Indians offered a cash bonus to marry beneath their caste
by Jeremy Page

The Government hopes that its offer of £580 will help to break an 
unjust hierarchy 
 
 


THE Indian Government is offering 50,000 rupees (£580) to higher-
caste people who marry spouses from the lowest castes in its latest 
controversial effort to dismantle the ancient Hindu social 
hierarchy. 
The Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment made the proposal 
yesterday amid a growing controversy over plans to expand quotas for 
lower-caste students at schools and universities. 

 
 
The scheme is already under attack, with conservatives saying it 
will trigger social chaos and liberals arguing that few will accept 
the offer — and fewer will receive the funds. 

The proposed bonus is a small fortune in a country where average 
annual income per capita is £280, and where official corruption is 
rampant. 

But Meira Kumar, the Social Justice Minister, who is from a lower 
caste, defended the plan yesterday before meeting officials from the 
28 Indian states to persuade them to approve it. 

"Yes, I know this is not the only way to end the caste 
discrimination, but one has to start somewhere," she said. "All 
proposals have initial hiccups. That does not mean that we give them 
up." Ever since independence in 1947, Indian governments have tried 
in vain to break down the complex caste system, which divides 
society into hereditary hierarchical groups. 

Most Indians' educational, professional and marriage prospects are 
still determined at birth by their place in the hierarchy, which 
ranges from Brahmins at the top to Dalits, or Untouchables, at the 
bottom. Despite the recent economic boom, which has lifted millions 
of people out of poverty and spawned a burgeoning middle class, 
sociologists say that the caste system is becoming ever more 
entrenched. 

A recent survey by the National Sample Survey Organisation showed 
that the number of people in the three lowest social strata had 
risen to 67.6 per cent of the Indian population of 1.1 billion. 

Intercaste marriages have been permitted by law since 1955, and 
today some lower-caste women do marry men of a higher caste. 
Children traditionally assume the father's caste status. But most 
Indians still marry within their caste, and those who do not often 
have to flee their homes to avoid "honour killings" by relatives of 
the higher-caste spouse. 

Last week three men in the town of Palghar, near Bombay, were 
sentenced to death for the murder of four people over an intercaste 
marriage. 

Dilip Tiwari and two friends hacked to death his sister Sushma's 
husband, two of his relatives and one of his neighbours in May 2004. 
The only motive was that Sushma, whose family was Brahmin, had 
defied her parents' objections by marrying her neighbour Prabhu 
Nochil, whose lower-caste family ran a dairy. 

The Supreme Court ruled in July that such "honour killings" were 
acts of barbarism and ordered police to protect intercaste couples. 
It described the caste system as "a curse on the nation". 

"It is dividing the nation at a time when we have to be united to 
face the challenges before the nation," it said. "Intercaste 
marriages are in fact in the national interest as they will result 
in destroying the caste system." 

Several states already offer financial incentives for inter-caste 
marriages, ranging from 2,000 rupees in West Bengal to 50,000 rupees 
in Gujarat. 

The new offer would be open to anyone from the top three social 
strata who married someone from the lowest three — Scheduled Tribes, 
Scheduled Castes or Other Backward Classes. The Social Justice 
Ministry has offered to pay half of the 50,000-rupee bonus, with 
state governments providing the rest. 
 
 
  
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