For centuries we have thrust chores we regard to be unclean and socially humiliating on people of the lowest, most oppressed castes.
In urban India some imagine that caste demarcations have
become history. We need to only check the caste identity of those employed to
clean the toilets in our offices and homes to recognise how wrong they are. For
centuries we have thrust chores we regard to be unclean and socially
humiliating on people of the lowest, most oppressed castes.
They alone carry the burdens of disposing of animal
carcasses, skinning animals, and scavenging and disposing of human excreta.
Today, although not written, there’s virtually 100% reservation for the lowest
castes in jobs as cleaners and sweepers.
Young people born into these disadvantaged castes battle
formidable barriers to enter and stay in school. Research demonstrates that
they frequently endure humiliating caste discrimination in classrooms. However,
even for many who persevere with their studies, and nearly all of those who
cannot, their caste destiny forces them to clean toilets as the only employment
available to them.
Can we imagine an India in which cleaning toilets becomes an
employment open to people of all castes ? A progressive social service
institute in Ahmedabad did it. It issued a job advertisement for a sanitation
worker, stating that preference would be given to candidates of higher castes.
The institute knew that the notification would be
controversial: They issued it to stimulate public debate and soul-searching
about embedded social inequalities. What they didn’t anticipate was violence
and threats, forcing its director Prasad Chacko to go into hiding.
The advertisement was issued by the Human Development and
Research Centre (formerly Behavioural Science Centre), established in the
seventies by a group of Jesuit priests. These St Xavier’s College teachers were
moved by the caste discrimination, untouchability and violence which they
encountered across Gujarat. The institute tried to organise Dalit and tribal
people, and promote gender equity. In 2002, it also became a hub for activists
working with survivors of the communal carnage.
Some years ago, the position of a sanitation worker fell
vacant in their Ahmedabad office. It was advertised, and as invariably happens,
only people from the lowest-caste, Valmiki community, applied. Mukesh, a ‘tenth-fail’
Valmiki youth was appointed, but Chacko and his colleagues felt it would be
unjust for him to be trapped for a lifetime in only cleaning floors and
toilets. They helped him learn computers and office errands and promoted him as
an office assistant.
This spring the position of sanitation worker fell vacant
again. It was certain that if they issued a job call, only Valmiki candidates
would apply. The audacious idea of stating in the advertisement that preference
would be given to applicants of higher castes came up.
They mentioned that Brahmins, Kshatriyas, Baniyas and Patels
among Hindus; Syeds and Pathans among Muslims (priestly and warrior castes);
Syrian Christians; Parsis; and Jains, would be preferred. Chacko, a Syrian
Christian says that his community still claims its Brahmanical pedigree with
the myth that St Thomas came to Kerala in AD 51 and converted 51 Brahmins, the
ancestors of all later Syrian Christians.
Unsurprisingly, there were no high-caste applications, but
one morning late in June three young men in jeans forced themselves into
Chacko’s office, introducing themselves as members of organisations
representing Brahmins and Rajput Kshatriyas, and challenged him: “Do you
believe that Brahmins and Kshatriyas should clean toilets? Don’t you know what
responsibilities are assigned to us by tradition?”
“Would you ask Christian priests or Muslim maulvis to clean
toilets? It is the Kshatriyas who protect the nation, how dare you insult them
by asking them to clean latrines?” they asked. Chacko said that there was no
reason for priests and maulvis to not clean toilets, and that it is the army
and police — comprising men and women from every caste — that defend the nation.
They recorded Chacko’s views on their phones and left.
In a few hours, Chacko’s interview began circulating on the
Internet, and a number of Gujarati TV channels arrived at the college campus
where the institute is located. By afternoon, a crowd of around 20 angry young
men gathered at the campus demanding that Chacko apologise. The police finally
arrived and dispersed the men.
The next day, more men gathered, and when they could not
meet Chacko, they smashed windows and flower pots outside the office. Many
joined in to condemn the advertisement, including Hardik Patel’s outfit and for
good measure even a Muslim organisation. The institute issued a ‘limited’
apology for unintentionally hurting sentiments, but did not retract the
advertisement.
Dalit and human rights groups on the other hand rose in
solidarity across Gujarat issuing statements in support of this gesture for
advancing the idea of social equality. Jignesh Mewani, a Dalit activist and
lawyer said, “Narendra Modi has declared that sanitation work is a spiritual
exercise. Then why should the upper castes be denied this opportunity?” The
matter simmered for a while, and is now dormant, but Chacko continues to be on
leave.
The fury and indignation of upper caste organisations is
instructive of how entrenched the idea of caste remains in India. On the other
hand, simply the accident of birth into disadvantaged-caste households makes it
fine for low-caste youth to be trapped in this work that the upper castes so
despise.
The country is building toilets in every rural school, which
is welcome, but the responsibility for cleaning these toilets frequently fall
on students from these oppressed castes, who are shamed into doing work that
would so offend their higher-caste classmates. This too causes no outrage.
It is evident that the value of different lives still varies
infinitely in India based on the chance of where children are born. For some,
the skies are within reach, and the idea of cleaning dirt is sacrilege. For
others, clearing human waste is a fitting destiny, and reaching for the skies
is sacrilege.
SOURCE HINDUSTAN TIMES
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Wednesday, July 27, 2016
Is it sacrilege for upper castes to clean toilets?
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