http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/06/01/asia/india.php


Fighting their way to the bottom in India
By Amelia Gentleman

Friday, June 1, 2007
 NEW DELHI: A fight for the right to be downwardly mobile exploded
this week in north India, as a powerful community of Indian shepherds
asserted that the best way to rise up in modern society was to take a
step down in the regimented class hierarchy.

Tension over the still-rigid caste classifications, which underpin the
Indian social system, spilled over into riots across the state of
Rajasthan, with at least 23 people killed during clashes with the
police. By Friday evening, protests had spread to the outskirts of the
capital, New Delhi.

This was not the usual show of anger at the ever-prevalent
discrimination faced by members of lower-caste groups. Instead, it
stemmed from controversy over a demand from the Gujjar community of
farmers and shepherds to have their low caste status officially
downgraded, relegating them to the bottom classification in the caste
ladder.

If Gujjars were to be shunted into the Scheduled Caste category, a
classification that includes Dalits (once known as untouchables) and
tribal communities, they would qualify for greater privileges under
India's affirmative action program, which was designed to lift up
those groups that for centuries were viewed as "pollutants,"
ostracized by mainstream society and prevented from accumulating
wealth.

Quotas of university places and lucrative government positions are
reserved for members of the Scheduled Castes under the system that was
created when India became independent 60 years ago. Although the
Gujjar caste is also eligible for some privileges because of its
position in the second-from-bottom grouping - known in bureaucratic
lexicon as Other Backward Classes - its leaders point out that members
would enjoy much better preferential treatment if it were demoted to
the lowest rung.

Sachin Pilot, the Congress Party member of Parliament for the region
where six people were killed by police gunfire Tuesday and a member of
the Gujjar caste, said as many as 70,000 protesters were still
blocking the road out of Jaipur.

"Most people don't realize that India's new economic prosperity is not
shared by the vast majority," he said in a telephone interview.

"The Gujjars feel they have been very deprived. Access to quotas would
give the community a sense of hope."

Frustrated at the state government's refusal to meet their demand,
thousands of Gujjars blockaded the national highways around the state
capital of Jaipur, known as the pink city, on Tuesday. The protests
brought the state of Rajasthan, much loved by tourists, to a virtual
standstill all week. Vehicles were prevented from traveling on to Agra
and the Taj Mahal. Thousands of trucks were stuck for several days by
the blockades, tourist trains were canceled and government vehicles
scorched.

Government buildings were attacked in one Rajasthan town Friday,
prompting the authorities to issue a shoot-on-sight order.

Thirteen people were shot and killed by the police Tuesday, Indian
media reported, as officers tried to disperse crowds that had gathered
to shut off the national highway. Two more were killed by the police
Thursday, Reuters reported.

"Let a hundred people die," Colonel Kirori Singh Baisala, one of the
Gujjar leaders, told The Times of India on Thursday. "But we are clear
in our objectives. We have suffered enough and would not go back until
we get the Scheduled Caste status."

Kalu Lal Gurjar, a member of the caste and a minister in the Rajasthan
government who is supporting the protesters, said that the Indian
government had promised to reclassify the group as a Scheduled Caste
in 1964. "At that time, there was opposition from within the Gujjar
community itself, because they thought that it would be demeaning to
be associated with the Scheduled Castes," he said in a telephone
interview Friday.

Later, when the material benefits of being consigned to the bottom of
the ladder became more obvious, the mood changed. "The community has
been agitating since 1980s for inclusion," he said.

The debate over India's affirmative action policy hovers constantly at
the top of the political agenda. The Hindu concept of untouchability
was abolished in 1950, but the centuries-old caste system, and the
deep-rooted prejudices that go with it, remains.

In rural India, Dalits are frequently prevented from sharing the same
water pump as the rest of the village. Even in middle-class urban
India, where the divisions are less obvious, people will often inquire
indirectly for clues of caste membership on first meeting, putting
together details of surname, origin and father's profession to make a
mental classification.

For some the oppression is so intolerable that they abandon the
religion altogether. Last Sunday, several thousand Dalits and tribal
Indians converted en masse to Buddhism in a ceremony in Mumbai, to
escape their position at the bottom of the social pile.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh recently compared India's caste system
to South Africa under apartheid. "Untouchability is not just social
discrimination. It is a blot on humanity," he said. But his
government's programs for eliminating the problem have proved as
controversial and as unsuccessful as those begun by his predecessors.

India has more than 6,000 castes and subcastes, 3,743 of which are
designated "backward" on the grounds of social and educational
deprivation. Scheduled castes represent around 25 percent of the total
population. Designed originally to abolish caste divisions by helping
the Dalits and tribal communities to escape destitution, the quota
system was expanded in the early 1990s to assist the Other Backward
Classes, those who were less well placed in the ancient hierarchy.

Opponents of the expanded quota system argue that instead of
eliminating caste consciousness, it has further entrenched it, making
society more aware of divisions and more resentful of rival castes.

The caste tension sparked by the Gujjar protest illustrates the depth
of inter-caste hostility, intensified by the fierce competition for
government quotas, analysts say. The Meenas, another Rajasthan
community ranked in the Scheduled Caste bracket, have started a
counterprotest against the Gujjars, concerned that their share of the
pie would be diminished if the Gujjars were to be reclassified.

Four people were killed in clashes between the communities on Friday,
officials said.

The demands of the Gujjar caste have been condemned by some as
"cynical." "It's about milking the system," said Dipankar Gupta, a
sociologist and expert on caste, adding that the Gujjar community had
never been "brutalized or pushed down" as Dalits had.

This kind of "political maneuver" was the inevitable consequence of
the government's affirmative action policy, he said. "If you play the
caste game, you will end up with caste war. Because of the government
intervention, these identities have become heightened."

Chandrabhan Prasad, a Dalit newspaper columnist, said: "There is no
basis for reclassification. Gujjars are low caste, not outcasts. They
have always been part of the mainstream, unlike the Dalits, who were
rejected as pollutants and excluded from the rest of society."

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