People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXIII
No.
37 September 13, 2009 |
G
Mamatha
IN
a recently held State
Welfare and Social Justice Ministers� conference in
Good
to hear that at
last the government wants to start a 'concerted awareness programme'.
Dalits
today are humiliated for wearing nice clothes, for being clean, for
being
literate and for desiring to be treated with dignity. Dalit students
are
routinely humiliated and harassed at school. Many drop out because of
this.
They are seated separately in the classroom and at mid-day meals in
countless
schools across the country.
Students
from the upper
castes do not get slapped by the teacher for drinking water from the
common
pitcher. Nor is there much chance of acid being thrown on their faces
in the village
if they do well in studies. Nor are they segregated in hostels and in
the
dining rooms of the colleges they go to. This happens only to the
dalits.
Discrimination haunts dalits at every turn, every level, at workplace,
at
educational institues and at public places. Discrimination for dalits
is like
the proverbial 'cradle to grave' as in many places they are even denied
burial
grounds. The upper caste landlords in most of the villages occupy these
lands,
deny access to them by blocking the paths leading to them and thus
deprive
dalits even space to bury their dead.
In
these conditions, to
make our society 'more humane' and 'socially progressive' a concerted
awareness
programme is not sufficient. And moreover, 'changing mindset' is not so
easy.
After all they are not handsets to be changed in a whiff (Of course,
even
changing handsets is difficult for the majority in our country). These
theories
of change of heart, change of mindset are nothing new for the Congress
leadership. There were many attempts to eliminate caste discrimination
and
untouchability by encouraging a change in the social behaviour of the
people,
through inter-caste marriages and such other means. Unfortunately such
attempts
did not address the root cause of the problem and thus were not able to
completely eliminate these vices.
The
prime minister
should realise that the root of the problem of exclusion, of caste
discrimination and associated atrocities lies in the
economic basis on which this oppression thrives. In
It
was only the then united Communist Party which linked social reform
with the struggle against British imperialism and a comprehensive
agrarian
revolution. Right from the Platform of Action in 1930 to the memorandum
submitted to the National Integration Council by Comrade Putchalapalli
Sundarayya on behalf of the CPI(M) in 1968, the Communist movement
constantly
underlined that caste exploitation and social emancipation could be
possible
only through sweeping changes in agrarian relations. The caste system
is the
superstructure of a feudal and semi feudal economic base. Therefore,
any
attempt to overthrow this obnoxious caste oppression will have to
target the
elimination of the vestiges of this system and should be a
socio-economic
struggle.
The
question before the present government therefore is, is it ready to
implement the land reform legislation promulgated by their own earlier
government? The Congress leadership was unable to proceed with even the
limited
land reform legislations because of their class alliance that defines
the
character of the Indian state. This alliance
prevented in the past and prevents even today the Indian
bourgeoisie to
complete the tasks of the democratic revolution. Unless this is done,
all the
pious wishes of the prime minister would remain just as such and would
not
translate into reality.
Did
the wish of this government in its first five years tenure to provide
reservations for dalits in the private sector turn into reality? No.
Experience
tells that mere pleading, (as the prime
minister once again had done in the
above quoted speech) the corporate sector to shoulder some social
responsibility and cater to the needs of the marginalised sections of
the
society would not materialise. The government should display some
political
will. This again should not just mean
mere legislation. Of course, legislation is important. But
implementation or
putting the legislation to work is even more important. After all, it
is twenty
years since the SC, ST atrocities act was passed. In many instances as
the
prime minister himself had acknowledged its implementation is tardy.
In
this scenario, mere words however sweet and well intentioned thus
should not fill our hearts. We should fight to force the government
convert its
rhetoric into action. We should fight to ensure that the existing
provisions
are properly implemented. We should fight to change the existing
inhuman
system. It is only through our struggles-both social and economic that
a more
humane and progressive society can be built.