An interesting and thought provoking article

http://indianrealist.wordpress. com/2009/ 11/20/what- caste-actually-
was-like/<http://indianrealist.wordpress.%20com/2009/%2011/20/what-%20caste-actually-%20was-like/>
November 20, 2009...3:57 pm What caste actually was like
 An eye-opening article by Ram Swaroop about what caste was actually like in
Hinduism and what the Brits and church deliberately made it out to be. A
shame on this class of jholawala historians and sociologists reared by Nehru
which cannot do original research and bring the true facts of our race to
light so that this nonsensical propaganda of the Whites against Hinduism
stops.

*Logic behind perversion of caste*
Ram Sawrup
(From the Indian Express, 13th September, 1996)

 Today casteism is rampant. It is a new phenomenon. Old India had castes but
not casteism. In its present form, casteism is a construct of colonial
period, a product of imperial policies and colonial scholarship. It was
strengthened by the breast-beating of our own “reformers”. Today, it has
acquired its own momentum and vested interests.
*In the old days, the Hindu caste system was integrating principle. It
provided economic security. One had a vocation as soon as one was born.- a
dream for those threatened with chronic unemployment. The system combined
security with freedom; it provided social space as well as closer identity;
here the individual was not atomised and did not become rootless. There was
also no dearth of social mobility; whole groups of people rose and fell in
the social scale. Rigidity about the old Indian castes is a myth.*
Ziegenbbalg writing on the eve of the British advent saw that *at least
one-third of the people practised other than their traditional calling and
that “official and political functions, such as those of teachers,
councillors, governors, priests, poets and even kings were not considered
the prerogative of any particular group, but are open to all”.*
Nor did India ever have such a plethora of castes as became the order of the
day under the British rule. Megasthenes gives us seven fold division of the
Hindu society; Hsuan Tsang, the Chinese pilgrim (650 A. D.) mentions four
castes. Alberuni too mentions four main castes and some more groups which
did not strictly belong to the caste system.
Even the list of greatly maligned Manu contained no more than 40 mixed
castes, all related by blood. Even the Chandals were Brahmins on their
father’s side. But under the British, Risley gave us 2,378 main castes, and
43 races! There is no count of sub-castes. Earlier, the 1891 census had
already given us 1,156 sub-castes of chamars alone. To Risley, every caste
was also ideally a race and had its own language.
Caste did not strike early European writers as something specifically
Indian. They knew it in their own countries and saw it that way. J. S. Mill
in his Political Economy said that occupational groups in Europe were
“almost equivalent to an hereditary distinction of caste”.
To these observers, the word caste did not have the connotation it has
today. Gita Dharampal Frick, an orientalist and linguist tells us that the
early European writers on the subject used the older Greek word Meri which
means a portion, share, contribution. Sebastian Franck (1534) used the
German word Rott (rotte) meaning a “social group” or “cluster”. These words
suggest that socially and economically speaking they found castes closer to
each other than ordo or estates in Europe.
The early writers also saw no Brahmin domination though they found much
respect for them. Those like Jurgen Andersen (1669) who described castes in
Gujarat found that Vaishyas and not the Brahmins were the most important
people there.
*They also saw no sanskritisation. One caste was not trying to be another;
it was satisfied with being itself. Castes were not trying to imitate the
Brahmins to improve social status; they were proud of being what they were.
There is a Tamil poem by Kamban in praise of the plough which says that
“even being born a Brahmin does by far endow one with the same excellence as
when one is born into a Vellala family”.*
There was sanskritisation though but of a very different kind. People tried
to become not Brahmins but Brahma-vadin. Different castes produced great
saints revered by all. Ravi Das, a great saint, says that though of the
family of chamars who still go around Benares removing dead cattle, yet even
the most revered Brahmins now hold their offspring, namely himself, in great
esteem.
With the advent of Islam the Hindu society came under great pressure; it
faced the problem of survival. When the political power failed, castes took
over; they became defence shields and provided resistance passive and
active. But in the process, the system also acquired undesirable traits like
untouchability. Alberuni who came along with Mahmud Ghaznavi mentions the
four castes but no untouchability. He reports that “much, however, as these
classes differ from each other, they live together in the same towns and
villages, mixed together in the same houses and lodgings.”
Another acquired another trait; they became rigid and lost their mobility.
H. A. Rose, Superintendent of Ethnography, Punjab (1901-1906), author of A
Glossary of Punjab Tribes and Castes’ says that during the Muslim period,
many Rajputs were degraded and they became scheduled castes and scheduled
tribes. Many of them still retain the Rajput gotra of parihara and parimara.
Similarly, G. W. Briggs in his The Chamars tells us that many chamars still
carry the names and gotra of Rajput clans like Banaudhiya, Ujjaini,
Chandhariya, Sarwariya, Kanaujiya, Chauhan, Chadel, Saksena, Sakarwar,
Bhardarauiya, and Bundela, etc. Dr.K. S. Lal cites many similar instances in
his recent “Growth of Scheduled Tribes and Castes in Medieval India”.
The same is true of bhangis. William Crooke of Bengal Civil Service tells us
that the “rise of the present Bhangi caste seems from the names applied to
the castes and its subdivisions, to date from the early period of Mohammedan
rule”. Old Hindu literature mentions no bhangis of present function. In
traditional Hindu rural society, he was a corn-measurer, a village
policeman, a custodian of village boundaries.* But scavenging came along
with the Muslim and British rule. Their numbers also multiplied. According
to 1901 Census, the bhangis were most numerous in the Punjab and the United
Provinces which were the heartland of Muslim domination.*
Then came the British who treated all Hindus equally – all as an inferior
race – and fuelled their internal differences. They attacked Hinduism but
cultivated the caste principle, two sides of the same coin. Hinduism had to
be attacked. It gave India the principles of unity and continuity; it was
also India’s definition at its deepest. It held together castes as well as
the country. Take away Hinduism and the country was easily subdued.
Caste in old India was a cooperative and cultural principle.; but it is now
being turned into a principle of social conflict. In the old dispensation,
castes followed dharma and its restraints; they knew how far they could go.
But now a caste is a law unto itself; it knows no self-restraint except the
restraint put on it by another class engaged in similar self-aggrandisement
. The new self-styled social justice intellectuals and parties do not want
castes without dharma. This may be profitable to some in the short run but
it is suicidal for all in the long run.
*In the old days, castes had leaders who represented the culture of the
land, who were natural leaders of their people and were organic to them. But
now a different leadership is coming to the fore; rootless, demagogic and
ambitious, which uses caste slogans for self-aggrandisement .*

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