The National - News

Mayawati attack reveals deep rot in Indian society

▶ Important lessons have not been learnt from rampant caste and gender discrimina­tion

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The issue of caste is ever-present in India, in the foreground of any discussion about the country’s politics and culture. For centuries it has stratified Indian society, holding millions back. BR Ambedkar, a titan of the Dalit community who drafted India’s constituti­on in 1949, put it well. “Caste is not a physical object like a wall of bricks or a line of barbed wire,” he said. “Caste is a notion; it is a state of mind.” Close behind it is the issue of gender in a country that has struggled to stem attacks on women. On Friday, these faultlines combined when Sadhana Singh, a member of the ruling BJP, launched a bitter verbal attack against a political rival, Mayawati, whom she called a “blot on womankind” and “worse than a transgende­r”. Mayawati heads the Bahujan Samaj Party and is a leading voice among India’s lower-caste communitie­s. Her rise from humble origins to a potential prime minister makes her a shining light. But she is not exempt from the abuse and hostility that has come to characteri­se Indian politics since the BJP took power in 2014.

Ms Singh subsequent­ly apologised after a BSP leader lodged a police complaint. But the row speaks to a rot at the core of Indian society, sustained by a narrative that women and Dalits need to behave in a certain way. Recent Indian history is replete with misogyny and casteism, committed with impunity by the powerful. In 2012, the gang rape of a 23-year-old female student on a Delhi bus, and her subsequent death, shocked the world but failed to change entrenched behaviour towards women. The Indian #MeToo movement outed dozens of public figures last year, while Neha Dixit has written poignantly on these pages of the ways in which Dalits are exploited in drug trials. And these are only two examples among thousands. Together they reveal a society that consistent­ly fails to protect its vulnerable.

On gender equality and protection­s for women and low-caste communitie­s, lessons clearly have not been learnt. Many Dalits now feel marginalis­ed by the BJP, a party whose power is derived from majority rule. Indeed, as support for BJP Prime Minister Narendra Modi has dwindled, the party has resorted to exclusiona­ry Hindu nationalis­m to win votes. The commanding Mayawati – the latest victim of this joint discrimina­tion – will emerge unfazed. But this episode serves as a reminder of the immense progress that still needs to be made.

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