http://www.indianexpress.com/news/bringing-development-to-the-bahujan-within-the-bahujan/426643/


Bringing development to the bahujan within the bahujan
Sudheendra Kulkarni
 Posted online: Feb 22, 2009 at 0118 hrs

H.L. Dusadh is not the typical high-society Delhi intellectual one
sees at the India International Centre and other usual places in the
seminar circuit. He, like crores of other Indians, is a victim of
linguistic discrimination that is as odious, if less subtle, as caste
discrimination. For our intellectual establishment displays an
arrogant notice at the entrance of its privileged enclave: 'Entry only
for those who speak English.' Dusadh doesn't, and most of his
colleagues don't. They write only in Hindi. But the work that they
have produced on Dalit empowerment, with meagre resources at their
disposal and no institutional research support, is voluminous in
quantity, substantive in quality and displays a rare kind of
transformational passion that only those with deep grassroots social
involvement can summon.
I consider myself fortunate in having come to know Dusadh and his
group, which calls itself Bahujan Diversity Mission (BDM). We have
been interacting for close to a year now. Our dialogue has been
especially rewarding for me since it has somewhat bridged the
differences that separate us. I am proud of my Hindu roots. Many
intellectuals belonging to this group are religious rebels who are
angry with traditional Hinduism. I work for the BJP, whereas they have
no affinity with it. But if these differences have not come in the way
of our interaction, it is partly because we have a common link in Dr
Sanjay Paswan, a former BJP MP from Bihar who was also a minister in
the Vajpayee government. I have always admired Paswan for his
dedication to the cause of Dalits' all-round progress. I was an avid
reader of Vanchit Vaani (Voice of the Excluded), the magazine that he
used to edit.

Dusadh, bespectacled, bearded, soft-spoken and frail on account of all
the hardships he has faced in life, responded to Kanshi Ram's call of
'Pay Back to Your Society' and made research and writing his lifelong
activity. He believes that Kanshi Ram, founder of the Bahujan Samaj
Party, was not merely an excellent organiser and a farsighted
political leader but also an original thinker. Kanshi Ram's principal
goal was to achieve for Dalits social equality and economic
empowerment. However, he was firm in his belief that this goal can be
reached only by achieving "political influence initially, and
political power ultimately." Most of his life was spent in pursuing
the first objective of making the BSP politically influential through
ceaseless mobilisation of Dalit intellectuals, employees and masses.
Towards the end of his life, the BSP also gained partial political
power. His achievement was all the more remarkable since he succeeded
where traditional Ambedkarite movements had failed?namely, in
transforming mobilisation into legislative strength.

Mayawati, Kanshiram's successor, has taken the party considerably
ahead along that path by adopting an unusual tactic of social alliance
building?of bringing Dalits and Brahmins together in Uttar Pradesh.
But the strategy, according to Dusadh and his colleagues, remains the
same. Tactics are subservient to strategy.

I shall not dwell here on Dalit intellectuals' dilemma over Mayawati's
brand of governance, characterised as it is by rampant corruption and,
lately, criminalisation. It is the kind of dilemma that all
politically committed intellectuals experience, to a lesser or greater
degree, with regard to the parties they support. What interests me,
instead, is the concept of 'Bahujan Diversity' that Dusadh and his
colleagues have been advocating. Their basic proposition is well
known: India's social diversity is just not reflected in its economic
profile. A small minority, belonging overwhelmingly to upper castes,
is rich and privileged, whereas the majority (Bahujan), comprising the
Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes, OBCs and others, is excluded from
the nation's progress and prosperity.

How can India's social diversity be fairly represented in its
development? Dusadh invokes a slogan that Kanshi Ram had coined:
'Jiski jitni sankhya bhaari, uski utni bhaagidaari' (Numerically
proportionate share to each caste or social group). I consider this
formula flawed and unworkable. Neither democracy nor any dynamic
economic system can sustain it. Another flaw: India is an integral,
united and self-reforming entity, not a numerical aggregation of
separate and unchanging social groups.

But Dusadh, who is the president of BDM, and his colleagues have also
been advancing a related concept of diversity promotion, which
deserves serious consideration. Its primary virtue is that it takes
the debate on affirmative action beyond the limits of reservation in
jobs. For example, Dr Vijaykumar Trisharan, a BDM activist from
Jharkhand, writes categorically that "Dalit liberation is impossible
through reservations alone". He calculates that the government sector,
with 1.94 crore employees, can give 45 lakh jobs to SCs and STs when
quotas are fully implemented; additionally, the organised private
sector, which employs only 87 lakh people, can give 19.57 lakh more
jobs, if and when quotas are introduced in it. Thus, only 64.57 lakh
SCs and STs can have quota-based jobs. Assuming an employed person
supports a family of five, only 3.24 crore SCs and STs can benefit
from the quota system. "Where should the remaining SC/ST population of
21.75 crore go and what should it do?" is the blunt question Trisharan
poses.

I must confess that this is the first time I have across Dalit
intellectuals so squarely and unambiguously positing the limitations
of the quota policy. Reservations are, of course, justified and must
continue. But aren't we, as a society, morally and constitutionally
duty-bound, to look beyond job quotas to bring tangible benefits of
development to the bahujan within the bahujan (majority within the
majority)?

As a solution to this problem, Dusadh and his colleagues have been
advancing another diversity- promotion principle, which, according to
me, has some merit. It is based on preferential treatment for SC/ST
entrepreneurs, contractors and professionals in government purchases
and contracts and also in the purchases and contracts of private
sector companies that avail government support in one form or the
other. It also envisages skill development, induction of science and
technology inputs into traditional vocations on which large numbers of
SCs and STs are dependent for their livelihood, and empowering them
with beneficial market linkages without exploitative intermediaries.
"Political parties should look beyond the B-S-P (bijlee, sadak, paani)
model of development," says Dusadh. "What matters ultimately is
whether there is diversity in development."

I agree.

Write to: sudheenkulka...@gmail.com

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