Similar yet different: What dalit activists think about Barack Obama

By Anuja Mirchandaney

As Barack Obama is sworn in as the first black President of America on
January 20, 2009, dalits in India debate what this means for marginalised
communities in both countries
Barack Obama

The election of Barack Obama as President of the United States of America
stands out as one of the defining moments of 2008. It has been hailed the
world over as a historic moment, and despite cynicism from some quarters, a
landmark for a country that just a few decades ago witnessed a tumultuous
civil rights movement.

Though wary of the Democratic Party's opposition to outsourcing, the
response to Barack Obama's victory has been, by and large, a positive one in
India. Has the unprecedented election of a person of colour to the highest
office in a nation considered  a superpower been a source of inspiration to
India's own historically marginalised community, the dalits? A black
intellectual and B R Ambedkar's contemporary, columnist George S Schuyler,
wrote in the Pittsburgh Courier in 1931 that the "correct analogues to
blacks were the Indian untouchables who were like blacks, segregated, denied
access to education and transportation, turned away from religious temples,
and economically oppressed." While dalit Muslims in Bihar have celebrated
Obama's victory, calling him an 'American dalit', the response from other
dalit activists has varied from guardedly happy to outright dismissive.

K T Manoranjini, a young dalit activist lawyer in Bengaluru (Bangalore), is
happy with the election results. She says that Barack Obama, by virtue of
being a black man understands what it means to be exploited, as opposed to a
George Bush who comes from an elitist background. This understanding will
inform future developmental programmes, particularly in the areas of science
and technology (where the black community is grossly under represented) as
"he will always be conscious of the needs of black people".

Du Saraswathi, a dalit feminist activist and writer, is also happy with the
electoral outcome, but says we can see this as a positive change depending
on Obama's stance on foreign policy. At a more abstract level she feels that
there is hope for the marginalised all over the world, and now "at least
they can have a dream...it is a symbolic victory for all people all over the
world".

In an opinion piece on
http://www.facebook.com/l.php?u=http://Forbes.com%2CTinku Varadrajan,
a professor at New York University, concludes that Obama's
victory was 'given' to him by his society, as a reward for a "mutiny against
convention that was thought to ennoble not merely him and his kind, but all
of America..." He was referring to the negative image America had acquired
globally. He believes that America, unlike India, "rewards mutiny against
convention, against one's past, and against those who would keep one down",
and Obama's presidential bid as a coloured man was just that. Du Saraswathy
too believes that America needs to redeem itself after being spat upon by
the world. Borrowing a metaphor from Shakespeare's Macbeth, she says,
"Ultimately, the whites needed a black man to wash away their sins."

Senior functionary of the Dalit Sangharsh Samiti (DSS) in Bengaluru and the
state coordinator of the National Alliance of Peoples Movements (NAPM), N
Venkatesh, welcomed the election of Barack Obama as the first black
President of America. However, his happiness is qualified. He outlines what
in his view are the challenges facing the president-elect. He says Obama
should dismantle the 'infrastructure' that was set up during the Bush era
that allowed multinational corporations to plunder the natural resources of
poorer countries. Speaking about the Indo-American nuclear power treaty, he
says that the chief reason President Bush promoted it was because it was
projected as providing employment to 1,50,000 US citizens.

Another crucial issue that Obama should focus on according to N Venkatesh is
peace in the world. He should establish peace, democracy and social justice.
"To get power he has posed like anything," observes Venkatesh, meaning that
while in campaign mode Obama made all the right noises. "Now we have to see
what he will deliver."

Addithya, a young dalit journalist and Youth Convener of the National
Alliance of Peoples Movements (NAPM), is more sceptical. Obama talked a lot
about human rights while campaigning, but will not do much when he is in
power, Addithya says. The election of Obama makes no difference because "the
system is the same although the person is different -- only the mask has
changed". Obama's victory does not inspire him, he says, but concedes that
Obama may be a source of inspiration for black people in America. Barring a
few favours, the aspirations of black people will not be fulfilled, he
predicts.

Speaking about whether a dalit will be elected prime minister in India, both
Venkatesh and Addithya feel that this would be difficult. Addithya believes
that the reasons for Obama's electoral success have no relevance in the
Indian context. He draws a parallel from sports to explain: can one win a
match using the rules of cricket for a game of football?  The entire social
and political set-up is vastly different in the two countries. In addition,
he says, Obama as a person of colour has come to power after 200 years of
slavery, while in India the caste system has existed for more than 1,000
years!

Doubtless, India has seen dalits in exalted positions like chief architect
of the Indian Constitution, President of the country, and most recently, as
the chief justice of the Supreme Court, and in a sense some barriers have
been broken. However, as N Venkatesh points out, the prime minister's post
is a far more important one. Casteism and communalism need to be destroyed
before we can expect an Obama-like phenomenon to occur in India. He gives
the example of Jagjivan Ram, a respected scheduled caste national leader in
the pre-independence era and a Union minister in post-independence India,
well-known for his oratory, leadership and organisational abilities. In the
1970s Ram left the Congress saddened by the excesses of the Emergency and
joined the Janata coalition. According to Venkatesh, Jagjivan Ram's chances
were foiled by Jayaprakash Narayan, leader of the Janata coalition who
reneged on his undertaking to choose Jagjivan Ram the prime ministerial
candidate. This move hurt the dalit community a lot, he says.

He further rues the kind of issues that centrist parties espouse in
present-day politics. "They are not taking up issues of the poor: instead,
they follow imperialist policies that favour exploitation of our resources
by multinational corporations," he says. This is a far cry from Obama, who
started his political career as a community organiser in Chicago and worked
on social issues of the poor. In India it is difficult to see how a person
engaged in social or political activism can be supported by any of the
political parties at the centre, Venkatesh says.

In his doctoral thesis on race and caste, Dr Ambedkar drew out the
commonality between the two. People of the so-called lower caste in India
and black people in the United States have both suffered tyranny -- of the
upper castes in India, and of white people in the US. This was grounded on
the assumed superiority of the higher varna or white skin. In the context of
a shared history of oppression on similar grounds, there is a sense of
commonality, maybe even brotherhood between the dalits and the blacks. But
there is also a recognition of the cultural, social and economic seas that
separate the two forms of discrimination in the two countries.

(Anuja Mirchandaney is a legal researcher and freelance writer with the
Alternative Law Forum, Bengaluru. Her primary interest is in research and
writing on socio-legal issues)

InfoChange News & Features, January 2009
READ MORE SUCH ARTICLES AT:
http://www.facebook.com/l.php?u=http://infochangeindia.org%2F
--------------------

Reply via email to