The Hindu (Kolkata)

Urbanisati­on, no liberating force for Dalits

- Fahad Zuberi

quick look at the nameplates in India’s neighbourh­oods will show you that caste is the primary language of spatiality in Indian cities. Despite such failings, B.R. Ambedkar rejected village life and encouraged Dalits to move to the city. Ambedkar said that an Indian village is “the working plant of the Hindu social order” and argued that it is the ideal place to understand caste. Gandhi, however, saw the Indian village as a selfrelian­t, equitable and a just nonviolent order, and argued for the decentrali­sation of power to the villages through Gram Swaraj. In strong opposition, Ambedkar believed that the idealisati­on of Indian village life emerged either from the colonial romanticis­ation of the rural population or from the desire of Hindus to retain caste domination.

In the Constituen­t Assembly, Ambedkar opposed the idea that villages should be recognised as autonomous administra­tive units and felt relieved that the Assembly rejected the idea. “For the untouchabl­es, there could not have been a bigger calamity,” he wrote.

AUrbanisat­ion and Ambedkar’s belief

In the process of urbanisati­on, Ambedkar saw an opportunit­y for Dalit liberation. He believed that the systems of caste oppression that thrive in Indian villages become weaker in cities. These included segregatio­n of Dalits into ghettos, restrictio­ns on economic activities, and denial of land ownership. Jyotirao Phule had also admired city life for being liberal and enabling him to earn a living. At the core of the liberating power of cities, for Ambedkar and Phule, was the opportunit­y to become anonymous. Cities, in principle, offer an opportunit­y to become a stranger among a sea of strangers and transition from a castebased order to a classbased order. One defined not by genealogy but by accumulati­on of resources or capital.

Here, it is important to acknowledg­e that is Indira Gandhi Radhakrish­nan Graduate Scholar at the University of Oxford and writes on the politics of the built environmen­t

Ambedkar had seen the ways in which caste adapts to urbanisati­on. In Waiting for a Visa, Ambedkar reflects on his struggle to find a house in Baroda.

While modern urbanisati­on was fuelled by a skillbased transition to economy, i.e., industrial­isation, the dominance of caste over skill had also become clear to Ambedkar when even skilled Dalits were not allowed to enter the weaving sections of textile mills. Despite these experience­s, Ambedkar saw urbanisati­on as a liberating force. However, after a century of Ambedkar’s struggles with renting a house in Baroda, caste remains the spatial logic of Indian cities.

Language of ‘purity-pollution’

Caste translates into a city’s spatiality through the language of ‘puritypoll­ution’. A consumer survey in 2021 vrevealed that eating nonvegetar­ian food is the biggest dealbreake­r in finding rental housing in India. Writing about segregatio­n policies under the Peshwas in the Maratha kingdom, Gopal Guru explains this phenomenon. Guru says that the ghetto is not merely a space but also forms the constituti­on of the body of the ghetto dweller. The language of puritypoll­ution that identifies the savarna space as ‘pure’ and one that can be polluted by the Dalit body, extends to the logic of the city. Here, the ghetto dweller carries the ghetto on their body when they step out into the city. In the language of caste, the space of the ghetto — characteri­sed by filth and dirt — becomes mutually reinforcin­g on the body of the Dalit — characteri­sed by meateating and other “unacceptab­le” traits.

More recently, the language of caste has been imposed on public spaces of the city by various government­s. In March 2017, the Uttar Pradesh government, for example, issued regulation­s for meat shops that included, for example, a ban on selling meat near religious places and black paint or curtains in the facade of the shop to hide the sight of meat from pedestrian­s. In 2021, several municipal corporatio­ns in Gujarat banned the sale of meatbased street food on the city’s main roads citing “religious sentiments”. Through these Brahminica­l regulation­s, the State has characteri­sed meat as the impurity that could pollute a public space — both secular and religious — or even a pedestrian’s sight.

A crippling segregatio­n

Urban governance policies and housing crises have also sustained castebased segregatio­n. Scholars such as Raphael Susewind, Sheba Tejani and Christophe Jaffrelot have shown that Muslims and Dalits face the most crippling segregatio­n in Indian cities.

A largescale study also found that public services and access to municipal infrastruc­ture such as clean drinking water are the worst in Dalit and Muslim ghettos. Research in sacrifice zones — regions marked for severe environmen­tal pollution such as landfills — shows that such areas are overwhelmi­ngly inhabited by Dalits and Muslims. A recent report by the Housing and Land Rights Network on forced evictions in India also shows that Dalits and Muslims are the most impacted by slum demolition drives.

Through lived experience and extensive research, we can see that the Indian city has failed the aspiration­s and expectatio­ns that the Dalit liberation movement had placed in urbanisati­on. While transition to city life might have weakened some structures of caste oppression, they have morphed through language, state sanction and policy, and have evolved to allow caste to thrive in Indian cities. The Indian city has fallen short of the potential and promise that Ambedkar saw in urbanisati­on. Even after a century of urban developmen­t, Dalits remain, to use Ambedkar’s words, “the children of India’s ghettos”.

The Indian city has failed the aspiration­s and expectatio­ns that the Dalit liberation movement had placed in urbanisati­on

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