Untouchability in India: a Reading List
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ISSN (Online) - 2349-8846 Untouchability in India: A Reading List EPW ENGAGE Although constitutionally banned, untouchability is still practised in both rural and urban India, by upper castes and lower castes. But how was the untouchability question answered in colonial India? Did attitudes change during the fight for independence? And despite the ban, why is the practice still prevalent in India today? The caste system in India involves “rank and gradation,” Sukhadeo Thorat explains, which make “the rights and privileges of higher castes, become the disabilities of the lower castes, particularly the untouchables.” According to Amit Thorat and Omkar Joshi, being India’s “quintessential social and individual identifier,” caste receives a lot of scholarship focusing on its creation, evolution and manifestation. For instance, over the years, it has been discussed and debated whether caste originated in India or was introduced to India by “invaders.” Regarding the evolution of caste, when answering the “untouchability question,” Gopal Guru, in his review of the book, Untouchability in Rural India, writes that, “…there are scholars who obliquely suggest that caste is a rumour and untouchability has become irrelevant in India.” Guru argues that those who deny the existence of caste and those who believe that a practice like untouchability exists only in a “mild form” are either “guilty” or “embarrassed” of the very existence of caste and untouchability. The manifestation of caste is based on the notion of purity which goes beyond mere physical contact and is applied to a larger set of social norms. Thorat and Joshi note that “the notions of ‘purity and pollution’ are ideas that, despite the spread of education and the advent of ISSN (Online) - 2349-8846 modern lifestyles, tend to stick and prey on our religious and social insecurities.” This reading list looks at the manifestation of caste, particularly in the form of the practice of untouchability. It traces the origin of the practice, how it evolved and how it was enabled under the British, how the “anti-colonial nationalists” felt the need to provide leadership to the Untouchables and finally how and why the practice is still prevalent in India today. The Indian Caste System In their paper, “The Continuing Practice of Untouchability in India,” Thorat and Joshi explain how India, the largest democracy and the second-most populous country in the world, has its religious majority divided on the basis of “jati” or “caste.” While jati is derived from the Sanskrit word jāta (born), “caste” has different origins. The word caste … derives from the Spanish/Portuguese word casta meaning race, lineage or breed. It was used formally for the first time in India by the British to identify and enumerate the various groups in India as part of their census exercises. But “caste is not the same as race,” write Thorat and Joshi. The usage of the term “caste” does not imply a difference in race, but a difference in “characteristics.” Caste is hierarchical, hereditary and endogamous in nature, and has historically been linked to specific occupations. However, some occupations like agriculture have traditionally been caste-neutral. Throat and Joshi write that the caste system was derived from “the Chaturvarna system or the fourfold division of society.” This divides the society into four varnas or classes that are hierarchical in nature. On the top of this ranking are the priests (Brahmins), followed by the warriors and erstwhile rulers (Kshatriyas). The next to come are the farmers and merchants (Vaishyas), while the last in the hierarchy are the workers and craftsmen, among others (Shudras). There exists a group of people who were considered “physically and ritually polluting” due to their occupations. These “outcastes” enjoyed no rights and were considered impure. It is primarily against this community that untouchability was and continues to be practised. ISSN (Online) - 2349-8846 A fifth group existed outside this fourfold classification, that of the non- classified (avarnas) who did work that was, and is still considered, physically and ritually polluting, such as cremation and the handling of dead bodies, removal and skinning of dead animals, removal and cleaning of human bodily fluids and excreta (manual scavenging) and basket weaving. However, B R Ambedkar, in his work, Who Were the Shudras, writes that the division of society based on occupation was a later addition to Hindu scriptures to secure religious sanction for “control and hegemony.” Defining Untouchability Marc Galanter, in his 1969 paper, “Untouchability and the Law,” traces the relationship between the British legal system and the Indian “caste order” in colonial India. Discussing the “constitutional meaning of untouchability,” Galanter writes: The Constitution does not define “untouchability,” nor is it clear what constitutes its “practice in any form” or “a disability arising out of ‘untouchability.’” The English term “untouchability” is of relatively recent coinage; its first appearance in print was in 1909 and, while it gained wide currency, it did not gain clarity. Based on the pronouncements of Indian courts, Galanter writes that broadly, “untouchability” could be defined as follows: …Might include all instances in which one person treated another as ritually unclean and as a source of pollution. In this sense, women at child-birth, menstruating women, persons with contagious diseases, mourners, persons who eat forbidden food or violate prescribed states of cleanliness or are subjects of social boycott might be considered to be untouchables. Galanter goes on to refine this definition: A … somewhat narrower sense of the term would include all instances in which a person was stigmatised as unclean or polluting or inferior because of his origin or membership in a particular group—ie, where he is subjected to invidious treatment because of difference in religion or membership of a lower or different caste. ISSN (Online) - 2349-8846 A still narrower definition is provided by Galanter: …As referring only to those practices concerned with the relegation of certain groups “beyond the pale of the caste system.” In an attempt to answer the question, “does untouchability exist among Muslims?” Prashant K Trivedi et al gave a more exacting definition of untouchability. In a comprehensive study of untouchability, Shah et al (2006: 19) define untouchability as a “distinct Indian social institution that legitimises and enforces practices of discrimination against people born into particular castes and legitimises practices that are humiliating, exclusionary and exploitative.” From one’s occupation to their social interactions, caste dictates everything in a person's life. As a result, those “beyond the pale of the caste system” were at the receiving end of untouchability, a practice that could take up “vicious” forms. …That mere touch or a shadow of an “untouchable” falling on someone else pollutes them. Framing Muslims for Importing Untouchability In the late 1800s, when “elite Indian nationalists” were trying to articulate the “new social order,” the Chaturvarna system posed an uncomfortable reality. Prashad explains elite Indian nationalists as “bourgeois historicism” which “locates its past in distant antiquity and clothes it in Brahminism.” To return to the problem as proposed by the nationalists, how does one organise a new social order in which the Bhangis are liberated without losing their labour which is essential for menial tasks? According to Vijay Prashad, in an attempt to overcome the contradiction of liberating the “untouchable” from menial jobs, while still making them continue their job of cleaning and sweeping, the Indian “elite liberators” came up with a new “Aryan social polity” that placed conduct over birth in determining a person’s occupation. So, how did the elite liberators justify the “perversion” of this social polity over time? Prashad writes: Only one community is made to bear the burden for the perversion of the polity ISSN (Online) - 2349-8846 in these and other tracts: the Muslims. It was the “cruel bigotry of Muslim Emperors” and the practices of the “foreigners who ruled over India for several centuries” which ended perfection. This statement has a long ancestry, even in the biography of Shraddhananda, who as Munshi Ram in 1891 wrote that “there was no trace of the present caste system during the puranic age. It is a direct outcome of the advent of Muslim rule in India.” According to Prashad, “It was not just the [Muslim] rulers who earned the wrath of [Hindu intellectual] writers, but all Muslims.” Various books and speeches from the early 1900s claimed that untouchable “sweepers” were originally Rajputs who were captured by Muslim rulers and forced into the occupation. And thus, the “elite Indian nationalists” attributed the origin of untouchability in India to Muslims. Jairamdas, a staunch Gandhian, writes that although “untouchability is ages old, the evidence hitherto collected shows that there were no professional scavengers before Mohammedan conquest.” What is the ‘evidence’ for this? None is cited, except some ahistorical and acontextual stereotypes. Arguments that there existed no Sanskrit equivalent of the word “Bhangi,” that there was no need for Bhangis in an Indian village in the first place and that Muslim women required indoor toilets as they were forbidden from stepping out, were all used to accuse Muslim “villainy” of introducing untouchability to India. A story is being told which portrays the Muslim as the villain and the Hindu as the saviour, with the untouchable as the character who waits on the stage of history, caught between good and evil, waiting only for a judgment which is beyond his/her control. By attributing the existence of untouchability to the “invading Muslims,” writes Vijay Prashad, the Indian “elite nationalist” “reveals its Brahminical and anti-Muslim standpoint.” Untouchability in Colonial India “The legal system of British India supported certain aspects of the caste order,” writes Galanter. They also withdrew their support in the years “preceding independence.” Many still believe that the British are behind the existence of the caste system in India.