This article will qualify to be - without anything else even remotely
challenging it - the most foolish article ever written on any dalit topic
among those posted in this network in recent times. If this Mountain chap is
real, he is either having cheap fun or simply mad or a costable with
writerly pretensions! I never thought this countercurrents is a great
website but it is a new low in their utter unconcern for any standards. This
article pretends to be an attack on Maoists- a necessary task- but actually
insults Dalits. I don't remember reading anything more humiliating to Dalits
than the following: "my Dalit comrades point out that 85% of India Dalits
still believe in the one, unifying tenent of
Hinduism, varna/caste/color. Simply put, most Dalits believe they are being
punished by God for sins in a previous life and their lot as "untouchables",
Dalits, is Gods Will. If God willed your punishment  today with the promise
of a better re-birth in the next life , than trying to lift yourselfs and
your childrens lot above that of cleaning the communal toilets is going
against Gods Will."
Outrageous! May be this author is worse enemy of Dalits than the types I
guessed: a member of Communist Party of India (Marxist).
On 12 April 2010 16:29, Siddhartha Kumar <mailsiddharth...@gmail.com> wrote:

>
>
> http://www.countercurrents.org/mountain100410.htm
>
> Why India's Dalits Dont Trust The Maoists
>
> By Thomas C. Mountain
>
> 10 April, 2010
> Countercurrents.org
>
> India's Dalits really, really distrust the Maoist movement of India
> and Nepal. As the Maoist movement begins to challenge for state power
> in Nepal, and has struck a serious level of alarm in the ruling elite
> in India, this question has important ramifications for the future of
> south Asia.
>
> The Dalit movement in India is the largest and fastest growing threat
> to the status quo, followed at some distance by the Maoists.
> Interestingly, almost all the Dalit leadership I know, mostly mid
> level cadre in the Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP), India's third largest
> national party and main force in the Dalit liberation movement, are
> ex-Maoists.
>
> When asked why they distrust the "Naxalites", the common term for the
> Maoist movement, they point out, to start, the fact that almost all
> the rank and file fighters in the Maoist movement are Dalits or
> tribals and that almost all the leadership are "high caste". The
> Dalits I know have had first hand experience with just how casteist
> the "Naxalite"/Maoist leadership is.
>
> When delving into the "political line" put forth by the Maoist
> movement in India and Nepal, it is rare to find mention of
> caste/varna, let alone any attempt to address caste/varna(color) in
> any sort of historical perspective. It would seem that the Maoist
> leaders would prefer to blend class with caste and avoid any dealing
> with such a potentially divisive question.
>
> The Dalit movement exemplified by the BSP cadre I know is firmly
> rooted in organizing Dalits into community collectives and focused on
> mobilizing Dalits in exercising their voting rights. When it is
> pointed out that no ruling class has ever peacefully relinquished
> their priviledges, i.e; through elections, my Dalit comrades point out
> that 85% of India Dalits still believe in the one, unifying tenent of
> Hinduism, varna/caste/color. Simply put, most Dalits believe they are
> being punished by God for sins in a previous life and their lot as
> "untouchables", Dalits, is Gods Will. If God willed your punishment
> today with the promise of a better re-birth in the next life , than
> trying to lift yourselfs and your childrens lot above that of cleaning
> the communal toilets is going against Gods Will. Sounds like a
> brilliant scheme for social control using a religion, Hinduism, in the
> opinion of all the Dalits I know.
>
> Taking into consideration just how mentally enslaved most Dalits
> remain, moving the masses of Dalits from being so crushed and broken
> to real liberation might take a series of steps instead of one giant
> leap, or so my Dalit comrades seem to feel. Dalits may have to see for
> themselves that casting a vote is not going to midwife any real
> liberation for the rank and file. While acknowledging that a series of
> trial and error may mark their struggle and that the Maoist scorn such
> an approach, Dalits feel that if the Maoist movement continues to
> ignore varna/caste while still dependent on Dalits to win power,
> Dalits are doomed to see their struggle for equal rights and justice
> betrayed by the new Brahmins, the leaders of todays Maoist movement.
>
> One fact remains utterly non debatable and that is that India and
> Nepal remain overwhelmingly a society of villages. Equally non
> debatable is that in India and Nepal's villages, caste rules . How the
> Maoist movement can hope to succeed without even addressing this issue
> in any real way bodes ill for any hopes the Maoist movement offers any
> real solutions to the most barbaric, inhumane system of human
> oppression in the world, Apartheid in India and Nepal.
>
> In a previous life Thomas C. Mountain was the publisher of the
> Ambedkar Journal and a founding member of the Phoolan Devi
> International Defense Committee
> thomascmountain at yahoo dot com
> 
>

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