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Sent: Tuesday, August 16, 2011 5:48 PM
Subject: [TriumphOfContent] AARAK SHUN


  







AARAK SHUN

A knock on the door always makes Amit nervous. If it is daytime, he quickly
moves the book rack so that it hides the framed photo of B R Ambedkar,
dressed in a dark suit and looking at some distant horizon. If it's night,
Amit lies still in bed, staring at the fan. As the banging goes on, he slips
in and out of sleep. In his dreams he often sees a boy putting a noose
around his neck. Sometimes he sees the boy hanging from a rope that's
furiously twisting by itself. Then there is dead silence. He can't go back
to sleep. 

Amit, a student of IIT-Kanpur
<http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/topic/IIT-Kanpur> , is not suicidal. He
has been to a shrink, though, and says he lives in some kind of dread. For
two years, life on the campus was beautiful - at least until the day his
classmates found out his caste, a fact he had masked with a caste-neutral
surname. The Ambed kar photo had already made some "friends" suspicious, and
when a clerk in the scholarship section "exposed" his caste, Amit's world
changed. He lost his place on the dining table. The batchmates became
hostile: jibes in the classroom or an accidental jab in the ribcage every
now and then became a common occurrence. And the midnight knocks started.
"They don't want me to study. People may think it's a seat of high learning
but for me it's living hell," says Amit, who has a brilliant academic
record. "People here don't believe in merit. They will push you if you
perform better than them," adds the final-year student who is too scared to
give his real name. 

Amit is not paranoid. His fear is real. In 2008, the year he joined the
institute, a fellow student called Prashant Kureel was found hanging in his
room. In 2009, an MTech student, G Suman, killed himself. And in 2010,
Madhuri Salve, a final-year student, used her dupatta to hang herself from
the ceiling fan. All three were dalits and IIT
<http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/topic/IIT>  authorities were quick to
blame academic pressure for these deaths. "It's because of constant ragging
and brazen casteism on the campus that my son killed himself," says Sunder
Lal Kureel, the father of Prashant, as he continues his fight for justice. 

But in this battle, Sunder Lal is alone. There are no middle class-led
candlelight vigils at India Gate for Prashant. There are no campaigns by TV
channels, just the lonely battle of a broken man. There are many like Sunder
Lal in their peculiar tragedy. Since 2007, 18 dalit students pursuing
engineering and medical courses in the country's top institutes, including
the IITs and All India Institute of Medical Sciences, have committed
suicide. And here's the real shocker: only one of them, Jaspreet Singh of
Government Medical College, Chandigarh
<http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/topic/Government-Medical-College,-Chandi
garh> , left behind a suicide note. None of the others who hanged themselves
or jumped from a building blamed anyone for pushing them to take the extreme
step. "All of them had complained to their families about harassment at the
hands of faculty and fellow students, yet they didn't leave a suicide note.
Only Jaspreet's was there because his father found his body. We wonder what
happened to all the other suicide notes," says Ratnesh Kumar of Insight
Foundation, which is trying to get justice for the families. "We're sure the
notes vanished because the victims had accused the authorities of
harassment." 
Hidden in these missing notes are the dirty secrets of India's top
institutes, where dalits have been treated as outcastes ever since
reservations were introduced for SC and ST students in the 1950s. Nobody
likes to talk about this dark side. Now, as filmmaker Prakash Jha takes a
"fresh look at the issue" with his Aarakshan, the dalits fear that the film
may reinforce old biases. "We get only 15% seats, while the OBCs get 27%.
But, it's the dalits who have to face the brunt of hate campaigns," says
Surya Dev, a 25-year-old engineer from Guna, MP, who now works with the
Insight Foundation helpline. 

Ironically, anti-dalit sentiment erupted in 1991, when the V P Singh
government decided to implement 27% reservation
<http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/topic/reservation>  for OBCs. In the
Capital's "Left-leaning" university, JNU, caste clashes took place between
students; in the dining-halls of IIT-Delhi, dalits were forced to sit on
separate tables, and the walls of urinals in Delhi University
<http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/topic/Delhi-University>  were covered
with puerile graffiti. And the authorities just watched. "The atmosphere in
our institutions is very brahminical as the upper castes dominate the
faculty. In such an environment, the lower caste students automatically
become outcastes," says Dilip Mandal, who teaches at Delhi's Indian
Institute of Mass Communication (IIMC). 

Many dalits have paid a price for being what they are. In 2008, Narendra
Divekar and Nitin Kamble, who worked as cameramen at the Centre for Distance
Engineering Education Programme at IIT Bombay, took part in a meeting of the
institute's union for backward classes. A torrent of casteist abuses from
the centre's web coordinator, Rahul Deshmukh, followed almost immediately.
Deshmukh told them that they were "not fit to work here". A complaint was
made to IIT authorities and the police. But the abuse went on. Unable to
handle it, the duo tried to commit suicide outside Deshmukh's office. 

Many, however, have fought back. Dr Ajay Singh, who joined AIIMS
<http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/topic/AIIMS>  in 2002 with the same
marks as the cut-off for "general" students, was the only dalit in his
hostel wing. He was barred from entering the carrom-board room and one day
someone scrawled "Nobody likes you here. F**k off" on his door. But Dr Singh
fought back and that led to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh
<http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/topic/Manmohan-Singh>  appointing a
three-member committee, headed by University Grants Commission chairman
Sukhdeo Thorat, to look into caste harassment in the country's top medical
institutes. The report was shocking: dalit students were bullied into
vacating their hostel rooms, leading to a ghetto being formed on two f loors
of a hostel; they were specifically targeted during ragging; they were not
allowed to play cricket and basketball; they were not allowed to eat in the
"upper-caste mess"; and the teachers ignored them in class, sometimes
deliberately failing them in exams. Shamed by the damning report, AIIMS took
some remedial steps. "Now the hostels are allotted through a lottery system
and general harassment has come down a bit, but all the recommendations of
the panel are yet to be implemented," says Dr Singh, who now works with a
government hospital in Delhi. 

But resistance is growing on some campuses. "Now the number of upper-caste
and reserved category students is almost the same. It's not easy to bully
them," says Mandal of IIMC. And dalits are now not prepared to be shunned by
the system. "We started celebrating Ambedkar Jayanti on our campus to unite
us," says Manju Kumari Rao, 28, a former student of Benaras Hindu University
<http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/topic/Banaras-Hindu-University>  who was
once denied permission to go abroad on an exchange programme because she was
dalit. "We don't want to join the system, we want to change it." 

(Additional reporting by Anahita Mukherji) 
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/home/sunday-toi/special-report/AARAK-SHUN
/articleshow/9512625.cms

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