*Doctoring History for Political Goals: Origin of Caste System in India*


*Ram Puniyani*



Caste hierarchy is the major obstacle to the goal of social justice and it
continues to be a major obstacle to social progress even today. There are
many a theories, which have tried to understand its origin. The latest in
the series is the attempt of RSS to show its genesis due to invasion of
Muslim kings. Three books written by RSS ideologues argue that Islamic
atrocities during medieval period resulted in emergence of untouchables and
low castes.  The books are "Hindu Charmakar Jati", "Hindu Khatik Jati" and
"Hindu Valmiki Jati".



The Sangh leaders claimed that these castes had come into existence
due to atrocities
by foreign invaders and did not exist in Hindu religion earlier. According
to Bhaiyyaji Joshi, number two in RSS hierarchy, 'shudras' were never
untouchables
in Hindu scriptures. 'Islamic atrocities' during the medieval age resulted
in the emergence of untouchables, Dalits. Joshi further elaborated, "To
violate Hindu swabhiman (dignity) of Chanwarvanshiya Kshatriyas, foreign
invaders from Arab, Muslim rulers and beef-eaters, forced them to do
abominable works like killing cows, skinning them and throwing their
carcasses in deserted places. Foreign invaders thus created a caste of
charma-karma (dealing with skin) by giving such works as punishment to
proud Hindu prisoners."



The truth is contrary to this. The foundations of the caste system are very
old and untouchability came as an accompaniment of the caste system. The
Aryans considered themselves superior, they called non-Aryans *krshna
varnya* (dark skinned), *anasa* (those with no nose), and since non-Aryans
worshipped the phallus, they were considered non-human or *amanushya*. (*Rig
Veda*: X.22.9) There are quotes in the *Rig Veda* and *Manusmriti* to show
that low castes were prohibited from coming close to the high castes and
they were to live outside the village. While this does not imply that a
full-fledged caste system had come into being in Rig Vedic times, the
four-fold division of society into varnas did exist, which became a fairly
rigid caste system by the time of the *Manusmriti*.



Untouchability became the accompaniment of the caste system sometime around
the first century ad. The *Manusmriti*, written in the second–third
centuries ad, codifies the existing practices which show with utmost
clarity the type of despicable social practices that the oppressor castes
were imposing upon the oppressed castes. The first major incursions of
Muslim invaders into India began around the eleventh century ad, and the
European conquests of India began in the seventeenth–eighteenth centuries.





Over time, the caste system became hereditary. The rules for social
intercourse as well as establishing marriage relations were laid down by
the caste system. Caste hierarchies also became rigid over time. The
shudras began to be excluded from caste society, and ‘upper’ castes were
barred from inter-dining or inter-marrying with them. Notions of ‘purity’
and ‘pollution’ were enforced strictly to maintain caste boundaries.
Shudras became ‘untouchables’. It is this rigid social division that
Manu’s *Manav
Dharmashastra* (Human Law Code) codified.



Golwalkar, the major ideologue of RSS ideology defended it in a different
way, ‘If a developed society realizes that the existing differences are due
to the scientific social structure and that they indicate the different
limbs of body social, the diversity (i.e. caste system, added) would not be
construed as a blemish.’ (*Organiser*, 1 December 1952, p. 7) Deendayal
Upadhyaya, another major ideologue of Sangh Parivar stated, ‘In our concept
of four castes (varnas), they are thought of as different limbs of virat
purush (the primeval man)… These limbs are not only complimentary to one
another but even further there is individuality, unity. There is a complete
identity of interests, identity, belonging… If this idea is not kept alive,
the caste; instead of being complimentary can produce conflict. But then
that is a distortion.’ (D. Upadhyaya, *Integral Humanism*, New Delhi,
Bharatiya Jansangh, 1965, p. 43)



Social struggles to oppose this system and the struggles to escape the
tyrannies of caste system are presented by Ambedkar as revolution and
counter-revolution. He divides the ‘pre-Muslim’ period into three stages:
(a) Brahmanism (the Vedic period); (b) Buddhism, connected with rise of
first Magadh-Maurya states and representing the revolutionary denial of
caste inequalities; and (c) ‘Hinduism’, or the counter revolution which
consolidated brahman dominance and the caste hierarchy.



Much before the invasion of Muslim kings, shudras were treated as
untouchables and were the most oppressed and exploited sections of society.
The rigidity and cruelty of the caste system and untouchability became very
intense from the post-Vedic to Gupta period. Later, new social movements
like Bhakti, directly, and Sufi, indirectly, partly reduced the intensity
of the caste oppression and untouchability. This doctoring of the history
by Sangh ideologues is motivated by their political agenda and tries to
hide the truth.

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