I wish to express immense pleasure
and to share the pride,
as an Indian who sincerely wish to challenge the ideologies of
Brahmanic supremacy,
the caste and everything in the name of religion that ritualistically
motivates and propagates hate in this country,
as Prof.Kancha Ilaiah receives the prestigious London Institute of
South Asia international award
for his renounced work "Why I am Not a Hindu".
 Also want to share as a Malayalee, the best sentiments expressed by
S.Sanjeev thanks to whom we have this work in Malayalam.
With Best Regards,
Venugopalan K.M


On 26 Jun, 16:24, "ranju radha" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> International award  for Kancha Ilaiah's "Why I am Not a Hindu"
>  3 Blacklands Drive, Hayes (Middlesex) UB4 8EU. Tel: 020-8797.3729 E-Mail:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED],com
>
> " Why I am not a Hindu" by Professor Kancha Ilaiah
> Chosen for Annual lisa Book Award 2008 to be presented
> on 17 July 2008 at Westminster
>
> London Institute of South Asia (LISA) makes an award every year to an author
> from South Asia for a "book that made a difference". The award is Two
> Thousand Pounds and a return air ticket to receive the award at a ceremony
> held in London. This year, the book chosen for the award is " Why I am not a
> Hindu" written by Professor Kancha Ilaiah, former Head of the Department of
> Political Science at the Osmania University, Hyderbad, India. The Award
> Ceremony will be held at Thatcher Room, Portcullis Hose, Westminster,
> London, on July 17. Professor Ilaiah will give lecture on BEING AN UNHINDU
> WRITER after his acceptance speech.
>
> Ever since this book was first published in 1996, it did not only become the
> bestseller of the year, it has been declared one of the Five Great
> Millennium Books in Dalitbahujan stream of thought by the Indian National
> Daily, PIONEER. It has influenced a whole range of new discourse on
> understanding of India and South Asia. It has been translated not only into
> several Indian languages but also European languages – French and German. It
> has been adopted as the common core text of New Reading on South Asia by
> several American and European Universities. Most Indian Universities include
> it in the curriculum of courses in Sociology and Anthropology.
>
> The native peoples of India (erstwhile untouchables) called Dalitbahujan by
> Prof. Ilaiah have been denied a separate identity by denying them education;
> they were not even allowed to be lettered. Under British rule, they were
> given an identity; they were grouped into Scheduled Castes (SCs), Scheduled
> Tribes (STs) and Other Backward Castes (OBCs). They also got two things they
> never had before – reserved seats in education and right to vote. That
> caused a slow change in the beginning but a veritable revolution in the new
> millennium.
>
> The caste Hindus are at best 15 % of the population of India today. The
> Dalitbahujan may be as many as 65% of the population depending on who is
> included. Realising the power of the vote, Mahatma Gandhi condescendingly
> called them Harijan (children of Hindu god Hari) and insisted they were
> Hindus.  In 1932, under the Communal Award, the British Government offered
> them 'Separate Electorate' alongside the faith groups – the Muslims, Sikhs
> and Christians. The leader of the Dalitbahujan, Dr. B.R.Ambedkar, accepted
> the Award. But Mahatma Gandhi went on 'fast unto death' opposing the
> principle of separate electorate. Mahatma Gandhi pressurised Dr.Ambedkar
> under the duress his death to accept the present principle of Reserved Seats
> for SCs and STs. The pressure worked; Dalitbahujan agreed to 'Joint
> Electorate' under which they were put on electoral rolls of the Hindus. That
> is how the myth of India being a Hindu majority country was born.
>
> Universal adult franchise makes Dalitbahujan the majority in India. Dalit
> parties, by themselves or in coalition, rule several states. The voice of
> Dalitbahujan is heard loud and clear all over India; more and more of them
> are seen in high office of state; yet alienation is so acute as to be almost
> unbearable.  The repression of Dalitbahujan is not so overt but it is still
> vicious and highly effective as the Brahmin priest caste is adept at
> evolving covert methods. Complaining about discrimination and securing more
> places in education and in government jobs has run its course; it still
> leaves Dalitbahujan at the bottom of the social pile.
>
> The book "Why I am not a Hindu" is chosen because it has 'made a difference'
> since it was first published in 1996. The Constitution of India describes a
> Hindu as one who is 'not a Muslim, Christian or a Parsi'; the Sikhs,
> Buddhists, Jains and all the animal/ancestor worshipping faiths, are thus
> denied their separate identity. This definition portrays India as
> overwhelmingly Hindu and puts a tight lid on the repression on the basis of
> faith and castes. Perhaps taking a cue from the Constitution, Prof. Ilaiah
> defines Dalitbahujan as all except the 'twice born'. Thus, he also defines
> the Indian nation as a 'coalition' but of different elements. The elements
> he excludes are those who preach, uphold or practise 'apartheid'.
>
> Language, race, faith and culture define nations. Prof. Ilaiah has described
> at length in his book that Dalibahujan are different, indeed better, on
> every score. He urges his compatriots to stop complaining and begging.
> Dalibahujan should define their own identity; everything else would
> follows.
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