WORKSHOP
REPORT
Harnessing
Counter-Culture to Construct Identity:
Mapping Dalit Cultural Heritage in
Contemporary India
7-8 December, 2012, Convened by: Ronki
Ram |
Ronki
Ram (Dr.)
Shaheed Bhagat Singh Professor
of Political Science
ICCR Chair Professor of Contemporary
India Studies
Leiden University Institute for Area
Studies (LIAS)
& International Institute for
Asian Studies (IIAS)
Leiden, The Netherlands |
1 The topic and the goal
The
workshop entitled Harnessing Counter-Culture
to Construct Identity: Mapping Dalit Cultural
heritage in Contemporary India was organized
by International Institute for Asian Studies
(IIAS) and Leiden University Institute for Area
Studies (LIAS), Leiden, The Netherlands at Lipsius,
Cleveringaplaats 1, Leiden on December 7-8,
2012. The workshop focused on the emergence
of Dalit cultural heritage as a counter-culture
to the mainstream culture of upper/dominant
castes social set-up and world view. If any
social institution or phenomenon that can be
singled out to boldly mark the centrality of
the Indian society, caste qualifies to be the
foremost one. Anti caste movement has a long
history in India. It was further radicalized
by the emergence of Dalit movement with the
entry of Dr. B.R. Ambedkar into the highly contested
political domain of the colonial and post colonial
India. Dalit movement adopted various strategies
in its tirade against social exclusion and made
concerted efforts for the emancipation and empowerment
of the socially excluded sections of the society.
To begin with, the Dalit movement spearheaded
by Dr. Ambedkar attempted to find a way out
of caste discrimination and social exclusion
while focusing on social reforms within Hinduism.
It tried its level best to pierce through the
iron-curtain world view of caste hierarchy by
cultivating a sense of social interaction across
caste divide through proposals of inter-caste
marriages and food sharing, on the one hand,
and launching Satyagrahas (non-violent mass
struggles) for the entry of Dalits into Hindu
temples, on the other. Finding hard to achieve
its goal, the Dalit movement took a sharp turn
in the 1930s to mobilize its vast constituency
towards the critical direction of building a
counter-culture for the sole purpose of empowering
downtrodden by offering them a distinct social
identity different from their tormentors based
either on their forgotten cultural past or seeking
a refuge in an egalitarian religion. With the
adoption of the constitution (prepared under
the Chairmanship of Dr. Ambedkar) in independent
India, the Dalit movement also found a solid
support from the state of India in its efforts
to bridle caste and build an egalitarian social
order through state affirmative action.
For
a quite some time, Dalit social mobility based
on cultural assimilation (Sanskritisation) came
to command a large following among the extremely
marginalized sections of the society. But with
the advent of Dr. Ambedkar, a strong alternative
and powerful Dalit movement emerged on the basis
of conversion to Buddhism. However, another
equally powerful Dalit movement that found an
immediate appeal among the ex-Untouchables became
popular by the name of Dalit cultural heritage.
Initially, the Dalit cultural heritage movement
found its tender sapling growing on the meticulously
fertile field cultivated by the strenuous efforts
of Jotirao Phule and the protagonists of the
Adi-movements (indigenous) in different parts
of India. Since then the domain of cultural
heritage has fast been emerging as a politically
contested site where the hitherto marginalized
and socially excluded Dalit communities started
learning how to deploy it as a viable agency
in their identity formation processes and struggles.
The
workshop spread over seven engaging sessions,
during its two-day programme, focused primarily
on various dimensions of the emerging Dalit
cultural heritage in contemporary India and
the ways it impacts the identity formation processes
among the historically socially excluded sections
of the society. Currently, Dalits in contemporary
India are closely engaged in a herculean task
of building their exclusive centers of cultural
heritage at the local and national levels. Through
this highly critical and challenging process
of constructing Dalit cultural heritage, Dalits
are, in fact, exhibiting their dormant and long
cherished will to build a separate Dalit identity
which could help them not only to overcome caste
discriminations and social exclusion but also
gain dignity and visibility in the hitherto
dominated public sphere in the mainstream Indian
society.
India has a credible reputation in preserving
varied cultural heritage centers. Ironically,
Dalits hardly figure anywhere in these most
sought after popular centers of cultural heritage
in India. They often attribute their conspicuous
absence in the mainstream cultural heritage
centers to their historic exclusion from the
civil society as well as to the dominant discriminatory
social structures that relegated them to the
periphery in the name of their so-called low
caste birth - based as it was on Varnashramdharma
(four-fold Hindu social order). They also allege
that their indigenous cultural heritage was
deliberately destroyed as well as made oblivious
with the clear purpose of denying them any space
whatsoever in the corridors of power. From their
pre-Aryan sovereign status, they were allegedly
reduced into Dasas (slaves) and subsequently
divested of all that was worth of keeping identity
alive and throbbing with a sense of pride. It
is often alleged by the authors of the currently
circulated Dalit Gaurav Gathas (Dalit prestige
stories) that Dalit were not only divested off
their rich pre-Aryan cultural heritage but also
forcefully put into the task of building the
dominating Aryan cultural heritage where they
(Dalits) would have no place to stand once the
projects were completed. It is in this context
that many of the Dalits who have been struggling
for self respect and equal rights at different
fronts often talk about the emptiness of their
identity in the mainstream cultural heritage.
They are of the firm views that the only pragmatic
way for the historically deprived and oppressed
Dalits communities to overcome their slavery
and drudgery was to retrieve their lost cultural
heritage by bringing forth their misplaced glory
through rebuilding on their pre-Aryan sovereign
existence and dignified identity.
The
nascent ongoing diverse Dalit cultural heritage
project seems to coalesce tradition and modernity.
In the concerted efforts of retrieving Dalit
cultural heritage, the tradition ceases to be
a value of the past and the modernity loses
its aura in the fast acclimatizing present cast
in the images of yesterdays. It is in this critical
context that tradition and modernity have been
acquiring new meanings and nuances to the advantage
of the socially excluded sections of the society.
Consequently, this has also been leading to
a sort of perennial social conflicts between
the hitherto dominant communities and the ex-Untouchables
who find the resurfacing Dalit cultural heritage
quite hard to digest. Whereas, Dalits in the
resurfacing of cultural heritage find a hope
of reclaiming their long-overdue share in the
local and national structures of power. Quite
interestingly, the Indian developmental state
takes keen interest in emergence of Dalit cultural
heritage and its role in the enhancement of
the Dalit identity and the effective participation
of the ex-Untouchables in the participatory
democracy of the country. Proposals are being
prepared to make policy matters to declare Dalit
parks and places of Dalit icons as centers of
Dalit cultural heritage. The fast resurfacing
of Dalit cultural heritage, in fact, has quickly
drawn the attention of electoral politics in
India so much so that in some sharply divided
state and parliamentary constituencies it has
become a popular electoral contest arena. It
has taken on different facets. The most prominent
among them are Dalit parks and statutes of Dalit
icons (especially Gautama Buddha, Dr. B.R. Ambedkar
and Babu Kanshi Ram), Dalit imagery in the forms
of colourful calendar cultural, constructing
prestige stories, dedicating Dalit shrines to
ex-Untouchable Bhakti Saints (especially Guru
Ravidass), raising memorable buildings in the
memory of Dalit forefathers (Jatheras), compiling
matching spiritual literature and even fighting
virtual wars at YouTube!
2
Presenters and chairs
The workshop was designed to bring together
field scholars from a variety of disciplines
and spatial/cultural backgrounds to have a critical
and open dialogue on the emerging trajectories
and contours of nascent Dalit cultural heritage
in contemporary India. The workshop had total
eleven full papers chaired by equal number of
known experts from the diverse social sciences
background.
•
Sukhadeo Thorat: Chairman-Indian Council of
Social Science Research, New Delhi, India (presenter
and chair)
• Paramjeet S. Judge, Department of Sociology,
Guru Nanak Dev University, Amritsar, India (presenter
and chair)
• Badri Narayan: G.B. Pant Social Science
Institute, India (presenter and chair)
• Rajiv Lochan: Department of History,
Panjab University, Chandigarh, India (presenter
and chair)
• Eva-Maria Hardtmann: Department of Social
Anthropology, Stockholm University, Sweden (presenter
and chair)
• Ashutosh Kumar: Department of Political
Science, Panjab University, Chandigarh, India
(presenter and chair)
• Meena Dhanda: Department of Philosophy
and Cultural Politics, University of Wolverhampton,
United Kingdom (presenter and chair)
• Ramnarayan Rawat :Department of History,
University of Delaware, United States (presenter
and chair)
• Kristoffel Lieten, Prof. Em. University
of Amsterdam & Director IREWOC (International
Research on Working Children)
• Nira Wickramasinghe, Leiden University
Institute of Area Studies, The Netherlands (Chair)
• Erik de Maaker, Leiden University Institute
of Cultural Anthropology and Development Sociology,
The Netherlands (Chair)
• Pramod Kumar, Institute of Development
& Communication, Chandigarh, India (Paper
read by Ronki Ram)
• Surinder Singh: Department of Political
Science, Panjab University, Chandigarh, India
(presenter)
• Ronki Ram: IIAS & LIAS, Leiden University
(presenter and chair)
3 Presentations
Dr.
Ram Narayan Rawat in his paper Forms of Dalit
Historical Narratives in the Twentieth Century
North India: The Chanvar Puranic and Adi-Hindu
Histories built a counter thesis to the mainstream
historical narratives while critically tracing
the origins of the ‘Chamars’, one
of the various Dalit castes, in the lost cultural
narratives of Dalit histories. He primarily
talked about Chanavar Puranic and Adi-Hindu
Histories. Based on ethnographic-archival study,
his paper raised a major concern that the scholars
of fast emerging Critical Dalit Studies discipline
should be cautious to embrace a singular, meta-narrative
about the explication of Dalit cultural heritage
episteme. He underlined the urgency of locating
‘diversity of visions’ for a graphic
understanding of scattered universe(s) of Dalits.
He further pointed out that the purpose of developing
a Critical Dalit Studies perspective requires
a close engagement with ‘dominant methodological
paradigms to formulate distinctive Dalit agendas’,
which would eventually help in building a counter-culture
to the entrenched structures of domination,
inequity, oppression and exclusion.
He
drew his insights about the alternative Dalit
narratives based on Chanvar Purana (Kanpur 1910),
Syryavansh Kshatriya Jaiswar Sabha (the royal
lineage of Kshatriya Jaiswar (Chamar) sabha)
(Lahore 1923), Pandit Sunderlal Sagar’s,
Yadav Jivan (Agra 1927), and Ramnarain Yadvendu’s
Yaduvansh Ka Itihas (Agra). The sources of Dalit
counter-cultural histories, said the author,
lies in popular Puranic (a major form of Indic
historical narratives) and colonial and nationalist
sources. The author emphasized on the fact that
non-Dalit scholars showed no interest in the
sources of Dalit history. He laid emphasis on
getting engaged with Puranic history with the
purpose of unraveling Dalit cultural heritage.
He also laid emphasis on the point that forefathers
of Chamars made a historical mistake that threw
them from higher status of caste hierarchy into
the lowest ebb of social scale of the Hindu
social order. What the author wanted to say
in his eloquent presentation was that the Chamars
of North India at one point of time in the long
cultural history of the region were enjoying
respectable social status in the society. However,
at some point of time they slipped from their
privileged rank due to some mistakes and thus
turned into lower castes. He tried to show through
his incisive research that the rich cultural
heritage and respectable social past of these
equally respectable people who were turned into
socially excluded sections of the society in
the past can be located from the often neglected
Dalit Puranic sources (Chanvar Purana) and other
available rich colonial sources. While relying
on such sources, the Dalit actors are no longer,
the author opined, relegated to the periphery.
On the contrary, they are at the forefront of
mainstream knowledge production.
Another
equally seminal point that the author highlighted
in his engaging presentation was that Dalit
struggles need not to be circumscribed within
“identarian politics’’, they
rather represent a consistent upsurge against
the frozen structures of hegemonic narratives
of hierarchical and exclusionary social practices
including the most obnoxious untouchability.
The author further pointed out that these divergent
Dalit historical narratives should not be considered
merely an armchair exercise in the intellectual
domain of the expanding Dalit counter-culture;
in fact, they have been providing the necessary
basic strength to the various Dalit movements
sprouting with visions of social equality, Dalit
emancipation and empowerment.
The
presentation was followed by an engaging discussion.
A large number of question were raised by many
of the participants. One of the moot question
which emerged during the discussion hour related
with the most controversial issue of Dalit social
mobility and the question of annihilation of
caste in India. Many a participants asked the
author if the sole purpose of Dalit (in this
particular case of his presentation Chamar)
social mobility is to seek parity with upper
caste through rewriting Dalit histories and
escape from the stigmatized social identity
emanating from title of Chamar, historically
a socially excluded lower, then how this very
approach of social mobility would help fight
the discriminatory structures of caste? Would
not such an approach in a way supports the very
logic of the caste system?
Prof.
Badri Narayan’s presentation
(Crossing Borders: Bhagait Folk Ballad Tradition
of Bihar and Uttar Pradesh and Nepal) argues
that an alternative non-Brahminical art and
cultural tradition of some of the extremely
marginalized Dalit communities (Mushahars, Dusadhs,
Pasis, Kumhars, etc.) have been developing fast
over a long stretch of Indo-Nepal border in
both India and Nepal. In his field based critical
study, the author built an interesting thesis
which highlights the emerging trajectories of
Dalit cultural heritage defying the artificial
state boundaries separating people of similar
cultural ethos and background who have been
rising to their lost glory by inventing/constructing/
retrieving/ relocating their rich cultural symbols,
stories, idioms to contest the hegemonic discourses
that were deployed strategically by dominant
upper castes to exclude and penned them down
for centuries. The authors narrated various
cases of Bhagait tradition which has become
very popular among the downtrodden of the region.
This local-low castes- people based cultural
tradition distinguished itself from the dominant-upper
caste-hegemonic cultural tradition in the sense
that in this tradition ‘the songs are
not sung in praise of gods like Rama an Krishna
that are popular among the upper castes but
are sung in praise of their folk heroes or Bir
(brave) and Gosai, who are related mostly with
low and subaltern castes’. The low and
subaltern Birs and Gosais are the social construct
around which new Dalit narratives are woven
to challenge the social hegemony of Brahminical
social order (BSO). The main contribution of
Bhagait tradition lies in constructing a rich
haul of Dalit cultural heritage in terms of
alternative Dalit tradition of local Dalit deities.
Bhagaits are itinerant bards across the Indo-Nepal
border.
The Bhagait tradition comprises
of Bhagat mandali (a team of gayan (singers),
mulgayan (chief singer) and subaltern discourses
created around local Dalit stories. The singers
(usually 10 to 12 led by a chief singer popularly
known as Bhagaits), play an important role at
the local levels among the subaltern groups.
The local Dalit communities’ members invite
the Bhagait singers to perform on various special
occasions where the latter often enact as priests
who perform the role of a mediator between the
Dalit people and their deities. On some of such
occasions the Bhagaits also perform the role
of a curative expert who relieved the people
from various types of diseases and the so-called
bad effects of evil spirits.
The
author explained how over the year the popular
Dalit Bhagait tradition has undergone some changes
and has also eventually entered into the urban
setting. One of the most striking differences
which can be noticed in the conduct of this
low caste tradition of redeeming the cultural
ethos of the Dalit communities is that it has
now developed into a sort of popular lower caste
entertainment agency. However, the Bhagait tradition,
the author emphasized, has been able to maintain
its sacred sanctity alive while keeping its
entertainment and sacral function quite distinct
and separated. What makes this tradition an
icon of popular Dalit cultural heritage, said
the author, is its transmutation into a written
form as a large number of literature in the
form of novels, plays, modern theatre etc. are
being created based on this tradition. The growing
local vernacular Dalit literature based on the
Bhagait tradition and its expanding popularity
in the urban setting has not only politicized
this indigenous Dalit tradition but also presented
it as a reservoir of Dalit counter-culture.
This
power-point based presentation generated a lot
of discussion during the question-answer session.
The central theme of the discussion revolved
around the following questions: In what ways
the Bhagait tradition based Dalit counter-narrative
is essentially different from the already dominant
hegemonic narrative of Brhaminical caste discourse
based on Hindu Itihasa-Purana tradition? It
seems that the Bhagait tradition in its attempt
to reconstruct the Dalit counter culture in
the medium of Dalit deities and heroes is replicating
the similar cultural world for the Dalits which
they wanted to challenge in the courtyard of
their tormentors. How and in what ways the Bhagait
tradition offer Dalit an alternative vision
to seek equality and dignity within the Dalit
counter public while borrowing massively from
the style and contents of the so-called Brahminical
sacred tradition?
Dr.
Eva-Maria Hardtmann’s paper entitled
Dalit Women in Poetry, Art and in the Global
Justice Movement primarily contextualized within
the universe of famous World Social Forum (WSF)
held in Mumbai in January 16-21, 2004. What
made this World Social Forum rather unique and
historic was the way it brought into focus feminism
within the agenda of Global Justice Movement
(GJM). The participation of South Asian Dalit
Women in this global event was worth of taking
serious note so much so that neither before
nor after such an enthusiasm came to be seen
at similar global gatherings. The presence of
a large number of South Asian Dalit Women at
the WSF gets further importance based on the
fact they were doubly oppressed and marginalized
both my men in the Dalit movement and by the
Indian feminist movement. In India the Dalit
women, argued the author, began to organize
at the national level way back in the mid 1980s,
built feminist alliances transnationally in
the 1990s, and came to shape the WSF in Mumbai
in 2004.
Eva-Maria’s
presentation, with a focused perspective on
Dalit feminism within transnational activist
networks during the last decade, was based on
a point of departure of her ethnographical material
collected during the WSF in Mumbai. She emphasized
on the need to understand the background of
Dalit feminism, and in what context it emerged.
In her paper, the author made an attempt to
understand Dalit feminism in India in the wider
critical context of poetry and art in India
and related it to the broader Dalit counter-public.
During her presentation, she touched upon the
role of Dalit activists joining global protest
against economic crisis, cyber-exclusion, and
Dalit women connections with Dalit social forums.
The presentation drew some sharply pointed questions
relating to the conspicuous absence of Dalit
women poets and the form of arts South Asian
Dalit women are involved into and their links
with Dalit politics in general and the question
of Dalit women empowerment in particular.
Prof.
Rajiv Lochan’s paper (Finding
a Voice, Instituting Memories – Rhetoric
and Ideas in Creating and Sustaining ‘Bahujan-Mulniwasi’)
dealt with one of the most critical themes of
current Dalit identity politics i.e. creating
a shared memory of repression and suppression
through the agency of the non-political All-India
Backward (SC/St/OBC) and Minority Communities
Employees Federation (BAMCEF). While caricaturing
the discourse of Dalit identity politics, the
author explicate its central episteme ‘bahujan’
(literally ‘the majority’) and the
ways it transformed over two decades into an
equally powerful episteme popularly known as
‘Mulniwasi’ (literally ‘the
indigenous people’) in the 1990s. The
term Mulniwasi, said the author, carries within
its ambit a vast notion of historical imaginations
about the oppressive operations led by the marauding
Aryans rendering the indigenous people homeless
and relegating them into periphery, the nature
of their current plight, strategies adopted
by their tormentors to divest them off their
sovereignty and to keep them disadvantaged throughout
since then, the inadequacy of the state affirmative
action to uplift them and much more. The entire
presentation revolved around the processes and
dynamics of indigenous historical imagination
as taken up and developed within the vast organizational
network of Dalit and minority communities employees
federation in India. The author presumed that
by looking at the efforts of the BAMCEF based
as it is on the idea of ‘bahujan-mulniwasi’
could help understand the nature of the new
ideological moorings that are being sought for
the emancipatory struggle of the socially disadvantaged.
In
his presentation, the author has cogently articulated
how the BAMCEF has shaped over the years ‘an
inchoate group of people into a meaningful body
that has emancipatory capacity’. The author
further highlighted that such an inquiry was
based on three core questions: emancipation
from whom, from what and for what purpose. This
study is based on author’s close interaction
with BAMCEF for over twenty years both as participants
and observers and the vast body of literature
that this organization has produced over all
these years.
This
presentation raised some sharply pointed question
like that the mainstream social construction
paints the indigenous people as homogenous category/group
whereas they themselves are a divided house
as BAMCEF too consider them a motley of different
social background. What measures, if any, BAMCEF
takes to bring them under single roof in the
real sense of the term? Is it not true that
the Bahujan Samaj Party (a political offshoot
of BAMCEF) in itself has emerged as a political
party of Chamars only?
Dr.
Meena Dhanda in her power-point presentation
(Adh Dharm Samaj: the Social Vision of Darshan
Rattan Ravan) articulated about the emerging
leadership of Valmiki community in Punjab based
on her ethnographic study of its locales, personal
interviews with its activists and leadership,
and readings of the literature produced within.
She also has had access to some of the large
public gatherings of the community in question
during one of her field visits to Amritsar.
During her presentation, the author primarily
focused on the personality, leadership style,
organizational framework, and literally and
political ambience of the AADHAS (Aadi Dharam
Samaj) led by Darshan Rattan Raavan. She presented
AADHAS as a new social forum which distinctly
represents one of the extremely marginalized
Dalit communities in Punjab (Valmikis).
Darshan
Rattan Raavan, the president of AADHAS was presented
as a social reformer who wants to consolidate
political power by creating an upstanding leadership
amongst the youth, especially by improving the
state of existence of his community by making
efforts to gain for them genuine advantages
of the state affirmative action, focusing on
women’s education, superstition free alternate
anti- Hindu religious culture, a drugs-free
environment etc. She took serious note of addressing
him by a known social scientist of the region
as “a kind of Parcharak” who uses
“the idiom of religion to gain dignity...
religious identity then becomes a parallel identity
to other identities”. The author termed
such remarks about Darshan Rattan Raavan as
a “projection of an academic mentality
of opportunism where career aspirations determine
the trajectory of one’s research and any
thought of selfless dedication and genuine solidarity
with the oppressed is dismissed out of hand?”
The
author projected the social vision of Darshan
Rattan Raavan as a potent agency that could
eventually help the Valmiki community to attain
social emancipation and empowerment. The social
vision of Darshan Rattan Raavan, according to
the author, includes consciously avoiding references
to Hindu God and Goddesses, eschewing Sanskritised
Hindi, promoting the cause of sewer-man’s
human rights, gender justice and paying respects
to the promoters of the just human cause like
that of Ambedkar, Martin Luther King, Jagjivan
Ram, Shabana Azmi and Arundhati Roy. The most
striking aspect of his social vision that the
author underlined boldly is the characterization
of young Dalit men as the culture of 4Ms, i.e.
motorcycle, mobile, muscle and mustunda (hooligan).
The
presentation was followed by an interesting
discussion focusing on Chamar vs Valmiki politics
at the state level, and personality and identity
based Dalit politics. Some of the questions
were related with the most burning and current
issue of caste and identity based Dalit politics
in contemporary Punjab and the ways it gears
the Valmiki community towards the Shiromani
Akali Dal (SAD).
Mr.
Surinder Singh’s presentation
(Dalit Cultural Heritage in Punjab: A study
of Jathera Shrines of the Ad Dharmi Community)
based on ethnographic field study touched one
of least discussed aspects of fast emerging
Dalit identity formation processes in the current
Punjab. The phenomenon of reverence of Jathera
shrines among the Dalit of Punjab has been gaining
wide currency as explained by the author in
this presentation. Dalits in Punjab have been
constructing and reconstructing multi-stories
shrine in the memory of their reverend forefathers
as an endeavor to create memorial cultural heritage
reflecting on their sense of pride. The author
is of the opinion that the process of remembering
the jathera and construction of shrines also
creates, mediates and invents relationship between
the Dalits in Punjab and the widely scattered
Dalit diasporas. Jathera shrines, said the author,
are not only used as religious/cultural sites
to worship Dalit ancestors but the construction
of such sacred monument buildings is a witting
search for the lost Dalit identity and cultural
heritage roots. In the presentation, the author
has coherently built linkages among local economy,
Dalit cultural heritage and the rising Dalit
consciousness in the region. Through the medium
of his field based collected information, Mr.
Singh underlined the fact that more the prosperous
a Dalit community is the more fabulous would
be its jathera shrine. The role of the diaspora
Dalit community members in constructing the
multi-story jathera shrine buildings is also
highlighted in the presentation. The author
further stated clearly how the construction
of the jathera shrines are linked with the pride
of Dalit gotra (clan lineage) and caste identities.
The process of depicting caste identity through
the construction of jathera shrines is exemplified,
said the author, through putting the symbols,
pictures of symbolic figures, slogan and spiritual
poetry of the lower castes Sants (spiritual
figures) at the places and walls of the jathera
shrine buildings.
Another
important aspect of the presentation is its
emphasis on the links between political patronage
and the promotion of Dalit cultural heritage
in Punjab. The author cites various example
reflecting on the thick involvement of the political
personalities in the promotion of the jathera
shrine culture among the Dalits of the region.
He talked about the economic grants released
by the Members of Legislative Assembly (MLAs)
and Members of Parliament (MPs), Presidents
of the Municipal Corporations (MCs) and the
village Sarpanches for the construction of such
shrines.
The
presentation was followed by the question hour
session. Most of the questions were related
to the political economy of the emerging Dalit
jatehra shrines and the impact of this distinct
Dalit identity formation on the politics and
the empowerment of the downtrodden.
Prof.
Ronki Ram in his presentation (The
other Modernity and forgotten Tradition: The
Resurfacing of Dalit Cultural Heritage in Contemporary
India) talked about the concerted efforts of
the historically socially excluded sections
of the Indian society, popularly known as Dalits,
who have been engaged with a herculean task
of reviving/inventing their lost cultural heritage
at the grass-roots and national levels. It highlighted
the dialectics and logistics of various techniques
and strategies as adopted by them to rebuild/invent
their lost/imagined cultural heritage and the
ways it help them in acquiring distinct and
separate social identity in a highly stratified
social set up. The process of Dalit cultural
heritage, said the author, have passed through
different stages at different intervals in the
country. As far as Punjab is concerned, it was
the Ad Dahram movement that provided the initial
spur to the nascent phenomenon of Dalit cultural
heritage.
The most obvious agency of Dalit cultural heritage
in contemporary East Punjab is the mushrooming
growth of Ravidass Deras. The other equally
important agencies of Dalit cultural heritage
in the state are Dalit folk songs, poetry, music,
Dalit autobiographies, statues of Dalit icons,
monumental buildings dedicated to the memory
of ancestors (jatheras), and large scale production
and circulation of small size booklets sharply
depicting Dalit past, heroes, and counter narratives.
Ravidass Deras, articulated the author, are
the only Dalit religious centers where religious
and political figures (Guru Ravidass and Dr.
Ambedkar) are blended together and projected
publicly as the messiahs and redeemers of Dalits.
Architecture of Ravidass Deras is distinguished
from that of the mainstream religions in the
state. Ravidass Deras have carved out their
own distinct architecture which is a mixture
of Hindu, Sikh and Islamic contents. In addition,
these Deras have also developed their own dress
code, sacred scriptures, religious symbols,
sacred slogans, salutations, ceremonies, rituals,
ardas (prayer), Kathas (scared stories), Kirtan
(musical rendering of social hymns), and religious
festivals and auspicious days/dates. The presentation,
however, focused mainly on Ravidass Deras, particularly
Dera Sant Sarwan Dass, Ballan (DSSB).
DSSB
enriched Dalit cultural heritage in the region
by establishing various Ravidass shrines, bhawans
(memorial halls), hospitals, libraries, schools,
news papers (weekly), and vocational training
centers in the state. The sants of DSSB convened
regular sant-sammelans (spiritual congregations),
another noble way of disseminating the message
of evolving Dalit cultural heritage among the
followers of Ravidass Deras. To promote Dalit
cultural heritage Sants of DSSB prepared a number
of cassettes, compact discs (CDs) and video
compact discs (VCDs) of the spiritual teachings
of Guru Ravidass, the patron Sant of Ad Dharm
movement and the rallying centre of Ravidass
Deras including DSSB. However, of all the major
contributions made by DSSB towards retrieving
the lost Dalit cultural heritage, the construction
of a mammoth ‘Shri Guru Ravidass Janam
Asthan Mandir’(Temple of Shri Guru Ravidass’s
Birthplace) at Seer Goverdhanpur, a locality
in the suburb of Varanasi (Uttar Pradesh) is
the most significant. Dalits from India and
abroad contributed enormously towards the constriction
of the temple. Within a short span of time it
has become a main pilgrimage center of the Dalits.
Every year during the birth anniversary of Guru
Ravidass, this temple attracts millions of devotees
from India and abroad. Another major intervention
by the Sants of DSSB in the emerging domain
of Dalit cultural heritage in Punjab is the
declaration of Ravidassia Dharm as a distinct
religion of its followers.
The
presentation received a number of question relating
to the different dimensions of the separate
Ravidassia Dalit identity and the relevance/irrelevance
of such a religion based identity for the empowerment
of the formerly socially excluded sections of
the society. What could be the possible social
and political consequences of such a distinct
religion based Dalit identity for the over-all
caste question in the already highly segmented
Punjabi agrarian society?
Prof.
Sukhadeo Thorat’s paper (Rise
of Dalit Arts and Imagery: Instrument of Protest
and Hope) touched the unexplored but rich domain
of Dalit visual arts and imagery (painting,
prints, sculpture, architecture, and other forms
such as wall posters and photographs) and the
ways it has been rather meticulously deployed
as a non-violent method of social protest and
viable instrument of hope for the ex-Untouchables
in India. During his eloquent presentation perforated
with slides of Dalit visual arts, Prof. Thorat
highlighted the hidden meanings and connotations
of such art so far neglected almost absolutely
in the realm of mainstream social science. The
author traced the history of Dalit arts and
imagery to Ambedkar anti-caste civil right movement
between early 1920s to mid 1950s in various
forms. However, the author continued, it took
more visible and recognizable expression since
the early 1990s and finally caught the critical
eye of the experts in the field only in 2000s.
Dalit
visual arts, said the author, represented various
dimensions of excluded Dalit life. He quoted
a number of Dalit artists whose works have been
documented in the seminal works of scholars
working on caste and Dalit questions in India.
In the expert opinion of the author, Gary Tartkov
is the first writer who captured and conceptualized
Dalit arts. Other writers who have done a considerable
work in this emerging sub-field of critical
Dalit studies, according to the author, are:
David Santon and Saurabh Dube, Nicolas Jaoul,
Owen Lynch. The seminal works brought out by
these scholar writers provided a rich haul of
literature on Dalit visual arts and imagery
which is both, as the author quoted Tartkov,
‘a register of social reality and an instrument
to change it’.
Dalit
visual arts and imagery, said the author, served
as a two-pronged instrument in the direction
of Dalit emancipation and empowerment. The first
signified a ‘switch over from Hindu religion
and cultural symbols to those associated with
Ambedkar and Buddhism and similar traditions.
The other is an ideological change that this
new arts and imagery carries with it, signifying
the changes in principles that govern the ways
in which Dalits now define identities and the
ways in which they relate to others’.
As far as the shift is concerned, it rejected
symbols of social hierarchy and encouraged a
shift to the alternate symbols that underline
social equality and struggle for equal rights
and dignity. The author further said that, “[i]n
making this shift Dalit art provides us an insight
into the social transformation that is underway,
that involves not only rejection of the caste
system and excluded life, but an embrace of
efforts to create a new social order and social
relations based on the principles of equality
and social justice’. The author concluded
his presentation while emphasizing that ‘Dalit
art and visual imagery in contemporary India
from a Dalit oriented perspective open up a
new arena for considering our shared social
development.’
The
presentation was followed by an engaging discussion
reflecting on varied dimensions of the possibility
of the development of the Dalit visual arts
and imagery into a sort of didactic counter-culture
which would eventually usher into Dalit counter-public.
Some of questions were also raised to identify
the basic parameters for the recognition of
the genre of the Dalit art and imagery. How
Dalit art as an art differs from the mainstream
art and imagery? Is it that the Dalit art and
imagery always expressed itself in exclusionary
terms only? What could be the other positive
dimensions of Dalit art and imagery independent
of the negative Dalit cultural heritage?
Prof.
Ashutosh Kumar began his presentation
(Dalit Deras as Critical Sites of Counter Culture:
Explaining Why Political Parties Do Flock to
the Deras) raising two sets of question relating
to the lack of ‘presence’ and ‘empowerment’
of the Dalit community in the corridors of political
power. It is in this context that he proposed
to focus on the role of the Deras as a potential
space for the emergence of Dalit counter-culture
as a potent agency of Dalit assertion. This
in turn, as the author emphasized, based on
the fact that ‘the mushrooming of the
deras and their ever increasing role in influencing
the political choices of their followers, most
of whom belong to the socially and economically
marginal indigenous groups as well as the migrant
low castes farm/industrial labourers, is being
recognized by the political parties as evident
in the leaders cutting across party divides
flocking to the deras in elections after elections’.
Another equally focused observation that the
author made in the beginning of his presentation
was that ‘the contestation and representation
of the dalits and backward castes has remained
confined to mere ‘presence’ in the
party forums or in the legislative bodies. It
is obvious that there has hardly been a sincere
attempt on the part of any ‘effective/relevant’
party in the state to mobilize the dalits, constituting
one third of the state’s population for
democratic purposes’. Instead, averred
the author, the contending political parties
dominated by upper castes leadership prefer
to chose the ‘softer’ option of
flocking to all sorts of Deras during elections
to influence their top management to give verdict
in their favour for en- block voting.
For
an in-depth understating of the transmutation
of the Deras from primarily a blend of sacred
social, cultural and political arenas into critical
domains for the invention of Dalit cultural
heritage, the author raised the following question:
How to make a sense of the mushrooming growth
of deras in the state and how and why are they
different from the earlier deras in this context?
To what extent, the growing clout of the deras
especially the Sikh deras as alternative socio-religious
spaces across the state can be attributed to
the decline of the autonomy of the two highest
religious bodies of the community namely Akal
Takht and Shiromani Gurudwara Prabandhak Committee
(SGPC)/ Why in terms of sociological origins,
most of the deras followers are dalits and backwards
castes even as many of these deras are not lower-caste
based and are even headed by the Sants/Gurus/Babas
belonging to the dominant community?
The
author is of the view that the current hobnobbing
between the political parties and the Deras
has emerged ‘at a juncture when politics
of the state has undergone a paradigmatic shift
in the sense that ethnicity as determinant factor
seems to be receding into the background with
communal peace and development taking the centre
stage in the electoral arena as one reads the
election manifestos or follows the campaign’.
While critically exploring the politicization
of Dalits and the Dera factor in the much contested
electoral arena of the state politics in Punjab,
the author minced no words in refuting the growing
political assertion ignited by the fast expanding
constituency of Dalit Deras and their seminal
role in the spread of Dalit cultural heritage
within the region and beyond. Why despite the
growing constituency and the influence of the
Dera factor, questioned the author, Dalits in
Punjab assembly and parliamentary elections
failed to carve a niche for themselves in the
state?
The
presentation led to an interesting discussion.
One of most common query that figured in all
most all the questions was concerned with pros
and cons of the linkages between the Dalit assertion
and the political victory in the periodic assembly
and parliamentary elections. In order to measure
the temperature of the rising Dalit assertion
in Punjab, many a questions raised, is it essential
to compare it with that of the political mileage
in terms of electoral gains? If the role of
Dalit Deras in building Dalit assertion in the
region is minuscule then why it is so that the
political leadership across the parties make
bee lines at their entrances on one or the other
alibi?
Prof.
Paramjit S. Judge’s presentation
(Dalit Culture and Identity: Valorisation and
Reconstruction of Tradition among the Chamars
in Punjab) was a fresh and significant intervention
in the sense that in the whopping build up of
the Dalit literature over the last few years,
one hardly finds a piece on the ‘virtual
wars’ being fought on the You-tube signifying
the ever widening canvas of Dalit assertion
and the resistance it faced from the protagonists
of the forces of the status-quo. His eloquent
presentation revolved around the main issue
of how virtual wars between the Chamars (one
of the most outwardly mobile Dalit community)
and Jats (the dominant peasant caste) are fought
on the internet and how the former have been
engaged in this very process in constructing
a counter-culture. The learned author had also
discussed how such wars made the distinction
between the diaspora and non-diaspora Punjabi
fuzzy.
The
author categorized virtual wars into two segments.
At the first level, the virtual wars are carried
out as a mode of enactment in the visuals presented
in the form of songs as well as the themes of
those songs. At the second level, the two warring
communities (Jats and Chamars) exchange arguments,
often vituperative, in the form of comments
they make on the contents of the songs. In a
fit of rage, said the author, the comments often
transcended the boundaries of the contents and
entered ignominiously into the filthy domain
of defacing the body and character of the very
singer of the song as a symbolic of the community
in question. In such virtual wars, the author
continued, body of the singer degraded into
a site of aggression (particularly sexual) and
the newly earned wealth of the Dalit diaspora
became a critical site of prosperity. Body of
the macho Dalit male is also depicted as solid
face of emerging Dalit assertion. The actors
on both the sides of virtual wars are shown
as the consumers of modernity and perpetrators
of tradition. The actual and the existential
domain of ethnic cleavages and caste divides
are metamorphosed into ‘symbolic universe’
depicting the deep-rooted sinews of the dominant
structures of social forces often oppressive
and exclusionary. It is at the stance of these
oppressive and exclusionary social structures
that the virtual wars are fought as the savior
of their respective camps. Chamars took it a
big pride in their newly earned wealth and hard
earned social position, explained the author,
which still needed to get due recognition in
the rival camps; they proudly exhibit their
so-called low caste status through the medium
of the catchy contents of the songs sung on
the You-tube that portrayed them as the rising
sons of Chamars. On the other hand, the rival
warring camp represented by Jats leave no stone
unturned from the way of smashing such hyper-glamorous
social prestige and position of the erstwhile
ex-untouchable boys who now dared to challenge
their so-called bread guarantors.
As
far the visual presentation of virtual wars
is concerned, Guru Ravidass, Dr. B, R. Ambedkar
and DSSB emerged as the main iconic figures
on the You-tube representing the socially excluded
sections of the society. However, it is at this
level, said the author, that a phenomenon of
duality surfaced configuratively among the Chamars
of Punjab, ‘that is, politically they
support Dr. Ambedkar and, at the same time,
they have not responded to his call for conversion
to Buddhism”. Another duality that the
author talked about underlined the fact that
‘both Dr. Ambedkar and Guru Ravidass do
not subscribe to violence in their writings
and preaching. However, most of the visual presentations
of this genre of songs carry powerful symbols
of violence. These songs show hockey sticks,
baseball bats, swords and guns’.
The
author concluded his presentation with three
implications. First, the virtual wars have shattered
the myth of possibility of casteless society.
Instead of taking back seat, the caste identities,
emphasized the author, became strong and have
been deployed to capture power. They have also
become exclusive. The second, social equality
needs to be understood and achieved without
achieving casteless society. And third, the
bludgeoning phenomenon of exclusive caste identities
hinders the process of social inclusion in a
democratic system, particularly in the private
sphere.
The
presentation was followed by an engaging discussion
revolving around the central issue of strengthening
of caste identities in contemporary India. Some
of the comments and questions raised the issue
of public vs. the private in understanding the
complexities of the emerging phenomenon of exclusive
caste identities in cyber-age in border state
of Punjab.
Dr.
Pramod Kumar’s paper (Dalit Identity
Architecture: From Selective Adaptation of Cultural
Symbols to Nurturing of Exclusive Sites) was
read by Ronki Ram. Dr. Pramod Kumar could not
attend the workshop on health grounds. The central
thrust of his paper is on selective cultural
adaptation by the lower castes of dominant cultural
standards and at the same time to construct
parallelism in terms of cultural forms and nurturing
of exclusive sites to bargain for equitable
representation in the domain of both public
and private. There is sufficient evidence available,
claimed in the paper on the basis of intensive
field study, to show how Dalits were selectively
appropriating certain traits of dominant castes.
While further complicating the phenomenon of
specific cultural practices, the author cautioned
against possible misunderstanding of the dubbing
the entire process as ‘sanskritisation
of Dalits in Punjab’. Against the established
notion of the ‘sanskritisation of Dalits’,
the author in this critical study established
the notion of ‘competitive parallelism’
which aimed at to form a common Dalit identity
and at the same time wanted to lose that same
identity. ‘This parallelism’, said
the author ‘is in convergence with the
exclusive spatial sites being established’.
It aimed at ‘nurturing a exclusive Dalit
identity in comparison with Jat Sikh identity’.
The formation of Mahila Mandals, Deras and Gurdwaras
are some of the most obvious cases of such emerging
exclusive and parallel cultural domain as cited
in the paper. Within the expanding domain of
exclusive and parallel Dalit cultural heritage,
Dalit Deras figured most prominently. They have
‘put the Sikh ethnic claims in a weak
and crumbling position by challenging the monolithic
claims of Sikhism. Herein lies one of the potential
strengths of these Deras as they have not only
represented the marginalised sections of Punjabi
society (primarily in terms of caste and class)
but at the same time they have put into question
the monolithic projection of Sikhism and thus
putting the state into a tight spot whereby
it has to simultaneously balance the contesting
claims of the people voiced through Deras due
to electoral compulsions with close connections
it historically has with the Sikh clergy in
politics, whereby state and religious –
political institutions of Sikhs are highly intermeshed’.
It is in this context that the politics in Punjab,
emphasized the author, has been providing a
bargaining space to Dalits in the state.
The
final session of the Workshop was marked as
concluding remarks. In this session, Ronki Ram,
convener of the Workshop, provided a synoptic
view and a conclusion of the engaging discussions
held during the two days technical sessions
of this international academic event. He emphasized
that Dalit identity formation and its representation
emerged as the central view point during the
Workshop. The emerging Dalit identity formation
processes tended to be characterized as multiple
in its contents and deeds as against the usual
singular-monolithic. In fact, the multiple Dalit
identity formation processes in contemporary
India were reminiscent of the diverse social
domain of the ex-untouchables sections of the
Indian society who were as sharply divided along
castes lines as the other four Varnas of the
Hindu social order.
As
far as representation of such a highly differentiated
and contested domain of lower castes identity
formation processes are concerned, it is quite
obvious that there emerged several distinct
cultural heritage centers signifying the multidimensionality
of such on going processes. Some of the papers
presented during the Workshop highlighted the
multidimensionality of the Dalit cultural heritage
processes while concentrating on different cultural
ethos and their representation in the form of
emerging divergent centers of Dalit religion(s)
and culture(s), prestige stories, historical
narratives, virtual wars sites, Dalit visual
arts, imagery and poetry etc. etc. Thus the
contemporary India has been witness to the growth
of several distinct Dalit cultural heritage
domains and counter-cultures as against a single
unified Dalit cultural heritage domain. The
emerging domains of Dalit cultural heritage
are being looked at as new vistas of Dalit emancipation
and empowerment. They are presented as centers
of counter-culture which facilitate the former
socially excluded sections of the society in
getting them re-jointed with their forgotten
histories and rich cultural traditions of sovereignty.
Posted on www.ambedkartimes.com (January
30, 2013)
|
MAKING
SENSE OF DALIT IDENTITY
IN CONTEMPORARY PUNJAB:
REVIEW ARTICLE OF A
RECENT STUDY IN PUNJABI
[Ronki Ram,
Dalit Pachhan Mukti Ate Shaktikarn
(Dalit Identity, Emancipation and
Empowerment),
Patiala: Punjabi University Publication
Bureau, 2012,
pp. xlviii +372, Rs 300, in Punjabi].
|
|
Surinder
Singh
Junior Research Fellow
Department of Political Science
Panjab University, Chandigarh
singhsurinder333@gmail.com |
Punjab
has the highest proportion of Dalits (29 percent,
Census of India 2001) in India and this whopping
numerical presence has further increased with
the inclusion of Mochi and Rai Sikh/Mahatam
castes into Scheduled Castes category in the
state. Despite having the highest proportion
of Dalit percentage in the country, Dalits
in Punjab, however, are extensively deprived
of agricultural land. Among them less than
5 percent (Census of India) are cultivators.
They shared only 4.82 percent of the number
of operational holdings and 2.34 percent of
the total area under cultivation (1991 Census).
Consequently, their landlessness rendered
a large number of them into agricultural labourers
and made them subservient to the landowners.
However, a significant change has taken place
over the last few decades. Dalits in Punjab
have improved their economic position through
hard work, job diversification and emigration
abroad. They have entered into a number of
professions, which were traditionally considered
to be the mainstay of the business and artisan
castes. This has led to a sharp decline in
the number of Dalit landless agricultural
workers in Punjab whose strength has come
down from 24 percent in 1991 to 16 percent
in 2001. However, the dissociation of Dalits
from the menial and agricultural work in Punjab
and their relatively better economic conditions
have probably failed to get them entry into
the local structure of power, almost totally
`monopolized by the so-called dominant/upper
castes. This is what forced them to look for
alternative ways of social mobility and empowerment.
The
story of Dalit identity, emancipation, empowerment
and mobility is quite different in Punjab
from that of the rest of India. There happened
to be two main models of social mobility available
to the socially excluded sections of the Indian
society. These two models are: Conversion
and Sanskritisation. Conversion and Sanskritisation
aim at seeking Dalit emancipation by crossing
over to something new/external that would
facilitate them to quit their centuries-old
entrenched subordination [Ram 2012: 639].
But as far as Punjab is concerned, Dalits
seem to have avoided this two fold way of
social mobility for the reasons best known
to them. They prefer to improve their social
status through highlighting their caste identity.
What
distinguished caste in Punjab from the rest
of the country is the primacy of the material
(land) and political factors over the principle
of purity and pollution dichotomy. Punjab
is primarily an agrarian state. Social status
in Punjab is basically measured in terms of
possession of land. In Punjab, land is basically
under the absolute control of the dominant
caste i.e. Jat Sikh [ibid: 656]. Therefore,
Jat Sikh considered themselves at the top
of caste hierarchy in Punjab, particularly
in Sikhism. Since Purity-Pollution is not
the criterion of social exclusion in Punjab,
it does not make much difference whether you
follow the cultural norms of priestly class
or not. Even if someone embraces some other
religion in Punjab to get rid of caste-based
discrimination rampant in Hinduism, it still
does not make much difference so far, as long
as he fails to acquire some land in agriculture-dominated
state of Punjab. So Dalits conversion into
another religion becomes meaningless and they
prefer to improve their social position through
reconstructing their identity on the basis
of caste and reinventing their cultural heritage.
Dalit Pachhan Mukti Ate Shaktikarn (Dalit
Identity, Emancipation and Empowerment) is
the second book written by the author in the
Punjabi language. This ethnographic work,
under review, is based on historical and analytical
methods. The main argument of the book is
that Dalits in Punjab are consciously and
systematically constructing their caste/religion
based identity. Caste based identity helps
them in emancipation from the inferiority
complex and gaining empowerment in the otherwise
oppressive mainstream Punjabi society. It
also discusses the sources and stages of Dalit
identity formation in Punjab by focusing on
various Dalit movements like Ad Dharm, Ambedkarite,
Bahujan Samaj and the mushrooming growth of
Ravidass Deras. Relying on archival and ethnographic
sources, the study meticulously explores the
causes behind the rise of Dalit identity in
Punjab and the ways it exhibits the same.
Before exploring the various themes which
the book analytically discusses, there is
a need to highlight the prologue of the book.
In the prologue, the author has described
the importance of vernacular/mother language.
In the views of the author mother tongue is
not only used as a tool of conversation but
in reality it also helps in understanding
the complexities of social existence, culture,
identity, nationality, economy and psychology.
Language and culture are the two intricate
determinant factors of the existence and development
of a community. There is a common impression
that one can write about the complex aspects
of life and society rather more comfortably
in ones mother tongue. Till date, the most
renowned literary works, opinioned the author,
were written by authors in local languages.
The writers who achieved this reputation through
mother/local language are: Plato, Aristotle,
Hegel, Marx, Derrida among many others. Similarly,
Punjabi i.e. the local language of Punjab,
was popularized by Guru Nanak Dev, the founder
of Sikh faith, in gurumukhi script. Punjabi
language, culture and literature eventually
developed through the gurumukhi script. Today,
the domain of Punjabi language is shrinking
while relying more on ditto vocabulary of
other languages than making use of original
Punjabi vocabulary. The author alarms that
by doing so we would not only weaken our mother
tongue vocabulary but also dwarf our culture.
The book is arranged into eight chapters in
addition to a detailed prologue, foreword,
introduction, epilogue (Dalit suppression
and emancipation: synthesis and reaction)
and a detailed bibliography based on scattered
but rich Punjabi sources.
The first chapter explores the long journey
of Dalit identity, emancipation and empowerment
in Punjab. The chapter opens with the ubiquity
of Dalit question in Indian society which
remained inflamed during the period of Buddhism,
Bhakti movement, the mission of social equality
and justice run by Sikh Gurus, Adi movements
and also during the movements run by Phule-
Periyar- Ambedkar- Kanshi Ram. The protest
against the silence of upper castes on Dalit
question is raised from time to time. However,
the big silence on Dalit question at the time
of Indian national movement has not only revealed
its narrow canvas but also separated it sharply
from its wider social domain deeply drowned
in social inequalities and social evils. Dalit
identity, emancipation and empowerment are
discussed in two perspectives: first, Marxist/Leftist
and second, caste prestige. Marxists/Leftists
study Dalit question from economic/class perspective.
They observe Dalit identity in terms of class.
They argue that the Dalit oppression is based
on their economic subjugation. They consider
caste to be the superstructure on class. They
criticize the newly emerged middle class among
Dalits who follow the bourgeoisie and casteist
parties. Particularly, they criticize the
Bahujan Samaj Party leaders who limit themselves
to ‘caste politics’. They argued
that bourgeoisie Dalit class wants to maintain
its position in present political system.
They never participate in Marxist struggle
and always oppose it. Therefore, Marxists
adopt similar planning for bourgeoisie, religious
and Dalit political parties. They also argue
that Dalit consciousness is a hurdle in revolutionary
thinking. Although, Dalit consciousness recognises
the revolutionary spirit but in the end it
goes in favor of capitalism and makes it strong.
Second, the author argues that in Punjab,
Dalit identity is emerging on the basis of
caste. The caste inferiority is challenged
through the proverb of caste prestige. The
caste based Dalit identity is giving birth
to Dalitism. And Dalitism has become victim
of one-sidedness which looks at the Dalit
emancipation only through the prestige of
caste. The author questioned caste based Dalit
emancipation while asking a pertinent question
that is it a positive way of Dalit emancipation?
He described that Dalit question is not a
question of Dalits only. This question, in
his views, is related to the change of social,
economic and political structure of the entire
Indian society. Quoting Dr. Ambedkar, the
author says that Dalit question is facing
two main rivals: Brahmanism and Capitalism.
If Dalit movement failed to abolish Brahmanism
and in the presence of capitalism somehow
able to gain slightly through reservation,
then this type of change will be far away
from Dalit identity, emancipation and empowerment
as defined by the author. Dalit emancipation,
emphasized the author, is related with the
freedom of individuals from individuals who
are encircled within oppressive structures
of social dominations based of hoary caste
system. The struggle for Dalit emancipation
is waged by Dalit middle class. The Dalit
middle class is the product of constitutional
affirmative actions and the teachings of Ambedkarite
ideology. This Dalit middle class firmly observes
that Marxist parties are their opponent. The
basic reason of their opposition to the Communist
parties is that such left parties are themselves
votary of capitalism and therefore are unable
to understand the everlasting caste based
division of Indian society.
The instances of caste based Dalit identity
are normally observed in Doaba region of Punjab.
Couplets of caste prestige such as “putt
Chamaran de” (the babes of Chamars),
Guru Ravidass di foj kardi a moj” (the
children of Guru Ravidass are relishing) etc.
are often found written on cars, jeeps and
bikes in the Doaba region of Punjab. The religious
places popularly known as Deras/Ravidass Deras
are mushrooming on caste line. Such caste
based religious places are providing most
sought after socio-religious space to Dalits
which differentiates them from other communities.
Ravidass Deras, as argued by the author, are
providing a new and different identity to
Dalits by combining spirituality with politics.
Dr. Ambedkar and Guru Ravidass have become
the center of Dalit identity. It was first
highlighted by Ad Dharm movement. The question
of Dalit emancipation and empowerment has
been continuously raised by different persons
through different ways for instance Buddha,
Sants of Bhakti movement, Sikh Gurus, Jotirao
Phule, Adi/Ad Dharm movements, Ambedkarite
movement, and Kanshi Ram. Dalit empowerment
critically analysed through different ideologies.
Gandhian philosophy emphasises on Dalit emancipation
and empowerment within Varna Vyastha through
eliminating the caste hierarchy from the minds
of people. It represents Varna Vyastha with
moral principles. In other words, it emphasises
on Dalit emancipation without elimination
of the caste system. Ambedkar-Gandhi Poona
Pact is the outcome of such philosophy. Efforts
of British government (divide and rule policy)
had also empowered the Dalits in a limited
way. On one hand, Britishers empowered Dalits
through communal award and, on the other hand,
they kept away Dalits from land ownership.
The reservation provided by the Colonial government
in electoral system, recognition of Ad Dharm
as a new religion of Dalits, victory of Dalits
on the reserved seats of Punjab provincial
Assembly election in 1937 and 1946 etc are
known as examples of Dalit empowerment. In
the views of the author, it shows that such
a process of Dalit empowerment is ultimately
went in favour of further strengthening the
already entrenched institution of caste system.
The educated and middle generation Dalits
have been trying to seek emancipation and
empowerment through constructing separate
religious/caste identities. The educated class
has ligitimised their act by using the idea
of caste based identity as popularized by
Kanshi Ram. From the last few decades, religion/caste
based Dalit identities have emerged as hub
of Dalit emancipation and empowerment. However,
the emergence of caste based Dalit identities
are fast becoming the cause of routine caste
conflicts in Punjab.
Second chapter is a detailed account of the
changing basis of Punjabi Dalit identity.
Dalit identity is related to resourceful,
prosperous and respectable life. It is a demonstration
of positive efforts of Dalits who consciously
put emphasis on projecting themselves as an
altogether a separate different social group/community.
It also helps them in flouting their distinct
political value in the arithmetic of electoral
politics. Earning respectable space in society
through political power, seems to be the sole
purpose of emerging Dalit identity. It also
looked at as if providing freedom from Brahminical
structures. Historically, the idea of distinct
Dalit identity started from the Buddhism.
Buddha was the first to raise voice against
the symbols and behaviors of Upper Castes
which were responsible for oppression of Dalits.
Due to the efforts of Buddhist prophets Dalits
attained opportunities to capture the political
power. After a long period, in medieval time,
in north India Sants of Bhakti movement and
Sikh Gurus’ mission of social equality
provided a new meaning to Dalit identity.
However, during Ad Dharm movement, Dalits
for the first time took initiative to construct
their identity on their own. The leaders of
Adi Dharm movement created religion based
Dalit identity i.e. Ad Dharmi. The religious
paradigm of Dalit identity was a process of
regenerating the hitherto eclipsed Dalit history,
culture and heritage. ‘Ad Dharmi’
as a religious identity separates Dalits from
the mainstream religions such as Hindu, Sikh
and Muslims. In edition of religion, the leaders
of the movement also constructed the different
Dalit identity through religious texts, Gurus
(Guru Ravidass, Bhagat Kabir, Balmik, Namdev),
shrines, slogans (Jo Bole So Nirbhye –
Sri Guru Ravidass Maharaj Ki Jai” and
Jo Bole So Nirbhye – Ad Dharm Ki Jai”),
symbols (Sohung), prayers, dress codes, construction
of religious places, and salutations. Ad Dharm
movement also encouraged the Dalits to attain
political power and to become resourceful
to further strengthen Dalit identity. Subsequently
to the Ad Dharm, Ambedkarite movement played
a significant role in construction of Dalit
identity. It is notable that Ad Dharm movement
constructed Dalit identity on religion. However,
Ambedkarite movement focused on the rational
Buddhist identity. Dr. Ambedkar argued if
Dalits want to live like human beings than
they should construct their distinct political
identity.
Dr. Ambedkar was highly respected among the
Dalits in Punjab. Dalits of Punjab not only
respect Guru Ravidass but also adhere to neo-Buddhism
that concentrated on rational thinking in
respect of devotion. Dr. Ambedkar’s
understanding toward caste and its solution
through democratic way presents him as the
most effective leader of downtrodden. After
the Ambedkarite movement, Bahujan Samaj movement
played a vital role in formation of Dalit
identity. Babu Kanshi Ram emphasized on caste
based Dalit identity and its importance for
gaining political power. He organized middle
class of Dalits Bahujan Samaj at a platform
i.e. Backward and Minority Communities Employees'
Federation (BAMCEF). Systematic organizational
structure of BAMCEF provides a new Dalit identity
that organised Dalits around political programmes.
The sole purpose of this identity is to make
Dalits as the holders of political power.
The next two stages of Bahujan Samaj’s
political programmes which play a vital role
in construction of Dalit identity are: Dalit
Soshit Sangarsh Samiti (DS4) and Bahujan Samaj
Party (BSP). This was for the first time when
Dalits realized to capture political power
through caste line. BSP through its caste
card is providing different meaning to Dalit
identity. It is also providing a new alternative
to young Dalits of rural and urban Punjab.
The roots of Dalit identity are based on political
alternative or capture of political power.
In Punjab, the distinction of Dalit identity
did not gain appreciation in political field
but it has become fashionable in cultural
field. In the earlier stage of BAMCEF, caste
symbols were used in derogatory sense but
now they are deployed to gain recognition
as Dalit identity, emancipation and empowerment.
Ravidass Deras are the major socio-religious
institutions that hold the command of the
Dalit identity in the state. Ravidass Deras
are dedicated to the Guru Ravidass mission.
The Deras demonstrate distinct Dalit identity
through different religious traditions, customs,
slogans, prayer, festivals, hymns, dress etc.
It revolved around the Bani and teachings
of Guru Ravidass. In the rural Punjab, particularly
among Chamar community, new socio-cultural
movements are silently growing its influence.
The numbers of Dera followers are increasing
day by day due to their adoption of the blended
philosophy of Guru Ravidass and that of Dr.
Ambedkar. The credit of blending the philosophies
of Dr. Ambedkar and Guru Ravidass goes to
Dera Sachkhand Ballan. Ravidass Deras do not
only exist in Punjab but also in abroad. The
growing numbers of Ravidass Deras are taking
the shape of new socio-cultural Dalit movement.
The Sants of Deras Sachkhand Ballan are leading
the movement of Ravidass Deras. Dera Ballan,
also known as Dera Sant Sarwan Dass, is playing
a vital role in construction of Dalit identity.
Since, Sant Sarwan Dass Dera is providing
multifarious facilities (schools, hospitals
etc.), religious places, symbols, salute,
slogans, and respectable social space to Dalits
for led a descent life. Recently, Dera was
in news to provide new religious identity
to Dalits i.e. Ravidassia and holy book “Amrit
Bani of Guru Ravidass”.
In the third chapter, author describes the
role of Punjabi qaum in Dalit emancipation
and empowerment. He has criticized those people
who defined Punjabi qaum narrowly. He defines
Punjabi qaum in broader and positive sense
that includes common language, area, economy
and mind-set. In other words Punjabi qaum
constituted all the people who reside in and
outside of Punjab and have common language,
culture and worldview. Due to influence of
different religions, the Punjabi quam is believed
to become synonymous with the welfare of all,
brotherhood and commonhood, serve freely,
and secure the interest of poor and humble.
It demonstrates that Punjabi qaum represents
devotion of love, equality, sharing-ness and
democratic values. It neither opposed anyone
nor oppressed anyone. Because of these characteristic
of Punjabi qaum castism never become much
rigid as in the other parts of India. In Punjab
castism has been based on materialistic things
i.e. land. Therefore, Dalits are free from
the notion of Purity and Pollution. It becomes
the major cause of their emancipation from
Brahminical ideology and elastic attitude
toward castism that can help for their empowerment.
Author argued that not only the question of
Dalit emancipation and empowerment but the
problem like communalism also can be solved
through the philosophy of Punjabi qaum. The
lager qaumi identity (Punjabi) will liberate
Punjabis from all other small identities.
It will teach the lesson of love and social
equality not only to Punjabis but to the whole
world.
The fourth chapter describes the issues related
to caste and class and Dalit emancipation
in Indian Punjab. It is generally perceived
that Punjabi society is free from Brahminical
Varna system. However, the criticism of caste
system by Sants of Bhakti movement, Sufis
and Gurus, argued the author, highlights the
fact of caste system in Punjabi society. According
to the author the existence of caste system
in Sikh panth can be judged from two questions:
first why Dr. Ambedkar, who once wanted, changed
his decision to convert into Sikhism? Second,
what was the reason that Sikh leadership started
a campaign to seek the constitutional provisions
of affirmative action for Scheduled Castes
for the lower castes among Sikhs? Sikh Gurus
vehemently criticized the evil of caste system
both theoretically and practically. The author
further discussed that the period from Sikh
Gurus to the missals was known as ‘golden
period of Sikhism’. During this period
Sikh panth was free from caste system at all.
This was the period when Shudras joined the
Sikhism and played an important role in the
emerging egalitarian Sikh identity. Not even
a single example of caste based discrimination
can be found during that period. Subsequently,
caste system emerged into Sikh panth: first,
due to its close relationship with Hinduism.
Second, it entered into Sikh panth with the
adoption of the cultural patron of Jat community.
During the second half of 19th century Singh
Sabha movement was launched to reform the
Sikh panth. Though the movement offered some
relief from castism but it failed to eliminate
caste system from Sikh panth. Caste hierarchy
in Sikh panth, however, is different from
that of Hindu religion. Among the Sikh, Jat
Sikhs are recognized as superior. The lower
castes in Sikh panth are largely categorized
into two groups; Chamars and Chhuras. The
Chamar Sikhs also known as Ramdassia Sikh
and Khalsa Brader. The Chhuras Sikhs are known
as Mazhabis and Rangretta Sikhs. They are
kept in the lowest rung of caste hierarchy
in Sikh panth as well as in Hinduism. Caste
hierarchy in Sikh panth is based on materialistic
things not on purity and pollution. Priestly
activities in Sikh shrines are not only limited
to upper/dominant castes in Sikh panth.
The fifth chapter deals with Guru Ravidass,
Ad Dharm and Dalit emancipation. According
to the author, Bani (spiritual poetry) of
Guru Ravidass is a major source of Dalit consciousness
in Punjab. Guru Ravidass did not only write
in spiritualistic sense. In fact, his poetry
also challenged insidious caste system and
oppression of the lower castes. In his Bani
Guru Ravidass also talked at length about
Beghampura (an ideal state) where no one would
be found sad and each one would live a happy
life. The author wrote in detail about how
the leaders of Ad Dharm movement highlighted
Guru Ravidass and his bani which was already
a great source of Dalit consciousness. Ad
Dharm leaders meticulously spreaded this consciousness
among Dalits. The movement made every attempt
which ideologically and philosophically was
necessary for the establishment of a new religion
including religious book, symbol, prayer,
salute, slogans, etc. But in the post independent
period, the movement did not sustain. However,
the seed of Dalit consciousness that were
sown by Ad Dharm movement are now nurtured
by Ravidass Deras. Recently, the Ravidass
Dera of Sachkhand Ballan announced a new religion
i.e. Ravidassia. And Dera also appealed to
Dalit communities to register their religion
‘Ravidassia’. The author ends
this chapter with a critical note that time
will tell whether Dalit will accept Ravidassia
as their religion or it will end up like Ad
Dharmi as a new caste category among Dalits.
The sixth chapter is a detailed description
of the ideas and efforts made by Dr. Ambedkar
for Dalit emancipation. Dr. Ambedkar’s
vision about Dalit emancipation and empowerment
are discussed by the author broadly in the
following three aspects: first, the problem
of Untouchability should be resolved through
reforms in Hindu religion and society. Secondly,
by constitutional provisions of reservation
and social inequality should be reduced and
anti-Dalit elements should be dealt strictly
by law. Thirdly, emancipate the Dalits from
caste system by converting into Buddhism.
For Dr. Ambedkar issues like social equality,
self-esteem and respectable life are more
significant than poverty and resource-less
for Dalits. Therefore, Dr. Ambedkar suggested
the necessity of social democracy for Dalits’
emancipation. Social democracy, for him, is
based on the three principles; freedom, equality
and fraternity. These three principles are
necessary to live a dignified life and establish
political democracy. That’s why he set
up three political parties (Independent Labour
Party, Scheduled Caste Federation and Republican
Party of India) for Dalits’ emancipation.
However, he failed to organise Dalits to attain
political power. Beside the political and
legal methods to resolved the problems of
Dalits. He also emphasised the peacefully
social protest against the discrimination.
He lunched many movements for emancipation
of Dalits for instance temple entry movements
and to get water from restricted pounds.
In the seventh chapter the author discussed
in details the views of Shaheed Bhagat Singh
towards the question of Untouchability. The
two waves of non-Dalit movement that raised
voice for Dalits’ emancipation along
the national independence were Gadhar movement
and Hindustan Socialist Republic Party (an
organisation established by Bhagat Singh).
Due to the influence of Arya Samaj, Bhagat
Singh and his family were against the caste
and Untouchability. Bhagat Singh discussed
deeply the problem of religious fundamentalism
and Untouchability in his three writings;
Firkhu fasadh ate uhana da ellaaj (communal
violence and their solutions), Dharm ate sadhi
azadi di jang (religion and war of our independence),
and Achhut da swal (question of Untouchable).
In his essay Achhut da swal, he argued that
religion is the foundation of Untouchability
and caste system in India. Religion morally
confesses the lower castes to serve the upper
castes for salvation. Therefore, he called
himself atheist. As contrary to Congress,
he did not prefer only political independence
but also wanted to resolve the social and
economic problems of Dalits, labourers, artisans
and farmers. He criticized the disgust of
Upper Castes towards Dalits. He argued that
Dalits are hatred because of their bad economic
condition. Therefore, we should remove their
poverty rather than hate them. He asked Dalits
to organised and struggle for their emancipation.
He argued “you are real labourers, labourers
be organised. You will not lose except the
chains of your slavery. Awake and revolt against
the ruler. Nothing will happen with these
slow reforms.” He also warned Dalits
about bureaucrats and feudals which he said
were also responsible of their slavery. He
argued that it is through awareness that Dalits
could achieve their emancipation from caste.
The eighth chapter deals with the question
of Dalit emancipation in Punjabi Dalit poetry.
Dalit poetry, as pointed by the author is
not only related to life of Dalits but also
criticized the perpetrators of Dalit atrocities.
It challenges, writes the author, the political
and religious authority which supports Dalit
oppression. The oppression of Dalits was first
time challenged in the radical poetry of the
Bhakti movement of medieval period. Subsequently,
the leaders of Adi movements of 1920s also
used poetry as a medium to criticize Dalit
subjugation, documents the author with a number
of examples. It is an excellent achievement
of the book that it elaborates minutely how
the poetry of Babu Mangu Ram, Gurdass Ram
Alam, Charn Dass Nidhark and Chanan Lal Manak
clearly draw the pictures of Dalit life, oppression
and empowerment. This chapter also talked
in detail about the Dalit poetry that was
written during the Ambedkarite movement in
Punjab. In the opinion of the author, Dalit
thinkers observe the Dalit identity and emancipation
in Dalit poetry from two perspectives: small
stories and social criticism. Dalit poetry
criticizes all types of socio-cultural, religious
and political conditions which preserve the
social hierarchy based on oppressive four-fold
Varna categories. Dalit poetry, said the author,
represents the labourers, farmers, poorer,
untouchables, cobblers, wavers as its hero
who were earlier ignored. The author further
states that at present, Dalit poetry addresses
the Dalit struggle from both caste and class
perspectives. But to receive relief from caste
system it lays stress on Ambedkarite and medieval
Sants’ philosophy than Marxist. Dalit
poetry, writes the author, has been in the
process of inventing counter culture as against
the mainstream culture of social domination
and all pervasive hegemony.
The epilogue includes various interviews of
the author which were published at different
intervals in various local/vernacular newspapers
and magazines. These interviews help in understanding
the complex issues of Dalit identity, emancipation
and empowerment. It provides us deep understanding
of the author on the issues like Dalit identity,
education, literature, their social, economic
and political position in the pre and post
liberalization, privatization and globalization
period.
On
the whole, this book is another good attempt
by the author to analytically explore in Punjabi
language the complex theme of Dalit identity,
emancipation and empowerment. The book provides
a compact and rich account of the rise of
Dalit consciousness, identity and assertion
in Punjab. Based on ethnographic and archival
methods, this analytical volume in Punjabi
is a welcome addition to the growing critical
Dalit literature on Punjab in vernacular.
The publisher too deserves commendation for
bringing out the book in an impressive form
and wrapped up in an artistic cover with a
reasonable price tag. It is a must read for
lay, academic, political and media persons.
References:
Mochi
and Rai Sikh/Mahatam were added in the list
of Scheduled Castes by the Constitution Scheduled
Castes Amendment Act 2002 (Act No. 25) and
2007 (Act No. 31 of 2007) respectively. With
the inclusion of these two castes the numbers
of SCs have reached up to 39 castes
For more detail see Ronki Ram (2012), Beyond
Conversion and Sanskritisation: Articulating
an Alternative Dalit Agenda in East Punjab,
Modern Asian Studies, Cambridge University
Press, Cambridge, Vol. 46, No. 3, pp. 639-702.
Posted
on www.ambedkartimes.com (January
12, 2013)
|
|
PROF.
RONKI RAM NOMINATED
TO THE SENATE OF PANJAB UNIVERSITY,
CHANDIGARH (INDIA) |
www.ambedkartimes.com
congrats Prof. Ronki Ram
on his being nominated to the Senate
of Panjab University, Chandigarh (India)
for the term 2012-2016 by the Chancellor
of the university (Vice President of
India). The PU Senate has 91 members.
Of the 91 senate members, 36 are nominated,
6 are ex-officio members, whereas the
remaining 49 members are elected from
different constituencies, including
graduate, faculty, affiliated colleges
principals etc. The Senate is the highest
governing body of the university. Prof.
Ronki Ram has the honor of serving this
august academic body thrice already:
twice as an ex-officio member (being
President of PUTA (Panjab University
Teachers Association for the terms -
2004-2005 & 2008-2009)) and once
as elected member (2010-2012). Posted
on www.ambedkartimes.com dated October
31, 20121 |
|
GLOBALISATION,
DALITS
AND SOCIALDEMOCRACY |
Ronki
Ram
ronkiram@yahoo.co.in
ICCR Chair Prof. of Contemporary
India Studies,
LIAS & IIAS, Leiden University,
The Netherlands
|
Globalisation
is based on the principle of unrestrained
functioning of the free market-economy. The
globalisation paradigm reduces the institution
of state into a sort of security mechanism
to guard citizens from internal disruption
and external threats. The developmental state
thus metamorphoses into a security state.
The paradigm stipulates that the social and
material interests of the citizens could be
better served provided they are surrendered
to the market. Thus globalisation robs citizens
of the welfare functions of the state. The
institution of social democracy, on the contrary,
calls upon the state to play a positive role
for the protection as well as promotion of
the interests of its citizens. It expects
that state should play the role of a harbinger
of social and economic justice as well. It
is in this context that the extended contractarian
tradition of the welfare state comes into
head-on-collision with the forces of neo-liberal
market-economy in the contemporary domain
of globalisation.
Globalisation,
thus, poses a serious challenge to the nascent
institution of social democracy in India.
Though, it is often paraded as a custodian
of enormous ‘opportunities’, but
what such ‘opportunities’ are
and whom they benefit is a question that directly
concerns the Dalits. In an existential asymmetrical
world, where we actually live, such opportunities
open many doors to the haves. But the interests
of the have-nots, a large majority of whom
happens to belong to low castes, socially
excluded, tribal, women, and other vulnerable
sections of the society, are often neglected.
The socially excluded sections of the society
are the worst victims of much-hyped Special
Economic Zones [SEZs] and its resultant consequent
process of forced displacement. This has led
to further perpetuation and deepening of the
social and economic discriminations, which
in turn seriously diminish the values and
principle of social justice in the society.
In other words, it deepens the perennial evil
of social exclusion through its much advertised
project of new economic reforms, which in
effect is less about ‘reforms, and more
about ‘exclusion’. It has led
to the closure of various industrial units
in the public sector. This, in turn, has increased
unemployment and poverty on the one hand,
and widened the hiatus between the rich/upper
castes and the poor/lower castes on the other.
Since
Dalits constitute the bulk of the poor and
unemployed, they have suffered the most. Their
chances of acquiring jobs in the high-tech
industry at home as well as in the multinational
corporations have been getting curtailed since
the beginning of the process of globalisation
in India. The system of primary and elementary
education in the rural and urban settings
has been subverted almost totally. Since,
majority of the rich upper castes send their
wards to the private/convent/public schools;
government schools have been reduced into
dysfunctional centres of learning for the
poor Dalits. It is simply out of the reach
of the matriculates of such neglected government
schools, where hardly any infrastructure and
teachers are available, to be able to compete
for admission in the prestigious Information
Technology (IT) or management schools. Moreover,
since the background of a majority of Dalit
undergraduates is in Arts and Humanities,
it becomes difficult for them to meet the
job requirements of the multinational corporations.
Even if some of the Dalits aspire to compete
in the technology driven new job market, it
would be, perhaps, out of their reach to acquire
the requisite qualifications at exorbitant
rates from various engineering and management
institutes. It is precisely due to these reasons
that Dalits are rarely to be found in the
prestigious management schools all over the
country.
Dalits
happened to be the beneficiaries of state’s
affirmative action before India entered into
the realm of neo-liberal free market-economy.
The developmental welfare state in India had
brought some improvements in the lives of
Dalits by making special provisions to provide
them education, employment, respectable wages,
access to land, water, health, housing and
other resources. But the welfarist stance
of the Indian state gave way to a new system
of free market-economy in 1990s. One of the
main tasks of this new paradigm is to force
the roll back process of the welfare state
and to allow the market forces to operate
in an unrestrained manner. The pro-market
stance of globalisation has led to widening
of the gap between the privileged few and
the large mass of the marginalized sections
of the society. It further led to marginalisation
of the already marginalized people, thus widening
the gulf of inequity in the society. Dalit
labourers, daily wage workers and workers
in the informal sector among them suffer the
most. In other words, globalisation process
severely affects some categories of the Scheduled
Castes and Scheduled Tribes who are deprived
of jobs, and face great difficulties in accessing
housing, drinking water, food, healthcare,
education, and employment. Thus the way globalisation
affects the life of a Scheduled Caste worker
differs significantly from that of the non-Scheduled
Caste one.
In
a caste-based hierarchical and graded social
setup where lower social status and economic
backwardness seems to be coterminous, social
rank plays an important role in determining
one's economic status. Globalisation further
aggravates this vicious interrelationship
between social and economic backwardness.
The logic of economic globalisation favours
the rich, who can invest and multiply capital.
The favoured rich are mostly found among the
so-called traditional ‘upper castes’
that have monopolised land and other economic
resources in the country. It has made them
prominent in the newly carved out vast private
space of the open market. In other words,
capital and caste have joined hands against
labour and the principle of state social welfare
it has led to an alliance between the forces
of the market and the upper castes –
much to the disadvantage of the marginalised
and the lower castes.
Another
way through which the process of globalisation
has been affecting the lives of the Dalits
rather more severely is the transformation
of their traditional hereditary occupations
into lucrative profit seeking competitive
avenues where they find themselves incapable
of competing with the so called upper castes
who until very recently used to consider such
professions as polluting. In other words,
when the occupations of sewage disposal, scavenging
and raw hides were performed under the Jajmani
(hereditary system of asymmetrical reciprocity
and patronage between landlords and occupational
experts) system, with no profit incentive,
Dalits were forced to take them up. But now
when these so-called polluting occupations
became profit-generating businesses, Dalits
find themselves at odd in their own tested
fields to compete with the better equipped
new forces of the market economy. It is in
this context that the process of globalisation
perpetuates the system of caste and inequality
albeit in a new form. Instead of liberating
the ex-untouchables, it further pins them
down. Earlier they were excluded and were
condemned as Ati-shudras because of their
closeness to the muck of the dirty drainage
system, now it excludes them by way of defeating
them in the newly turned profit oriented business
of hygiene and cleanliness of the neo-liberal
economy. In fact, this market is open only
for those who have the capital to play the
profit game on the chessboard of its unrestrained
competition. In this new profit driven game
of the process of globalisation, Dalits –
normally starved of capital – stand
disqualified.
Yet
another way through which the process of globalisation
severely affects the lives of the Dalits is
the accentuation of the phenomenon of their
exclusion from land. Significant parts of
the vast majority of Dalits who live in villages
are landless labourers. Only a small number
of them are cultivators with marginal holdings.
The large-scale landlessness on the part of
the Dalits led to their dependence on the
upper castes land owning communities, which
in turn deepened the caste based inequalities
with the additional burden of asymmetrical
class structures. The neo-liberal economic
policies adopted under the regimes of liberalisation,
privatisation and globalisation widen already
existing caste and class divisions between
the Dalits and the dominant castes, and further
minimises the chances of the emergence of
a sense of solidarity among different communities.
II
Dalits constitute a significant proportion of
the total population of India. How can India
surge upward if it fails to care for the interest
of the total 16.23 per cent Scheduled Castes
population (Census of India 2001), which can
promptly swell further if clubbed with the population
of different categories of Backward and Other
Backward Classes and Scheduled Tribes? No doubt
the Indian constitution contains many provisions,
thanks to Dr. B.R. Ambedkar, but how much the
Indian state has actually done for the uplift
of those on the socio-political margins is open
to debate. To quote Dr Ambedkar: …that
political power in this country has too long
been the monopoly of a few and the many are
not only beasts of burden, but also beasts of
prey. This monopoly has not merely deprived
them of their chance of betterment, it has sapped
them of what may be called the significance
of life. These down-trodden classes are tired
of being governed, they are impatient to govern
themselves. This urge for self-realization in
the down-trodden classes must not be allowed
to develop into a class of struggle or class
war. It would lead to a division of the house.
That would indeed be a day of disaster.
Even
after 60 years when Dr Ambedkar echoed these
words, majority of the Scheduled Castes are
still landless. No systematic efforts have been
made for the implementation of land reforms.
A large majority of Dalit population remains
landless. Even the provisions of minimum wages
were never adhered to in many cases.
Globalisation
has further sharpened the already existing contradictions
between political equality on the one hand and
social and economic inequality on the other.
It has deprived Dalits of whatever little they
have in the name of so-called fast development
under the model of free market-economy. There
exists no space for them at all in the glamorous
showrooms of no-liberal market-economy –-Special
Economic Zones (SEZs). These fabulous zones
are yet to be tamed to accommodate the ever-increasing
vast multitudes of downtrodden section of the
society who could no longer be denied any more
of their due share in the varied structures
of power.
Downtrodden,
in fact, are tired of being ‘governed’
for centuries, and are impatient to take control
of their own destinies. However, whatever little
space was available to them to dream the possibility
of their betterment seems to have been grabbed
by the forces of neo-liberal market-economy
in the name of quick development. Their patience
and ‘urge for self-realization’
can no longer be tested. Articulating the urge
of the downtrodden for self-realization during
his famous address on the completion of the
Draft Constitution on 25 November 1949, Dr.
Ambedkar cautioned that:
… the sooner room is made for the realization
of their aspiration, the better for the few,
the better for the country, the better for the
maintenance of its independence and better for
the continuance of its democratic structure.
This can be done by the establishment of equality
and fraternity in all spheres of life ….
Similar
views were expressed after 50 years by K. R.
Narayanan, the President of India, in his address
to the nation on January 25, 2000: “Beware
of the fury of the patient and long suffering
people”.
The
benefits of globalisation are yet to reach these
‘patient and long suffering people’
who never shirk from hard work and toiling labour.
But the free market economy driven forces advocate
the concerns of the rich and resourceful only.
This widens the gap between the rich and the
poor. The widening gap coupled with the rolling
back of the state lead to further resentment
and alienation among the downtrodden that in
turn put pressure on the practice of democracy
in the country. Dr. B.R. Ambedkar was well aware,
much in advance, about the serious implications
of the lopsided development for the growth of
social democracy in a caste ridden country like
India. He therefore underlined the inclusion
of the downtrodden into the governmental set-up
of the country. For that he emphasised that
the safe route goes via total annihilation of
caste and in that the role of the state is of
utmost importance. If globalisation implies
pushing the state out, then the future of the
project of social democracy seems to be very
bleak. It is in this context that the responsibility
and the task of safeguarding the developmental
character of the Indian state becomes very crucial
more so for the empowerment of Dalits in particular
and strengthening the forces of social democracy
in India in general.
Though
a lot has already been said about the desired
human and humane face of globalisation based
on global governance, such claims sound rather
hollow for the marginalised sections of the
society. The free market-economy has not only
failed to liberate them, it has rather further
pinned them down. Downtrodden are not welcomed
in the sphere of market as equal partners of
profit. In other words, the market too practices
‘untouchability’, albeit in a different
form. They feel alienated in the very world
that promises to empower them. Howsoever strong
and robust the free market-economy might appear
to be, in long run it will not survive until
and unless the question of the marginalised
sections is addressed sincerely. In fact, the
question of equitable distribution of resources
is closely related with the issue of the immediate
and amicable redressal of the causes of marginalization
and exclusion of the Dalits from the mainstream.
The marginalized are to be provided not only
with low price wheat, rice and pulses as has
been popularly done in some Indian states. What
is equally essential is to empower them, to
enhance their buying capacity in the real sense
of the term by dismantling the structures of
economic and social dominations. As warned by
George Tong-Boon Yeo, Singapore Foreign Affairs
Minister, at the Confederation of Indian Industry
(CII) Partnership Summit in Bangalore:
If
we are not concerned of the stresses of globalisation,
ideological counter-currents will emerge. Globalisation
is not a bed of roses. There is a need to be
watchful, always, (The Hindu, March 19, 2007).
In
other words, a balance needs to be created between
the forces of market and the principles of social
justice.
Economic
liberalisation regimes in India can no longer
ignore the stark realities of unequal and discriminatory
patterns of its social life and chronic poverty.
Any attempt to work out the economy in isolation
of the hard-core social realities would have
serious and far-reaching implication not only
for Indian polity and society but also for its
economy in the long run. It is in this context
that the project of economic liberalisation
needs to be understood, in consonance with the
complex ‘social’ and ‘political’
of the Indian economy. To get rid of centuries-old
caste-based social discriminations, exclusion
and chronic poverty of millions of downtrodden
in India, the ambitious project of economic
liberalisation, perhaps, needs to be clubbed
together with another equally ambitious project
aiming at total transformation of the entire
gamut of Hindu social order; thoroughly cleaning
its long accumulated muck of hereditary occupation
and repulsion. Can economic liberalisation alone
help generate new avenues for rapid economic
growth and equal opportunities (‘growth
with redistribution’ or ‘capitalism
with a human face’) for all in a society
like India marked by rampant social hierarchies
and inequalities? This is an urgent and critical
issue that needs serious attention. That is
what Dr. Ambedkar strongly pleaded for in his
capacity as a Chairman of the Drafting Committee
of the Constitution for Independent India and
also as an organic leader of millions of downtrodden.
Can economic liberalisation alone help generate
new avenues for rapid economic growth and equal
opportunities (‘growth with redistribution’
or ‘capitalism with a human face’)
for all in a society like India doted with rampant
social hierarchies and inequalities? This is
an urgent and uphill task that needs serious
attention. And it is in this context that social
democratic vision of Dr Ambedkar assumes critical
importance. Failure to engage with this vision
is likely to result in further perpetuation
of chronic poverty and inequalities leading
to social unrest and political violence, with
the downtrodden and the marginalized becoming
the worst victims.
Posted on www.ambedkartimes.com
dated October 23, 2012
|
|
REMEMBERING
FATHER
REV.
DR. SUN MYUNG MOON
(1920-2012)
|
Ronki
Ram (Dr.),
ICCR
Chair Professor of Contemporary
India Studies
Leiden University Institute
for Area studies (LIAS)
&
International Institute
for Asian studies (IIAS),
Leiden,
The Netherlands
ronkiram@yahoo.co.in
|
|
|
|
Rev.
Dr. Sun Myung Moon will be
remembered passionately by the coming
generations for his concerted efforts
towards building a viable peace and
harmony in the world. He was, in fact,
an angel of peace, family unity, and
inter-faith dialogue who invented
new traditions and ways to organize
universal gatherings of diverse religions/faiths
in the contemporary world within the
forums of UNO and without for the
sole purpose of learning the basic
lessons of living together harmoniously
and with compassion for one and all.
Father Moon was not an armchair philosopher
who philosophized idyllically in the
realm of mere dreams and thoughts,
but a karmayogi (a man of action)
who firmly believed in practical actions
now and here in the real world of
our day-to-day existence.
Rev.
Dr. Moon himself said once, “I
did not spend all my time roaming
the hills and meadows and playing.
I also worked hard helping my old
brother run the farm. On a farm there
are many tasks that must be done during
a particular season. The rice paddies
and fields need to be plowed. Rice
seedlings need to be transplanted,
and weeds need to be pulled. …
After the seeds are planted, the furrows
need to be weeded at least three times,
and this is background work. When
we were finished, we couldn’t
straighten our backs for awhile”.
Father Moon combined hard labor with
his mission of world peace in such
a manner that it became a new principle
of peace to bring harmony through
work and family unity. The roots of
peace, according to Rev. Dr. Moon,
are to be searched at the family level.
For him, the parents represent the
present, the children the future and
the grandparents the past. So it is
only when the grandparents, parents,
and children live together, said Father
Moon that the children can inherit
all the fortunes of the past and present.
To love and respect ones grandfather
is to inherit the history of the past
and to learn from the rich experience
of the past. Peace can not be built
in a day. It requires continuous efforts
on our part. For a peace to become
reality, Father Moon founded various
non-profit international organizations
(the Universal Peace Foundation, and
the Family Federation for World Peace),
interfaith service group (the International
Relief Friendship Foundation, Religious
Youth Service and Service for Peace),
and various print, electronic and
digital media outlets publications.
The
Universal Peace Federation (UPF) is
a world peace forum that brings together
all eminent persons of all the faiths
in the world to find a harmonious
way to resolve differences and to
learn the lessons of living in family
and world peace. It is a global network
of individuals and organizations dedicated
to building a world of peace centered
on universal spiritual and moral values.
It looks at world peace in a much
broader manner and considers peace
as positive, holistic and indivisible.
It believes that “we are one
human family created by God. The highest
achievements of men and women are
rooted in spiritual and moral developments.
The family is the ‘school of
love and peace’. Peace comes
through dialogue and cooperation.
Service to others is the foundation
of reconciliation”. UPF believes
that interfaith dialogue and cooperation
through conferences and forums allow
participants to share diverse aspects
of their rich sacred scriptures and
traditions that benefit the entire
mankind. Father Moon sponsored thousands
of conferences on world peace, family
and interfaith dialogues in different
parts of the world. The UPF participates
each year in the UN’s World
Interfaith Harmony Week, International
Day of Families, International Day
of Peace and Women’s day. For
the UPF marriage, parenting, and the
family are the foundations of human
development and they function as building
blocks of universal peace. Peace begins
in the hearts of individuals and it
gets nurtured by loving and stable
families at home before it spreads
on the entire globe.
For
times to come, the institution of
UPF and the principle of ‘one
human family under God’ will
remain the finest legacies of Rev.
Dr. Moon. The world will remember
him for ever for his life long dedication
to peace and human unity. I have had
the honour and privilege to sit in
his august company during his 93rd
birthday celebration at Peace Palace
(Cheon Jeong Goong) up in the mountains
east of Seoul in the forenoon of January
24, 2012. Ambassador Krishna V. Rajan
of India in his congratulatory message
on the auspicious occasion said that
“Father Moon’s simple
but powerful message of boundless
love and unconditional compassion,
of service and sacrifice, of family
values and spiritual leadership, is
like a lighthouse which beckons the
world”. The Ambassador continued,
“His answer to conflict is the
realization that we are one human
family created by God. Living for
the sake of others is the only road
to real happiness”.
Father
Moon’s birthday celebrations
in January 2012, coincided with the
Chinese New year holidays celebrations,
brought together over 200 participants
from 72 countries of the world. It
was during the last international
Leadership Conference at Seoul (January
21-25, 2012) that I got the rare opportunity
to meet various Ambassadors for Peace
of Father Moon, almost from all parts
of the world, discussing the ways
to bring peace and harmony in the
world. The central themes during all
such discussions were the vibrant
ideas and teachings of Father Moon
and his various ongoing peace projects
in the world. Father moon was indeed
a Messiah of world peace who sincerely
wanted this world become the most
conducive place for everyone to realize
his/her potentials to the maximum
with an ultimate objective in mind
to grow peace around. In his own words:
“I have lived my life with just
one thought: I wanted to bring about
a world of peace, a world where there
are no wars and where all humankind
lives in love”. It would really
be impossible to replace soon Rev.
Dr. Sun Myung Moon, the messiah of
peace, who had left for his heavenly
abode on September 3, 2012. Let’s
pray for his holy soul which will
keep guiding the whole world towards
his pious mission of peace and one
human family under God.
Posted on www.ambedkartimes.com dated
October 14, 2012
|
|
A
BRIEF REPORT ON
THE NORDCORP WORKSHOP
– SIKH IDENTITY FORMATION,
COPENHAGEN, DENMARK
(AUGUST 31 – SEPTEMBER 1,
2012)
Ronki
Ram
(ronkiram@yahoo.co.in )
ICCR Chair Professor of Contemporary
India Studies
Leiden University Institute for Area
Studies &
International Institute for Asian
Studies,
Leiden, The Netherlands
|
|
A
Brief Report on the Nordcorp Workshop
The Nordic Institute of Asian studies (NIAS),
Copenhagen, Denmark, organized a two day workshop
on “Sikh Identity Formation” in
Copenhagen on August 31 & September 1, 2012.
The workshop was a part of the annual meeting
of the Nordcorp research project entitled “Sikh
Identity Formation: Generational Transfer of
Traditions in the Nordic Countries”. This
research project is funded by the Joint Committee
for Nordic Research Councils for the Humanities
and Social Sciences (NOS-HS). The workshop also
organized two open lectures. The first lecture
was delivered by Dr. Brian Keith Axel, University
of California, Santa Cruz in the forenoon technical
session of the workshop. The title of his well-perceived
lecture was: “Traumatic Citizenship: Racial
Conflict in Sikh-American Life since September
11, 2001”. The second lecture was delivered
by me. I spoke on “Confronting Caste in
Distant Lands: The Emerging Contours of Diasporic
Dalit Identity” in the afternoon technical
session of the workshop on August 31, 2012.
Apart from these two invited open lectures,
there were four interesting research presentations
from the four researchers of the Nordcorp research
project on “Sikh Identity Formation: Generational
Transfer of Traditions in the Nordic Countries”.
These research presentations were made by Prof.
Knut Jakobsen of the University of Bergen, Norway,
Dr. Kristina Myrvold of the Lund University,
Sweden, Laura Hirvi of the University of Jyvaskyla,
Finland, and Dr. Ravinder Kaur of the University
of Copenhagen, Denmark .
During
the second day technical sessions of the workshop,
Laura Hirvi, doctoral candidate of the University
of Jyvaskyla, Finland, presented her dissertation
draft to seek the feedback from the participants
in the workshop. The other important highlights
of the second day workshop were the publication
plans and the planning for the 2013 forthcoming
conference of the Nordcorp research project.
ABOUT THE NORDCORP RESEARCH PROJECT
This
research project investigates generational transfer
of traditions and identity formation processes
among Sikhs, one of the visible minority groups
in the Nordic countries. How Sikhs transmit
their religious, cultural and linguistic traditions
and how the second generation Sikh youth with
transnational life-styles negotiates between
contradictory perspectives confronting them
and gravitates towards religious identification
in attempts to carve out a place for themselves
in multicultural domains abroad are the two
major themes of the Nordcorp research project.
The project headed by Dr. Kristina Myrvold,
Centre for Theology and Religious Studies, Lund
University, Sweden, brings together five scholars
from Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden to
critically examine the how the ‘second
generation shapes understanding of individual
and collective identities in relation to many
different “cultural others” in the
social fields of home, school, religious community
and on the Internet’.
Abstract of the invited open lecture
Prof. Ronki Ram:
Confronting Caste in Distant Lands: The Emerging
Contours of Diasporic Punjabi Dalit Identity
Among
the Non Resident Indian (NRI), Punjabi Dalits
are a sizeable diasporic community. Way back
home they are compelled to grapple with caste
in their daily routine life. As usually thought
about, that was primarily because of the highly
segmented and hierarchical character of the
Indian society. But what is there in their much
sought after diasporic locations that forced
them to organize for similar struggles against
caste discriminations that used to be their
daily routine affair way back home. Is it that
caste is not only specific to a particular location
but tied rather inextricably with certain communities
so much so that where ever such communities
travel they carry the virus of caste with them?
Or what is there in caste that helps it survive
even in altogether different and to large extent
socially egalitarian foreign lands? This study
aims at critically unraveling the dilemmas of
caste abroad and the trajectories of the emerging
diasporic Punjabi Dalit identity. How the Punjabi
diasporic Dalit identity affects Dalit movement
back home and in what way it draws sustenance
from it would be yet another major concern of
this study.
Posted on www.ambedkartimes.com (September 15,
2012)
|
PROF
RONKI RAM DELIVERS PUBLIC LECTURE AT NORDCORP
WORKSHOP, THE UNIVERSITY OF COPENHAGEN, DENMARK
Prof
(dr.) Ronki Ram, ICCR Chair Professor of Contemporary
India Studies, Leiden University Institute for
Area Studies (LIAS) & International Institute
for Asian Studies (IIAS), Leiden University,
The Netherlands has been invited by the Nordic
Institute of Asian Studies (NIAS) to deliver
an invited open lecture in its Nordcorp workshop
on “Sikh Identity Formation” in
Copenhagen on August 31- September 1, 2012.
The Nordcorp workshop is part of the annual
meeting of the Nordcorp research project Sikh
Identity Formation: Generational Transfer of
Traditions in the Nordic Countries funded by
the Joint Committee for Nordic Research Councils
for the Humanities and Social Sciences (NOS-HS)
– hosted by the University of Copenhagen.
The workshop organizes two invited open lectures.
The first, Traumatic Citizenship: Racial Conflict
in Sikh-American Life since September 11, 2001,
is to be delivered by Dr. Brian Keith Axel,
University of California, Santa Cruz. Prof.
Ronki Ram will speak on the second one entitled
Confronting Caste in Distant Lands: The Emerging
Contours of Diasporic Dalit Identity.
|
DR.
AMBEDKAR, NEO-LIBERAL MARKET-ECONOMY AND SOCIAL
DEMOCRACY IN INDIA |
The
ambedkartimes.com congratulates Prof. Ronki
Ram (ICCR Chair Professor of Contemporary India
Studies, Leiden University Institute for Area
studies & International Institute for Asian
Studies, Leiden University, The Netherlands)
for his recent research article entitled “Dr.
Ambedkar, Neo-liberal Market-Economy and Social
Democracy in India” published in the current
(late) issue of Human Rights Global Focus (HRGF)
Vol. 05, No. 03 & 04, July-December 2010,
pp. 12-38. Prof Ronki Ram’s research on
Punjab Dalit Politics, Identity and Assertion
has been widely carried in various reputed peer
reviewed international Journals like Modern
Asian Studies (Cambridge) Journal of Asian Studies
(Cambridge) Asian Survey (University of California
Press), Contributions to Indian Sociology (Sage),
Journal of Punjab Studies (UCSB) among many
others. He has also extensively published in
Punjabi language. His latest book on Dalit Identity,
Emancipation and Empowerment (Punjabi) is recently
released by the Punjabi University, Patiala.
The
ambedkartimes.com also put on record its sincere
appreciations for Human Rights Global Focus
(published by the international human rights
foundation) for its concerted efforts towards
bringing critical awareness about the often
negated but complex question of Dalit emancipation
and empowerment. Dr. R. Sreekantan Nair is the
current Editor-in-Chief of this prestigious
Research Journal based at: TC-28/1487 East,
Sreekandeswaram, Fort P.O., Trivandrum-23, T
#914064878, E-mail: info@humanrightsfocus.com
www.humanrightsfocus.com
Prem
K. Chumber
Editor-in-Chief
www.ambedkartimes.com
Posted on June 22, 2012
|
DR.
AMBEDKAR, NEO-LIBERAL MARKET-
ECONOMY AND SOCIAL DEMOCRACY IN INDIA
|
(This
article is published in Human Rights Global
Focus (HRGF), Vo. 5, Nos. 03 & 04, July-December
2010 (late issue), pp. 12-38). |
|
Ronki
Ram, ICCR
Chair Professor of
Contemporary
India Studies, Leiden University
Institute for Area Studies &
IIAS, Leiden University, The
Netherlands |
|
|
Abstract
Social democracy, as a philosophy, occupies a pivotal
role in determining the social life of millions of
oppressed and downtrodden communities all over the
world. In the case of India, it occupies the central
theme in the philosophy of Dr. B.R. Ambedkar, where
he identified caste and social exclusion as the main
blocks to the real attainment of the social democracy.
This paper looks at the ways in which neo-liberal
market-economy impacts social democracy as conceived
by Dr. Ambedkar and examines its implications for
the millions of ex-untouchables. It argues that the
institution of social democracy, which flourished
in India during the era of mixed economy and state
welfares, seems to be fast approaching its demise
under the ongoing process of neo-liberalisation. The
paper further argues that the fast expanding domain
of corporate sector and free flow of global capital,
in conjunction with the gradual withdrawal of the
welfare state, will not only widen inequalities, but
also stifle the growth of social democracy in India.
Introduction
Social democracy occupies centre stage in the philosophy
of Dr B.R. Ambedkar, the chief architect of the constitution
of Independent India and the messiah of millions of
downtrodden, reverently called Baba Sahib. The dominant
and oppressive social structures like caste and the
resultant social exclusion are what he considered
as the main stumbling blocks on the way to social
democracy in India. For democracy to survive in a
country like India, it must be rooted in social democracy.
To help emerge genuine and true democracy in India,
Dr. Ambedkar gives a clarion call for the ‘annihilation
of caste’ through constitutional and democratic
way. His emphasis on the total transformation of ‘public
sphere’ in colonial and Independent India distinguishes
him from his contemporaries who were more concerned
with the political freedom of the country from the
British rule and its consolidation afterwards. As
far as Indian freedom struggle is concerned, the contributions
of Dr. Ambedkar were second to none. Furthermore,
he reiterated that the struggle for political freedom
should be thoroughly embedded in the social democracy,
which in turn is primarily based on social emancipation
and empowerment of ex-untouchables while making their
participation in the local structures of power active
and significant. Thus, for Dr. Ambedkar the struggle
for political freedom would not cease to exist with
the historic mid-night celebrations at the Red Fort,
it will continue rather uninterrupted until independent
India achieves equality and fraternity, the two equally
important components of the trinity mantra (liberty,
equality and fraternity) to liberate the people from
the thraldom of ignorance, slavery and poverty. It
is in this context, that the social democratic vision
of Dr. Ambedkar becomes central to his post independent
political discourse and praxis in the country. To
strengthen liberty with equality and fraternity at
its base, and to imbibe the true spirit of democracy
in the country, Dr. Ambedkar devoted his entire life
to the cumbersome task of annihilating caste from
the Indian society.
His vision of social democracy assumes added importance
in the wake of neo-liberal reforms in India, particularly
since 1991.The neo-liberal market-economy with singular
focus on economic growth and profit, suffocates the
delicate nurturing milieu of social democracy in India.
Given its exclusive agenda of economic growth and
profit, and insensitivities towards the rabid discriminatory
social structures, will it be feasible for economic
liberalization to plough through the arid land of
caste hierarchies and rampant social exclusion –
the main enemies of social democracy? Or would the
neo-liberal free-market economy further deepen inequalities,
caste hierarchies and social exclusion by tightening
caste-rope around the neck of the incipient institutions
of social democracy? Would it not delay, if not preclude,
the often talked about trickle-down impact of the
economic liberalization on the lives of the multitudes
of the Indian poor with majority of them historically
relegated to the periphery?
This paper looks at the ways in which neo-liberal
market-economy impacts social democracy as conceived
by Dr. Ambedkar and examines its implications for
the millions of ex-untouchables. It argues that the
institution of social democracy, which flourished
in India during the era of mixed economy and state
welfares, seems to be fast approaching its demise
under the ongoing process of neoliberalisation. The
paper further argues that the fast expanding domain
of corporate sector and free flow of global capital,
in conjunction with the gradual withdrawal of the
welfare state, will not only widen inequalities, but
also stifle the growth of social democracy, which
Dr. Ambedkar thought to be the most pragmatic and
viable way of putting an end to the oppressive social
structures in India.
The paper is divided into three parts. The first,
deals with the phenomenon of social democracy as articulated
by Dr. B.R. Ambedkar and the ways it helps downtrodden
to improve their living conditions. How the institution
of free market economy scuttles the essence of incipient
institution of social democracy in India and the challenges
it throws to the socially excluded sections of the
society are also looked into. In the second, complex
but intricate relationships between caste, poverty
and neo-liberal market-economy are discussed. This
part is based on a premise that neo-liberal market-
economy not only deepens poverty but also strengthen
the asymmetrical structures of caste, which in turn
entrench the already existing social exclusion in
the society. The third part draws heavily on the implications
of the neo-liberal economic reforms for the emancipatory
project of social democracy in India and the birth
of new contradictions that it gave rise to the disadvantage
of Dalits .
I
Ambedkar and the Dilemma of
Social Democracy
Social democracy occupies centre stage in the philosophy
of Dr. B.R. Ambedkar. It constitutes the core of his
struggle against the historic social malady of graded
inequality in India. This is what distinguished Dr.
Ambedkar from the rest of the mainstream Indian freedom
thinkers and fighters who were struggling primarily
for the liberation of the country (political freedom)
from the yoke of British Empire. Dr. Ambedkar expanded
the meaning of political freedom by incorporating
in its fold the less talked about issue of freedom
from internal colonialism – caste based social
exclusion. He assigned special importance to the principles
of social democracy by championing the cause of the
socially excluded sections of the Indian society.
He wanted to strengthen the emerging sphere of political
democracy in India by substantiating it with the institutionalisation
of the less talked about phenomenon of social democracy.
Dr. Ambedkar defines social democracy as: a way of
life which recognizes liberty, equality and fraternity
as the principles of life. These principles …
are not to be treated as separate items in a trinity.
They form a union of trinity in the sense that to
divorce one from the other is to defeat the very purpose
of democracy (Three Historical Addresses 1999:53).
Frozen in the centuries old stratified structure of
the Hindu social order, the principles of equality
and fraternity are yet to find a clear expression
and a significant space in the political democracy
of independent India. Social life in India is still
governed by the principle of birth-based graded inequality
that tends to elevate some (upper castes) and degrades
many (lower castes). Even after more than sixty four
years of India’s independence and wide spread
anti-untouchability laws, the so-called outcastes
continue to be subjected to repulsion and all sorts
of humiliations. They have continuously been deprived
of education, human rights, social status, and equal
opportunities in the field of art, culture, science
and technology .
It is repulsion rather than fraternity that underlined
the social structure of the Indian society. Repulsion
promotes social exclusion. Repulsion is one of the
three main agencies (the other two are hierarchy and
hereditary occupation) of caste that determine the
exclusionary boundaries of Indian social structures
(Bougle 1971). In the views of Dr. Ambedkar:
In fact, it makes isolation of one caste from another
a virtue. There is isolation in the class system.
But it does not make isolation virtue nor does it
prohibit social intercourse. The class system, it
is true produces groups, but they are not akin to
caste groups. The groups in the class system are only
non-social while the castes in the caste systems are
in their relations definitely and positively anti-social
<http://www.ambedkar.org/Babasaheb/Commandments_of_Baba_Saheb.htm>
The caste based principle of repulsion, thus, generated
mutual antagonism within the society that ultimately
squeezed the required space for the deepening of social
democracy in the country. The roots of democracy are
to be searched in the fabric of social relationship/associated
living (Chand 2005). Since caste thrives on mutual
repulsion and complete rejection of fraternity, it
goes against the norms of associated living that affects
the machinery of the state by making public opinion
impossible (Mungekar 2006:1). It introduces separation
in the society, and generates jealousy and antipathy
among the socially segregated inmates of the society.
On the completion of the Draft Constitution (25 November
1949), Dr. Ambedkar sounded a grave warning in his
famous address in the Constituent assembly: On the
26th January 1950, we are going to enter into a life
of contradictions. In politics we will have equality
and in social and economic life we will have inequality.
In politics we will be recognizing the principle of
one man one vote and one vote one value. In our social
and economic life, we shall, by reason of our social
and economic structure, continue to deny the principle
of one man one value. How long shall we continue to
live this life of contradictions? How long shall we
continue to deny equality in our social and economic
life? If we continue to deny it for long, we will
do so only by putting our political democracy in peril.
We must remove this contradiction at the earliest
possible or else those who suffer from inequality
will blow up the structure of political democracy
which this Assembly has so labouriously built up (Three
Historical Addresses 1999:53-54).
It seems that the Indian state has accorded some heed
to the prophetic warning of Dr. Ambedkar. Independent
India opted for a mixed economy model of development
and introduced the system of reservation for the downtrodden
in government jobs, education institutions and legislature.
Legal provisions for reducing the enormous gap between
the rich/upper and the poor/lower castes have been
incorporated in the law book of the land. The preamble
of the constitution clearly spells out the objectives
of securing “to all its citizens JUSTICE, social,
economic and political” as well as “EQUALITY
of status and of opportunity”.
The social Democratic vision as nurtured during the
freedom struggle as well as drafting of the constitution
under the stewardship of Dr. Ambedkar got further
reflected in the Resolution of the Government of India
for the creation of the Planning Commission in March
1950. The Resolution clearly defined the scope of
the work of the Planning Commission in the following
terms: The Constitution of India has guaranteed certain
Fundamental Rights to the citizens of India and enunciated
certain Directive Principles of State Policy, in particular,
that the State shall strive to promote the welfare
of the people by securing and protecting as effectively
as it may a social order in which justice, social,
economic and political, shall inform all the institutions
of the national life, and shall direct its policy
towards securing, among other things –
(a) That the citizens, men and women equally, have
the right to an adequate means of livelihood;
(b) That the ownership and control of the material
resources of the community are so distributed as best
to sub serve the common good; and
(c) That the operation of the economic system does
not result in the concentration of wealth and means
of production to the common detriment
(The First Five Year Plan: 1)
Thus an all inclusive vision of development and an
egalitarian social order underlined the basic spirit
of the constitution as well as the ambitious Five
Year Planning projects of the Planning Commission
of India. To translate the ideals of the founding
fathers, a number of special provisions are incorporated
in the constitution and the Resolution for the creation
of the Planning Commission. State affirmative action
is the most prominent among them. It aimed at overcoming
historic caste-based social exclusion and oppression.
Along with reservations in education, employment and
legislature, rural development programme, public distribution
system, public health programmes, cooperatives, the
Right to Education Act, mid-day meals programme, Mahatma
Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act, the
Food Security Act, the Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan, and
the Sampoorna Grameen Rozgar Yojana are a few more
significant state initiatives taken over the last
six decades since independence to help emerge social
democracy in India. Yet another important measure
towards the formation of social democracy has been
a series of attempts, under the Directive Principles
of state policy, to democratize and decentralize governance
and the devolution of authority from the centre to
the grass-roots (panchayati raj institutions). Thus
the constitution of India, as aptly argued by Dr.
Manmohan Singh, Prime Minister of India, is “a
unique social charter – the boldest statement
ever of social democracy” (Singh 2010:1). Whether
these varied measures have been able to facilitate
the growth of social democracy in India or not, is
a matter of contention (Desai 2010:10). Nevertheless,
the incorporation of such measures in the constitution
is a vindication enough that the founding fathers
of Independent India wanted to deepen the roots of
liberal democracy while placing it on firm foundation
of social democracy. However, the adoption of the
neo-liberal market-economy model by India in 1991
dilutes the social welfare concerns of the Indian
state. It is in this context that the institution
of social democracy has come under dark clouds of
the free market economy model in the country.
Neo-liberal market-economy is primarily based on delicensing,
removal of import quotas, cutting down tariff levels,
liberalisation of the inflow of foreign capital, capital
goods, imported inputs, capital markets, industrial
liberalisation, removal of MRTP constraints, opening
of yet newer areas hitherto reserved for the public
sector, tax concessions, voluntary retirement scheme,
hidden closing of non-viable units, widespread use
of contracted/casual labour, sub-contacting work to
the small scale sector, taming labour etc (McCartney
2009: 212-13; Kohli 2006: 1361 & 1363) . Before
Indian economy could actually open its gates to the
surging tides of world market-economy, the study of
economic liberalisation had already deepened its roots
in the domain of social sciences in the country. However,
in terms of content and scope, neoliberalism is yet
to enter mainstream political sociology with vast
body of pertinent literature remains confined to the
discipline of economics (cf. Bardhan 2007: 397; Nayyar
2007:361-2). It rarely focuses on the intricate but
often neglected relationship between caste and economy
as well as contradictions between the emerging structures
of neo-liberal market-economy and the incipient institutions
of social democracy (see also Basu 2010: xvi; Thorat
and Newman 2010:7). In other words, economic liberalisation,
caste, social democracy and intersections among them
constitute the core challenges that India face today.
Among the core challenges that contemporary India
face, the issue of economic liberalisation seems to
be the latest, while caste certainly remains the oldest.
Caste, at the same time, also enjoys the dubious distinction
of being the most perennial and complex phenomenon.
As an exclusionary social phenomenon, it has eclipsed
the Indian (read Hindu) society for ages and continues
to affect its economy and polity even today so much
so that it proves to be a stumbling block in the way
of substantive democratisation from within. During
the long spell of Muslim rule and the subsequent British
Raj, the scourge of caste has expanded beyond imagination
(Barrier 1968). In the postcolonial India, it assumed
a new potent identity against its traditional hierarchised
stance (Still 2009). The constitution-based state
affirmative action has further aided the institutionalisation
of caste as identity .
Social democracy figures somewhere in between these
two above mentioned challenges. It, however, remains
peripheral to the critical thinking of the builders
of modern India. Although a sharp division between
the moderates and the extremists within the Indian
freedom struggle brought into focus social of the
colonial India, the political, however, took precedence
over the social in independent India. Ultimately,
the form of democracy that India has come to acquire
is a parliamentary democracy that in fact was implanted
on Indian soil during the British rule. It did not
evolve from within under natural conditions. Thus,
despite the widespread belief about its ancient roots,
it is considered to be of recent origin . But once
it was transplanted, efforts were being made for its
survival . It is in this context that social democracy
becomes prerequisite for the survival of the parliamentary
democracy in India.
The story of the emergence of social democracy in
India is different from that of Europe. Unlike Europe
and Latin America, Social democracy in India did not
emerge as a response to rabid capitalism and economic
depression. Instead, it started taking shape in colonial
India, as aptly argued by Dr. Manmohan Singh, Prime
Minister of India, “ to liberate ourselves from
centuries of misrule, from the scourge of poverty,
ignorance and disease, from tyranny and bigotry, from
caste prejudice and communal divisions’’
(Singh 2010:1). Social democracy in India, thus, emerged
as a response to deep rooted caste-based social disabilities
as against the fiscal crisis of 1929 and the upheaval
generated by the World War II in Europe. The central
focus of social democracy in Europe was on economic
equality (Desai 2010:9). Whereas, in India the main
focus of social democracy has been on deepening democracy
while empowering the downtrodden to come forward to
democratically struggle for their long denied human
rights as enshrined in the constitution. In other
words, it is the ‘social’ as against the
‘economic’ that provided impetus to the
rise of social democracy in India. It is in this regard
that the role of state affirmative action becomes
noteworthy, which aims at distributive justice that
helps downtrodden to make equal contribution towards
strengthening the base of liberal democracy. It intends
to empower them in such a way that they reap the fruits
of hard earned freedom, at par with the privileged
twice born. In other words, state affirmative action
aims at rescuing the Indian society from the clutches
of centuries old institution of caste and the all
pervasive social exclusion and discrimination embedded
in it (Jacob 2009). It is in this context that the
neo-liberal market-economy and the institution of
social democracy come face to face in a mutually antagonistic
posture with serious implication for the sustainability
of the growing sapling of liberal democracy in India.
My key argument here is that social democracy in India
is different from its counterpart in Europe. In India,
it aims at building an indigenous base for the restoration
of an egalitarian social order that in turn facilitate
in internalisation of democratic values of equality,
freedom and fraternity as incorporated in the constitution.
It underscores the need of demolition of discriminatory
social structures. Since democracy thrives on numbers
in a closely contested sphere of electoral politics,
the burden of tradition becomes too difficult to be
avoided. Given the typical communal character of the
electoral constituencies in India, caste has come
to acquire a leading role in the arithmetic of electoral
number game; thus blocking the ongoing process of
deepening democracy in the country. There is a general
impression that instead of blunting the fangs of caste,
the institution of liberal democracy has further sharpened
them (for communalisation of electoral process see:
Juergensmeyer 1988: 22-32). How to overcome caste
and similar other socially stagnating forces, is really
an uphill task for the policy makers in India? It
is in this context that social democracy aims at deepening
the roots of liberal democracy in India – established
on the pattern of British parliamentary setup –
while facilitating ethnically divergent and socially
fragmented vast majority of rural poor to become active
participant in the political process at the grass-roots.
In fact, the inherent contradiction between the indigenous
institution of caste and the transplanted institution
of democracy are what acted as stumbling blocks in
the way of deepening the roots of democracy in India.
This contradiction subsequently assumed the form of
a tug-of-war between tradition and modernity (Gurumurthy
2009).
My another key argument is that the entry of neo-liberal
market-economy in India in 1990s has further compounded
the ongoing tug-of-war between tradition and modernity
to the disadvantage of the latter by entrenching,
albeit indirectly, the oppressive caste structures
in the country (discussed in details below). In the
tug-of-war between tradition and modernity, the institution
of social democracy stands with modernity and openly
confronts the forces of neo-liberal market-economy
which quite interestingly seem to toe the line of
the primordial and ascriptive institution of caste.
Free market discriminates against the poor. Majority
of the India Poor belong to lower castes. Thus, the
free markets discriminate against the Dalits. Taking
side with the lower caste victims of the ‘economics
of market’, which are mercilessly excluded from
the business domain, social democracy compensates
them in ensuring a respectable space in the ‘politics
of democracy’ . In other words, social democracy
aims at overcoming the primordial and ascriptive hurdles
in the way of arduous but steady march of liberal
democracy in India.
Social democracy is thus aims at building an indigenous
base for the restoration of an egalitarian social
order and internalisation of democratic values of
equality, freedom and fraternity. It aims at imbibing
the spirit of constitutionalism among its people.
It underscores annihilation of caste and caste-based
social exclusion. There is a general impression that
given the presence of caste in the social structure
in the country and the typical communal character
of its electoral constituencies, the former has been
able acquire a leading role in the arithmetic of electoral
number game in post-colonial India, thus blocking
the way of social democracy.
It is in this context that the induction of neo-liberal
economic reforms in India further complicates the
existing contradictions between caste and democracy.
Neo-liberal economic reforms were adopted to bridle
the ever-increasing menace of fiscal crisis and to
help India get rid of its chronic poverty. The problem
of chronic poverty in India, however, seems to be
not merely an economic issue. It has equally been
rooted rather more deeply in the asymmetrical social
structures of its Brahminical social order, which
finds its natural ally in the fast expanding operations
of new-liberal market economy in the country. It is
against this backdrop that the project of economic
liberalisation seems to block the way of nascent institution
of social democracy in India.
Neo-liberal Economy v/s Social
Democracy
The neo-liberal market-economy model runs in the opposite
direction of the well conceived social democracy model
of Dr. Ambedkar. The profit driven paradigm of free
market economy accords no importance whatsoever to
the principles of liberty, equality and fraternity.
The only value that it considered worth of honouring
is the value of unrestrained and free flow of capital
without least interference by the institution of the
state. This new paradigm of neo-liberal market economy
did not confront at all with the pre-modern institution
of caste in India. On the contrary, caste and market
nurture close relationship within the paradigm of
neo-liberal market-economy. They reinforce each other.
Market thrives on capital and profit. Since capital
has traditionally been accumulated by the upper castes
who have been able to establish their monopoly over
the economy of the country, the free market economy,
based as it is on the unrestrained flow of capital,
tends to promote the interests of the upper castes
rather more confidently. It welcomes them with enormous
opportunities and hefty profits. But at the same time,
it ignores the ex-untouchables who lack the requisite
capital.
In the traditional Hindu social system, the ex-untouchables
were kept at distance from the capital through the
mechanism of purity-pollution principle. They were
not allowed to own land, possess precious metals and
keep certain kind of animal. Whereas in the present
system of the free market economy, they were forced
to be fence sitter precisely because they did not
possess the desired amount of capital or capacity,
which are passports to enter into business in the
market economy. Earlier, the ex-untouchables were
denied all sort of access to capital in the name of
sacred scriptures. Now, they were kept at a distance
because free market economy does not entertain them
because they do not show capital. It is in this context
that the dialectics of inverse relationship between
democracy and untouchability and the complimentarity
between market and caste assumes an added importance
for the understanding of the impact of globalisation
on the life of the Dalits in India in general and
the structures of social democracy in the country
in particular.
II
Caste, Democracy and Market:
The Boiling Cauldron
The question of the survival of democracy in India
is linked with the rooting of social democracy in
the country. Social democracy, in turn, is strongly
confronted by the well-entrenched institution of caste
in India. What further strengthens caste, ironically,
is the inherited institution of parliamentary democracy.
Caste and democracy are locked in a peculiar relationship.
Traditionally, caste assigns rights to some and excludes
many from the public domain merely on the basis of
birth. As a pristine discriminatory social system,
it permeated and continues to permeate almost all
fields of the Indian society even today Every thing
is organised around it, as Thorat notes, ‘in
unequal measures of social, religious, economic relations
and rights’(2002). Opposed to the exclusionary
nature of the institution of caste, democracy, on
the other hand, is based on liberal legacy of “equal
dignity and worth of all persons” (Meyer &
Hinchman 2007:10). It promotes popular participation
and freedom of action and speech. Caste as mentioned
earlier shelved all such liberal principles that in
turn render democracy into a farce. Though caste and
democracy are antithetical to each other, but in certain
respects politicisation of caste is flagged as having
a positive impact on the deepening of democracy in
post-colonial India. Scholars, of late, have started
recognizing the fact that once caste structures get
politicized they help in deepening democracy which
in turn empowers the marginalised sections of the
society (Yadav 1999; Palshikar 2004). Delivering a
lecture on “Democracy and its Critics”
organized by the United Nations Foundation, Nobel
Laureate Amartya Sen notes, ‘here is a need
for caution, however, for those who believe that invocation
of caste in any form in democracy is an evil force.
As long as caste is invoked in speaking for a lower
caste or uniting it, it is good’ (Hindu: 16
December 2005). Such a pragmatic view of caste eclipses
the common conjecture predicated on the idea that
the onset of the modernity project would inevitably
render the institution of caste invalid as a power
index in the long run. Politicisation of caste, however,
does not go well with the grammar of fast economic
growth model of the neo-liberal market-economy, which
sharply underlines the phenomenon of the rollback
of the state as a stumbling block in the way of economic
growth and democracy.
What further complicates the process of deepening
of democracy in India is the intermeshing of caste
and poverty. The problem of poverty in India is not
merely an economic issue as discussed above (cf. Sunil
Khilnani, The Hindu, September 24, 2009). It is equally
well entrenched in the asymmetrical caste structures
of the Brahminical social order, which in turn, as
Alam (2004: xvii) argues, ‘defy every norm of
democratic justice, even of decency’. It is
against this backdrop that the status of Dalits who
have been pushed to the bottom of the social hierarchy
in the Indian society needs to be examined rather
critically in the wake of the implementation of neo-liberal
economic reforms in the country.
The bulk of Dalit population in India falls in the
category of below poverty line. Majority of Dalit
population continue to live in: extreme poverty without
land or opportunities for better employment or education.
With the exception of a minority who have benefited
from India’s policy of quotas in education and
government jobs, Dalits are relegated to the most
menial of tasks, as manual scavengers, removers of
human waste and dead animals, leather workers, street
sweepers, and cobblers. Dalit children make up the
majority of those sold into bondage to pay off debts
to upper caste creditors. Dalit men, women, and children
numbering in the tens of millions work as agricultural
labourers for a few kilograms of rice or Rs. 15 to
Rs. 35 (US $0.38 to $0.88) a day (Human Rights Watch
1999:2).
Another factor that distinguishes poverty stricken
Dalits from the poor of the upper caste in the country
is their social exclusion. Scheduled Tribes (STs),
Other Backward Castes (OBCs) and the other poor of
the upper castes are generally clubbed in the category
of economically deprived (economic exclusion) sections
of the society. Historically, Dalits have been deprived
of social, economic and political rights including
the right to education and employment. In the rural
areas, most of Dalits earn their livelihood as landless
agricultural labourers and in towns as labourers and
menial workers. In both the rural and urban sectors,
Dalits live in segregated colonies and slums respectively.
The relationship between caste and poverty seems to
be of symbiotic nature. They reinforce each other
and often club together in posing a serious challenge
to the nascent institution of social democracy in
India. The inextricably intertwined phenomena of caste
and poverty is so well entrenched that it has failed
to recede back even after the adoption of economic
reform measures in India in 1991. On the contrary,
the latter has further been strengthening the anti-democracy
nexus between caste and poverty in the country.
The capital intensive and profit driven model of neo-liberal
market-economy has, in fact, not only flared up the
dormant caste contradictions in India, but has also
brought into light some fresh ones between Dalits
and various ‘Backward and Other Backward Classes’
that have mushroomed in the post-Mandal era. Though
the neo-liberal market- economy has been promised
to provide an ample space to the socially excluded
sections of the society by opening new and unrestrained
opportunities for them in the fast emerging domain
of free market economy in India, but the reality is
the other way round. The neo-liberal market-economy
has failed to ward off the contagious effect of the
hoary and exclusionary institution of caste in India.
Untouchability and democracy are antithetical. Democracy
is totally negated in the scheme of untouchability.
Democracy is premised on the liberal principles of
freedom, equality and fraternity. On the contrary,
untouchability thrives amidst inequality and denial
of human rights. It promotes social segregation and
denies freedom to the socially excluded sections of
the society. It rests on asymmetrical social structures
of difference and domination that preclude democracy
to emerge in its natural stance. It is at this crucial
juncture of vendetta between democracy and untouchability,
the institution of free market economy enters into
the whirlpool of caste contradictions in the social
set up of the country.
In the tug-of-war between democracy and constitutionally
rendered illegal institution of untouchability, the
forces of the free market economy sided with the latter.
They strengthen the hands of the capital rich upper
castes by making it almost impossible for the capital
starved ex-untouchables to participate in the glamorous
domain of finance capital. Since capital lies mostly
with the upper castes, it is only they who matter
the most in the multiplexes/malls of the new market
economy. It is only they to whom the market has been
pushing into billionaires (Damodaran 2008). There
is hardly anyone from the ex-untouchables communities
in India who have joined the elite club of the billionaires.
Thus market does not only favour the upper castes,
it also accentuates the gulf between the rich and
the poor. Since poor and lower castes are co-terminus,
market further marginalizes the lower castes by preventing
them from entering into business operations.
If untouchability debarred the ex-untouchables from
the public sphere, the free market economy discourages
them from entering into the domain of business. If
the former had squeezed the ‘public’ or
the ‘social’ into ‘public’
or the ‘social’ of the privileged few
(the savarnas/dvijas [upper castes]) only; the later
seems to have mortgaged the entire economic domain
of the country to the upper castes only. Market elevated
a few upper castes and degraded many socially excluded
lower castes. Quite interestingly, untouchability
and free market economy join together in favouring
the upper castes with immense wealth/privileges as
against the lower castes who in spite of working hard
have to live a life of abject poverty and severe deprivations.
This in turn deprives them (lower castes) substantially
of the periodic opportunities to compete for power
berth in the electoral bogies of the political democracy
in the country. Elections over the years, in fact,
have become very costly affairs. They are beyond the
reach of the poor and socially excluded sections of
the society. Thus social exclusion and poverty deprive
the lower castes of the opportunity to compete on
equal footings with their rich and upper castes rivals
in the limited electoral arena of the political democracy
in India.
Thus it is in the above discussed context that untouchability
used to preclude deepening of democracy in India by
supporting the oppressive social structures of power
in the country. It is in this very context that free
market economy and social democracy become incompatible.
Thus the neo-liberal free market economy model by
virtue of its being anti poor and anti lower caste
has ultimately led to squeezing the already skimpy
space hard earned by the nascent institution of social
democracy in India. Since social equality and freedom
are inseparable, political democracy without social
democracy is farce. In the absence of social democracy,
the socially excluded sections of the society would
find it difficult to participate effectively in the
process of the political democracy. It raises the
most obvious and perennial question of freedom: political
v/s social and economic.
Freedom: Social v/s Political
Though political liberation from the British rule
was the central theme of the Indian freedom movement,
the question of freedom had never been merely a ‘political’
issue in colonial India. It had always been intertwined
with the ‘social’ of the country. In other
words, the question of freedom from the external/British
rule was closely tied with the much larger as well
as complex internal question of freedom from the oppressive
Hindu caste system in the country. But the mainstream
anti-imperial stance of the Indian freedom movement
failed to address the later larger question of social
exclusion of the vast number of downtrodden/ex-Untouchables
of India who were sandwiched between the oppressive
systems of internal colonialism of Hinduism on the
one hand, and British colonialism, on the other. The
ex-Untouchables were, thus, doubly oppressed. They
had no hope for any relief whatsoever from the Hindu
social order as it was based on the doctrine of permanent
inequality in every sphere of life . Their social
conditions too remained almost unchanged even during
the long spell of the so-called liberal minded British
rulers who probably did not like to touch the institution
of caste lest it unleash revolt from within the upper
caste hegemonized Hindu society (Ambedkar speech at
Roundtable). On the contrary, the British rulers rather
reinforced caste as it helped them in some ways in
maintaining their hold over colonial India (Thekaekara
2005). Though the constitution of independent India
has provided ample space to the inherited institution
of democracy, it has yet to overcome the subtle legacies
of centuries old caste structures in the country.
Since Hindu society is intensely rooted in the pre-modern
system of caste-based social hierarchies, it openly
clashed with the liberal principles of equality and
liberty. It is basically indifferent to the liberal
principles of individual worth and justice, which
blocked the way for the natural growth of the social
democracy in the country. Caste inculcates a sense
of complete alienation among those who have been condemned
to live separately as ‘outcastes’ away
from the mainland habitations of the upper castes.
The goal of Political freedom of the people of India
can never be accomplished in the real sense of the
term until and unless the deprivations and sufferings
of the large numbers of the ex-Untouchables are removed
by completely annihilating the oppressive caste system
of the Hindu society (Ambedkar 1995[1936]). In the
words of Dr. Ambedkar, “Political democracy
cannot last unless there lies at the base of it social
democracy” (Three Historical Addresses 1999:53).
Social democracy, in fact, is the ‘cornerstone’
of the edifice of political democracy in India. Saheed-e-Azam
Bhagat Singh, one of most prominent of the few forerunners
of the institution of social democracy in India, also
expressed the similar views, of course much earlier,
in his less quoted article published in the June issue
of Kirti 1929. He was of the firm opinion that Political
freedom gained from the British colonialism could
not last long if failed to be accompanied by a massive
social and economic reforms measures for the transformation
of the rotten undertaken in the internal social set
up of the country.
The next section attempts to explore, how free market
economy operations under the phenomenon of globalisation
have affected the lives of the marginalised sections
of the Indian society, which had, hitherto, been looking
towards the state for some support to stand on their
own feet. Since the very logic of globalisation is
based on the notion that welfare state is a hindrance
in the way of the global free market economy, it contained
no space for the welfare of the socially excluded
and marginalized sections of the society. This has
further deepened the marginalisation and exclusion
of the downtrodden and has severely limited the possibilities
of their emancipation in the neo-liberal free market
economy system of globalisation. It is against this
backdrop that the processes of globalisation and the
principles of social democracy come into an open clash.
III
Globalisation, Dalits and
Social Democracy
Globalisation is based on the principle of unrestrained
functioning of the free market-economy. In the paradigm
of globalisation, state is reduced into a sort of
security mechanism to protect its citizens from internal
disruption and external threats. State is not supposed
to care for the social and economic interests of its
citizens. It is argued that the social and material
interests of the citizens would be better served if
they were left free to flourish in the market ‘prompted
by the profit motive to supply essential services’.
The Neo-liberal argument goes further by highlighting
the point that the interests of the individuals are
best served by maximum market freedom and minimum
intervention by the state. Thus globalisation robs
the state of its welfare functions. On the contrary,
the principle of social democracy calls upon state
to play a positive role for the protection as well
as promotion of the interests of the downtrodden.
It expects that state need not be confined solely
to law and order system; it is expected to function
as a harbinger of social and economic justice as well.
It is in this context that the extended contractarian
tradition of the welfare state comes into head-on-collision
with the forces of neo-liberal market-economy in the
contemporary domain of globalisation.
Globalisation, thus, poses a serious challenge to
the formation of social democracy in India. It is
often paraded as a custodian of enormous ‘opportunities’.
But such ‘opportunities’ are and whom
they benefit is a question that directly concerns
the Dalits. In an existential asymmetrical world,
where we actually live, such opportunities open many
doors to the haves. But the interests of the have-nots,
a large majority of whom happen to be low castes,
socially excluded, tribal, women, and other vulnerable
sections of the society, are often neglected. The
socially excluded sections of the society are the
worst victims of much-hyped Special Economic Zones
[SEZs] and the resultant consequent process of forced
displacement (Ahlawat 2008; Palit 2008; Partha 2008;
Kumar 2007; Gill 2007; Shankar 2007; Shankar 2008;
Sampat 2008; Sharma 2009; and Sarma 2007). This has
led to further perpetuation and deepening of the social
and economic inequities, which in turn seriously diminish
the values and principle of social justice in the
society. In other words, it deepens the perennial
evil of social exclusion through its much advertised
project of new economic reforms, which in effect is
less about ‘reforms, and more about ‘exclusion’.
It has led to the closure of various industrial units
in the public sector that “played havoc with
the employment scenario of the populace as a whole
and of the Dalits in particular” (Puniyani 2002)
This, in turn, has increased unemployment and poverty
on the one hand, and widened the hiatus between the
rich/upper castes and the poor/lower castes on the
other. In the first decade of the new economic reforms
in India, the ratio of both unemployment and poverty
increased from 28 per cent in 1989 to 48 per cent
in 1992.
Marginalisation of the Marginalised
Since Dalits constitute the bulk of the poor and unemployed,
they have suffered the most. Their chances of acquiring
jobs in the high-tech industry at home as well as
in the multinational corporations have been getting
curtailed since the beginning of the process of globalisation
in India. The system of primary and elementary education
in the rural and urban settings has been subverted
almost totally. Since, majority of the rich upper
caste send their wards to the private/convent/public
schools, government schools have been reduced into
dysfunctional centres of learning for the poor Dalits.
It is simply out of the reach of the matriculates
of such neglected government schools, where hardly
any infrastructure and teachers are available, to
be able to compete for admission in the prestigious
Information Technology (IT) or management schools.
Moreover, since the background of a majority of Dalit
undergraduates is in Arts and Humanities, it becomes
difficult for them to meet the job requirements of
the multinational corporations. Even if some of the
Dalits aspire to compete in the technology driven
new job market, it would be, perhaps, out of their
reach to acquire the requisite qualifications at exorbitant
rates from various engineering and management institutes.
It is precisely due to these reasons that Dalits are
rarely to be found in the prestigious management schools
all over the country.
Dalits happened to be the beneficiaries of state’s
affirmative action before India entered into the realm
of neo-liberal free market-economy. The Indian state
had brought some improvements in the lives of Dalits
by making special provisions to provide them education,
employment, respectable wages, access to land, water,
health, housing and other resources. But the welfarist
stance of the Indian state gave way to a new system
of free market-economy in 1990s. One of the main tasks
of this new paradigm is to force the roll back process
of the welfare state and to allow the market forces
to operate in an unrestrained manner. The pro-market
stance of globalisation has led to the widening of
the gap between the privileged few and the large mass
of the marginalized sections of the society. It further
led to marginalisation of the already marginalized
people, thus widening the gulf of inequity in the
society (Kumar 2007). Dalit labourers, daily wage
workers and workers in the informal sector among them
suffer the most. In other words, globalisation process
severely affects some categories of the Scheduled
Castes and Scheduled Tribes who are deprived of jobs,
and face great difficulties in accessing housing,
drinking water, food, healthcare, education, and employment.
Thus the way globalisation affects the life of a Scheduled
Caste worker differs significantly from that of the
non-Scheduled Caste one.
In a caste-based hierarchical and graded social setup
where lower social status and economic backwardness
seems to be coterminous, social rank plays an important
role in determining one's economic status. Globalisation
further aggravates this vicious interrelationship
between social and economic backwardness. The logic
of economic globalisation favours the rich, who can
invest and multiply capital. The favoured rich are
mostly found among the so-called traditional ‘upper
castes’ that have monopolised land and other
economic resources in the country. It has made them
prominent in the newly carved out vast private space
of the open market. In other words, capital and caste
have joined hands against labour and the principle
of state social welfare it has led to an alliance
between the forces of the market and the upper castes
– much to the disadvantage of the marginalised
and the lower castes.
Another way through which the process of globalisation
has been affecting the lives of the Dalits rather
more severely is the transformation of their traditional
hereditary occupations into lucrative profit seeking
competitive avenues where they find themselves incapable
of competing with the so called upper castes who until
very recently used to consider such professions as
polluting. In other words, when the occupations of
sewage disposal, scavenging and raw hides were performed
in the Jajmani (hereditary system of asymmetrical
reciprocity and patronage between landlords and occupational
experts) set up, bereft of profit incentive, Dalits
were forced to take them up. But when these same occupations
became profit-generating businesses, Dalits find themselves
at odd in their own tested fields. It is in this context
that the process of globalisation perpetuates the
system of caste and inequality albeit in a new form.
Instead of liberating them, it further pins them down.
Earlier they were excluded and were condemned as shudras
because of their closeness to the sewages, now it
excludes them by way of defeating them in the profit
oriented open market system of the neo-liberal economy.
In fact, this market is open only for those who have
the capital to play the profit game on the chessboard
of its unrestrained competition. In this new profit
driven game of the process of globalisation, Dalits
– normally starved of capital – stand
disqualified.
Yet another way through which the process of globalisation
severely affects the lives of the Dalits is the accentuation
of the phenomenon of their exclusion from land. Significant
parts of the vast majority of them who live in villages
are landless labourers. Only a small number of them
are cultivators with marginal holdings. The large-scale
landlessness on the part of the Dalits led to their
dependence on the upper caste land owning communities,
which in turn deepened the caste based inequalities
with the additional burden of asymmetrical class structures.
The neo-liberal economic policies adopted under the
regimes of liberalisation, privatisation and globalisation
widen already existing caste and class divisions between
the Dalits and the dominant castes, and further minimises
the chances of the emergence of a sense of solidarity
among different communities.
Moreover, atrocities against Dalits (social boycott,
kidnapping, murder, abduction, bonded labour, intimidation,
rape, honour killings and residential segregation)
have also increased many folds during the economic
reforms measures. Tapan Basu in his engaging review
of Anand Teltumbde’s latest book on Khairlanji:
A Strange and Bitter Crop writes, “[t]he paradox
of Indian modernity is that it instigates Dalits to
fight for social justice, even as more and more social
injustices are heaped upon them everyday” (Hindu,
December 7, 2008). It is this heightened amount of
Dalit atrocities wrapped in a double foil of chronic
poverty and emerging Dalit assertion that has in fact
come to challenge the much hyped neo-liberal market-economy
model and the promise that it flags for the deepening
of democracy in India. There has been about a three-fold
rise in cases of crime against Dalits such as murders,
grievous hurt, rape, social boycott etc during the
last decade and half (Puniyani 2002). Late Suraj Bhan,
the then Chairman of the National Sc and ST Commission,
while speaking in a seminar on Reservation In Privatisation
organised by the Ambedkar Trust (Jalandhar), commented
that more than 45,000 cases of atrocities against
Dalits and downtrodden have been registered in India
during the past one year alone. However, if the numbers
of those cases, which were either suppressed or went
unnoticed, are included, the total figure could easily
go up to one hundred thousand (The Tribune September
5, 2005). During 2003-05 the number of such atrocities
against Dalits was 69,216 (Mungekar 2006).
Talhan, Meham, Dulina, Gohana, Saalwan, Chakwada,
Khairlanji, Khandamal and Mirchpur are some of the
recent instances of atrocities against Dalits in India.
Atrocities against Dalits thus continue to exist even
today, despite constitutional safeguards, and various
legislative measures. The National Human Rights Commission
(NHRC) in its report on the Prevention of Atrocities
on Scheduled Castes released in 2002 pointed out that
there was “virtually no monitoring of the implementation
of the SC/ST Prevention of Atrocities Act at any level”
(Narrain 2006). This clearly shows how vulnerable
Dalits are in the wake of globalisation. In the opinion
of Christine Moliner, a French anthropologist who
visited the 4th World Social Forum (WSF) in Mumbai
in January 2004, “[t]he Indian state has in
recent years often proved itself unable or unwilling
to protect Dalit; indeed, state representatives –
police especially – are frequently accused of
active participation in anti-Dalit violence”
(Moliner 2004: 2; see also Mungekar 2006:2). How can
the Indian state save the socially excluded if its
own security agencies remain immersed in the pre-modern
institution of caste?
Sharpening the Contradictions
Dalits constitute a significant proportion of the
total population of India. How can India surge upward
if it fails to care for the interest of the total
16.23 per cent Scheduled Castes population (Census
of India 2001), which can promptly swell further if
clubbed with the population of different categories
of Backward and Other Backward Classes and Scheduled
Tribes? No doubt the Indian constitution contains
many provisions, thanks to Dr. B.R. Ambedkar, but
how much the Indian state has actually done for the
uplift of those on the socio-political margins is
open to debate. To quote Dr Ambedkar:
…that political power in this country has too
long been the monopoly of a few and the many are not
only beasts of burden, but also beasts of prey. This
monopoly has not merely deprived them of their chance
of betterment, it has sapped them of what may be called
the significance of life. These down-trodden classes
are tired of being governed, they are impatient to
govern themselves. This urge for self-realization
in the down-trodden classes must not be allowed to
develop into a class of struggle or class war. It
would lead to a division of the house. That would
indeed be a day of disaster (Three Historical Addresses
1999: 55).
Even after 60 years when Dr Ambedkar echoed these
words, majority of the Scheduled Castes are still
landless. No systematic efforts have been made for
the implementation of land reforms. A large majority
of Dalit population remains landless. Even the provisions
of minimum wages were never adhered to (Chopra 2008b:
2).
Globalisation has further sharpened the already existing
contradictions between political equality on the one
hand and social and economic inequality on the other.
It has deprived Dalits of whatever little they have
in the name of so-called fast development under the
model of free market-economy. There exists no space
for them at all in the glamorous showrooms of no-liberal
market-economy –-Special Economic Zones (SEZs).
These fabulous zones are yet to be tamed to accommodate
the ever-increasing vast multitudes of downtrodden
section of the society who could no longer be denied
any more of their due share in the varied structures
of power.
Downtrodden, in fact, are tired of being ‘governed’
for centuries, and are impatient to take control of
their own destinies. However, whatever little space
was available to them to dream the possibility of
their betterment seems to have been grabbed by the
forces of neo-liberal market-economy in the name of
quick development. Their patience and ‘urge
for self-realization’ can no longer be tested.
Articulating the urge of the downtrodden for self-realization
during his famous address on the completion of the
Draft Constitution on 25 November 1949, Dr. Ambedkar
cautioned that:
… the sooner room is made for the realization
of their aspiration, the better for the few, the better
for the country, the better for the maintenance of
its independence and better for the continuance of
its democratic structure. This can be done by the
establishment of equality and fraternity in all spheres
of life … (Three Historical Addresses 1999:55).
Similar views were expressed after 50 years by K.
R. Narayanan, the President of India, in his address
to the nation on January 25, 2000: “Beware of
the fury of the patient and long suffering people”
(as quoted in Puri 2006: 7). In a similar vein, Pratibha
Patil, President of India, in her Republic Day-eve
address reiterated that the disadvantaged: too should
find a place to enjoy the sunshine of the country’s
growth and development… Our efforts and our
commitment, while pursuing the goal of high growth
rates, should be to ensure that all people of our
country benefit from it. Our pledge will remain unfulfilled
until, as Gandhi had said, ‘we have wiped every
tear in every eye’ ” (as cited in Iyer
2008).
The benefits of globalisation are yet to reach these
‘patient and long suffering people’ who
never shirk from toiling labour. But the free market-economy
driven forces advocate the concerns of the rich and
resourceful only. This widens the gap between the
rich and the poor. The widening gap coupled with the
rolling back of the state has lead to further resentment
and alienation among the downtrodden, thus jeopardising
the democratic set up in the country. It is in this
overarching context of social democracy that the responsibility
and the task of safeguarding the developmental character
of the Indian state, especially with regard to the
empowerment of Dalits, become very crucial.
The benefits of globalisation are yet to reach these
‘patient and long suffering people’ who
never shirk from hard work and toiling labour. But
the free market economy driven forces advocate the
concerns of the rich and resourceful only. This widens
the gap between the rich and the poor. The widening
gap coupled with the rolling back of the state lead
to further resentment and alienation among the downtrodden
that in turn put pressure on the practice of democracy
in the country (Singh 2006). Baba Sahib Dr. B.R. Ambedkar
was very well aware, much in advance, about the serious
implications of the lopsided development for the growth
of social democracy in a caste ridden country like
India. He therefore underlined the inclusion of the
downtrodden into the governmental set-up of the country.
For that he emphasised that the safe route goes via
total annihilation of caste and in that the role of
the state is of utmost importance. If globalisation
implies pushing the state out, then the future of
the project of social democracy seems to be very bleak.
It is in this context that the responsibility and
the task of safeguarding the developmental character
of the Indian state becomes very crucial more so for
the empowerment of Dalits in particular and strengthening
the forces of social democracy in India in general.
Though a lot has already been said about the desired
human and humane face of globalisation based on global
governance, such claims sound rather hollow for the
marginalised sections of the society. The free market-economy
has not only failed to liberate them, it has rather
further pinned them down. Downtrodden are not welcomed
in the sphere of market as equal partners of profit.
In other words, the market too practices ‘untouchability’,
albeit in a different form. They feel alienated in
the very world that promises to empower them. Howsoever
strong and robust the free market-economy might appear
to be, in long run it will not survive until and unless
the question of the marginalised sections is addressed
sincerely. In fact, the question of equitable distribution
of resources is closely related with the issue of
the immediate and amicable redressal of the causes
of marginalization and exclusion of the Dalits from
the mainstream. The marginalized are to be provided
not only with low price wheat, rice and pulses as
has been popularly done in some Indian states. What
is equally essential is to empower them, to enhance
their buying capacity in the real sense of the term
by dismantling the structures of economic and social
dominations. As warned by George Tong-Boon Yeo, Singapore
Foreign Affairs Minister, at the Confederation of
Indian Industry (CII) Partnership Summit in Bangalore:
If we are not concerned of the stresses of globalisation,
ideological counter-currents will emerge. Globalisation
is not a bed of roses. There is a need to be watchful,
always, (The Hindu, March 19, 2007).
In other words, a balance needs to be created between
the forces of market and the principles of social
justice. It is in this context that Baba Sahib Dr.
B. R. Ambedkar’s warning, as referred to in
the beginning of the paper, assumed critical importance.
The globalisation process has been compelling India
to bind up as early as possible its most sought after
projects of social and economic justice aiming at
empowering the Dalits. In other words, before social
democracy could take firm roots in India, the state
started rolling back from its commitment to facilitate
the process of emancipation and empowerment of the
downtrodden classes.
Dalits are now no longer confined within the rural
settings and patron-client relationship. Some of them
have been able to move into mainstream sectors of
non-polluting professions and a few of them ventured
abroad. Now the relatively better off Dalits come
forward to articulate the interests of their brethren
and to some extant they have been successful in providing
them with an alternative leadership. Dalits who have
once tasted the fruit of political equality can no
longer be denied further any more their long overdue
social and economic rights. Nothing short of structural
transformation including the free market based system
of economic domination on the one hand and the traditional
Varna system of four-fold occupational division based
on graded social hierarchy on the other could provide
them their long denied basic human rights. In fact,
in India the problem of Dalits is not just linked
to the economic forces emanating from the spheres
of the free market economy. It has equally been made
complex by the all pervasive caste ridden social order.
It seems that market and caste have joined hands to
pose a most serious challenge to the nascent institution
of social democracy in India.
There is a general impression that some of the Dalits
have been able to strengthen their economic position
through sheer hard work and enterprise. Although the
constitutional affirmative action played an important
role in the uplift of the Dalits in general, their
individual efforts to wriggle out of the abyss of
social exclusion through the mechanism of localised
social struggles armed with Dalit-Bahujan ideology,
along with their ventures abroad, has turned out to
be of crucial importance. Some of them have established
their own small-scale servicing units such as carpentry,
barber, blacksmith shops etc thus saying good bye
to their low rank hereditary occupations (for details
see: Ram 2010; Ram 2004a: 5-7). In addition, they
have also been politicized to a large extent by the
socio-political activities of the various regional
Dalit movements and the consequent emergence of distinct
‘Dalit counterpublic’ in the form of an
alternative religious sphere, popularly known as Dalit
deras (Ram 2008; Ram 2009a; Ram 2009b). Their improved
economic status has not only liberated them from the
subordination of the upper castes but also encourage
them to aspire for a commensurate social status. The
upsurge of a consciousness among Dalits to aspire
for dignity and social justice seem to bring them
in direct confrontation with the new forces unleashed
by the free market-economy. Since free market-economy
is premised on the withdrawal of state from the economic-welfare
domain, it leads, consequently, to the demise of the
institution of social democracy based as it was on
the social welfare pillars of the state.
Economic liberalisation regimes in India can no longer
ignore the stark realities of unequal and discriminatory
patterns of its social life and chronic poverty. Any
attempt to work out the economy in isolation of the
hard-core social realities would have serious and
far-reaching implication not only for Indian polity
and society but also for its economy in the long run.
It is in this context that the project of economic
liberalisation needs to be understood, in consonance
with the complex ‘social’ and ‘political’
of the Indian economy. To get rid of centuries-old
caste-based social discriminations, exclusion and
chronic poverty of millions of downtrodden in India,
the ambitious project of economic liberalisation,
perhaps, needs to be clubbed together with another
equally ambitious project aiming at total transformation
of the entire gamut of Hindu social order; thoroughly
cleaning its long accumulated muck of hereditary occupation
and repulsion. Can economic liberalisation alone help
generate new avenues for rapid economic growth and
equal opportunities (‘growth with redistribution’
or ‘capitalism with a human face’) for
all in a society like India marked by rampant social
hierarchies and inequalities? This is an urgent and
critical issue that needs serious attention. That
is what Dr. Ambedkar strongly pleaded for in his capacity
as a Chairman of the Drafting Committee of the Constitution
for Independent India and also as an organic leader
of millions of downtrodden. Can economic liberalisation
alone help generate new avenues for rapid economic
growth and equal opportunities (‘growth with
redistribution’ or ‘capitalism with a
human face’) for all in a society like India
doted with rampant social hierarchies and inequalities?
This is an urgent and uphill task that needs serious
attention. And it is in this context that social democratic
vision of Dr Ambedkar assumes critical importance.
Failure to engage with this vision is likely to result
in further perpetuation of chronic poverty and inequalities
leading to social unrest and political violence, with
the downtrodden and the marginalized becoming the
worst victims.
This paper is a slightly revised draft of what I
read at national seminar on Invoking Ambedkar –
Contributions, Receptions, Legacies, organised by
Institute of Development Studies. Kolkata (March 11-12,
2011). I am grateful to Amiya K. Bagchi, Sukhadeo
Thorat, Nandu Ram, Rowena Robinson and Debi Chatterjiee
for critical inputs.
Notes
The term ‘Dalit’ is used in this paper,
as a social category that incorporates the Scheduled
Castes (SCs), the Scheduled Tribes (STs), and the
Other Backward Castes (OBCs) – constitutional
categories referring to socially and/as well as economically
excluded sections of the Indian society. However,
in the current political discourse, the term Dalit
is mainly confined to the SCs only. To be more precise,
it covers only those SCs who are classified as Hindus,
Sikhs and Buddhists but excludes Muslim and Christian
Dalits. They were subjected to forced and customary
undignified labour, precisely because of their low
birth. Thus, Dalit is the “politically correct”
nomenclature for the ex-untouchables who traditionally
have been placed at the lowest rung of the Hindu caste
hierarchy and were contemptuously called by different
names like Shudras, Atishudras, Achhuts, Antyajas,
Chandalas, Pariahs, Dheds, Panchamas, Avarnas, Namashudras,
Adi-Dravida, Ad Dharmis, Mazhabis, Depressed Classes,
Harijans, and Scheduled Castes. They were forced to
live on the segregated peripheries of the mainstream
rural settings. In the Urban sectors they are confined
to shanty colonies in slums. According to the 2001
census, 22.59 percent of the total urban population
in India was living in slums. A large number of them
happened to be Dalits.
Untouchability splits people into distinct and seamless
geographical settings. It blocks the channels of effective
communication among different castes especially between
the upper and the lower castes by erecting permanent
barriers of social exclusion. It is a nefarious system/mechanism
of ghettoising a large number people into the periphery
of a mainstream social realm. Despite its practice
being declared a criminal offence in the Constitution
of independent India, first under the Protection of
Civil Rights [Anti-Untouchability] Act of 1955 and
later on under the Scheduled Castes/Scheduled Tribes
(Prevention of Atrocities) Act of 1989, it continues
to exist even today in the form of separate Scheduled
Castes settlements in the country, especially in the
rural sector where most people still live (Rajagopal
2007). The spatial segregation of the ex-untouchables
has become a formidable hurdle in the realisation
of social democracy in India. Untouchability, by its
very nature, negates the very possibility of the rise
of an egalitarian social order. It inculcates a sense
of complete alienation among those who have been condemned
to live separately as ‘outcastes’ away
from the mainland habitations of the upper castes.
For a detailed account of developmental planning and
the setting up of the planning commission see: Kudaisya
2009:939-78.
For list of reforms see: Frankel 2005; Jenkins
1999: 16-28; and Kumar 2000.
In the constitution of Independent India caste has
been accorded a distinct place in the form of state
affirmative action. The lower castes, legally referred
to as Scheduled Castes (SCs) in the constitution of
independent India, are provided reservation in the
fields of education, Government/Public Sector jobs
and the legislature in order to help them in overcome
their chronic social exclusion. The phenomenon of
the reservation of SCs, however, has brought ‘caste’
into the centre stage of the electoral politics in
independent democratic India.
For a discussion on the ancient roots of democracy
in India see: Jayaswal 1978 fifth ed, [1924].
Ashutosh Varshney identified three basic conditions
for the survival of democracy in the West: “universal
suffrage came to most Western democracies only after
the Industrial Revolution, which meant that the poor
got the right to vote only after those societies had
become relatively rich; a welfare state attended to
the needs of low-income segments of the population;
and the educated and the wealthy have tended to vote
more than the poor” (Varshney 2007:93). He argued
cogently that none of these three conditions exist
in India. Universal adult suffrage was introduced
in India long before the advent of the industrial
economy. As far as welfare state is concerned, India
was not a match to that of the West. And thirdly,
poor citizen tend to vote more in India than the rich
(Varshney 2007: 93-94).
For ‘economics of market’ and politics
of democracy’ phrases, I am indebted to Deepak
Nayyar (Nayyar 2007:362—69).
In the Hindu social order, rights were not granted
on the basis of an individual’s personal worth.
They are, in fact, granted or denied on the basis
of one’s social status in the Hindu caste hierarchy
(Thorat 2002). For those who had been pushed to the
bottom of the hierarchy, it hardly matter whether
they enjoy any human rights or not (Ramaswamy 2001).
It is in this context that Dr. Ambedkar spoke forcefully
in the London Roundtable conferences against the British
rule in India.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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