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Are Brahmins the Dalits of today?

Adux

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Are Brahmins the Dalits of today?

May 23, 2006


At a time when the Congress government wants to raise the quota for Other Backward Classes to 49.5 per cent in private and public sectors, nobody talks about the plight of the upper castes. The public image of the Brahmins, for instance, is that of an affluent, pampered class. But is it so today?

Doctors in arms

There are 50 Sulabh Shauchalayas (public toilets) in Delhi; all of them are cleaned and looked after by Brahmins (this very welcome public institution was started by a Brahmin). A far cry from the elitist image that Brahmins have!

There are five to six Brahmins manning each Shauchalaya. They came to Delhi eight to ten years back looking for a source of income, as they were a minority in most of their villages, where Dalits are in majority (60 per cent to 65 per cent). In most villages in UP and Bihar, Dalits have a union which helps them secure jobs in villages.

At Ground Zero of the quota protests

Did you know that you also stumble upon a number of Brahmins working as coolies at Delhi's railway stations? One of them, Kripa Shankar Sharma, says while his daughter is doing her Bachelors in Science he is not sure if she will secure a job.

"Dalits often have five to six kids, but they are confident of placing them easily and well," he says. As a result, the Dalit population is increasing in villages. He adds: "Dalits are provided with housing, even their pigs have spaces; whereas there is no provision for gaushalas (cowsheds) for the cows of the Brahmins."

The middle class deserves what it is getting

You also find Brahmin rickshaw pullers in Delhi. 50 per cent of Patel Nagar's rickshaw pullers are Brahmins who like their brethren have moved to the city looking for jobs for lack of employment opportunities and poor education in their villages.

Even after toiling the whole day, Vijay Pratap and Sidharth Tiwari, two Brahmin rickshaw pullers, say they are hardly able to make ends meet. These men make about Rs 100 to Rs 150 on an average every day from which they pay a daily rent of Rs 25 for their rickshaws and Rs 500 to Rs 600 towards the rent of their rooms which is shared by 3 to 4 people or their families.

Did you also know that most rickshaw pullers in Banaras are Brahmins?

Do our institutes connect with the real India?

This reverse discrimination is also found in bureaucracy and politics. Most of the intellectual Brahmin Tamil class has emigrated outside Tamil Nadu. Only 5 seats out of 600 in the combined UP and Bihar assembly are held by Brahmins -- the rest are in the hands of the Yadavs.

400,000 Brahmins of the Kashmir valley, the once respected Kashmiri Pandits, now live as refugees in their own country, sometimes in refugee camps in Jammu and Delhi in appalling conditions. But who gives a damn about them? Their vote bank is negligible.

And this is not limited to the North alone. 75 per cent of domestic help and cooks in Andhra Pradesh are Brahmins. A study of the Brahmin community in a district in Andhra Pradesh (Brahmins of India by J Radhakrishna, published by Chugh Publications) reveals that today all purohits live below the poverty line.

Eighty per cent of those surveyed stated that their poverty and traditional style of dress and hair (tuft) had made them the butt of ridicule. Financial constraints coupled with the existing system of reservations for the 'backward classes' prevented them from providing secular education to their children.

Who are the real Dalits of India?

In fact, according to this study there has been an overall decline in the number of Brahmin students. With the average income of Brahmins being less than that of non-Brahmins, a high percentage of Brahmin students drop out at the intermediate level. In the 5 to 18 year age group, 44 per cent Brahmin students stopped education at the primary level and 36 per cent at the pre-matriculation level.

The study also found that 55 per cent of all Brahmins lived below the poverty line -- below a per capita income of Rs 650 a month. Since 45 per cent of the total population of India is officially stated to be below the poverty line it follows that the percentage of destitute Brahmins is 10 per cent higher than the all-India figure.

There is no reason to believe that the condition of Brahmins in other parts of the country is different. In this connection it would be revealing to quote the per capita income of various communities as stated by the Karnataka finance minister in the state assembly: Christians Rs 1,562, Vokkaligas Rs 914, Muslims Rs 794, Scheduled castes Rs 680, Scheduled Tribes Rs 577 and Brahmins Rs 537.

Appalling poverty compels many Brahmins to migrate to towns leading to spatial dispersal and consequent decline in their local influence and institutions. Brahmins initially turned to government jobs and modern occupations such as law and medicine. But preferential policies for the non-Brahmins have forced Brahmins to retreat in these spheres as well.

Caste shouldn't overwrite merit

According to the Andhra Pradesh study, the largest percentage of Brahmins today are employed as domestic servants. The unemployment rate among them is as high as 75 per cent. Seventy percent of Brahmins are still relying on their hereditary vocation. There are hundreds of families that are surviving on just Rs 500 per month as priests in various temples (Department of Endowments statistics).

Priests are under tremendous difficulty today, sometimes even forced to beg for alms for survival. There are innumerable instances in which Brahmin priests who spent a lifetime studying Vedas are being ridiculed and disrespected.

At Tamil Nadu's Ranganathaswamy Temple, a priest's monthly salary is Rs 300 (Census Department studies) and a daily allowance of one measure of rice. The government staff at the same temple receive Rs 2,500 plus per month. But these facts have not modified the priests' reputation as 'haves' and as 'exploiters.' The destitution of Hindu priests has moved none, not even the parties known for Hindu sympathy.

The tragedy of modern India is that the combined votes of Dalits/OBC and Muslims are enough for any government to be elected. The Congress quickly cashed in on it after Independence, but probably no other government than Sonia Gandhi's has gone so far in shamelessly dividing Indian society for garnering votes.

From the Indian Express: 'These measures will not achieve social justice'

The Indian government gives Rs 1,000 crores (Rs 10 billion) for salaries of imams in mosques and Rs 200 crores (Rs 2 billion) as Haj subsidies. But no such help is available to Brahmins and upper castes. As a result, not only the Brahmins, but also some of the other upper castes in the lower middle class are suffering in silence today, seeing the minorities slowly taking control of their majority.

How reservations fracture Hindu society

Anti-Brahminism originated in, and still prospers in anti-Hindu circles. It is particularly welcome among Marxists, missionaries, Muslims, separatists and Christian-backed Dalit movements of different hues. When they attack Brahmins, their target is unmistakably Hinduism.

So the question has to be asked: are the Brahmins (and other upper castes) of yesterday becoming the Dalits of today?

Francois Gautier
http://ia.rediff.com/news/2006/may/23franc.htm
 
This article has been written with a very biased attitude. Among all the Indian leaders; past and present; I respect Mahatma Gandhi the most. Gandhiji cleaned latrines himself to prove that any honest work is not demeaning.

So what if Brahmins are pulling rickshaws and working as domestic servants and cooks. A pucca Brahmin can only eat food cooked by another Brahmin. This excludes poor Dalits from a cooks job in Brahmin household. What stops Brahmins to have as many children as Dalits??.

The whole purpose of quota system as included in the Indian constitution was meant to ensure that Dalits come out of the 'Catch 22', they have no education because they cant make the grade, they have no jobs because they have no education. The articles uses arguments identical to the one used by the BNP ( British National Party) in the UK and by Le Pen in France. Only difference being that in place of Dalits they use examples of the blacks, Indians and Jews. They cite how Jews, Indians and blacks have taken over the jobs and that Whites have become victims in their own country.

Pray tell me, what is the motive behind this article??. Do you intend to keep Dalits and other minorities always in the servile position. Such articles disappoint me a great deal. India has some good things which other nations could copy. Indian constitution is one such. People who wrote the above article want to undermine Indian constitution. But who am I to criticize this?? If Indians want to ignore Mahatma and keep all the minorities and Dalits in perpetual serfdom, so be it.
 
Sir,
Brahmins and uppercaste in Hindu's systematically destroyed the lower caste for centruies both economically, intellectually and also their personal freedom.

The reservation by caste ;not by the economic condition of the person; was kept in government jobs and educational insititutions , was kept cuz of two primary reasons.

1. Even if you have the qualification, you wont be entered into the job cuz the interviewer was a higher caste and they wouldnt let them in

2. Again, Their economic condition and educational condition was so backward there was no other way other than Reservation.

I am an OBC myself, and I dont agree with the government plan of including OBC into reservation. It is just a political move. And the article is a hyperbole mixed with reality. So it is true at the same time just a 'rant'. In the metro's there is no problem, but in the interior villages you still have the caste discrimination here and there. I am of an advocate that Reservation must be time bound maybe 20 years and after that everything should be a level playing field. Even in the US, there is Affirmative action. Dalits need a helping hand and there is no doubt about that. OBC's I dont think so.
 
UN report slams India for caste discrimination
Last Updated: Friday, March 2, 2007
CBC News
A United Nations anti-racism committee has sharply criticized the Indian government for its failure to prevent discrimination based on caste.

The UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination deplored the widespread abuse perpetrated against India's so-called "untouchable" caste, also known as Dalits.

The report found more than 165 million Dalits continue to face segregation in housing, schools, and access to public services. It also said many are forced to work in degrading conditions and are routinely abused by police and upper-caste community members who enjoy the state's protection.

Ruth Manorama, president of the National Federation of Dalit Women in India, told CBC News that discrimination against the Dalits is taking place even though the caste system is abolished in the Indian Constitution.

"Formerly, we have been called untouchables; if someone touches us, they get polluted," she said.


"They cannot fetch water from the common wells and the common taps … they are not allowed."
According to government statistics, there were 110,000 registered cases of violence, murder, rape and other atrocities committed against Dalits in 2005. Few cases ever get to trial.
In December, Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh acknowledged there is still social discrimination against Dalits in many parts of the country, even after 60 years of constitutional and legal protection and state support.www.cbc.ca/world/story/2007/03/02/india-dalite.html-30k
 
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