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Dalit man killed for eating in front of upper-caste men

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Dalit man killed for eating in front of upper-caste men
By Vineet Khare BBC Hindi, Uttarakhand
_106954050_jitendra_pic.jpg

Jitendra was a carpenter and the only breadwinner in his family
A helpless anger pervades the Dalit community in the remote Indian village of Kot.

Last month, a group of upper-caste men allegedly beat up a 21-year-old Dalit resident, named Jitendra, so badly that he died nine days later.

His alleged crime: he sat on a chair and ate in their presence at a wedding.

Not even one of the hundreds of guests who attended the wedding celebration - also of a young Dalit man - will go on record to describe what happened to Jitendra on 26 April.

Afraid of a backlash, they will only admit to being at a large ground where the wedding feast was being held.

Only the police have publicly said what happened.

The wedding food had been cooked by upper-caste residents because many people in remote regions don't touch any food prepared by Dalits, who are the bottom of the rigid Hindu caste hierarchy.

"The scuffle happened when food was being served. The controversy erupted over who was sitting on the chair," police officer Ashok Kumar said.

The incident has been registered under the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities Act) - a law meant to protect historically oppressed communities.

Dalits, formerly known as untouchables, have suffered public shaming for generations at the hands of upper-caste Hindus.

Dalits continue to face widespread atrocities across the country and any attempts at upward social mobility are violently put down.

For example, four wedding processions of Dalits were attacked in the western state of Gujarat within a week in May.

It is still common to see reports of Dalits being threatened, beaten and killed for seemingly mundane reasons.

The culture that pervades their community is visible everywhere - including in Kot, which is in the hilly northern state of Uttarakhand.

Local residents from the Dalit community allege that Jitendra was beaten and humiliated at the wedding.

They say he left the event in tears, but was ambushed again a short distance away and attacked again - this time more brutally.

Jitendra's mother, Geeta Devi, found him injured outside their dilapidated house early the next morning.

"He had been perhaps lying there the entire night," she said, pointing to where she found him. "He had bruises and injury marks all over his body. He tried to speak but couldn't."

Dalits are outnumbered by upper-caste families in the village
She does not know who left her son outside their home. He died nine days later in hospital.

Jitendra's death is a double tragedy for his mother - nearly five years ago her husband also died.

This meant that Jitendra, who was a carpenter, became the family's only breadwinner and had to drop out of school to start working.

Family and friends describe him as a private man who spoke very little.

Loved ones have been demanding justice for his death, but have found little support among the community.

"There is fear. The family lives in a remote area. They have no land and are financially fragile," Dalit activist Jabar Singh Verma said. "In surrounding villages too, the Dalits are outnumbered by families from higher castes."

Of the 50 families in Jitendra's village, only some 12 or 13 are Dalits.

Dalits comprise almost 19% of Uttarakhand's population and the state has a history of atrocities committed against them.

Police have arrested seven men in connection with Jitendra's death, but all of them deny any involvement.

Upper-caste villagers deny discriminating against the Dalit community
"It's a conspiracy against our family," said a woman whose father, uncles and brothers are among the accused. "Why would my father use caste slurs at a Dalit's marriage?"

"He must have been embarrassed that he got beaten and popped dozens of pills that led to his death," another local upper-caste person said.

But the Dalits in the village, who are livid over Jitendra's death, hotly deny these claims.

They say Jitendra suffered from epilepsy, but insist there is no chance that he overdosed on his medication.

Apart from these expressions of anger, local Dalit families have largely remained silent.

"It is because they are economically dependent on families from the higher castes," activist Daulat Kunwar said.

"Most Dalits are landless. They work the fields of their wealthy upper caste neighbours. They know the consequences of speaking out loud."

Jitendra's family has already experienced some of these consequences - Geeta Devi says they are under pressure to stop pushing for the truth.

"Some men came over to our house and tried to scare us," she said. "There is no one to support us but I will never give up our quest for justice."
 
Let me tell you BBC is anti-India
I feel like talking more today because I had a 4 pegs of whiskey with two of my friends and they were both proper Chinese citizens. None of the two were interested about what was going on between Huawei and the USA. To be amongst like minded folks I had to come to this forum and blah blah blah with you lovely folks. :)
 
Funny how people make fun of Muslims because they follow rules from "2000" years ago and yet say nothing about the caste system an oppressive draconian system.
 
I feel like talking more today because I had a 4 pegs of whiskey with two of my friends and they were both proper Chinese citizens. None of the two were interested about what was going on between Huawei and the USA. To be amongst like minded folks I had to come to this forum and blah blah blah with you lovely folks. :)
Drink and posting is dangerous, strongly not recommended.
 
Hindu society is divided on castes. Far worse than Semitic religions. North Indian Hindus lack habits. No toilets, votes for RSS-BJP.
 
@Nilgiri, how credible is this news?

Its true, lot of media has corroborated this story.

The other side (positive stories of good change and integration of previous divisions) goes lot more unreported because you know how media likes to be (especially if they have lot of free reign).

So how much is the reality of the good that happens versus the bad that happens versus the neutral etc (of the increasing social and economic mobility of underclass/repressed groups)?

Guess that only can be known in the end if you give enough time and scale to it (given time and scale involved in making the system what it is now) Elections are good marker actually for it.

But I do welcome all the negative focus (by media or whomever else), one does not get better making excuses or suppressing the bad that happens. Then we watch and take notes of those that genuinely seem to think our weaknesses/problems somehow makes them strong.

We have much to do...but we have also come a long way given these kind of things never even got reported...and the chance of them happening in first place was often nil back in the day (things were that segregated, and no one dared to change it).

Funny how people make fun of Muslims because they follow rules from "2000" years ago and yet say nothing about the caste system an oppressive draconian system.

When majority gulfies start treating "fellow" muslims from other parts of world as equal....you can start making comments about what is "funny" then.

What many (not all) muslims get stuck in regarding the modern world when they have equal opportunity as every other community....is as clear as night and day. It comes from not acknowledging that truths can lie in other systems too...whatever the discrimination that exists in reality. Hence why in many ways I do sympathise with what China does regarding Uighurs. There can be only one ultimate allegiance...that of ultimate truth. You cannot say your faith is it, period, and then stay backwards with all kind of excuses....and then say hey look we have some feelings of less discrimination than whatever other system (while you lot are just as imperfect on it as everyone else).

@Jlaw
 
welcome to modi's 2nd term! let the civil war begin...
 
Funny how people make fun of Muslims because they follow rules from "2000" years ago and yet say nothing about the caste system an oppressive draconian system.

What the hell are you talking about?
Caste system has been a blot on India for its entire history and continues to be.
Not sure what makes you think anyone is skipping over the fact that this is shameful for us Indians and something that needs to be corrected ASAP through strict enforcement.

I would never propose dictatorship or communism in India if not to enforce the elimination of caste system.
It’s an uphill battle though, not going to lie!
 
Its true, lot of media has corroborated this story.

The other side (positive stories of good change and integration of previous divisions) goes lot more unreported because you know how media likes to be (especially if they have lot of free reign).

So how much is the reality of the good that happens versus the bad that happens versus the neutral etc (of the increasing social and economic mobility of underclass/repressed groups)?

Guess that only can be known in the end if you give enough time and scale to it (given time and scale involved in making the system what it is now) Elections are good marker actually for it.

But I do welcome all the negative focus (by media or whomever else), one does not get better making excuses or suppressing the bad that happens. Then we watch and take notes of those that genuinely seem to think our weaknesses/problems somehow makes them strong.

We have much to do...but we have also come a long way given these kind of things never even got reported...and the chance of them happening in first place was often nil back in the day (things were that segregated, and no one dared to change it).



When majority gulfies start treating "fellow" muslims from other parts of world as equal....you can start making comments about what is "funny" then.

What many (not all) muslims get stuck in regarding the modern world when they have equal opportunity as every other community....is as clear as night and day. It comes from not acknowledging that truths can lie in other systems too...whatever the discrimination that exists in reality. Hence why in many ways I do sympathise with what China does regarding Uighurs. There can be only one ultimate allegiance...that of ultimate truth. You cannot say your faith is it, period, and then stay backwards with all kind of excuses....and then say hey look we have some feelings of less discrimination than whatever other system (while you lot are just as imperfect on it as everyone else).

@Jlaw
Sorry, what?
 

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