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The Plight of Indian Caste System

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The Plight of Indian Caste System​

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One the one hand, modern India prides itself on how it has transcended its most rigid traditions and beliefs which are part of its caste system, while on the other, the plight of Indian caste system has produced grave results.

Although apparently, India claims to be the largest democracy, acting upon the principles of liberalism, yet in practice, all political, economic and social fields of the country are divided on the caste lines. In this regard, Tim Sullivan of the Associated Press wrote, “There’s a lot of lip service to saying ‘I’m an Indian first, and ‘I’ do not believe in caste,” said D’Souza, a prominent campaigner for dalits, as India’s “untouchables” at the very bottom of the caste system are now known. Sullivan further elaborated, “When it comes to sharing power, to interaction and to sharing social status, low-caste Indians are very much marginalized.”

Education and election to political office have advanced the status of many Dalits, but the overall picture remains one of great inequity. In recent decades, Dalit anger has been expressed in writings, demonstrations, strikes, and the activities of such groups as the Dalit Panthers, a radical political party demanding revolutionary change. A wider Dalit movement, including political parties, educational activities, self-help centers, and labor organizations, has spread to many areas of the country.

If someone goes to any office for job, question will be asked, “what is your caste?” people belonging to the lower caste are ignored at the cost of the superior caste. Hence, various departments and fields of India have adjusted the persons of the superior caste. Thus a system has emerged, which reflects India’s elite, energized caste-based political parties and left in doubt millions of government jobs and university slots which have little place for the people of the lower caste.

Based upon sharp discrimination, the caste system of the Hindu custom that has divided people in a strict social hierarchy based on their family’s traditional livelihood and ethnicity deeply prevails in the country. In this respect, the major issue of New Delhi is its inability to come to terms with this basic form of discrimination.

As regards politics, India’s most powerful caste politicians believe that with the help of the establishment, they could use the census data for votes and government funding. In this context, a prominent Indian political expert, Pratap Bhanu Mehta pointed out in the Indian Express: “At one stroke, it trivializes all that modern India has stood for, and condemns it to the tyranny of an insidious kind of identity politics.”

The plight of the Indian caste system is that the founders of modern India, who themselves belonged to nearly all high caste were staunch believers in a caste-blind society—while many would have been surprised, if one of their children had married a dalit.

Barun Mitra of a New Delhi-based research center indicated, “No one denies that there are a lot of problems in India that there is social discrimination.” Like many critics, he also worries about the rise of the caste-based politicians. In addition Mitra explained, “What purpose would it serve by drawing and redrawing the identity, particularly when it is politically motivated?”

India claims that in recent decades, some of the sharpest edges of caste traditions have been softened by urbanization and economic growth, but in reality, there are powerful superior-caste politicians and business people who play hell with those who come of low-caste families.

As a matter of fact, caste system remains a deeply felt part of Indian life. Brahmins, the most superior caste, still dominate everything from politics to journalism, while low-caste Indians and dalits face daily challenges for decent schools, medical care and jobs.



Regarding Indian caste system, a study indicates, “Caste is part of every social agenda, every political agenda…even when someone is considering a neighborhood, caste is an important consideration.”

In this connection, most regrettable dimension is that a new generation of politicians and businessmen are also biased against the people of lower caste.

India which claims to be a secular state, showing equality, human rights and justice has broken all the records of violence, genocide and massacre against people of the lower castes. It is because of these atrocities and injustices that Indian home-grown terrorism is on rise.

Caste has undergone significant change since independence, but it still involves millions of people. In its preamble, India’s constitution forbids negative public discrimination on the basis of caste. However, caste ranking and caste-based interaction have occurred for centuries and will continue to do so well into the foreseeable future.

Castes are ranked and named groups, membership of which is achieved by birth. There are thousands of castes and subcastes in India, and these large kinship-based groups are fundamental to the country’s social structure. Each caste is part of a locally based system of interdependence with other groups, involving occupational specialization, and is linked in complex ways with networks that stretch across regions and throughout the nation.

India’s complex society includes some unique members--sadhus (holy men) and harijans (untouchables). Such people have stepped outside the usual bonds of kinship and caste to join with others in castelike groups.

In India, several hundred thousand Hindu and Jain sadhus and a few thousand holy women (sadhvis) live an ascetic life. They have chosen to wear ocher robes, or perhaps no clothing at all, to daub their skin with holy ash, to pray and meditate, and to wander from place to place, depending on the charity of others. In their new lives as renunciants, they are devoted to spiritual concerns, yet each is affiliated with an ascetic order or subsect demanding strict adherence to rules of dress, diet, worship and ritual pollution. Within each order, hierarchical concerns are exhibited in the subservience novitiates display to revered gurus. Further, at pilgrimage sites, different orders take precedence in accordance with an accepted hierarchy.

The most extreme sadhus eat food provided only by low-ranking sweepers and prostitutes. There is a hierarchy of gurus and disciples, with expulsion from the community a possible punishment for failure to obey group rules.

In a village of India, where nearly 74 percent of the population resides, caste and class affiliations overlap. According to anthropologist Miriam Sharma, “Large landholders who employ hired labour are overwhelmingly from the upper castes, while the agricultural workers themselves come from the ranks of the lowest…predominantly untouchable castes.” She also points out, “Distribution of other resources and access to political control follow the same pattern of caste-cum-class distinctions.”

Nevertheless, as the privileged elites move ahead, low-ranking menial workers remain economically insecure.

Although many other nations are characterized by social inequality, perhaps nowhere else in the world has inequality been so elaborately constructed as in the Indian institution of caste. Caste has long existed in India, but in the modern period it has been severely criticized by foreign observers. Although some educated Indians tell non-Indians that caste has been abolished or that no one pays attention to caste anymore, yet such statements do not reflect reality.

Sajjad Shaukat writes on international affairs and is author of the book: US vs Islamic Militants, Invisible Balance of Power: Dangerous Shift in International Relations.

The Plight of Indian Caste System
 
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Casteism: alive and well in Pakistan - All My Posts Iran On Pakistan Published in HT Published in The Friday Times - biraadri caste casteism ethnic group minorities Pakistan Punjab sect sectarian Shia Sindh society Sunni - Jahane Rumi

Casteism : alive and well in Pakistan

What do you expect of a country where the aboriginals are known as janglis, asks Raza Rumi

Who says casteism is extinct in Pakistan? My friends have not been allowed to marry outside their caste or sect, Christian servants in Pakistani households are not permitted to touch kitchen utensils, and the word ‘choora’ is the ultimate insult

It is a cliché now to say that Pakistan is a country in transition – on a highway to somewhere. The direction remains unclear but the speed of transformation is visibly defying its traditionally overbearing, and now cracking postcolonial state. Globalisation, the communications revolution and a growing middle class have altered the contours of a society beset by the baggage and layers of confusing history.

What has however emerged despite the affinity with jeans, FM radios and McDonalds is the visible trumpeting of caste-based identities. In Lahore, one finds hundreds of cars with the owner’s caste or tribe displayed as a marker of pride and distinctiveness. As an urbanite, I always found it difficult to comprehend the relevance of zaat-paat (casteism) until I experienced living in the peri-urban and sometimes rural areas of the Punjab as a public servant.

I recall the days when in a central Punjab district, I was mistaken for a Kakayzai (a Punjabi caste that claims to have originated from the Caucasus) so I started getting correspondence from the Anjuman-i-Kakayzai professionals who were supposed to hold each other’s hands in the manner of the Free Masons. I enjoyed the game and pretended that I was one of them for a while, until it became unbearable for its sheer silliness and mercenary objectives.

It was also here that a subordinate told me in chaste Punjabi how the Gujjar caste was not a social group but a ‘religion’ in itself. Or that the Rajputs were superior to everyone else, second only to the Syeds. All else was the junk that had converted from the lowly Hindus (of course this included my family).

My first name is also a matter of sectarian interpretation. Another subordinate in my younger days lectured me on the importance of sticking together as the ‘victims’ of the Sunni majoritarian violence of Pakistani society. Mistaken as a Momin I also got a chance to know intra-group dynamics better, and also how closely knit such groups are and what they think of others. This reminds me of the horrific tales our domestic helper used to tell us about the Shi’ites, and as children we were scared to even go near a Moharram procession, until one day my Sunni parents fired her for poisoning their children’s minds.

My personal inclinations aside, for in the footsteps of the great Urdu poet Ghalib, I view myself as half a Shia, this has been a matter of concern. Can I not exist as a human being without being part of a herd? Obedience to hierarchies, conformity and identification with groups are central tenets of existing in Pakistan.

At a training institution fifteen years ago, where a group of us were being taught how to become ‘officers’, a colleague cooked up a fanciful story about me. In the lecture hall, I had argued for a secular state, quoting Jinnah’s August 11, 1947 speech and had highlighted the shoddy treatment of the minorities in Pakistan as a betrayal of the Quaid’s vision. This imaginative colleague circulated the rumour that the reason for my political views was that I belonged to the Ahmaddiya Jamaat. One could of course talk of the marginalised only if one was a part of that group. Otherwise why should we care, semi-citizens that we are!

In the twenty first century, Punjab’s entire electoral landscape is still defined by caste and biradari loyalties. In the 1980s, General Zia ul Haq’s machinations spearheaded a second social engineering in the Punjab by resuscitating the demons of clan, caste and tribe. Party-less elections helped Zia to undermine the PPP but it also gave enormous leeway to the state agencies to pick and choose loyalties when election was all about the elders of a biradari. His Arain (a non-land tilling caste) background became a topic of discussion as many Arains used this card to great personal and commercial advantage during his tenure. This is similar to what the Kashmiris have perceived under the multiple reigns of the now rechristened (in a democratic sense) Sharifs of the Punjab, who are proud Kashmiris .

Why blame the Punjabis only? In the early years of Pakistan, the migrants from India had set the ground for the politics of patronage along ethnic and group-lines. Karachi became divided into little Lucknows, Delhis and other centres of nostalgia. Employment opportunities and claims of property, as several personal accounts and autobiographies reveal, were doled out on the basis of affiliation to pre-partition networks – Aligarh, Delhi, UP qasbaas and Hyderabadi neighbourhoods. The same goes for the smaller units of Pakistan. Small wonder that the Bengalis ran away from the Pakistan project, despite being its original initiators.

We pride ourselves on being a nuclear armed Islamic state that broke away from the prejudiced Baniyas whose abominable caste system was inhuman. But what do we practice? Who said casteism was extinct in Pakistan? My friends have not been allowed to marry outside their caste or sect, Christian servants in Pakistani households are not permitted to touch kitchen utensils, and the word ‘choora’ is the ultimate insult after the ritualistic out-of wedlock sex and incestuous abuses involving mothers and sisters or their unmentionable anatomical parts. A Sindhi acquaintance told me how easy it was to exploit the Hindu girls at his workplace or at home. And what about the many blasphemy cases in the Punjabi villages, the roots of which are located in social hierarchies and chains of obedience.

The untouchables of the cities and the villages are called something else but they remain the underbelly of our existence. Admittedly these incidences are on a lesser scale than in India. That simply is a function of demographics. Even Mohammad Iqbal, the great reformist poet, lamented in one of his couplets: Youn tau Syed bhi ho, Mirza bhi ho, Afghan bhi ho/Tum sabhi kuch ho, batao tau Mussalman bhi ho (You are Syeds, Mirzas and Afghans/You are everything but Muslims).

Enter into a seemingly educated Punjabi setting and the conversation will not shy away from references to caste characteristics. For instance, I once heard a lawyer make a remark about a high-ranking public official, calling him a nai (barber) and therefore branding him as the lowest of the low. One of the reasons for Zardari-bashing in Sindh, has to do with the Zardari tribe’s historical moorings. They were camel herders as opposed to the ruling classes with fiefs.

When the young motorists playing FM radio, mast music, arranging dates on mastee chats, display the primordial caste characteristic on their windscreens, one worries if the ongoing change process can deliver a better society. Superficial signs of change cannot make up for the need for a secular educational system, equality of opportunity and accountability of political elites and their patron-state that use casteism as an instrument of gaining and sustaining power.

More bewildered, I wonder where I belong. Bulleh Shah has taught me that shedding categorisations is the first step towards self-knowledge. But I live in a society where branding and group labels are essential, if not unavoidable.

For this reason I am peeved that I still don’t know who I am.

Raza Rumi blogs at Jahane Rumi - In search of the unsearchable: O, my soul! where would you find your house? and edits Pak Tea House and Lahore Nama e-zines
 
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I don't think it is possible to neatly divide the Indian caste system into the 4 caste group and the the fifth group of out-castes. In many places, the caste equations are inverted with a depressed class in a certain area being dominant in other areas. In most cases of caste discrimination reported in India, the discrimination is between 2 people of the so called backward castes. Readers here may be surprised to know that very few of these cases involve the favored group of villains here known as the Brahmins.

Unfortunately we have a long way to go to eradicate caste from society. There are numerous examples where these caste barriers are being broken down however these are easily dwarfed by the numbers who still harbor caste based biases.


The plight of the Indian caste system is that the founders of modern India, who themselves belonged to nearly all high caste were staunch believers in a caste-blind society—while many would have been surprised, if one of their children had married a dalit.

I totally agree with this statement.
 
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Need for caste-free society!

Group of Ministers GOM will soon proclaim its decisive verdict on inclusion of caste in the census. At present census is being conducted in the country. Succumbing to the stiff pressure of many of its allies in the ruling coalition Prime Minister Manmohan Singh had announced in the upper house of parliament that cabinet will soon take positive decision on the issue. Now, it seems that government is trying to find ways and means to tackle the problems likely to arise after the caste census as it will inevitably lead to chain reactions. Setting-up of GoM is first step in the direction.

Caste has historically been a potent tool to serve the ulterior motives of all those who believed in the philosophy of ‘Divide and rule’. After the revolt of 1857 India was in the grip of wave of nationalism. Britishers used the tool of caste census to sow the seeds of division in the society. Caste was included during census of 1871 to 1931. This had stark impact on the society and it can be explicitly inferred that Britishers were quite successful in their vicious agenda. Many caste based organisations created chaos in the society and i sowed the seeds of conflict. Caste was dropped from the census from 1931 on the ground that it widens the rift in the society after the vehement protest of Congress. To consolidate itself in the country, Britishers made lot of experiments with ‘Varna system’ prevalent in Hindu society. They tried to divide Hindus and Vanvasis (Tribal) and dalits through smart machinations. Some of the castes were even declared as ‘criminal tribes’ by making separate law for them. This was the basic reason not only caste was included in the first census conducted in 1891 but also there scope and definition were included. This was precisely the reason Britishers successfully mobilised some of the castes.

Caste is an irrefutable truth of Indian society and it has multilayered social, economical and political structure. It is a historical fact that millions of people suffering from caste abuse took the shelter of Islam and Christianity. Many reformist Hindu leaders realised this inherent danger in Hindu society and tried to wipe out the multilayered sophistication of caste system. Swami Dayanand Saraswati, Swami Vivekananda and Mahatma Gandhi analysed caste on the basis of work and character. They failed the shrewd machinations of Puna through Puna Pact.

Those lower-caste people converted into Islam and Christianity are not feeling comfortable. Both of these religions progressed but there has not been remarkable shift in the lives of these deprived sections of society. After the end of British rule in the country missionaries started demanding to put these lower-caste converted people in the list of lower castes as decided by constituent. But, makers of constitution did not accept the proposal fearing increase in conversion that will disrupt peace and harmony in the country.

As per guidance of World Church Council (WCC) and Vatican; Indian church has been demanding for constitutional amendment to put these people in the list of Hindu scheduled castes. The logic of church is simple-Converted Christians are facing brunt of discrimination on the name of caste. Muslims first rejected the existence of caste in their society but now they see benefit in realising this reality. Muslim leaders are on the foot-steps of church. Setting up of ‘Sachhar committee’ and ‘Rangnath Misra Commission’ is the consequence of pressure of this sustained lobbying. Both of these commissions have advocated for reservation on caste basis. However, commission has accepted that they do not have reliable figures of castes in ‘Christianity and Islam’.

In 2001 church had strongly demanded inclusion of caste in the census and Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment had supported this demand. However, Atal Behari Vajpayee led government did not succumb to this demand. Some of the church leaders had even sent legal notice to Registrar General of Census alleging that questions put to the citizens, and the enumerators' manual on Religion of Scheduled Castes, violate secular and freedom of faith guarantees of the constitution. Church was uncomfortable to the fact of asking religion based questions. After the formation of United Progressive Alliance government ‘Non-governmental church organisations’ have stepped up their effort to include caste in the census. This issue was also raised in the advisory council meeting of UPA in 2005. Senior journalist Ram Bahadur Roy has written in a column that the then chairperson of advisory council Sonia Gandhi wanted to know the view point of other political parties on the issue. Many people do believe that Sonia Gandhi is in favour of inclusion of caste in the census and this is precisely the reason a large section of Congress feels that caste based data will be compiled sooner or later.

Honestly speaking caste census will not serve purposes of Christians and Muslim in a big way. On the other hand they will be forced in the same system that has forced them for conversion. Today, thousands of organizations and Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) are trying to sow the seeds of equality in the Hindu society. At 30th June a delegation from an organisation ‘Meri Jaati Hindustani’ led by Dr.VedPratap Vadik met Home Minister P Chidambaram and registered protest on the issue on the inclusion of caste in the census. Our view is that even if there is caste based discrimination in Islam and Christianity, it is the duty of religious leaders to change this practice. Inclusion in the lower caste category is not a solution to the problem. This will only aggravate the situation and will not ameliorate.

When constituent assembly had made provision of reservation for dalit Hindus- who were also majority-Hindus had accepted this. ‘Right to equality’ was sacrificed in favour of dalit sections that faced the brunt of caste abuse from thousands of years. The move of constituent assembly was widely perceived as compensation to those suffering. However, today every person and leader wants reservation to serve their own purpose. Makers of constitution had imagined for caste-free society and United Progressive Alliance government should respect it.

R L Francis
National President
Poor Christian Liberation Movement

Need for caste-free society!
 
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Need for caste-free society!

Caste is an irrefutable truth of Indian society and it has multilayered social, economical and political structure. It is a historical fact that millions of people suffering from caste abuse took the shelter of Islam and Christianity.

Socom bhai,

This post is once again in the form of a request to perform some "apnay girebaan may jhankna".

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Ali Anwar is the founder of the Pasmanda Muslim Mahaz (‘Marginalised Muslim Front’), a union of several Dalit Muslim and Backward Caste Muslim organisations. A well known journalist, he is the author of Masavat Ki Jang (‘The Struggle for Equality’) and Dalit Musalman (‘Dalit Muslims’) and writes regularly on issues related to Backward Caste/Dalit Muslims, who form the majority of the Muslim population in South Asia. In this interview he talks about his involvement in the struggle for the rights of Backward Caste/Dalit Muslims

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How did you get involved in the Backward Caste/Dalit Muslim movement?

I belong to the Ansari community, which is one of the largest Muslim communities in India. The ancestral profession of the Ansaris is weaving. They are considered a ‘Backward Class’ for purposes of reservation. My family is from the Shahabad district in Bihar. My grandfather was a horse-cart driver and father was a mill worker, and before me there was not a single person in my family who had passed the matriculation examination. The Ansaris in my area practised weaving as a profession for generations but with the onset of British rule and with the sort of capitalist ‘development’ that India went through after 1947 this profession of theirs was almost totally decimated. That’s why my parents and relatives, even I as a child, were forced to take to rolling beedis to supplement the meagre family income.

As a child itself I was sensitised to the crass oppression and poverty that I saw all around me. As a student I got involved in leftist politics. This was partly due to the influence of my father, who was a trade unionist associated with the All India Trade Union Congress of the Communist Party of India (CPI). My first involvement in people’s struggles was when some students of my high school in Dumraon started a movement against the Maharaja of Dumraon, a dreaded feudal lord who was also the manager of the school. Thereafter I joined the CPI and remained a card-holder of the party for around 20 years.

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How did you take to journalism as a career? In particular, what made you focus particularly on issues related to the Dalits and Backward Castes?

My association with the CPI inspired me to take to writing to document and highlight the oppression of the poor and their struggles against feudal and class/caste oppression. I worked for many years as chief reporter with the CPI’s Hindi magazine Janashakti, based in Patna. However, over the years I also discovered that within the communist parties casteism continues to be rife. Most of the leaders of the various communist parties are themselves from the so-called ‘upper’ castes, which is one reason why they rarely talk of caste but instead talk only in terms of class. In a sense, for some of them this is a way to perpetuate upper caste dominance.

My perception of the reality of caste oppression among both Hindus and Muslims was further strengthened as I travelled around Bihar as a journalist and this was reflected in the sort of articles that I began writing after Janashakti closed down and I joined Navbharat Times and later Jansatta and then Svatantra Bharat. For instance, I did a story on the Police Lines in Patna where there are separate barracks and kitchens for different castes, and another story on Dasrath Manjhi, a Dalit worker who literally broke half a mountain over a period of 19 years in order to build a road. Another story I wrote was on how, as in the case of the Hindus, many so-called ashraf or upper caste Muslims use fake ‘Backward Caste’ certificates to get jobs reserved for the Backward Classes. One such case was that of the granddaughter of Abdul Ghaffur, Bihar’s only Muslim chief minister, who belonged to the upper caste Shaikh caste but got a fake Backward Caste certificate to get a government job. This article, which was published in the Hindustan, created a great stir and I received many threatening letters for having exposed this racket!

In 1996 I received the KK Birla Fellowship for journalists to do a study on Dalit/Backward Caste Muslims, a subject about which very little has been written even though these Muslims constitute the vast majority of the Indian Muslim population. Owing among other factors to caste prejudice, upper caste Muslim writers – Syeds, Shaikhs, Mughals and Pathans as well as non-Muslim scholars have displayed little or no interest in writing about the non-ashraf Muslims. This is one reason why I thought it was crucial to write about them and to highlight their pathetic conditions and their struggles for equality and justice. And so I began travelling around Bihar to document the lives of Dalit and Backward Caste Muslims in the state, a report that was later published as a book in Hindi titled Masavat Ki Jang (‘The Struggle for Equality’). It has recently been translated and published in English and Urdu as well.

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What are the major arguments that you have put forward in your book?

I have tried to show, with the help of interviews, oral histories and statistics, that although Backward Caste/Dalit Muslims form the overwhelming majority among the Muslims of Bihar, they are victims of pervasive discrimination and, on the whole, are economically and educationally extremely marginalised. The state has done little if anything for them and instead has sought to promote the small minority of ashraf or upper caste Muslims as Muslim ‘leaders’. I tried to highlight the nexus between the state and the ashraf political and religious leadership in Bihar, a phenomenon that can be observed in other parts of India as well. This explains, as I have shown, how under various governments in Bihar non-ashraf Muslims have hardly received any representation, whether in successive ministries or in government services. Most of the few Muslims who have been so represented have been from the ashraf, and they do little for the non-ashraf Muslims, being barely concerned about their plight at all. In addition, I have highlighted the fact that in large parts of Bihar Backward Caste/Dalit Muslims continue to face social discrimination at the hands of both self-styled ashraf Muslims as well as so-called upper caste Hindus. I have shown how the leadership of large Muslim religious organisations is almost completely in the hands of the ashraf Muslims.

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Could you tell us something about the Pasmanda Muslim Mahaz? How was it established and what are its objectives?

The Mahaz is a broad front of a number of Dalit and Backward Caste Muslim organisations from different states of India, particularly Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, Jharkhand, West Bengal and Delhi. In the course of research for the book I was working on, I realised that Dalit/Backward Caste Muslims are hardly organised at all and have few effective leaders. Till now they have been following the lead of the ashraf, both professional politicians as well as maulvis who have, as I said, taken no particular interest in addressing their pathetic socio-economic conditions. Like their upper caste Hindu counterparts, they want us to focus only on communal controversies or narrowly defined religious issues and in this way seek to completely displace the harsh reality of the lives of Dalits and Backward Castes from political discourse. Hence I along with several of my friends set up the Mahaz in Patna in 1998 to organise the Dalit/Backward Caste Muslims so as to help evolve a leadership that would be responsive to their concerns and which would also seek to build alliances with non-Muslim Dalit/Backward Caste groups so that we can engage in a broad united struggle for our rights.

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What sort of work has the Mahaz been engaged in?

We have participated in several people’s struggles for justice to the Dalit/Backward Caste Muslims through staging demonstrations, presenting memorandums and bringing out publications. Recently we launched a Hindi magazine, Pasmanda Ki Awaz (‘The Voice of the Oppressed’). This is the only Dalit/Backward Caste magazine in this country, although the Dalit/Backward Caste Muslim population in India is well over 100 million! Hardly any of the hundreds or even thousands of other Muslim magazines and papers, not to speak of media controlled by non-Muslims, ever talks about our issues – such is the indifference to the problems and plight of our people.

The Mahaz has also been pressing with the demand that the state include Dalit Muslims and Dalit Christians in the Scheduled Castes list. Due to an extremely discriminatory presidential order issued in 1950, the state denied Dalit Muslims and Dalit Christians reservation and other benefits that had been provided for Dalits in the Constitution. Going completely against all notions of secularism, democracy and social justice, it declared that such benefits would be limited only to those Dalits who claim to be ‘Hindus’. Later, due to political compulsions, the state was forced to extend these benefits to Dalit Sikhs and Dalit Buddhists. So why, we ask, should Dalit Muslims and Dalit Christians, too, not be included in the list of Scheduled Castes?

The ashraf Muslim leadership has never voiced this demand because they are not at all interested in the plight of Dalit Muslims. But I think it is crucial that Dalit Muslims be given justice and treated by the state on par with ‘Hindu’ Dalits. Currently they are classified along with several more powerful castes as ‘Backward Classes’ instead of Scheduled Castes because of which they have not been able to benefit at all from ‘Backward Caste’ status. This is despite the fact that they continue to practice the same occupations as ‘Hindu’ Dalits and face the same sort of discrimination and oppression despite following Islam, a religion that is fiercely opposed to caste and untouchability.

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How do you think the other Dalits would respond to the demand of including Dalit Muslims and Dalit Christians in the Scheduled Castes list? Might they not oppose this on the grounds that this would result in a reduction of whatever little benefits they are able to procure from the state?

This problem can easily be solved if while including Dalit Muslims and Christians in the Scheduled Castes list the Scheduled Caste quota is proportionately increased. In this way, the other Dalits would not oppose this demand. In fact, they would welcome it because in this way the Dalit movement would itself be strengthened. After all, all Dalits, irrespective of religion, belong to the same race and the blood of common ancestors flows in their veins.

Unlike the ashraf Muslims who take great pride in their claim of foreign extraction, Dalit and Backward Caste Muslims are all of indigenous origin, being descendants of converts from the oppressed castes. This is why we don’t use the words ‘Dalit minority’ or ‘Dalit Muslim minority’ or ‘Backward Caste Muslim minority’. We Dalits and Backward Castes are not a minority at all. In fact, taken together, we are in the majority, the ‘Bahujan’, forming over 85 per cent of the Indian population despite the fact that we may follow different religions. We see that the politics of communalism, fuelled by both Hindu and Muslim elites, is aimed at dividing us, making us fight among ourselves so that the elites continue to rule over us as they have been doing for centuries. This is why we in the Mahaz have been seeking to steer our people from emotional politics to politics centred on issues of survival and daily existence and social justice, and for this we have been working with non-Muslim Dalit and Backward Caste movements and groups to struggle jointly for our rights and to oppose the politics of communalism fuelled by Hindu and Muslim upper caste elites.

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Some Muslim leaders, mainly from the so-called ashraf, are demanding reservation for all Muslims in government jobs and educational institutions. How do you view this demand?

I am totally opposed to this demand. The Constitution explicitly says that the reservation policy is meant for socially and educationally marginalised communities. How can anyone seriously argue that all Muslims in the country are socially and economically backward? Many of those who do argue in this way actually seek to promote the interests of the educationally and economically better off ashraf who, though they form only a small proportion of the Muslim population, would inevitably hog the lion’s share if a separate quota in jobs and educational institutions was introduced for all Muslims. This demand is also unconstitutional because nowhere in the Constitution is there any provision for reservation on the grounds of religion. Further, such a demand is bound to fuel the fires of communalism and Hindu-Muslim conflict, which would inevitably hurt Dalit/Backward Caste Muslims the worst, they being the principal victims of communal violence.

Of late some people, including some self-styled ashraf leaders, have been asking for a separate Muslim Backward Caste quota within the larger Other Backward Caste (OBC) quota, on the grounds that Muslim OBCs have not been able to benefit much from the general OBC quota. I am opposed to this demand as well. I think this is a crafty move to create and promote communal strife between Hindu and Muslim Backward Castes, which can only work to the benefit of the upper caste Hindu and Muslim elites.

The claim that Muslim Backward Castes have not been able to benefit much from the 27 per cent quota earmarked for Backward Classes by the Mandal Commission because these benefits have been cornered by some more powerful and influential Hindu Backward Castes first needs to be established. We have to conduct surveys to show this, and this is something that has not been done so far. Now, this claim might well be true but we can think of this later. We can’t take up too many issues at the same time. I believe that instead of a separate Muslim quota in the OBCs, we should think of dividing the 27 per cent quota that OBCs now have into two, on the Bihar model: one for the ‘Most Backward Classes’ and the second for other OBCs. Both categories would have Hindu and Muslim castes as well as those from other religions, depending on their socio-educational conditions.

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Some Muslims, particularly from the so-called ashraf, see the Dalit/Backward Caste Muslim movement as ‘divisive’ and ‘un-Islamic’. Some of them even go so far as to claim that it is a Hindu or Jewish conspiracy to set Muslims against each other. How do you respond to this charge?

Yes, that is an accusation I have been hearing day in and day out. When we started our work we were branded as ‘anti-Islamic’. Numerous maulvis, mostly of ashraf background, branded us as ‘divisive’ and ‘dangerous’ and appealed to Muslims to stay away from us. Urdu newspapers, almost all controlled by the ashraf, also boycotted us and refused to publish anything about us. Today however, perhaps because our movement has expanded and grown into a powerful force, their open opposition has somewhat declined.

Let me set the record straight here. We Dalit/Backward Caste Muslims are believing Muslims. We take our faith in Islam seriously. Islam, as the Koran says and as Prophet Muhammad showed in his own life, stands for social equality and justice. It is completely opposed to social hierarchy. So when we protest against inequality and injustice how can we be said to be going against Islam? On the contrary, what we are doing is, in my view, actually mandated by our religion. On the other hand, those who keep silent on the plight of Dalit/Backward Caste Muslims are actually working against Islam, for they are indifferent to its mandate of social justice and equality. Among them are several maulvis who have elaborated fanciful theories to argue the case for caste hierarchy in the name of what they call, in Arabic, kafa’a! And few of these maulvis take any interest in our plight, being more concerned with the details of minor fiqh or jurisprudential issues or with promoting their own sectarian brand of Islam while denouncing other Muslim sects as deviant.

Some ashraf accuse us of dividing Muslims. They say that caste has no sanction in Islam and they accuse us of injecting the poison of caste into Muslim society. Such people are completely blind to social reality. Islam, it is true, has no conception of caste, but Indian Muslim society is, by and large, characterised by the existence of multiple castes. And for centuries the ashraf have taken pride in being of foreign extraction – Arab, Iranian or whatever – and have considered other Muslims, who are all of indigenous Indian extraction, as being of ‘low’ caste. So all this while the ashraf have been championing caste and division among Muslims based on caste but this does not strike our opponents as ‘casteism’ or as ‘un-Islamic’, yet the moment we non-ashraf begin to speak, to oppose this system of ashraf hegemony, we are dubbed as divisive and ‘anti-Islam’ and so on. This reaction is no different from that of many upper caste Hindus who brand the Dalit movement as divisive, accusing it of reinforcing caste simply because the Dalit movement seeks to do away with upper caste hegemony.

My answer to those who falsely accuse us of dividing Muslims is that far from doing so we are trying to unite the dozens of Dalit/Backward Caste Muslim communities who have been kept divided for centuries! We are trying to bring them – Ansaris, Halalkhors, Kunjeras, Kalals, Dhuniyas, Mochis and who knows how many more such castes – together on a common platform to voice their demands and concerns. Now, you tell me, are we dividing these Muslims or uniting them? We are not setting Dalit/Backward Caste Muslims against ashraf Muslims. Our movement is not directed against them. Rather, we seek to strengthen and empower our own people, to enable them to speak for themselves and to secure their rights and justice from the state. We welcome well meaning people of ashraf background as well as non-Muslims who are concerned about the plight of our people to join us in our struggle.

When we are accused of dividing Muslims, our response is, "You so-called ashraf have kept us divided for centuries by fanning sectarian (maslaki) differences. Why don’t you put an end to this instead of telling us what to do? You have created and magnified these sectarian divisions for your own interests, to run your own little religious and political shops, for which you have not stopped even at promoting bloodshed and hatred. First you put an end to this sectarian hatred and division that you have created and then talk to us."
Today numerous maulvis of different maslaks – Deobandi, Barelvi, Jamaat-i Islami, Shia, Ahl-i Hadith and who knows how many more – issue statements against each other, some going to the extent of branding all Muslims but themselves as ‘apostates’ and even as ‘enemies of Islam’! Is that not ‘dividing the Muslims’?

Why don’t those who accuse the Dalit/Backward Caste movement of dividing Muslims condemn the way these maulvis spread serious sectarian conflict and divide Muslims? Is it because the vast majority of leaders of these maulvi groups are from the ashraf, so that when they fight on sectarian lines it is okay because this does not threaten ashraf hegemony, but when they see Dalit/Backward Caste Muslims getting together to struggle for their rights, they set apart their sectarian differences for the time being and come together to condemn them as ‘divisive’?

This said, let me point out that not all ashraf Muslims behave this way. Not all of them are opposed to our demands. In fact, some of them, as well as some Hindus of upper caste background, have been supporting our movement and demands. Yet I cannot help saying with deep regret that while several upper caste Hindus have been supporting the Dalit movement in different ways, very few upper caste Muslims have taken any interest in the concerns of Dalit/Backward Caste Muslims.

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Ali Anwar’s email address is alianwar3@rediffmail.com. For English and Urdu translations of Ali Anwar’s book Masavat Ki Jang, published by the Indian Social Institute, New Delhi, contact isibooks@unv.ernet.in. For the original Hindi version, contact Ali Anwar directly. For his other book, Dalit Musalman (Hindi), published by World Dignity Forum, New Delhi, contact worlddignityforum@yahoo.com.
 
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It will take long long for the Hindu society to cleanse itself of this abominable practice. See what the venerable sage and saint Tulsi Das says about the low cast and women in the Hindu society:

' Dhol..gawar...sudra...pashu...nari sakal tadan ke adhikari'
, literally meaning

'Drums, the illiterate, lower caste, animals and women deserve a beating to straighten up and get the acts together.'
 
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Dalit PhD student kills self over Hyderabad University 'bias' - The Times of India


HYDERABAD: A 26-year-old PhD scholar of the University of Hyderabad (UoH) committed suicide by consuming poison at his hostel on the campus in Gachibowli on Sunday, leading to a four-hour protest by students.

The victim was identified as M Venkatesh alias Venkateshwarulu, 26, from Lingampally villagein Ranga Reddy district. The PhD second-year student was carrying out research at the Defence Research and Development Organization — supported Advanced Centre for Research in High Energy Materials on the campus.

Hundreds of students laid siege to the vice-chancellor's (VC) lodge alleging caste discrimination behind Venkatesh's death. Students alleged that Venkatesh, a meritorious dalit student who had published three academic research papers, was not assigned a permanent guide by the institute. The stir began at 12.30pm and ended only after the VC, Ramakrishna Ramaswamy, isssued a written statement at 4.30pm.

Ramaswamy admitted that the failure of the varsity academic system caused the deaths of Vekatesh and some other UoH students. "Suicides on the campus are a failure of the system and steps that have been suggested in order to address the serious issues of the students need our immediate attention," he said.

The VC said a committee would be set up on Monday to probe the death. The panel will submit its report on November 26, he said. "The director of the Centre was in the process of constituting a doctoral committee for Venkatesh and assigning him a guide. His previous research supervisor retired in May and the present director took over in July. Venkatesh's work seemed to have been going well and his research was published," the VC said.
 
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Pakistan’s caste system: The untouchable’s struggle – The Express Tribune

LAHORE: Sabir Arif, a student of finance and cost management in one of Lahore’s private institutions lives in a hut made of wood, cloth and plastic sheets. His only source of income is the private tuitions he provides to others to keep his makeshift home intact.

The son of a daily wager, Sabir is not a typical victim of abject poverty in the city. Reminiscing about how he read Russian literature when he came across old story books while picking garbage in class seven, Sabir says his great challenge in life has been his caste – that he was born a Deendar Changar – Pakistan’s version of the ‘untouchables’.

Contrary to popular belief, caste in Pakistan has been a means of systematic discrimination. The lower castes here are Pakistan’s downtrodden, including Massalis also known as Muslim Sheikhs, Choorahs who are majority Christian and Chamars or Changars who are also calledDeendars if they practice Islam. In Punjab and Sindh these include the scheduled Hindu castes that serve as farm workers and bonded laborers.

Sabir admits that he faces greater discrimination than most of his “biradari” because he refused to stick to what is the generally acceptable position and career path of his caste. Living in the slums, and being considered lowest of the low in a society fixated on high and low birth, Sabir was always at the periphery, but his decision to pursue education did not sit well with the local community.

Muhammad Arif, his father who gets labor jobs with the help of his donkey cart, says he struggled with the decision of sending his children to school, “People of our biradari said that education was not for our people, that I should make Sabir help me with daily work, but I decided against it and have not sent my younger children to work as live-in domestic helpers like others in our community or forced them into working only.”

Discouraged, discriminated against and lacking any political identity, the city is now Sabir’s home, as it is easier for people of lower castes to access schooling and get odd jobs in urban hubs as compared to rural settings, where discrimination is far higher.

Abdul Rasheed Dholka, a political activist of Mazdoor Kissan Party in Sargodha has worked with lower caste farm workers, and says that in rare cases when young men from these communities are hired as peons or clerks, they try to cut off ties with their community and hide identity to avoid discrimination.

“Decades of oppression have led to circumstances where these people don’t even know how to stand up for their rights, because there is no representation,” he adds.

Dholka’s words reflect in Sabir’s thoughts, as the young man says he sometimes feels “like the Africans in South Africa or the Jews in Nazi Germany”. However, despite the twin challenges of poverty and his birth into the bottom of the social rung, Sabir manages to remain hopeful, and talks of changing the country into a better home someday.

Haris Gazdar, Director and Senior Researcher, Collective for Social Science Research in his paper “Class, Caste or Race: Veils over Social Oppression in Pakistan” argues that caste based marginalization is common in Pakistan.

“The trouble is that the biradaris and quoms are not all equal, and public silencing of the issue is very much about perpetuating existing hierarchies. The inequality is so severe and deeply embedded in parts of the country that it is hardly even noticed.”
 
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