Hindustan Times (Patiala)

BR Ambedkar’s legacy: Hope, defiance, critique

The chairman of the drafting committee of the Constituen­t Assembly continues to inspire millions of people. His ideas and institutio­ns form the pillars of the world’s largest democracy

- Dhrubo Jyoti dhrubo.jyoti@htlive.com

About a month into his undergradu­ate course at Pune’s Byramjee Jeejeebhoy Government Medical College, Sanjay Dabhade found himself depressed and suicidal. Hailing from the stigmatise­d Pardhi tribe, the young student battled a daily fog of slurs and ridicule targeted at his community, classified as criminal by the British. The year was 1988.

One night out on a stroll, he stumbled on a small blue bust of BR Ambedkar on the street outside his hostel; intrigued, he went to the library and started reading about India’s first law minister. In the struggles and triumphs of Ambedkar, Dabhade saw his own life, and the reading brought him close to a fledgling group of young anti-caste students.

“I wouldn’t have survived had it not been for Ambedkar. Babasaheb was the difference between me and Payal Tadvi,” said Dabhade, referring to the young medical researcher who committed suicide last year after months of alleged caste discrimina­tion by fellow students.

Dabhade’s experience is echoed by voices from India’s Dalit and adivasi communitie­s, for whom Ambedkar has emerged as a figure offering both inspiratio­n and resistance.

For his followers, Ambedkar’s appeal has three broad axes.

The first is hope. During an era where lower-caste students were routinely barred from attending schools, Ambedkar braved discrimina­tion and a chronic lack of resources to become one of India’s top academic minds. This is why someone like Rohith Vemula, coming from a marginalis­ed background and facing caste bias in university, looks to Ambedkar. Vemula committed suicide at the University of Hyderabad in 2016 alleging caste discrimina­tion by the institutio­n — a charge that the university has denied.

The second is the possibilit­y of defiance against caste hostility. This is especially true in villages where local administra­tion and law-and-order is often controlled by influentia­l castes and Dalit families have little choice but to follow caste diktats. Ambedkar offers a radical break from this stagnant status quo by his presence in textbooks, in the Constituti­on and in global recognitio­n, and this is why his statues and busts are often the first site of protest for Dalit communitie­s. Think of Sanjay Jatav, a 29-year-old man from Uttar Pradesh, who in 2018 used the image of Ambedkar’s bust while breaking a ban, imposed by the upper caste community of his village, on Dalit grooms riding horses to their weddings.

The third is the promise of a grammar to critique caste-based structures. Ambedkar’s writing counters the majoritari­an view of caste flowing naturally from Hinduism and Vedas, and instead, roots it in a fight for material resources and social hierarchy. It is this logic of de-naturalisa­tion of caste that helps people such as Ranjanben — a resident of Gujarat’s Mehsana village who quit her sanitation work in protest against the 2016 Una floggal ging of Dalit men —to refute the dominant narrative of inferiorit­y.

A TOUGH ELECTORAL FIGHT

The main source of strength for Ambedkar’s followers is his role as the chairman of the drafting committee of the Constituen­t Assembly, where he was also a member of seven other committees, and left his mark in pushing for universal adult franchise, reservatio­n for the scheduled castes and tribes, and the abolition of untouchabi­lity.

But in January 1946, it seemed that the doors of the Constituen­t Assembly had firmly closed on him.

In provincial elections that year, the Congress decimated Ambedkar’s Scheduled Caste Federation, which won only two of the 151 reserved seats across the country. The party, which had won 11 of the 15 reserved seats in Bombay in the previous elections in 1937, could retain only one seat in Bombay.

The debacle had two devastatin­g consequenc­es for Ambedkar.

The British were convinced that the Congress-backed Depressed Classes League (led by Jagjivan Ram) was the more representa­tive organisati­on.

This was a fundamenta­l clash of ideas. For Ram, a staunch follower of MK Gandhi, and the Congress, the problem of caste was primarily a socio-economic one that could be resolved by reconcilia­tion with and changing the minds of upper-castes, while Ambedkar thought caste as a singularly political issue and advocated a radical strategy of conversion to Buddhism.

As it happened, one of Ambedkar’s last lieutenant­s with a mass base — the Bengali Namashudra leader Jogendrana­th Mandal — offered him the election from the JessoreKhu­lna seat with merely three weeks to go. With the help of six scheduled caste legislator­s and one tribal member, Ambedkar entered the Constituen­t Assembly.

DISILLUSIO­NMENT

Why did the electoral debacle happen? Sekhar Bandyopadh­yay, a professor of history at the Victoria University of Wellington, offers several reasons in Transfer of Power and the Crisis of Dalit Politics in India, 1945-47.

One, that the federation simply didn’t have the organisati­onal strength to fight an election, or the purse to match the might of the Congress. Second, that Ambedkar was busy with national affairs and there was no one looking after the party and the electoral machine. Third, that the federation and Ambedkar had through the 1930s and ’40s, steadily lost large chunks of ground support to the Congress, which in turn, ramped up its Harijan connect programmes, even as the communists organised Dalit peasants in Benand Telangana.

But the most important reason was the fervour of the freedom struggle, which swept up voters in waves of nationalis­m.

“The greatest hurdle for the Federation was the popular appeal of nationalis­m and the euphoria of patriotism created by the recent Quit India movement, which had set the tone for the election campaign,” Bandyopadh­yay wrote. The misadventu­re of the 1946 election would come to haunt Ambedkar again in independen­t India’s first election. In the highly charged 1951-52 election, Ambedkar lost from the Bombay North seat to a political novice from the Congress by 14, 561 votes.

The last few years of Ambedkar’s life were spent in feverish writing and organising, as he toured the country and exhorted his followers to follow him into Buddhism. This was also when many say he grew disillusio­ned with the electoral system and moved towards a cultural and social movement.

In one of his last speeches in Parliament on March 19, 1955, he said, in reference to an earlier comment from him on him burning the Constituti­on, “We built a temple for a god to come in and reside, but before the god could be installed if the devil had taken possession of it, what else could we do except destroy the temple?”

CONTEMPORA­RY POLITICS

Ambedkar’s rise as a social icon of empowermen­t has ironically coincided with stagnating fortunes of mainstream Dalit political forces – his Republican Party of India is fragmented and a pale shadow of its formal self with only one Rajya Sabha member, Union minister Ramdas Athawale.

The Bahujan Samaj Party, started in 1984 in Uttar Pradesh, is smarting from successive electoral losses and new faces — such as Chandrasek­har Azad in Uttar Pradesh or Jignesh Mevani in Gujarat — are yet to become a significan­t electoral force.

Socially too, the gains have plateaued. Scheduled Caste communitie­s continue to outpace their counterpar­ts in literacy, as per Census data, but significan­t economic hurdles remain. Dalits are two-thirds less likely to be called for job interviews and roughly a fourth of all households continue to report some practice of untouchabi­lity.

Social and economic mobility have triggered a fierce backlash. In the last two years itself, upper-castes have attacked Dalits for owning a horse, taking out a wedding procession, sporting a moustache, adding a suffix to their name, asking for a raise, attending a traditiona­l dance, and swimming in a well.

But buoyed by Ambedkar’s message, a new generation of Dalit people has taken his message to newer movements such as those fighting for the Muslim underclass — the Pasmandas — or transgende­r rights.

To be sure, there are challenges. In the Pasmanda movement, for instance, Khalid Anis Ansari, a professor at Glocal University in Saharanpur points out, “We need to explore his insistence on the role of conversion to remove caste. Many Muslims converted hundreds of years ago, but caste remains.”

Still, 64 years after his death, Ambedkar’s ideas and institutio­ns form the pillars of the world’s largest democracy and his legacy inspires millions of people to strive for a life of dignity. “More than the Constituti­on, he gave people a vision, hope and rights to achieve them. He conceptual­ised institutio­ns and policies to bring progressiv­e ideas to India way ahead of his time,” said Jyotsna Siddharth, an artist and activist.

 ?? PHOTO BY MARGARET BOURKE-WHITE/THE LIFE PICTURE COLLECTION VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? ■
BR Ambedkar, May 1946.
PHOTO BY MARGARET BOURKE-WHITE/THE LIFE PICTURE COLLECTION VIA GETTY IMAGES ■ BR Ambedkar, May 1946.

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