http://scroll.in/article/812230/the-gujarat-model-what-violence-in-the-name-of-cow-protection-tells-us-about-bjps-caste-politics

OPINION

The Gujarat model: What violence in the name of cow protection tells
us about BJP's caste politics

The party wants to include Dalits into its Hindu vote bank, but the
age-old caste prejudices remain deeproted.

7 hours ago
Updated 2 hours ago

Nikita Sud

The shameful assault by cow-protection vigilantes on Dalit men in Una
on July 11 has once again exposed the deep fissures in Gujarat’s
majoritarian Hindu politics.

Apart from religious minorities, those lower down the state’s caste
hierarchies have long been subjected to discrimination and
socio-economic marginalisation. Even during anti-colonial struggles,
these local communities were excluded. Take the Kheda and Bardoli
satyagrahas led by Congress stalwarts such as MK Gandhi and
Vallabhbhai Patel almost a century ago. They contested the unjust
revenue increases faced by Patidar, Desai, and other upper and middle
caste farming communities but left out the substantive interests of
landless agricultural labourers, particularly so-called criminal tribe
of Dharalas and the backward caste Baraiyas and Patanvadiyas.

After Independence, the Congress projected itself as an
all-encompassing cross-caste party. However, it continued to be
dominated by Hindu upper castes, with every chief minister being
either Brahmin or Patel. The exceptions to this upper caste
stranglehold over power came in the 1980s, with the KHAM experiment of
building a coalition of Kshatriyas, Harijans, Adivasis and Muslims.

The KHAM years saw the rise of backward caste and Adivasi leaders to
the top, with Madhavsinh Solanki and Amarsinh Chaudhary becoming chief
minister. Power, in this case was not merely symbolic. The Solanki
administration in particular revived the debate on reservations in
education and public sector jobs for lower and backward castes.
Importantly, it attempted to resurrect policies of land redistribution
that would have overwhelmingly benefited landless lower and backward
castes. In what is by now a familiar story, both initiatives were
thwarted by what scholars Stuart Corbridge and John Harriss would term
elite revolts.

Elite politics

The resurgence of elite politics has shaped Gujarat from the 1990s.
Across parties, politics is once again dominated by upper caste
leaders and proximate agendas. In the economy, for instance, this is
reflected in the absolute focus on industrialisation, high-end cash
crop production, and the building of a certain type of infrastructure,
be it Special Economic Zones and Special Industrial Regions, or
Technology Parks, Financial Cities and Smart Cities.

These modes of economic growth do not even bother pandering to
trickle-down economics or inclusive development.

The BJP is the flag-bearer of this new Gujarat model. Its leaders may
studiously seek to keep the focus on development, but we cannot
overlook the social churning out of which this model has emerged.
Religious polarisation and violence is central to this mix, and has
been much commented on. However, as recent events remind us, the
politics and oppression of caste is as important to Gujarat’s
identity.

Ironically, an ostensibly backward caste politician has led Gujarat
through much of this period (2001-2014). However Narendra Modi, while
belonging to the Other Backward Classes, has determinedly steered
clear of his caste identity in an attempt to emerge as the leader of
all Hindus – the Hindu hriday samrat. As chief minister, Modi may have
steered clear of caste, but caste has definitely not steered clear of
him. In the many intra-party struggles during his reign in Gujarat, a
common refrain among those challenging his leadership has been “ame aa
joyto nathi", we don’t want this man – with a derogatory reference to
his caste identity.

The ruling party of Gujarat has been regularly drawn into accusations
of casteism in its ranks. For instance, in May 1995, newspapers
reported that a Bharatiya Janata Party minister had encouraged his
constituents to “teach Dalits a lesson” after an argument over prices
in the Vadodara market. This resulted in upper castes torching the
shops of 16 Dalits, and raiding and stoning Rohit Vas, the Dalit
housing locality.

Everyday exclusion

In such a milieu, Dalits face taunts of being sarkaar na jamaai, the
sons-in-law of the government, if they dare to seek out government
welfare benefits. Of course, the government is anything but theirs.
This is underlined by upper caste village and district officials
referring to recent dispensations as amaari sarkar (our government),
as opposed to tamaari sarkar (your, or the lower castes’ government),
in recent interviews.

Everyday exclusion is embodied and routinely played out in the
theatres of the state. This author has witnessed rural development
officials preventing lower and backward castes from signing onto
government schemes. The officials’ refrain was that these communities
are incapable of adhering to the conditions of the scheme, as is
obvious even in their comportment or chaal.

In this deeply fragmented society, erstwhile chief minister Modi’s pet
Samras Gram scheme, which rewards villages that choose local leaders
through consensus rather than a democratic contest, is a device for
papering over divisions and reproducing privilege. The same can be
said for the BJP’s pan-caste Hindutva coalition which has delivered
votes for over two decades, amply aided by the weakness of the
Opposition.

In the searing words of a BJP leader, a Dalit (interviewed by the
author in Ahmedabad):

… to show high number of Hindus, they [the BJP] will embrace Dalits,
but [they] don’t believe… [they have] no sympathy for Dalits…. I say,
do something for Dalits, make them feel they are part of you… but
neither politicians, nor administrators, are committed….

This enduring lack of commitment to anything other than an upper
caste, Hindu mode of politics has nurtured the vigilantes who will
kill and maim in the name of the holy cow in Gujarat and beyond.

Nikita Sud is Associate Professor of Development Studies at the
University of Oxford


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