Antelope Valley Press

Caste added to anti-discrimina­tion policy

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DAVIS (AP) — The University of California, Davis, has added caste to its anti-discrimina­tion policy after students said they have seen discrimina­tion take place at the university based on the South Asian practice of assigning people their social status at birth.

Under UC Davis’ policy, which was amended in September, students or staff who face discrimina­tion or harassment for their perceived castes can now file complaints that could result in formal investigat­ions, the San Francisco Chronicle reported, Wednesday.

The Northern California university may be the first public institutio­n to address caste discrimina­tion, which was largely imported from South Asia.

“The significan­ce of adding caste … is it ensures that the communitie­s most impacted and most vulnerable to this type of discrimina­tion or harassment know that the university recognizes the harm caused,” Danésha Nichols, director of UC Davis’ Harassment & Discrimina­tion Assistance and Prevention Program, told the newspaper.

Students started pushing for the change after receiving insulting memes in their group chats and overhearin­g South Asian students ask each other what caste they belonged to before picking roommates, the newspaper reported.

Estimated to be thousands of years old, caste is rooted in India’s Hindu scripture. It long placed Dalits at the bottom of a social hierarchy, once terming them “untouchabl­es.” Inequities and violence against Dalits have persisted even though India banned caste discrimina­tion in 1950.

The practice has traveled outside of India to Bhutan, Nepal, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Myanmar, and occurs among Hindus, Muslims, Sikhs, Jains, Christians and Buddhists, said Anjali Arondekar, a professor and co-director of the Center for South Asian Studies at University of California, Santa Cruz told the newspaper.

“Caste is really about labor segmentati­on and sustained inequality through the years — millennium­s, really,” she said.

India’s caste system, which assigns people their social statuses at birth, places Dalits, once called “untouchabl­es,” at the bottom of its social hierarchy that can determine where they live, what schools they can attend, what jobs they can get and where they marry.

Last year, California regulators sued Cisco Systems, saying an engineer faced discrimina­tion at the company’s Silicon Valley headquarte­rs because he is a Dalit Indian.

The engineer worked on a team at Cisco’s San Jose headquarte­rs with Indians who all immigrated to the US as adults, and all of whom were of high caste, according to the lawsuit filed by the California Department of Fair Employment and Housing.

The “higher caste supervisor­s and co-workers imported the discrimina­tory system’s practices into their team and Cisco’s workplace,” the lawsuit said, and that the company did not “substantia­te any caste-based or related discrimina­tion or retaliatio­n.”

Cisco Systems Inc., a major supplier of computer networking gear that makes the internet work, has said it would defend against the allegation­s in the complaint.

Caste is often based on a person’s last names, the village or town a person comes from, and from their religious and social practices.

Prem Pariyar, a 37-year-old graduate student at California State University, East Bay, said his family would be physically assaulted because of their lower caste in his home country of Nepal. He said the last thing he expected was to face casteism when he moved to the US in 2015.

But he faced it when interactin­g with other South Asians in the Bay Area — at his restaurant job, at the university, at community events and at dinner parties.

“Some will ask me my last name under the pretense of getting to know me, but are really trying to find out about my caste. Others have served me meals in separate plates and utensils after they find out I’m Dalit,” Pariyar said.

He started organizing with other CSU students around the issue and their efforts led the Cal State Student Associatio­n, which represents all 23 CSU campuses, to recognize caste as a protected category this year. But the CSU school system itself has not made any changes to its discrimina­tion policy. Pariyar was also part of the UC Davis campaign.

UC Davis’ policy change feels like a big step for those trying to get caste discrimina­tion recognized across the US.

“It is an issue, it’s here and it’s time to deal with it,” he said.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The University of California, Davis, has added caste, a millennia-old concept that assigns people in South Asia their social statuses at birth, to its anti-discrimina­tion policy. Prem Pariyar, whose family would be physically assaulted because of their lower caste in his home country of Nepal, has been advocating for his university, California State University, East Bay in Hayward, to adopt a similar policy and helped propel the change at UC Davis.
ASSOCIATED PRESS The University of California, Davis, has added caste, a millennia-old concept that assigns people in South Asia their social statuses at birth, to its anti-discrimina­tion policy. Prem Pariyar, whose family would be physically assaulted because of their lower caste in his home country of Nepal, has been advocating for his university, California State University, East Bay in Hayward, to adopt a similar policy and helped propel the change at UC Davis.

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