Maro Kato aur karte raho desh ki sampatti ka nuksaan,
Kise hai pata is se kon hai pareshan
Lagao aag traino me ukhado patari tumhara kya jata hai
Apne swarth ke chakkar me pura samaj lipta paya jata hai
Hindustan ka bhavishya saf dikhai deta hai
Galli Muhalle me samajik bhedbhav ka nasha chadhte dikhta hai,
Bant do fir se manuvadi vyavastha me logo ko,
dikhao dar unhe kabhi na aane vale samajik dohan ke pralay ka
Batao unhe tum kitne bhi ache ho kuch fark nahi padta,
Jab tak tumhare man ke andar ka manav nahi jalta
Kal dalit, aaj gujjar, kal chattisgarh aur jharkhand.....
Silsila chalta jayega lekin safed topi vale neta aag lagakar
AC me sota paya jayega
Marega garib, nuksan hoga desh ka, kise fark padta hai?
Lagana hai to lagao aag bhrast logo ki brasht kamai me
Aam janta ko bakhsho ye bhi aapke hi bich ke hai
Adivasi aur dalit ya savarno se pahle aadmi hai
Na karo desh ko piche in netao ke chakkar me
Lado apne astitva ke liye....lekin apna ghar me aag lagakar nahi
Maharastra me par prantiya nahi, ishar ye nahi udhar wo nahi????
Desh ki aajadi aur uske baad netao ki loot ne ye haal kiye hai
Babu Subhash....aajao desh ko tumhari jaroorat hai



--- In [email protected], "Jharkhand Blog"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>     *  *
>
> * Jharkhand  <http://jharkhand.org.in/blog> Blog
<http://jharkhand.org.in/blog>
> *
>
> ** *  *  <http://www.jharkhand.org.in/forum>
>
> **
> **
>
>
> **
>
>
>
>
>
>   Can the Adivasi status take Gujjars forward?
>
>
>
>
>
> Gujjars traditionally belonged to the Kshatriya caste, and ruled
over the
> Gurjara-Pratihara Kingdom -- an area comprising almost 60 per cent
of South
> Asia during the 8th and 9th centuries -- claims this Gujjar
community  web
> site <http://www.gurjarsonline.com/history.html>.
>
>
>
> Gujjars have a glorious past, a truth no doubt. Although fairly
unpopular
> for their violent conduct, Gujjars have lived on their productive
labour. In
> recorded history, Rajasthan's Gujjars are an integral part of the
mainstream
> caste in the region's society.
>
>
>
> Making a momentous departure -- in claiming Kshatriya-hood,
Rajasthan's
> Gujjars now clamour for Adivasi status. This in itself is
indicative of a
> new social mood in present day Indian society. Various social
classes in the
> country aspire to re-negotiate their social locations.
>
>
>
> The Gujjars have just fought a fierce battle seeking de-location
of their
> present social status. As per the deal, the Rajasthan government
has set up
> a three-member committee to examine the issue, and has recommend
the matter
> to the Union government. Rajasthan's Gujjars have to pass the
following test
> to qualify for Adivasi status:
>
>
>
>    - Primitive traits
>    - Geographical isolation
>    - Distinct culture
>    - Shy of contact with community at large
>    - Economically backward
>
>
>
> Whether they pass the test or not is a different question
altogether. We can
> only wish them good luck. Here we are faced with an exceptional
social
> situation -- a situation of a ruthless fracas between the lived
> occupational-culture and yet to be lived newer aspirations.
>
>
>
> What if Rajasthan's Gujjars were to earn an Adivasi status. Can
that take
> them forward? During the just ended week-long unrest, the
Rajasthan Gujjar
> leadership has been citing the case of the Van Gujjars of the
Shivaliks
> (parts of Uttarakhand, Himachal Pradesh and Jammu and Kashmir) who
enjoy
> Adivasi status for the purposes of affirmative action as available
to the
> Adivasi masses of India.
>
>
>
> The Van Gujjars -- meaning forest Gujjars -- actually live in
forests as
> quasi-nomads. During the winter they come down to the plains along
with
> their cattle, and return to the upper Shivalik hills during
summer. They are
> thus, virtual Adivasis -- though not as poor as the average Adivasi
> population of India. Their income far exceeds their needs.
>
>
>
> However, what the Rajasthan Gujjar leadership did not tell us is
the fact
> that, despite the Adivasi status, the Van Gujjars could not
benefit from
> affirmative action packages as available to the Adivasis.
>
>
>
> The Van Gujjars have not been able to produce civil servants,
doctors,
> engineers, or even schoolteachers. Nor have the Rajasthan Gujjars
been able
> to produce civil servants, doctors, engineers, or even
schoolteachers. They
> remain as backward as they had been for ages.
>
>
>
> So, if the Adivasi status couldn't help the Van Gujjars get
government jobs,
> how is that going to help the Rajasthan Gujjars even if they were
to be
> accorded Adivasi status?
>
>
>
> As a matter fact, the Rajasthan Gujjars are already in the Other
Backward
> Classes list, yet, they have not been able to benefit from the OBC
quota.
> How do we interpret this extraordinary spectacle of backwardness
of both --
> Van Gujjars and Rajasthan Gujjars!
>
>
>
> As we know, the Van Gujjars depend on cattle for their livelihood -
- selling
> milk, sheep and goats to the mainlanders. If there is any
similarity between
> Van Gujjars and the Gujjars of Rajasthan, it is the culture of
cattle
> rearing.
>
>
>
> To Van Gujjars, cattle rearing is an absolute necessity as that is
the only
> source of sustenance they know. There is no way Van Gujjars could
do farming
> in the Shivalik hills, neither have they thought of immigrating to
the
> mainland. They have remained with their occupational culture for
ages, and
> arguably, are quite content.
>
>
>
> But, as part of mainstream society, to the Rajasthan Gujjars,
cattle rearing
> is not a necessity as they have fairly good land holdings, and
other
> opportunities of enterprise available around them. Rooted in their
> tradition, cattle rearing is a cult amongst Rajasthan Gujjars.
>
>
>
> Even if a Gujjar family had for instance, a hundred acres of land,
and
> additional sources of income, by tradition, the family must have a
couple of
> cows or buffaloes, even few goats. In the Gujjar world, home
produced pure
> milk is as dire a necessity as oxygen to most of us. Cattle
rearing thus
> become an absolute necessity to a Gujjar household.
>
>
>
> Not much has been researched or written about the predicament of
the cattle
> rearers. In India, cattle rearing is not recognised as an organised
> industry. By nature, even those with a single animal require the
services of
> small hands -- of children, at some stage or the other during the
day.
> Understandably, there cannot be a cow or buffalo that will give
milk round
> the year. So, if a family has one cow, the logic of the
availability of
> pure-milk throughout the year demands another cow. In the process,
often,
> all the members including children are involved in taking care of
the cows.
>
>
>
> So what price does cattle rearing demand from the family?
>
>
>
> Children are less likely to enroll in schools. Those who have
enrolled, are
> likely to drop out. The few who still manage to get a degree, tend
to
> under-perform and hence are unfit in the job market.
>
>
>
> Rajasthan Gujjars, or the Gujjar community as a whole with few
exceptions
> though, is trapped in the tradition of cattle rearing. Since the
mainland
> Gujjars live in mainstream society, they watch members of other
communities
> getting into government jobs, which brings instant prestige and
recognition
> in society.
>
>
>
> The Rajasthan Gujjars now aspire for government positions but
without
> abandoning their tradition of cattle rearing. Can the Adivasi
status take
> Rajasthan Gujjars forward unless they depart from tradition and
embrace
> modernity? Will the Gujjars engage in a new debate for an
intensive reform
> within?
>
>
>
> rediff.com/news/2007/jun/07cbp.htm
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
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