*Benjamin Paul Kaila*

Caned at nine for touching an upper-caste teacher, Kaila has vowed to
educate the oppressed
In far away Los Angeles, Benjamin Paul Kaila is a successful IT
professional. But he has not quite forgotten his Dalit roots in Andhra
Pradesh. Kaila, 45, co-ordinates an annual scholarship scheme for deserving
Dalit students in his home state. It's a gesture that comes minus any media
glare and this is the third year of his scholarship scheme.
As a child in a Dalit settlement in a village in Guntur district, Kaila
would walk four miles to attend classes in a Telugu-medium school.

Living without electricity, water or sanitation, he eventually obtained a
postgraduate diploma in computer science and worked in the IT industry in
Hyderabad and Mumbai for a few years. His earliest memory of caste
discrimination is when he was nine years old: a teacher caned him for
accidentally touching him. Being Dalit acquired another meaning for him at
26 when a relative gifted him a biography of Dalit icon B.

R. Ambedkar.
"The book changed my lifestyle, my habits and my thinking," he says, "I
became an avid reader, developed critical thinking, a thirst for knowledge
and a desire to help others like me." An association with the Bahujan Samaj
Party, meetings with Kanshi Ram, and voraciously reading about Jyotiba
Phule, Sahu Maharaj and Periyar followed. In Mumbai, he briefly started a
Telugu Bahujan Welfare Society, but it did not last long. In 1999, he
shifted to the United States and decided it was time to do something for the
Dalit community. Starting a scholarship for bright students seemed easier
than starting a school. The Ambedkar Scholarships were born in '03, with two
humble scholarships of Rs 5,000 each for Dalit students who passed class X
with first class marks. The following year, the number of scholarships went
up to 24. Last year, 37 students benefited from the scheme. This year the
numbers will go up to 50. "I'm willing to expand the scholarship to other
states provided I can find reliable volunteers," he says. This year there
will be a special scholarship for children from families whose occupation is
scavenging.

The groundwork for the scholarship is done by a Hyderabad-based organisation
Devdas Adidela, and activist P.V.V. Rao. Half the scholarships are reserved
for girl students and it is ensured that the Mala and Madiga sub-castes are
equally represented. Kaila hopes the small initiative will help its
recipients study better. "Primary education in government schools is
painfully bad," he says, "I know children who cannot read and write in their
native language even after the 10th grade." Those attending a government
school are preferred since they tend to be poorer, he adds. Applicants are
judged on the basis of merit, economic status and what they hope to achieve
through education?

For some Dalit students about to enter college, the one-time scholarship
provides some measure of financial support. But more than that, it
recognises their merit and encourages them. The subtle and not-so-subtle
forms of discrimination that Dalit students face in school have been a prime
motivation behind the exercise. "I was discouraged to go to school by my
high school teachers," says Kaila, "and I still remember those incidents and
tell my children about them." Says professor Kancha Iliah, who was the chief
guest at the '05 award ceremony, "Such a scheme supports a conscious
yearning to succeed against all odds."

Being a Dalit Christian, Kaila did not benefit from reservation but
recognises its importance: "Without reservations, Dalits would not be in the
position they are now. Reservations are important for Dalits to become part
of the mainstream. Dalit is dignity," says Kaila.

Contact #302, Chandra Ganga Enclave, Brindavan Colony, Dr. A.S. Rao Nagar,
ECIL Post, Hyderabad--500 062. Tel: 09246203884.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
-- 
Ranjit

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