indian Penal Code sections 323 (punishment for voluntarily causing hurt) and 506 (criminal intimidation), and provisions of the SC/ST (Prevention of Atrocities) Act, he said.
They had suspected that the man was having an affair with their kin, Tiwari said.
"All the four accused, Bramhadeen and his three sons Bharat, Gajraj and Raju, have been arrested," he said, adding a probe into the matter is on.
Circle Office Verma said that the claim that an iron rod was inserted in the man's rectum was not found true.
"The medical examination and probe so far indicate that the allegation of insertion of iron rod in his rectum is not true," he said.
(With PTI Inputs)
 
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India is an Apartheid nation, the only country where untouchability is practiced...why India is called a democracy, just because elections are held.

India hides this ugly caste ridden real India from west and rest of the world...
nope not because elections are held but because indians are the best servant in the world west knows it and to tame yindus they boost their elections and economy!
as long as whites are in power india will remain relevant!
 
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Indians just have no idea what exactly they are lagging behind China further and further, no the delay of "opening" of 12 years, no their GDP that amounts to 1/6 of China's.

It's the whole thing that went wrong in the past thousands of years that never gets to reboot and reset.
 
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Country full of milk n honey are discussing dalits with country full of freedom. In between what ever happened to Kashmiris, very good keep it up :tup:
 
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India is an Apartheid nation, the only country where untouchability is practiced...why India is called a democracy, just because elections are held.

India hides this ugly caste ridden real India from west and rest of the world...
Israel is also Apartheid nation, it discriminates against Palestinians.
 
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Genetic studies have actually shown that Pakistan is also a casteist society, although it hides it better. Why do I refer to genetic studies as opposed to sociological studies? It is because the level of endogamy practised in India is also practised in Pakistan suggesting tribalism that goes beyond that of mere geographical proximity. To compare, Bangladesh does not have this endogamy and there is a free flow of genes as is the case in the Han Chinese population.

Endogamy and caste isn't exactly same thing. Lots of people around the world practice Endogamy, i.e. marrying within same ethnicity or tribe, but Hindu caste system is entirely different as it comes with a strict social hierarchy where the lower castes are seen as subhumans and their sight, smell or touch can ritually pollute higher caste for which the lower caste are severely punished or killed. I don't think this exists in any non-Hindu country.

Also, due to centuries of outside rule, there is a huge inferiority complex in the subcontinent in regards to skin colour, this is probably the bigger issue. Skin bleaching is a huge industry in India, Bangladesh and to some extent in Pakistan. No other group of people do this in the world, not even the dark skinned blacks of Africa.

Hindu caste system is thousands of years old... the skin color complex is probably a result of the caste system as upper castes are fairer and so maybe fair skin gives people better social status in the Indian continent.
 
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