Casteism Is Racism And India Should Stop
Interfering In ‘Internal Affairs’ Of Britain!

*By Avinash Pandey Samar*

10 September, 2010
*Countercurrents.org*

Britain, in a major victory for the movement against caste based
discrimination and atrocities, can soon declare caste prejudice unlawful
under laws against racial discrimination becoming the first country of the
world to do so. The development was imminent in the wake of the fact that
the House of Lords had already passed the Equality Bill empowering the
government to treat caste as ‘an aspect of race’ in March this year leaving
just one more step of getting it passed by the House of Commons to be
enacted as law.

The victory has come as a result of the valiant struggle of the Dalit groups
along with members of the broader civil society against the exploitative and
oppressive system of caste, amidst tremendous opposition of the Indian
government and the right wing Hindu groups based in Britain.

The significance of the development lies in the fact that it has taken
almost a decade to come since 2001 when the Government of India had
succeeded in botching up the attempt of the Dalit Rights Group together with
the broader civil society to make caste based discrimination an aspect of
racial discrimination at the Durban World Conference against Racism, Racial
Discrimination, Xenophobia and Related Intolerance. The Government of India
claimed the caste issues as ‘internal matter of India’ and asserted that
they were making all attempts to put an end to caste based discrimination.

What it forgot in doing that was its own, and glorious, role in the struggle
against apartheid in South Africa. If caste issues are an internal matter of
India, would not apartheid be an internal issue of the governments of
apartheid-era South Africa? So why did India play a crucial role in
mobilising the world opinion against apartheid?

The government of India tried to further substantiate its claim by asserting
the caste issues as intra-racial and intra-cultural even while conceding the
existence of discrimination. Soli Sorabjee, the then Attorney General of
India, maintained that the only reason behind India’s attempt to keep caste
discrimination off the agenda of Durban Conference was that “it will
distract participants from the main topic: racism”. Even while conceding
that caste discrimination in India is ‘undeniable’ he stressed that ‘caste
and race are entirely different’.

It could very well be. After all, no two systems of social stratification in
this world are absolutely similar to each other. A lot of factors, from
culture to economy, intercede with the systems of stratification to produce
the division of power and hierarchy in the society and make the systems, in
the process, absolutely distinct from one another in internal structure. The
crucial question, however, is not about their distinctiveness but their
efficacy in maintaining and safeguarding social hierarchies.

Sadly, Indian caste system has proved itself to be one of the worst, if not
the worst, system of social stratification for maintaining and perpetuating
social hierarchies. Most probably, humankind has never devised a more
comprehensive system of keeping a section of society under perpetual
subjugation amidst inhuman conditions. It has never devised a worse way of
dehumanising fellow human beings and reducing them to being mere labour
force devoid of any dignity leave aside rights. Everything said and done,
when it comes to committing atrocities on people, the caste system has
proved itself to be far more clinical in brutalising its victims than race
and not less.

The argument of the Indian government that caste based discrimination should
not be included under the category of racial discrimination because it is
making serious progress in the issue by having protective laws and positive
discrimination fails miserable in the wake of data produced by its own
agencies.

For example, the number of crimes against people belonging to the Scheduled
Castes as per records of the National Crime Records Bureau of India, a body
of ministry of Home Affairs, went up to 33615, an increase of more than 2
percent from the preceding year. Or the fact that the provisions of the
Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act does
not get applied even in such ghoulish cases of caste based atrocities as in
the killing of a Dalit family in Khairlanji while committing brutal rapes on
the women speaks volumes about the seriousness of the efforts of the
government

The second argument of Indian government, unfortunately backed by a few
leading sociologists, was that since ‘race’ is a not a meaningful biological
category in India and all attempts of profiling different castes along
racial lines have fallen flat. Their claim is that even if caste is based on
descent it is entirely different from race.
Even if the discrimination against the Dalits is intra-racial, the
consequences for them are no less brutal than that in racism. On a more
fundamental level, the lack of ‘scientific’ evidence may prove the absence
of ‘race’ in India but not the absence of ‘racism’, an ideological structure
based on the belief of superiority of some people because of birth and
inferiority of others because of the same! And there is no doubt that this
ideology is becoming stronger day by day despite all the attempts of Indian
government to put an end to this ‘evil’ practice.

The seriousness of the government on the issue speaks for itself in its
acts. After all, the government’s dogged opposition to the inclusion of
caste based discrimination does not come out of some failure to understand
the ground realities out of sheer ignorance. It reflects the mindset and the
psyche of the government and the people manning it. The stand of the
government emanates from that pre-modern, barbaric and regressive social
structure of caste that rules the country under its democratic façade. A
facade that gets exposed more often than not by the deeds of all organs of
the state, including its judiciary.

It is hard to believe that even judiciary can do that but even a cursory
glance on its track records bear out the fact. Be it the highly misogynist
and casteist verdict in Mathura rape case ((Tukaram V. State of Maharshtra,
AIR 1979 SC 185) when the Supreme Court overruled the decision of the Bombay
High Court convicting two policemen for raping Mathura, a 16-year-old girl
because of the fact that the girl was an ‘illiterate and orphaned tribal
girl’ and was of loose character by implication to the recent verdict of
Maharashtra High Court in Khairlanji massacre, the judiciary has proved
itself complicit in letting the government off its responsibility of
abolishing caste based discrimination.
At times, ubfortunately, it has went all the distance to be part of the
perpetuators ad not only accomplices of caste discrimination. Like in the
infamous and stinking observation of the trial judge in the Bhanwari Devi
rape case in 1995 that because Hindu scriptures do not allow upper caste men
to touch a low caste woman, the accused could not have raped the Dalit
victim. This case and many others have put our constitution to shame.

And that is why, compartmentalising the issue of caste into the ‘scientific’
and ‘cultural’ aspects and then prioritising the scientific ones to assert
that caste is not race is not only incorrect but in fact a deceitful attempt
to violate the spirit of the constitution of India if not the letters
itself, and should be fought against from within and outside.
As a matter of fact, the meaning of the term ‘descent’ has been expanded to
include ‘discrimination based on caste’ ,by the general recommendation
number 29, the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of
Racial Discrimination (ICERD) 1969. Indian government will do well to
remember that it is a signatory to that convention along with more than 170
other countries.

It will also do well to take note of the fact that the lives of more than
165 million citizens is not a question of intellectual theorising over
whether race is caste or not before putting its act together and cracking
down on all forms of caste atrocities decisively. By then, it can begin with
accepting that caste is a form of racial discrimination, at least of racism
if not of the ‘pure’ (in the Brahiminical sense) biological category of
race!

Meanwhile, lets us all support the British Dalits in safeguarding their hard
won victory against the demon of caste, threatened by the right wing Hindu
organisation in Britain as well as Indian government which is, reportedly,
trying to arm-twist the British government into not intervening in its
‘internal’ matter. Making that absurd claim amounts to appropriating
anything relating to Hindu religion as ‘internal’ and caste serious
aspersions on the secular credentials of Indian state. Does Indian
government want to claim that all issues concerning Hindus are its
‘internal’ issues, throwing all its secular pretensions away?

After all, caste based atrocities have long ceased to confine themselves in
Indian subcontinent. If the gory facts about honour killings taking place in
Britain and Canada among other places were not proof enough, the recent
killing of a Sikh religious leader belong to the Ravidasi sect (a Dalit
sect) in Vienna leaves no scope for doubts about the same.

We can begin by standing by the policy and reminding the Indian government
not to meddle in the internal issues of Britain, as it is dealing with an
issue concerning its citizens and has nothing to do with a ‘secular’ India.
Further, no government can sit idle when caste issues lead to illegal
confinements, abductions, forced marriages, and even killings. It is the
Indian state which has failed to contain the demon of caste, leave aside
killing it, and it has no right to demand the same indifference and disdain
for human life from a sovereign state for such a pressing issue.

The article was first published by the Asian Human Rights Commission and The
Sri Lanka Guardian.

*Avinash Pandey Samar* is Research Scholar, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New
Delhi. Currently in Hong Kong working with the Asian Human Rights
Commission.



-- 


You cannot build anything on the foundations of caste. You cannot build up a
nation, you cannot build up a morality. Anything that you will build on the
foundations of caste will crack and will never be a whole.
-AMBEDKAR



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