During the colonial days, the first expression of the resentment of the Untouchables was against their exclusion from social processes. Barring Jotiba Phule, who conceived their cause beyond untouchability and included them within his ‘shudra-atishudra’ as a class that was exploited by ‘shetjis and bhatjis’, all other social reformers just focused on this visible symptom of untouchability and not the disease of caste per se.
Post-Lucknow
Pact, the Congress acutely felt the need to keep the Untouchables within its
fold as Hindus lest they lost their political share to Muslims. They,
therefore, began working on the issue of untouchability. With the persistent
efforts of Babasaheb Ambedkar, particularly his forceful arguments in the Round
Table Conferences in 1931-32, the separate and special status of the
Untouchables was recognized in the Government of India Act 1935 as ‘Scheduled
Castes’.
A massive
exercise was carried all over India to identify castes on the basis of a
criterion of untouchability for preparing this schedule before 1937 elections
in order to implement the provisions contained in the Act. The provisions were
in the political form, originally as reservation with separate electorates and
thereafter, as modified in the Poona Pact, reservations in joint electorates.
There were preferment provisions also in the Act which mandated the state to
take care of their interests. Accordingly, capable people from among the
Scheduled Castes were given jobs in the government sector. When Dr Ambedkar
became the member of the viceroy’s executive council in 1942 as labour member,
this preferment policy was converted into quota system by an executive order.
The important point to note here is that the evolution of the reservation system up to this point was conceptually correct. The reservation as an exception to the general rule was extended to the exceptional people (nobody could have any dispute over the Untouchables being a very
exceptional lot in the world). But after the transfer of power, during the writing of the Constitution, this exceptional provision was proliferated so as to preserve the prevailing communal and caste divisions in the society, lest they disappear under the force of ensuing changes in political economy.
First, the same
set of provisions as were created for the Untouchables were extended to the
Tribals by creating a separate schedule for them. There was an alternative to
combine the schedules or extend the existing schedule for the Untouchables to
include the Tribes. By doing so, the caste factor could have been diffused
because although Tribals were backward, they did not suffer the social stigma
of untouchability as the Untouchables did. If the purpose of these schedules
were exactly same, there separation did not make sense except for keeping the
untouchable castes as a distinct category alive. Merging the Untouchables and
the Tribes would have at the minimum diluted the caste stigma. This separation
maintained the identity of the Untouchables as separate people. The utility of
this separation is illustrated by many communities demanding their inclusion in
Scheduled Tribes but not in the Scheduled castes. That would fetch them all the
benefits without the social stigma of being inferior. None would like to be
Scheduled Castes, however!
There was
another problem with the schedule for Tribes, which was the fluid criterion
used for scheduling the communities as tribals. Unlike the Untouchables, who
were categorized into the schedule on a concrete criterion of untouchability,
there could not be such criterion for Tribals or for that matter, any other
people. The problem has manifested into inclusion of certain wrong communities
into the schedule which appear to have monopolized most benefits planned for
the Tribes. Every state will demonstrate that just one or two communities which
otherwise are as advanced as even the upper castes, monopolizing the benefits
just by an accident of being included in the schedule for tribes.
The bigger mischief
was played under Article 340 of the Indian Constitution, which made it
obligatory for the government to promote the welfare of the OBCs.
The Article
said:
“The president may by order appoint a commission, consisting of such persons as he thinks, fit to investigate the conditions of socially and educationally backward classes within the territory of India and the difficulties under which they labour and to make recommendations as to the steps that should be taken by the union or any state to remove such difficulties and as to improve ‘their condition and as to the grants that should be made, and the order appointing such commission shall define the procedure to be followed by the commission. ... A commission so appointed shall investigate the matters referred to them and present to the president a report setting out the facts as found by them and making such recommendations as they think proper.”
To defend the Constitution, one may
argue that the phrase used in the Article is “socially and educationally
backward classes” and not ‘castes’. As a matter of fact, except in reference to
the Untouchables, the Constitution does not use ‘caste’ anywhere. But everybody
knew what was meant by the ‘class’ in the Article. It would only be mapped by
the castes. This article would constitute arsenal of the ruling classes, which
could be opened at the opportune time. There were far more pressing mandates of
the Constitution to the ruling classes. One such mandate and only one in that
demanding its fulfillment within a specified time period of a decade, was
regarding provision of the free and compulsory education to all children up to
the age of fourteen years. They ignored it but almost immediately followed the
Article 340 to institute a Kalelkar Commission on 29 January 1953 to identify
the ‘backward classes’. Naturally, in reference to their social backwardness,
the castes would come into picture. They did come and such castes were
identified by the commission which were ‘educationally’ backward and were
underrepresented in the government service as well as in the field of trade,
commerce and industry.
The Kalelkar
commission submitted its report on 30 March 1955, identifying 2,399 backward
castes or communities as backward and of them 837 as the ‘most backward’. It
inter alia recommended undertaking caste-wise enumeration of population in the
census of 1961 and reservation of 70 per cent seats in all technical and
professional institutions for qualified students of backward classes. Perhaps,
the opportune time had not yet come and therefore the report was rejected by
the Central government on the ground that it had not applied any objective
tests for identifying the Backward Class.
By the next
decade, the changes in political economy induced by the calibrated land reforms
and Green revolution, which would create a class of rich farmers out of the
populous Shudra castes, wielding the baton of Brahmanism from the upper castes
in vast rural India. These changes catalyzed regional parties and made
electoral politics (based on the first-past-the-post type elections, where a
small group of votes also make or unmake the outcome) increasingly competitive.
The rise of the backward castes and their regional parties slowly spread
through local self governments to states, culminating into defeat of the
Congress party in 1977 by the Janata party, which was motley mixture of all
these elements. Janata party government established the second backward classes
commission on on 1 January 1979, which came to be known as the Mandal Commission with a mandate to “identify the socially or educationally backward.”
The commission
identified “other backward class”, on eleven criteria, but necessarily in terms
of castes or religious communities comprising 54% of the total population
(excluding SCs and STs), belonging to 3,743 different castes and communities.
The report of the commission was submitted in December 1980 making several
recommendations. A decade after the commission gave its report, V.P. Singh, the
Prime Minister at the time decided to open up this can of castes in 1989 in his
political game plan. It immediately resulted in the nationwide inferno against
‘reservations’, which until then were confined to the SCs and STs and were
reluctantly but largely reconciled. The inferno created comic waves. Although
the reservations were meant for the BCs, on the ground they came to beat the
SCs, who foolishly rushed to defend ‘reservations’. Ultimately, reservations
for OBCs were implemented in government services in 1993 and in higher
educational institutes in 2008. Reservations came in their true prowess as
weapons in the hands of the political parties who began using them with
impunity in their political calculus.
Any sane person
can easily see that in a backward country like India, where arguably more than
80% population (by government reckoning 22.5% SCs and STs +54% BCs, which makes
76.5%. Add to it another 5 % of the poor of the excluded castes, all of them
not being the upper castes, the tally goes up to 80.5%) can be summarily termed
backward, the criterion of backwardness cannot be used for the exceptional
measures such as reservation. It is not to say that there are no people other
than the Untouchables who are not poorer or backward than them. They indeed
are.
And the state
bears definite responsibility towards them. It has policy instruments to do
such things and not reservations alone that are two edged swords that need to
be cautiously used. For example, such a policy measure was indicated in the
Constitution itself. It was about providing free, compulsory, and quality
education to all children through neighourhood schools up to the age of some
mature age. (The Constitution had prescribed free and compulsory education up
to the age of 14 years and did not elaborate in so many terms). I feel, if the
government had taken up this single issue in proper spirit and implemented this
provision; there would not have been even the need of reservations.
If the
government is really concerned with the backwardness of the people, it would
have internalized the need to ensure that every child that comes out on earth
does not inherit the disability of their parents. Any woman that conceives a
child would be provided quality health care and proper diet by the state. She
would deliver the child in a healthy atmosphere and the child after the birth
would be provided with proper diet and provisions for its healthy growth,
followed by quality education. All children if they got the same education only
through the neighourhood schools, would have healthy socialization and similar
opportunity to realize their potential. Instead of indulging in a plethora of
so called welfare schemes the government should have prioritized this
programme. But it summarily ignored it.
Instead, when
the circumstances compelled it to do something in this regard, it changed the
original mandate of the Constitution itself and enacted the ‘Right to
Education’ Act, which has only legitimized the multilayered education system
that evolved in the country under benign gaze of the government. It admits the
quality of education as per the socio-economic standing of the parents,
something akin to what Manu prescribed. Here also it has mischievously
unleashed the weapon of reservation to fool the lower castes and classes.
One should
clearly see the underneath orientation of the ruling classes in this brief
history that they would never let the goose of caste die! It is the testimony
to the bankruptcy of the Dalit politics on the other hand that such issues do
not even remotely concern it. Rather, paradoxically, with the spread of
education and ‘Ambedkarism’ among them, increasingly fewer among them believe
that castes could really be annihilated.
No comments:
Post a Comment