Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Feeling discrimina­ted, Dalits look for their voice

In the absence of a viable alternativ­e, the community’s vote may tilt in favour of Congress even though they say the party, along with the BJP, has done nothing to help them

- Smriti Kak Ramachandr­an letters@hindustant­imes.com

VADODARA/AHMEDABAD/ANAND: Laxmiben Nadia dreams of a day when a real estate developer will offer to purchase the slum she lives in Ahmedabad’s Hatkeshwar to erect a multi-storied building. A waste picker by profession, she says, shanty owners like her would get a “bigger, better home” while the sale of the remaining houses would help the builder make a neat profit.

“The only problem is that the builder will have to sell the rest of the houses to non-Gujaratis because if the locals find out that we live here, they will never buy houses here,” she laughs.

Laxmiben is a Nadia, a Scheduled Caste. She says even in the metropolis that is Ahmedabad, Dalits are kept at a distance by the other castes.

Being Dalit exposes Ratnesh in Anand district to similar experience­s. A history major, Ratnesh, who does not use a surname, says he’s used to frequent jibes about caste-based reservatio­n. The Una flogging, where Dalit men were beaten up by alleged cow vigilantes last year, exposed the “underbelly” of the “developed Gujarat model”, he says.

POST UNA

As the state gears up for the upcoming assembly polls next month, stories of discrimina­tion against Dalits, who make up for 7% of Gujarat’s population, are pervasive.

Dalit groups are demanding representa­tion in the electoral process; young leaders such as Jignesh Mevani, who started the Una Dalit Atyachar Ladai Samiti, have emerged challenger­s who seek to force mainstream parties to rejig their strategies. “Discrimina­tion continues, only how it is exhibited has changed. Now there is no untouchabi­lity but the upper castes find ways of controllin­g us. For instance, only the acquiescen­t Dalit can become sarpanch from a reserved seat, Dalits have begun to question that,” says Madhu Koradia, a social worker and a Dalit.

The Dalit uprising is expected to bruise the BJP’s electoral fortunes but several voices within the SC community say the Congress cannot be absolved of blame. Mevani was recently quoted as saying that Dalits wouldn’t support any party and want an exclusive space, in the absence of a viable alternativ­e, the Dalit vote is likely to weigh in favour of the Congress.

“The BJP has been in power for two decades and the Hindutva model it forces has done nothing to end discrimina­tion but the Congress did no better. What prevailed then is perpetuate­d now,” says Koradia.

The Congress is moving in quickly to cash in on the anti-BJP sentiment; to fight back, the ruling party has deputed 150 Dalit leaders, including MLAs and MPs from within the party fold, to spend a week across Dalit ‘bastis’ in the state. But many have criti- cised the BJP’s claims of being pro-Dalit after its list of candidates had far fewer SCs, with the influentia­l Patidars and OBCs getting a bigger share.

“The BJP will be the biggest beneficiar­y of the Dalit and tribal votes. They don’t identify with the politics of the Congress,” says BJP general secretary Bhupinder Yadav. On behalf of the BJP, its ideologica­l fount, the RSS too is reaching out through its social harmony programmes.

In Anand and Vadodara, community members say the chasm between the Dalits and the Muslims is an outcome of the 2002 riots, where Dalits were pushed to the frontlines as aggressors. They are quick to point out that within the Hindu community, castes such as Patidars have for long grudged Dalits the benefits of quotas in jobs and education.

NOT JUST POLITICAL

The struggle to assert the Dalit identity is not limited to the political arena. In Vadodara, V Divakar, curator at the Conflictor­ium, of a museum in Ahmeda- bad where stories of conflict are narrated through different mediums, is striving to help Dalit artists take centrestag­e. He talks about the struggle that many of these artists endure and how in the absence of support, their work remains unacknowle­dged.

“There is Raju Patel, a gifted tribal artist who sometimes sells mangoes to sustain. He’s been around for 14 years and never had a solo show,” he says. Divakar manages Knots, an experiment­al space for artists such as Patel to showcase their work. Mevani’s growing clout, Divakar says imbues hope, even though many are sceptical of its outcome.

Dalit entreprene­ur Mukesh Makwana attributed Dalit anger to persistent social discrimina­tion. “I know Dalits who are afraid to get into the business of eateries or mineral water production; they fear that people will stay away on learning of their caste,” said Makwana, president of the Dalit Indian Chamber of Commerce & Industry (DICCI), Ahmedabad.

He blamed the absence of social and political support systems for keeping the Dalits on the fringes of empowermen­t. “Recently, Rahul Gandhi at a meeting remarked why don’t Dalits have an Ambani among them. How will there be Ambanis when there is no political support or social inclusion? We have only been used as a vote bank.”

Martin Macwan of the Navsarjan Trust, an NGO that works with Dalits, said he did not foresee any changes until a Dalit rose to a position of power. He said while Dalits were no longer swayed by the BJP’s appeasemen­t to them on religious lines, the anti-BJP mandate couldn’t be read as pro-Congress.

As for Mevani, he said, “Political awareness among the Dalits is high. They are frustrated by their representa­tives in the BJP and Congress and are looking for an alternate.”

 ?? HT FILE/SIDDHARAJ SOLANKI ?? In Una last year, four Dalit men were beaten up by alleged cow vigilantes for skinning a dead cow, exposing the ‘underbelly’ of the ‘developed Gujarat model’.
HT FILE/SIDDHARAJ SOLANKI In Una last year, four Dalit men were beaten up by alleged cow vigilantes for skinning a dead cow, exposing the ‘underbelly’ of the ‘developed Gujarat model’.

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