Wednesday, February 14, 2007

Institutionalized Hindu Bigotry

At the dregs of the Hindu caste system is the social class known as Dalit, or sometimes called the “Untouchables” (because people of upper castes cannot even touch them without becoming defiled themselves). Considered untouchable by the remainder of society, the Dalits are unclean and incapable of becoming clean. They are regarded as impure and are prohibited from participating in any sort of religious experience as their mere presence would utterly defile the rite. This soul-stench and the very system of caste segregation itself are propagated and endorsed by Indian society’s religious staple, Hinduism. They are excluded from education and prohibited from seeking other means of self improvement. They are societal slaves, broken peoples, large segments of the population who have traditionally had no rights. These Dalits make up a little less than 20 percent of India’s population.

The Dalits are not a racial, ethnic, or religious minority, rather they are of the same race as any other Indian. Their discrimination and cultural inferiority is merely a product of their ancestry. The Dalit have been the bottom feeders of Indian society for several thousand years.

Institutionalized discrimination against the Dalits has been largely eliminated from the books but the caste still suffers from extreme and violent persecution at the hands of other societal entities. Much like the African American population following the American Civil War, the discrimination of Dalits has been banned in the code of law but it carries on in every sector of society, with the official exception of governmentally affiliated elements such as education, public services, etc. Of course this is only on paper. The official doctrine of discrimination is no longer there but the minds of people are difficult to change.

Crime against Dalits goes largely unpunished. Officially only 2 percent of all crimes against Dalits is prosecuted to the full extent. Rarely is a perpetrator punished. In all, 50,000 to 100,000 heinous and violent crimes against Dalits are reported every year including murder, violence against families, rape of women, burning of Dalit homes and neighborhoods, child labor and slavery, and kidnapping and trafficking of girls and women, generally for sex trade purposes and prostitution. The culture and society of the caste system has been thousands of years in the making and the mindset of the people of India is steeped in thousands of years of entrenched and impermeable tradition.

The persecution persists. The lower level castes in Indian society (castes including Dalit but not exclusive to it) make up 67 percent of India’s population and are fighting for representation and their rightful share in government. Their numbers are troubling and intimidating to the elite and those lower castes are beginning to feel their strength in numbers. Upper castes have lobbied government officials and branches of government with money and power to institutionalize the caste system and to insure the perpetuation of their place in society. This discrimination and institutionalization has been compared to Apartheid in South Africa. The international community and many various NGOs have and are fighting against the introduction of laws institutionalizing discrimination.

Although discrimination and broad ranging persecution of majority peoples in many parts of the world has largely departed public awareness, it persists and festers in densely populated areas where vast shares of the world’s population reside. A simple awareness of the prosperous circumstances which exist in the West resides, as compared to the rest of the world, would go a long way to waking up the West as to how good they really have it and alleviating such far reaching human tragedy.

6 comments:

SR said...

Of course someone who intentionally misleads others is worse than someone who perpetuates that information, believing it to be accurate. However, if someone is going to perpetuate information, they ought to be willing and capable of varifying that information before they regurgitate it. If they regurgitate that information and it is inaccurate, they have a responsibility to correct it once they have been educated as to the facts (nobody can be right 100% of the time).

Anil Kumar said...

Untouchability of humans is a punishable offense in India, thanks to the political movements created by Gandhi in 1940's. Though untouchability is not so prevalent in big cities, the "Dalits" (people born in lower castes) are discriminated by other means (sarcasm, inability to marry people from higher castes, discrimination in job offers, perceived low esteem etc). India could be a stronger country if the caste system is eliminated.

Edeninc said...

I too am a Christian, and a Mormon.
The disease of the caste system in India festers in America as well. Don't many consider the homeless as dirty and untouchable? Doesn't the welfare system propagate poverty by rewarding the breeding of fatherless children? Don't inner city gangs trap their members into servitude under threat of death for disobedience? Even in rich high schools in wealthy neighborhoods, there are always the "scum" of the school that are not "allowed" to participate in social activities. We teach our children the same discrimination that we condemn in other countries. Who is the liar now? Who is the enabler if we choose not to stop it? The sin of omission lay on all our heads.

Anonymous said...

You just repeated what some one told you, Did you verify if it is ground reality? I am from Dalit community from India. I live reasonably good life. There are many like me. Discrimination do exist in the society. You Mormon moron, just taking a photo does not make you right to write an article without knowing the ground reality.

Anonymous said...

1. Hinduism is unconstitutional because it creates hierarchy among Indians which is against Article 14 ie Right to Equality.

2. Hinduism is unethical because parents preach their children to hate other children as per the above hierarchies.

I deplore any other religion that does this.

Anonymous said...

i am a hindu and nobody ever taught me to hate. it is one of the few belief systems that teaches universal love, including love your enemy.

the kind of hatred seen in the west between races is completely unknown in india.

look at katrina. look at how the US did'nt inform asian nations about the tsunami wave even though it fully knew about it.