Who Are Dalits
Who Are Dalits
Who Are Dalits
The word Dalit comes from the Sanskrit root dal- and means broken, ground-down, downtrodden, or oppressed. Those previously known as Untouchables, Depressed Classes, and Harijans are today increasingly adopting the term Dalit as a name for themselves. Dalit refers to ones caste rather than class; it applies to members of those menial castes which have born the stigma of untouchability because of the extreme impurity and pollution connected with their traditional occupations. Dalits are outcastes falling outside the traditional four-fold caste system consisting of the hereditary Brahmin, Kshatriya, Vaishya, and Shudra classes; they are considered impure and polluting and are therefore physically and socially excluded and isolated from the rest of society. Dalits represent a community of 170 million in India, constituting 17% of the population. One out of every six Indians is Dalit, yet due to their caste identity Dalits regularly face discrimination and violence which prevent them from enjoying the basic human rights and dignity promised to all citizens of India. Caste-based social organization extends beyond India, finding corollaries in Nepal, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, and Bangladesh, as well as other countries outside of South Asia (see below). More than 260 million people worldwide suffer from this hidden apartheid of segregation, exclusion, and discrimination.
What is Untouchability?
Indias Constitution abolished untouchability, meaning that the dominant castes could no longer legally force Dalits to perform any polluting occupation. Yet sweeping, scavenging, and leatherwork are still the monopoly of the scheduled castes, whose members are threatened with physical abuse and social boycotts for refusing to perform demeaning tasks. Migration and the anonymity of the urban environment have in some cases resulted in upward occupational mobility among Dalits, but the majority continue to perform their traditional functions. A lack of training and education, as well as discrimination in seeking other forms of employment, has kept these traditions and their hereditary nature alive.
Prohibited from eating with other caste members Prohibited from marrying with other caste members Separate glasses for Dalits in village tea stalls
Discriminatory seating arrangements and separate utensils in restaurants Segregation in seating and food arrangements in village functions and festivals Prohibited from entering into village temples Prohibited from wearing sandals or holding umbrellas in front of dominant caste members Devadasi system - the ritualized temple prostitution of Dalit women Prohibited from entering dominant caste homes Prohibited from riding a bicycle inside the village Prohibited from using common village path Separate burial grounds No access to villages common/public properties and resources (wells, ponds, temples, etc.) Segregation (separate seating area) of Dalit children in schools Prohibited from contesting in elections and exercising their right to vote Forced to vote or not to vote for certain candidates during the elections Prohibiting from hoisting the national flag during Independence or Republic days Sub-standard wages Bonded Labor Face social boycotts by dominant castes for refusing to perform their duties
and in 70% of villages non-Dalits would not eat together with Dalits. In more than 47% villages, bans operated on wedding processions on public (arrogated as upper-caste) roads. In 10 to 20% of villages, Dalits were not allowed even to wear clean, bright or fashionable clothes or sunglasses. They could not ride their bicycles, unfurl their umbrellas, wear sandals on public roads, smoke or even stand without head bowed. Restrictions on temple entry by Dalits average as high as 64%, ranging from 47 % in UP to 94% in Karnataka. In 48.9% of the surveyed villages, Dalits were barred from access to cremation grounds. In 25% of the villages, Dalits were paid lower wages than other workers. They were also subjected to much longer working hours, delayed wages, verbal and even physical abuse, not just in feudal states like Bihar but also notably in Punjab. In 37% of the villages, Dalit workers were paid wages from a distance, to avoid physical contact. In 35% of villages, Dalit producers were barred from selling their produce in local markets. Instead they were forced to sell in the anonymity of distant urban markets where caste identities blur, imposing additional burdens of costs and time, and reducing their profit margin and competitiveness.
caste owners) Japan: Buraku community (at the bottom of the Japanese class system; traditionally viewed as filthy and/or non-human) Kenya: Watta community (traditionally considered low, worthless, and consigned to a life of servitude from birth) Mauritania: Haratin community (these black moors are considered slaves to the Bidan, or white moors, in Mauritanian society) Nepal: Dalit community (situation is essentially the same as that of Dalits in India) Nigeria: Osu community (traditionally the Osu people are owned by deities and considered as outcaste, untouchable, and sub-human) Pakistan: Dalit community (like Dalits in India except in Muslim society there is no concept of ritual pollution; concepts of privilege and shame used instead) Rwanda: Twa community (at bottom of social hierarchy with no legal protections from discrimination and no representation in positions of power/authority) Senegal: Neeno & Nyamakalaw communities (largely blacksmiths and leatherworkers, they are considered impure and face explicit segregation and exclusion) Somalia: Midgan community (minority outcaste group facing violence, refusal of rights, and possessing no legal protections) Sri Lanka: Rodi/Rodiya & Pallar/Paraiyar communities (these groups face discrimination in employment, practices of social distance, and denial of access to resources)