http://www.countercurrents.org/waghmare030607.htm

India's Lower Castes

By Nishikant Waghmare

03 June, 2007
Countercurrents.org

Mahatma Jotirao Phule, Social Reformer of India, stared the fight
against castes exclusion in our education system . His book titled
Slavery took the Marathi world by storm in 1873. It was Phule who told
the Hunter Commission in 1882 that the British were collecting revenue
from Shudras (Backwards) and Ati-Shudras (Dalits) to educate
upper-caste Brahmins. This, he claimed, was atrocious and the remedy
he suggested was universalisation of primary education. Later his
disciple Dr. B.R.Ambedkar demanded equality of opportunity from the
Simon Commission in 1928. It is from his memorandum one discovers that
enrolment of lower castes in colleges was zero in 1882 and just one
per cent in 1923-24. These facts have never been discussed in our
mainstream discourses.

Government of India's decision to extend 27 per cent proposed quota to
OBC (Other Backwards) in higher educational institutions. The attack
by elites and the corporate sector against the proposed quotas for
OBCs in the IITs, IIMs, and Central Universities, and reservation in
the private sector for SCs and STs is deplorable though predictable.
They condemn the proposals on the ground that quotas would jeopardize
merit and efficiency, which are the two main planks of a globalize and
competitive economy. It is distressing that the defenders of merit
forget that they
are condemning nearly 80 per cent of the country's population as
non-meritorious, inefficient and unworthy of occupying a due space in
the overall structure of entitlements.

Note what M.K. Gandhi said about the Caste. And how shamelessly he
defended it "Caste has nothing to do with religion. Varna and Ashrama
are institutions which have nothing to do with caste. The law of Varna
teaches us that we have each one of us to earn our bread by following
the ancestral calling. It defines not our rights but our duties. The
callings of a Brahmin- spiritual leader-and a scavenger are equal and
their due performance carries equal merit before God and at one time
seems to have carried identical reward before man. Both were entitled
to their
livelihood..." The Harijan, July 2, 1936.

Occupation was the defining category that determined hierarchies in
Manus's Varnaashrama. Manu assumed that economic and social orders
complemented each other. Abraham Lincoln says; "As I would not be a
slave, so I would not be a master. This expresses my idea of
democracy." Various philosophers, political scientists and writers
have given numerous definitions of democracy. A relentless champion of
human rights and staunch believer in democracy, Dr B.R. Ambedkar says,
"Democracy is not a form of government, but a form of Social
Organization."

Dr Ambedkar believed that in democracy revolutionary changes in the
economic and social life of the people are brought about without
bloodshed. The conditions for that are as follows: (1) there should
not be glaring inequalities in society i.e. privilege for one class;
(2) the existence of an opposition; (3) equality in law and
administration: (4) observance of constitutional morality: (5) no
tyranny of the majority: (6) moral order of society: (7) public
conscience."

Addressing the Constituent Assembly, he suggested certain devices
essential to maintain democracy: "(i) Constitutional methods (ii) not
to lay liberties at the feet of a great man (iii) make political
democracy a social democracy."

Empowering India "Bring into the mainstream all those kept out"? It
involves the establishment of a social-political order in which no
discrimination takes place on the basis of race, caste, creed or sex
and where all citizens enjoy equal opportunities and at least an
acceptable minimum quality of living.

Dr. Ambedkar is one of the most famous Indians of the last century.
Father of the Indian Constitution and one of the greatest Indian
intellectuals and political agitators, Dr. Ambedkar was born into an
"Untouchable" Caste. After 2000 Years of Man's anti-human laws when
India needed a new lawgiver, she turned to one who was born an
"Untouchable". On October 14, 1956 in Nagpur, Central India, Dr.
Ambedkar, along with half a million other Dalits, converted to
Buddhism- Dr.Ambedkar's interpretation of Buddhism is a modern and
humanistic one. Such is the intensity of he problem and the yearning
for dignity.

Dr. Amertaya Sen Said, The real reason why the erstwhile
"untouchables" or the poorest of the poor have the freedom to argue
today is that the working of democracy - with all its inadequacies -
has created a real shift in power to the deprived and dispossessed.

"I tell you, religion is for man and not man for religion. If you want
to organize, consolidate and be successful in this world, change this
religion, […] The religion that does not teach its followers to show
humanity in dealing with its o-religionists is nothing but a display
of a force. The religion that teaches its followers to suffer the
touch of animals but not the touch of human beings is not a religion
but a mockery. The religion that compels the ignorant to be ignorant
and the poor to be poor is not a religion but a visitation!"----Dr.
B.R Ambedkar. Today's UPA government got 80 Secretary's Post in New
Delhi one SC and one ST holding a post as Secretary of Union
Government, as per my reading goes in last 59 years not even 10 IAS
officers being appointed to Secretary post in Union Government or
Chief Secy. in State? In politics though 22% MLAs and MPs are from our
lot, portfolios like Home, Finance, Industry, Commerce, Power,
Revenue, Commercial taxes, excise, transport, irrigation, and H.R.D.
and Communication are still the privilege of the Upper Castes. What we
can achieve?

My fear is that when the State, the Central Government and the PSUs in
the country could not achieve even 22% reservation in the last 59
years, how would affirmative action help? I wish to inform you that it
is urgent need to revamp the administrative reforms and most of the
government agencies in the county. "Reservations per se are not the
Solution. The focus should be on high-quality education for all."

An empowered India bereft of the respect for women, values of
civilised existence and morality will collapse in the face of the
disaffection and discontent of those who have suffered for centuries.
Day in and day out we take pride in claiming that India has a
5000-year-old civilization. But the way the Dalits and those
suppressed are being treated by the people who wield power and
authority speaks volumes for the degradation of our moral structure
and civilized standards.

Education is a change agent. What kind of change and progress can we
anticipate if the education system is burdened with stereotype of the
inherited merit of the few? How do we expect Universities to flourish
and compete so long as we keep them as islands of caste prejudices and
vanities?

The only substitute to quota and reservation is to create a more
egalitarian social order guaranteeing equal opportunities to all and,
simultaneously, to fight against all sources of inequality, exclusion
and discrimination.

The writer is a Government Officer, Views expressed are personal.
Nishikant Waghmare can be contacted at [EMAIL PROTECTED]


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