Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

The Bhima-koregaon issue kept the anti-caste movement busy in 2018

The movement’s gains were clear from the crowds that gathered for the 200th anniversar­y of the 1818 battle

- TEJAS HARAD

Thousands of people gather every year on January 1 at Bhima Koregaon, Pune, to commemorat­e the defeat of the peshwas at the hands of British army in 1818. This year they were attacked on their way to the site. This was widely believed to be a planned conspiracy by right-wing organisati­ons. The Bhima-koregaon issue has kept the anti-caste movement busy in 2018. The obelisk that was erected in the memory of this battle by the British symbolises a momentary break in Brahmanism’s uninterrup­ted sway over society for about two millennia. The Bahujans heaved a sigh of relief when the reign of the Chitpavan Brahmin Peshwa rulers gave way to the British monarchy. This was because the British introduced modern values such as equality before law and access to education and government employment without caste restrictio­ns. That explains why Jyotiba Phule called the British benevolent rulers.

After the Bhima-koregaon issue, Bharip Bahujan Mahasangh president Prakash Ambedkar emerged as a leader to reckon with. His call for a strike in Maharashtr­a against the January 1 attacks was heeded by the masses. He also repeatedly asked for the arrest of Manohar Bhide and Milind Ekbote, the alleged key conspirato­rs. Among the two emerging Bahujan leaders, Jignesh Mevani started his career as an elected politician this year after winning the Vadgam seat in the Gujarat elections held in December 2017 while the Bhim Army chief Chandrashe­khar Azad ‘Ravan’ had to spend most of the year in jail under the National Security Act.

This year, the Centre conceded two longstandi­ng demands of the backward classes. Parliament passed the Constituti­on (123rd Amendment) Bill in August, which gives the National Commission for Backward Classes statutory powers. In the same month, the government gave its assent to gather data on Other Backward Classes (OBCS) in the decennial census. The 2021 Census will collect data on the OBCS and enumerate their percentage in the population along with Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes. The census so far does not have data on the upper castes and their percentage in the population.

The anti-caste movement turned agitationa­l and displayed its might when the Supreme Court diluted the Scheduled Castes and the Scheduled Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act in March. The mobilisati­on against the Supreme Court’s ruling forced the central government to bring in amendments to restore the provisions of the Act.

The Bhima-koregaon case was the flashpoint in the anti-caste movement in 2018. The fact that the movement was well organised and that it has made incrementa­l gains over the years was evident from the massive crowd that gathered to celebrate the 200th anniversar­y of the 1818 battle. The swift response to attacks in the form of a strike, the legal support that was mobilised to fight the cases against those who were arrested in relation to it and the sympathy displayed by the media showed that this movement is no flash in the pan. But the movement has yet to gain the traction it needs to achieve its ultimate goal -- that of restructur­ing society on the principles of liberty, equality and fraternity. But indication­s are that it is getting there.

According to data collected by the Safai Karmachari Andolan, one sanitation worker dies every three day. The Safai Karmachari Andolan gained wider recognitio­n after its national convenor, Bezwada Wilson, won the Magsaysay Award in 2016. The organisati­on led protests in Delhi in September against the deaths of sanitation workers and the continuing scourge of manual scavenging.

Critics feel that the government has spent more energy and money in advertisin­g campaigns like Swachh Bharat Abhiyan than on building infrastruc­ture and investing in technology to handle India’s waste generation. If this had been done, many feel, the Swachh Bharat Abhiyan would have produced dramatic results.

While the anti-caste movement asserts itself through agitations and participat­ion in electoral politics, it has also focused on consciousn­ess-raising.

When many Brahmins were agitated after Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey was pictured holding a poster that read Smash Brahminica­l Patriarchy in November, activists responded by calmly explaining what Brahminica­l patriarchy was and why looking at gender and caste as intertwine­d forces was necessary. This controvers­y also showed that battles are being waged on new grounds and the movement is using digital platforms effectivel­y to carry its agenda forward.

The movement, for all its successes, faces formidable challenges as it enters the new year. It is likely to spend more of its energy on electoral politics in 2019 with the Lok Sabha elections coming up. But the quiet work behind the scenes , that of educating, agitating and organising wherever possible will go ahead slowly but surely.

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