Vemula and the new political wave
The birth of independent India was also its moment of freedom from the shackles of untouchability. The hope of the country’s founders, especially its first law minister BR Ambedkar, was that a constitutional ban on the practice would herald the end of caste bias in institutional and everyday forms. In the last seven decades that promise has been repeatedly belied.
But the death of Hyderabad University student Rohith Vemula in 2016 was a particularly cruel blow because it underlined how young people from marginalised communities continued to battle casteerected hurdles in their pursuit of ordinary goals. It also showed that despite India’s longstanding policy of affirmative action in educational institutions, not much headway had been made in breaking the hold of caste-based mindsets in universities.
Vemula’s suicide touched off protests as casteoppressed groups pushed for a statutory regulation against campus-based harassment and pervasive prejudice. Student bodies asked the government to enact a law against caste prejudices on campuses.
Six years on, the demand remains unfulfilled though some institutions have started to address caste discrimination through existing mechanisms. But a brighter legacy left behind by Vemula was the creation of a new generation of assertive students who have refused to take caste-based harassment lying down. Universities are meant to be nurturing spaces that mould the intellectual capacity of students. Caste is the anti-thesis of this paradigm because it is based on the accident of birth. For India to progress, all of her people have to come together. After all, as Carl Sagan said (and Vemula noted), we are all made of star dust.