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Raj Kumar Makkad (Adv P & H High Court Chandigarh)     24 September 2010

CASTE, A DOUBLE-EDGED SWORD

It is about capitalism and hierarchy

The government has now reached a final conclusion on the raging controversy over the caste-based census in the country. In order to reconcile with the contending positions, the government has decided to conduct a separate stand-alone exercise of a parallel house-to-house enumeration of the caste affiliations of households. It is not yet clear as to whether the results and the data of the census proper and this separate exercise will be integrated in the end.

 

Caste has managed to sustain itself because of the

 

nature of the underlying economic relations and processes. It grew as part of our pre-feudal and feudal phase of history. Today, though, feudal relations have given way to semi-feudal relations with a great degree of penetration of capitalist market forces in our countryside. Post-independent governments and the ruling elite have not only refused to deal a death blow to caste, but have actually used it as a major instrument of political, and more particularly, electoral mobilisation.

 

The contemporary political process has become more complex. On the one hand, hitherto socially oppressed sections like Dalits and OBCs have come to question discrimination on the ground of social stratification and, on the other, campaigned aggressively for a share in the political process. However, what is absent from such an articulation is the question of equality in the economic sphere of which the most notable is the need for agrarian reforms and commensurate change in the land relations.

 

On the other hand, major shifts in the overall economic paradigm of international finance capital-driven globalisation have accentuated economic inequality. It is obvious that this development in the economic sphere has impacted socially-oppressed sections more adversely. This has led to a stronger demand for social justice. The consequent consolidation of the socially deprived sections and castes has resulted in obscurantism and medievalism in the traditionally advanced social groupings and castes.

 

Phenomena like honour killing have, thus, become part of the contemporary social responses. It is unfortunate that this phenomenon has come to threaten the very vitals of our society and polity. The unity and reconciliation which was part of our freedom struggle and which led to the modern vision of the composite and plural Indian nationhood has been jettisoned. And, this vision did get institutionalised and enshrined in our Constitution. Unfortunately, the realisation of this ideal has remained an elusive goal. The present neo-liberal developmental paradigm has actually accentuated the gulf between precept and practice.

 

While it can be nobody's brief to deny the legitimate concern for social justice, it is equally important to recognise the dual character of caste. At one level, the aspirations of the oppressed castes represents an extremely legitimate concern. Unless linked with the process of achieving economic equality, such an approach can end up reinforcing caste and its implied

 

hierarchy. Therefore, the battle for social justice cannot achieve what it intends to unless it transcends the demand for reservation and integrates with the larger question of achieving a holistic equality. While the need for a social profile of our demography is important, it cannot be done in a manner which would strengthen the retrograde process of the use of caste for electoral mobilisation — particularly those of the dominant castes.

 

Therefore, the need for differentiating the two processes — that of the census and caste enumeration was a real democratic requirement. Additionally, there was a technical complexity. The nature of OBCs does not have pan-Indian homogeneity. So a separate exercise for ascertaining this break-up would not have been effective but for a differentiated exercise. Therefore, this decision of the government seems to have addressed this concern.

 

Hopefully, this will bring down the curtain on the raging controversy.



Learning

 5 Replies

Democratic Indian (n/a)     24 September 2010

 

Caste system is the age old cancer, it is racism at its worst, that brought the downfall of this sub continent. Unless it is checked, it will bring the downfall again. It is very much present today. See the level to which people can fall and the brainlessness going on.

Eating a roti from dalit, causes a dog to become untouchable. What a nonsense it is?: https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/Dog-caste-away-after-dalit-touch/articleshow/6617039.cms

BHOPAL: A dog's life couldn't get worse. A mongrel brought up in an upper caste home in Morena was kicked out after the Rajput family members discovered that their Sheru had eaten a roti from a dalit woman and was now an "untouchable". Next, Sheru was tied to a pole in the village's dalit locality. His controversial case is now pending with the district collector, the state police and the Scheduled Caste Atrocities police station in Morena district of north MP.

The black cur, of no particular pedigree, was accustomed to the creature comforts in the home of its influential Rajput owners in Manikpur village in Morena. Its master, identified by the police as Rampal Singh, is a rich farmer with local political connections.

A week ago Sunita Jatav, a dalit woman, was serving lunch to her farm labourer husband. "There was a 'roti' left over from lunch. I saw the dog roaming and fed it the last bread," Sunita said. "But when Rampal Singh saw me feeding the dog and he grew furious. He yelled: 'Cobbler woman, how dare you feed my dog with your roti?' He rebuked me publicly. I kept quiet thinking the matter would end there. But it got worse," she said.

On Monday, Rampal ex-communicated the dog. A village panchayat was called, whi- ch decided that Sheru would now have to live with Sunita and her family because it had become an untouchable. Sunita Jatav was fined Rs 15,000.

An outraged Sunita and her brother Nahar Singh Jatav rushed to Sumawali police station. They were directed to take the matter to the SC/ST Atrocities police station in Kalyan. "When we went there, the officer asked us why we fed the dog," recalls Nahar. "So we went to the DSP in the SC/ST Atrocities department and submitted a memorandum to him, as also to the district collector. But no one has registered our FIR so far.

DSP SC/ST Atrocities (Morena), Baldev Singh, recalls, "We got a complaint in which it has been alleged that a dog was declared untouchable and a dalit family fined for feeding it. We are investigating the allegation," said the officer.

(Guest)

It is a great achievement of Congress to have caste census.  Justice will be said "done" when 100% IAS, IPS, IFS etc. posts will be filled up by SC/ST only constantly for at leat minimum 1000 years than only injustice done with them during all time in history will be recovered.


(Guest)

Till than caste census is very much necessary in regular manner.


(Guest)

100% reservation for SC/ST only for at least minimym 1000 years is needed to recover the injustice done with them during thousands-thousands years.

Bhartiya No. 1 (Nationalist)     24 September 2010

I too have read the above mentioned dog story in the news papers. Also so many times in TV News, one scene of beating of a lower caste boy by the local MLA was being shown, the case was the boy had worked at the House of that MLA, later he asked his wages, this angered the local MLA, and he beaten up the boy severely.  Also some days back I had read in news paper that one Dalit person shot dead, since he dared to sit in one of the chair lying on the garden of that High caste person. As rightly observed that it the worst type of discrimination and is equally severe than the racial discrimination. So many games are being played in the name of caste system prevailing in our country, like the land and property of a dalit/tribal widow is being looted, dalit/tribal women are being raped, and later they are being branded as witch or in the guise of witchcraft being practiced widely. These incidences are gross violation of our constitution and human rights too.

Also these things are blot on our advancement/civilization and need urgent and honest attention and widespread condemnation unanimously, or we will remain divided into pieces, which are not good in the larger interest of the Nation, which is being defamed by such acts.


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