Published in The Friday Times, Pakistan
It is a cliché now to say that Pakistan is a country in transition – on a highway to somewhere. The direction remains unclear but the speed of transformation is visibly defying its traditionally overbearing, and now cracking postcolonial state. Globalisation, the communications revolution and a growing middle class have altered the contours of a society beset by the baggage and layers of confusing history.
What has however emerged despite the affinity with jeans, FM radios and McDonalds is the visible trumpeting of caste-based identities. In Lahore, one finds hundreds of cars with the owner’s caste or tribe displayed as a marker of pride and distinctiveness. As an urbanite, I always found it difficult to comprehend the relevance of zaat-paat (casteism) until I experienced living in the peri-urban and sometimes rural areas of the Punjab as a public servant.
I recall the days when in a central Punjab district, I was mistaken for a Kakayzai (a Punjabi caste that claims to have originated from the Caucasus) so I started getting correspondence from the Anjuman-i-Kakayzai professionals who were supposed to hold each other’s hands in the manner of the Free Masons. I enjoyed the game and pretended that I was one of them for a while, until it became unbearable for its sheer silliness and mercenary objectives.
It was also here that a subordinate told me in chaste Punjabi how the Gujjar caste was not a social group but a ‘religion’ in itself. Or that the Rajputs were superior to everyone else, second only to the Syeds. All else was the junk that had converted from the lowly Hindus (of course this included my family). My first name is also a matter of sectarian interpretation. Another subordinate in my younger days lectured me on the importance of sticking together as the ‘victims’ of the Sunni majoritarian violence of Pakistani society. Mistaken as a Momin I also got a chance to know intra-group dynamics better, and also how closely knit such groups are and what they think of others. This reminds me of the horrific tales our domestic helper used to tell us about the Shi’ites, and as children we were scared to even go near a Moharram procession, until one day my Sunni parents fired her for poisoning their children’s minds.
My personal inclinations aside, for in the footsteps of the great Urdu poet Ghalib, I view myself as half a Shia, this has been a matter of concern. Can I not exist as a human being without being part of a herd? Obedience to hierarchies, conformity and identification with groups are central tenets of existing in Pakistan.
At a training institution fifteen years ago, where a group of us were being taught how to become ‘officers’, a colleague cooked up a fanciful story about me. In the lecture hall, I had argued for a secular state, quoting Jinnah’s August 11, 1947 speech and had highlighted the shoddy treatment of the minorities in Pakistan as a betrayal of the Quaid’s vision. This imaginative colleague circulated the rumour that the reason for my political views was that I belonged to the Ahmaddiya Jamaat. One could of course talk of the marginalised only if one was a part of that group. Otherwise why should we care, semi-citizens that we are!
In the twenty first century, Punjab’s entire electoral landscape is still defined by caste and biradari loyalties. In the 1980s, General Zia ul Haq’s machinations spearheaded a second social engineering in the Punjab by resuscitating the demons of clan, caste and tribe.
Party-less elections helped Zia to undermine the PPP but it also gave enormous leeway to the state agencies to pick and choose loyalties when election was all about the elders of a biradari. His Arain (a non-land tilling caste) background became a topic of discussion as many Arains used this card to great personal and commercial advantage during his tenure. This is similar to what the Kashmiris have perceived under the multiple reigns of the now rechristened (in a democratic sense) Sharifs of the Punjab, who are proud Kashmiris.
Why blame the Punjabis only? In the early years of Pakistan, the migrants from India had set the ground for the politics of patronage along ethnic and group-lines. Karachi became divided into little Lucknows, Delhis and other centres of nostalgia. Employment opportunities and claims of property, as several personal accounts and autobiographies reveal, were doled out on the basis of affiliation to pre-partition networks – Aligarh, Delhi, UP qasbaas and Hyderabadi neighbourhoods. The same goes for the smaller units of Pakistan. Small wonder that the Bengalis ran away from the Pakistan project, despite being its original initiators.
We pride ourselves on being a nuclear armed Islamic state that broke away from the prejudiced Baniyas whose abominable caste system was inhuman. But what do we practice? Who said casteism was extinct in Pakistan? My friends have not been allowed to marry outside their caste or sect, Christian servants in Pakistani households are not permitted to touch kitchen utensils, and the word ‘choora’ is the ultimate insult after the ritualistic out-of wedlock sex and incestuous abuses involving mothers and sisters or their unmentionable anatomical parts. A Sindhi acquaintance told me how easy it was to exploit the Hindu girls at his workplace or at home. And what about the many blasphemy cases in the Punjabi villages, the roots of which are located in social hierarchies and chains of obedience.
The untouchables of the cities and the villages are called something else but they remain the underbelly of our existence. Admittedly these incidences are on a lesser scale than in India. That simply is a function of demographics. Even Mohammad Iqbal, the great reformist poet, lamented in one of his couplets:
Youn tau Syed bhi ho, Mirza bhi ho, Afghan bhi ho
Tum sabhi kuch ho, batao tau Mussalman bhi ho!
(You are Syeds, Mirzas and Afghans / You are everything but Muslims).
Enter into a seemingly educated Punjabi setting and the conversation will not shy away from references to caste characteristics. For instance, I once heard a lawyer make a remark about a high-ranking public official, calling him a nai (barber) and therefore branding him as the lowest of the low. One of the reasons for Zardari-bashing in Sindh, has to do with the Zardari tribe’s historical moorings. They were camel herders as opposed to the ruling classes with fiefs.
When the young motorists playing FM radio, mast music, arranging dates on mastee chats, display the primordial caste characteristic on their windscreens, one worries if the ongoing change process can deliver a better society. Superficial signs of change cannot make up for the need for a secular educational system, equality of opportunity and accountability of political elites and their patron-state that use casteism as an instrument of gaining and sustaining power.
More bewildered, I wonder where I belong. Bulleh Shah has taught me that shedding categorisations is the first step towards self-knowledge. But I live in a society where branding and group labels are essential, if not unavoidable.
For this reason I am peeved that I still don’t know who I am.
Raza Rumi blogs at www.razarumi.com and edits Pak Tea
It is a cliché now to say that Pakistan is a country in transition – on a highway to somewhere. The direction remains unclear but the speed of transformation is visibly defying its traditionally overbearing, and now cracking postcolonial state. Globalisation, the communications revolution and a growing middle class have altered the contours of a society beset by the baggage and layers of confusing history.
What has however emerged despite the affinity with jeans, FM radios and McDonalds is the visible trumpeting of caste-based identities. In Lahore, one finds hundreds of cars with the owner’s caste or tribe displayed as a marker of pride and distinctiveness. As an urbanite, I always found it difficult to comprehend the relevance of zaat-paat (casteism) until I experienced living in the peri-urban and sometimes rural areas of the Punjab as a public servant.
I recall the days when in a central Punjab district, I was mistaken for a Kakayzai (a Punjabi caste that claims to have originated from the Caucasus) so I started getting correspondence from the Anjuman-i-Kakayzai professionals who were supposed to hold each other’s hands in the manner of the Free Masons. I enjoyed the game and pretended that I was one of them for a while, until it became unbearable for its sheer silliness and mercenary objectives.
It was also here that a subordinate told me in chaste Punjabi how the Gujjar caste was not a social group but a ‘religion’ in itself. Or that the Rajputs were superior to everyone else, second only to the Syeds. All else was the junk that had converted from the lowly Hindus (of course this included my family). My first name is also a matter of sectarian interpretation. Another subordinate in my younger days lectured me on the importance of sticking together as the ‘victims’ of the Sunni majoritarian violence of Pakistani society. Mistaken as a Momin I also got a chance to know intra-group dynamics better, and also how closely knit such groups are and what they think of others. This reminds me of the horrific tales our domestic helper used to tell us about the Shi’ites, and as children we were scared to even go near a Moharram procession, until one day my Sunni parents fired her for poisoning their children’s minds.
My personal inclinations aside, for in the footsteps of the great Urdu poet Ghalib, I view myself as half a Shia, this has been a matter of concern. Can I not exist as a human being without being part of a herd? Obedience to hierarchies, conformity and identification with groups are central tenets of existing in Pakistan.
At a training institution fifteen years ago, where a group of us were being taught how to become ‘officers’, a colleague cooked up a fanciful story about me. In the lecture hall, I had argued for a secular state, quoting Jinnah’s August 11, 1947 speech and had highlighted the shoddy treatment of the minorities in Pakistan as a betrayal of the Quaid’s vision. This imaginative colleague circulated the rumour that the reason for my political views was that I belonged to the Ahmaddiya Jamaat. One could of course talk of the marginalised only if one was a part of that group. Otherwise why should we care, semi-citizens that we are!
In the twenty first century, Punjab’s entire electoral landscape is still defined by caste and biradari loyalties. In the 1980s, General Zia ul Haq’s machinations spearheaded a second social engineering in the Punjab by resuscitating the demons of clan, caste and tribe.
Party-less elections helped Zia to undermine the PPP but it also gave enormous leeway to the state agencies to pick and choose loyalties when election was all about the elders of a biradari. His Arain (a non-land tilling caste) background became a topic of discussion as many Arains used this card to great personal and commercial advantage during his tenure. This is similar to what the Kashmiris have perceived under the multiple reigns of the now rechristened (in a democratic sense) Sharifs of the Punjab, who are proud Kashmiris.
Why blame the Punjabis only? In the early years of Pakistan, the migrants from India had set the ground for the politics of patronage along ethnic and group-lines. Karachi became divided into little Lucknows, Delhis and other centres of nostalgia. Employment opportunities and claims of property, as several personal accounts and autobiographies reveal, were doled out on the basis of affiliation to pre-partition networks – Aligarh, Delhi, UP qasbaas and Hyderabadi neighbourhoods. The same goes for the smaller units of Pakistan. Small wonder that the Bengalis ran away from the Pakistan project, despite being its original initiators.
We pride ourselves on being a nuclear armed Islamic state that broke away from the prejudiced Baniyas whose abominable caste system was inhuman. But what do we practice? Who said casteism was extinct in Pakistan? My friends have not been allowed to marry outside their caste or sect, Christian servants in Pakistani households are not permitted to touch kitchen utensils, and the word ‘choora’ is the ultimate insult after the ritualistic out-of wedlock sex and incestuous abuses involving mothers and sisters or their unmentionable anatomical parts. A Sindhi acquaintance told me how easy it was to exploit the Hindu girls at his workplace or at home. And what about the many blasphemy cases in the Punjabi villages, the roots of which are located in social hierarchies and chains of obedience.
The untouchables of the cities and the villages are called something else but they remain the underbelly of our existence. Admittedly these incidences are on a lesser scale than in India. That simply is a function of demographics. Even Mohammad Iqbal, the great reformist poet, lamented in one of his couplets:
Youn tau Syed bhi ho, Mirza bhi ho, Afghan bhi ho
Tum sabhi kuch ho, batao tau Mussalman bhi ho!
(You are Syeds, Mirzas and Afghans / You are everything but Muslims).
Enter into a seemingly educated Punjabi setting and the conversation will not shy away from references to caste characteristics. For instance, I once heard a lawyer make a remark about a high-ranking public official, calling him a nai (barber) and therefore branding him as the lowest of the low. One of the reasons for Zardari-bashing in Sindh, has to do with the Zardari tribe’s historical moorings. They were camel herders as opposed to the ruling classes with fiefs.
When the young motorists playing FM radio, mast music, arranging dates on mastee chats, display the primordial caste characteristic on their windscreens, one worries if the ongoing change process can deliver a better society. Superficial signs of change cannot make up for the need for a secular educational system, equality of opportunity and accountability of political elites and their patron-state that use casteism as an instrument of gaining and sustaining power.
More bewildered, I wonder where I belong. Bulleh Shah has taught me that shedding categorisations is the first step towards self-knowledge. But I live in a society where branding and group labels are essential, if not unavoidable.
For this reason I am peeved that I still don’t know who I am.
Raza Rumi blogs at www.razarumi.com and edits Pak Tea
We were one of the first ones to begin supporting your site. We want to engage the Muslim Dalits, with infromation, funding and access to the media. However we are very disappointd that your site has chosen to pubslish Anti-Pakistan articles which present a wrong and inccurate picture of Dalits in Pakistan.
ReplyDeleteMuslims in Pakistan are not under any caste system. In Sindh becuase of the number of Hindus, there might be some anamolies, but in the rest of Pakistan no one asks anyone about caste or creed.
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Will the new elections in Bharat (aka India) bring about a sea change? Will Mayawati be able to pull a rabbit out of her hat and unite diverse groups? Is Mayawati sell out the Dalit interests for personal gain? The Dalit Muslim Communist alliance has been tried before. Can it work this time?
In 2008 the left lost. The grand alliance between the Dalits, the Muslims, and the Communists failed–just like it failed in the 1940. Then they couldn’t unite. Now they united but were stabbed in the back by some in the opposition who supported the government. The vote of no confidence failed because the Congress spent millions of Dollars in bribes and even allowed convicted members of Parliament who were in jail to come in a vote for Premier Singh’s government.
Their propagandistic deception begins with the simple use of the word democracy. ..country qualifies as a constitutional republic, let alone a true democracy. Rife with election fraud, Corporatism, gross wealth disparities, militarism, belligerent expansionism, toxic nationalism, and a laundry list of traits characterizing a fascist state, the United States could easily qualify as one of democracy’s greatest foes. India does not lag far behind.
Hype and spin aside, determined investigation and fastidious scholarship by people like Bangladeshi barrister M.B.I. Munshi, researcher Isha Khan, and many others reveal the ugly realities behind India’s corporate media façade. India and the United States do share a number of commonalities, but few of them relate to “democracy”, “liberty”, or “solid moral foundations”.
While it is true that both nations were founded by noble people who wrested themselves free of the yoke of Great Britain’s imperial oppression, like degenerate trust fund children, the heirs of liberty have defecated on their family’s reputation and squandered their fortune.
As Munshi’s exhaustive research demonstrates, India’s policies, attitudes, and actions toward its neighbors are quite analogous to the machinations of the United States throughout Central and South America. Replete with its own version of the Monroe Doctrine (Akhand Bharat) and an intelligence agency called RAW (their version of the CIA), India has a long-term commitment to wielding undue power and influence throughout the subcontinent. Accelerating Humanity’s Demise By Jason Miller
There were many visionaries in the Subcontinent who saw he dangers of majoritarianism. A few had the foresight who actually came up with plans to resolve the rights of the minorities in the Subcontinent. His Cabinet Mission Plan was a stroke of genious and would have bridged the gap between Hindu and Muslim, Sikh and Dalit. It was torpedoed by the right wing of the Indian National Congress which shunned not only Jinnah but also Ambedkar and Bose. Thus began the politics of race, religion and creed.
“The Indian society does not consist of individuals. It consists of innumerable collection of castes, which are exclusive in their life and have no common experience to share and have no bond of sympathy. The existence of caste system is a standing denial of the existence of those ideals of society and therefore of democracy. An Indian cannot eat or marry with an Indian simply because he or she does not belong to his or her caste. An Indian simply can not touch an Indian because he or she does belong to his or her caste.” Ambedkar
India: Interaction of Hindus in power with Muslims
Fact & Fiction: What the world thinks of Mohandas Gandhi!
EU says “India is being ruled by castes, not laws”-Indian state machinery supports License to kill Dalits
India: 3500-yrs of massacres of Dalit-Sudra Blacks by Arya-Brahmins
Sudra Holocaust: Genocide of 1 million Dalits in India since 1947: About three million Dalit women have been raped and around one million Dalits killed from the time of Independence. This is 25 times more than number of soldiers killed during the wars fought after independence. That is why Dalits do not need Aryan culture or Hindu Dharma based on caste any more. …” [Dr. Tulsiram]
Orissa erupts: Hinduvata extremists massacre Christian Dalits
India: BJP or INC couldn’t tolerate a Dalit woman as PM-Mayawati
What happens after elections in a Psephocracy?
http://rupeenews.com/2008/05/29/amnesty-int-2008-report-excoriates-horrid-india/
http://rupeenews.com/2008/06/08/india-hindu-extremist-states-have-most-anti-dalit-hate-crimes/
The plight of the 250 million Untouchable Dalit in India (20% of population)
http://rupeenews.com/2008/05/29/amnesty-int-2008-report-excoriates-horrid-india/
http://rupeenews.com/2008/06/08/india-hindu-extremist-states-have-most-anti-dalit-hate-crimes/
http://rupeenews.com/2008/03/11/dr-br-ambedkar-on-gandhi-the-black-untouchables-gandhi-is-the-greatest-enemy-the-untouchables-have-ever-had-in-india/
Indo-Sino Oligopolistic Competition v Indo-Pak Spiraling Hostility
Orissa erupts: Hinduvata extremists massacre Christian Dalits
India: 3500-yrs of massacres of Dalit-Sudra Blacks by Arya-Brahmins
Sudra Holocaust: Genocide of 1 million Dalits in India since 1947: About three million Dalit women have been raped and around one million Dalits killed from the time of Independence. This is 25 times more than number of soldiers killed during the wars fought after independence. That is why Dalits do not need Aryan culture or Hindu Dharma based on caste any more. …” [Dr. Tulsiram]Can the current leaders of Jamat Islami Hind, the Indian Union Muslim League, the communist party of India and the Dalits resurrect the Jinnah-Ambadekar-Bose dream of crating a center left coalition among all the minorities in India today. Jinnah came close to building the powerful coalition . Today Mayawati is busy as a beaver building this new coalition which is working to defeat the BJP-VHP in the next elections.Dr Ambedkar when pressed for separate electorate for the depressed classes, feared that in the Parliamentary form of government, the voices of dissent would always be decried. It is a majority vote but majority can not always be right. Secondly, he feared that those who will represent the oppressed community might not be the ‘well-wishers’ of the community as they will be more bothered about getting votes of other communities, particularly if they are fighting from so called reserve constituencies, their worry would be more on focusing on other communities rather than their own. This will only create a leadership which would be corrupt and could easily be co-opted. Hence there was upper caste leadership of a majority of parties giving the Dalits ’symbolic’ presence in their parties A no confidence in current form of Parliamentary democracy Vidya Bhushan Rawat vbrawat@gmail.com
That was then. This is now. Does the future of Bharat hold a new future for the penury stricken, poverty infested people of India, or will it bring about real change? The Dalit Network in very positive about he possibilities.
The general elections in India is just a couple of months away. As usual the main upper caste parties Congress and the BJP are blowing their trumpets in their manuwadi media. They are claiming that Rahul Gandhi (Congress) and Advani(BJP) are the prime minsters in waiting. But do they know what is the reality.
None of these parties are going to get a complete mandate. We have to thank the BJP for this. The Congress always represented the upper caste intrests and they used the Bahujan votes to come to power. In a democracy numbers means power. The BJP or the Brahmin Jati Party of Hindu terrorists fractured the Congress mandate by weaning away the upper caste votes from Congress. The BJP used the Ram Janma Bhoomi movement to rope in the Backward Castes. But that movement has died down as the Backward castes have realised that BJP is only intrested in their own Jati and they do not care for the Sudras. And about Dalits they do not even treat them as Humans. The only support BJP has now is from the 15% upper caste dwija vote bank. Even this 15% is fractured to a great extent. The Congress with thier pro upper caste policies have aliented the Bahujans. That is why there are so many regional parties like DMK, PMK,JD(S) and the leftists. All these people have literally killed the congress votebank.
Dhaka Dairy: India’s Illusory Democracies accelerating Humanity’s Demise
Delhi Darbar: India’s hollow secularism & genocide
What happens after elections in a Psephocracy?
Oh, Bharat! Why this pandemic deviltry?
Rebutting Indian fiction of “Democracy”: Indian Dynastic “Democracy” is actually Plutocratic Kleptocracy
Victims of Brahminic tyranny in India: The forgotten Dalits, Muslims, Women
India as world power! Part 1
World power India: Part 2
The Manuwadis supporting the Brahmin Jati party has made their biggest mistake. Because now there is no way the BJP can come to power with their old and senile leader L.K.Advani. The butcher of Gujrath, the OBC Narendra Modi has no support outside Gujrath. BJP is just a dying party. Its use is over.
We at Dalit Nation want the Manuwadis to vote for BJP so that the Congress does not get a majority and there is a fractured mandate. And this is what is going to happen. In a fractured mandate our sister the revolutionary Dalit Leader Mayavathi will be the next prime minister of India. Even if the BSP gets forty seats, which is half of the seats in Uttar Pradesh, Mayavathi will come to power in Delhi. The left parties, the regional parties will support the Ambedkarite BSP and we will have the first Dalit Prime Minister of India. This election heralds the beggining of the end of Manuvadi Hindutva. But of course we want Hindutva to continue for some more time because that is how Hindu society will dis-integrate. Because Hindutva means upper caste.
We at Dalit Nation understand the forces of History. Just like we had a Black President in America we are going to have a Black untouchable prime minister of India. The Hindus are trembling and pissing in their pants. But you cannot prevent the forces of History. Mayavathi as PM - The Change has arrived February 9, 2009 at 7:34 am · Filed under Brahmin, Buddhism, dalit ·Tagged BSP, dalit,Mayavathi
Though not all Dalits are as optimistic. Some feel that Mayawati has already sold out to the highest bidder and no longer represents the cause of the downtrodden. Many accuse her of corruption and ill practices.
In 2006, the JIH had helped the left alliance to return to power in the southern most state of Kerala, trouncing the Congress party and its ally Indian Union Muslim League (IUML). But, Maulana Umri said, the options are still open at the national level.
The largest Indian Muslim organisation also announced on Monday that it would launch a political party in the near future. Maulana Umri told a press conference that his organisation was seriously considering launching a political party to participate in the electoral process. By Iftikhar Gilani Dawn. JI Hind, Indian communist parties to jointly teach lesson to BJP, Congress
Maulana Umri said such experiments in Hyderabad and Kerala had borne fruits where the Majlis-e-Ittehadul-Muslimeen and the Indian Union Muslim League respectively had proved forces to reckon with. But, these parties lack national character, he said, stressing that there was a need to consolidate Muslims and other minorities, who comprise 40 percent of the Indian population.
He said Muslims were getting disenchanted with the country’s political system and there was a need to restore their faith in the system.
Maulana Umari said if the plans to float the party did not materialise before the upcoming Lok Sabha polls, he would advise Muslims to vote for the Congress in constituencies where it was engaged in a direct fight with the BJP and to choose other secular parties where the Congress is weak. He said while the BJP was implicitly anti-Muslim, the Congress had also failed to address the community’s concerns.According to Maulana Umari, other parties have also only paid lip service to the community, using it as a vote bank. “It’s time to change,” he added. Iftikhar Gilani Dawn.
JI Hind, Indian communist parties to jointly teach lesson to BJP, CongressTheir propagandistic deception begins with the simple use of the word democracy. ..country qualifies as a constitutional republic, let alone a true democracy. Rife with election fraud, Corporatism, gross wealth disparities, militarism, belligerent expansionism, toxic nationalism, and a laundry list of traits characterizing a fascist state, the United States could easily qualify as one of democracy’s greatest foes. India does not lag far behind.
Hype and spin aside, determined investigation and fastidious scholarship by people like Bangladeshi barrister M.B.I. Munshi, researcher Isha Khan, and many others reveal the ugly realities behind India’s corporate media façade. India and the United States do share a number of commonalities, but few of them relate to “democracy”, “liberty”, or “solid moral foundations”.While it is true that both nations were founded by noble people who wrested themselves free of the yoke of Great Britain’s imperial oppression, like degenerate trust fund children, the heirs of liberty have defecated on their family’s reputation and squandered their fortune.
As Munshi’s exhaustive research demonstrates, India’s policies, attitudes, and actions toward its neighbors are quite analogous to the machinations of the United States throughout Central and South America. Replete with its own version of the Monroe Doctrine (Akhand Bharat) and an intelligence agency called RAW (their version of the CIA), India has a long-term commitment to wielding undue power and influence throughout the subcontinent. Accelerating Humanity’s Demise By Jason Miller
If this new political reality emerges it will be a seminal moment in Indian history. For the first time in hundreds of years in Indian history the disenfranchised and the downtrodden would challenge the forts of power ensconced in caste and bigotry. If Maulana Jalaluddin Umri, Sitaram Yechuri and ms. Mayawati can build a new party they will revolutionize not only India but the entire Subcontinent. Relations with Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal and Sri Lanka would improve precipitously.
The JIH chief, however, emphasised that his political party would not be an all-Muslim party. “All downtrodden, oppressed, outcastes, tribals and those believing in peace and justice would be allowed entry into this party,” he said.
Plight of 450 million Indian enslaved Untouchables. More than 60 per cent of Dalits are landless. Over 40 million of them are bonded labourers. Dalits are the worst victims of labour coercion “The 1991 Government survey of India states that on an average day, two Dalits are killed, three Dalit women are raped, two Dalits’ houses are burned and fifty Dalits are assaulted by people of a higher caste.” ” High-caste Brahmins formed a private army, the Ranvir Sena, to stop communists from encouraging Dalit field workers to demand higher wages
Delhi: 3500-yrs of massacres of Dalit-Sudra Blacks by Arya-Brahmins Who are the Untouchables? by Dr. Ambedkar Sudra Holocaust:Ongoing Genocide of millions of Dalits in India Dalit leader Dr. Ambedkar struggled to emancipate the “untouchables” from the shackles of Hindu prescribed slavery-- the caste system.
Ambeekar wanted to free the Dalits & to allow them to regain their inalienable rights as human beings--highlighting the servitude, humiliation, trials & tribulations of being born in a low caste family and struggled to uplift the “untouchables”, the indigenous people, women & other disadvantaged sections of society.
Dr. Ambedkar on Pakistan
Today Dr. Kancha Iiaiah carries on the struggle of the Dalits.
Civil Rights Activist Dr. Kancha Ilaiah
Why I am not a Hindu and other Dalit articles
Muslims must work AMONG Dalits & liberate them: Dr. Ilaiah
INDIA: Dr. Ilaiah, persecuted Dalit author of “I am not a Hindu”
Mr. Moin,
ReplyDeleteCasteism might not be so deep and severe in whole of the pakistan but casteims among Muslims is something which does not exists in India only but it does exists in Pakistan and Bangladesh too. Muslims are divided on the basis of caste and creed in whole of the world and we should accept this reality and talk about the remedy in spite of justifying this disease which is very common among Muslims.