The Guardian (USA)

Modi’s visit focuses attention on caste discrimina­tion in US

- Atul Dev

Maya K came to the US in 2002. She was born in Hyderabad in India, in a family considered to be untouchabl­e by the upper-caste Hindus.

Castes are the hereditary classes of Indian society, each with its role and status defined in the scriptures of Hinduism. At the top of the ladder are the Brahmins, who claim an exclusive right to perform religious rituals; at the bottom are the Dalits, who were denied the right to education and consigned to the jobs that required hard labour, or were considered impure.

Caste discrimina­tion was outlawed in India at the time of the country’s independen­ce, but in recent years Hindu mobs have lynched Dalits who try to assert their identity with pride. Earlier this month, in the most recent such killing, a 22-year-old was beaten and stabbed to death in Maharashtr­a, a state co-ruled by the Hindu nationalis­t Bharatiya Janata party of the prime minister, Narendra Modi, for celebratin­g the birth anniversar­y of BR Ambedkar, the Dalit economist and lawyer who wrote India’s constituti­on.

Modi, who is currently on a state visit to the US, has faced criticism during his tenure for the persecutio­n of minorities, the collapse of constituti­onal institutio­ns, and the imprisonme­nt of government critics in India. His party, critics allege, aims to make India a Hindu nation, where Dalits, Muslims and other minorities are treated as second-class citizens. For some in the US, the repercussi­ons continue abroad, making the pomp and circumstan­ce of a Modi state visit feel personal.

“As Indians have come to this country,” Maya (not her real name), who lives in Washington DC, said, “they have brought this discrimina­tory mindset with them.”

Maya had heard snide comments about her caste and faced discrimina­tion while pursuing her undergradu­ate studies in India, but she did not imagine that would continue in the US. “When I started working, I had an Indian American manager,” she told me. “As soon as he found out my caste, he started ignoring me completely, it got to a point when he would just pretend to not have heard what I said in a meeting,” she said.

In 2008, Maya founded Ambedkar Associatio­n of North America, named after BR Ambedkar. The group now has about 700 members spread across the US and Canada with the goal of helping the underprivi­leged communitie­s back in India with financial support, and fighting against caste discrimina­tion in the US. According to a Carnegie Endowment for Internatio­nal Peace survey about half of all Hindu Americans identify with a caste group.

“Caste is still not a protected category of discrimina­tion in most of the Unites States,” she said.

Modi talks about eliminatin­g caste in his public speeches – he recently said that “Indianness” is the only caste in India – but members of his own party support and protect upper-caste Hindu vigilantes. While hatred against minorities has been a frequent feature of India’s history, Hindu vigilantes have been emboldened by the ascent of Modi, whose political career was launched in 2002 amid a massacre of Muslims in Gujarat. Ever since, Modi has been one of the most divisive politician­s in India, and those divisions are also beginning to animate the Indian diaspora in the US.

In July 2020, government regulators in California sued Cisco Systems, a tech conglomera­te based in San Jose, accusing it of discrimina­ting against an Indian American employee and allowing him to be harassed by two managers because he was from a lower caste. In May 2021, federal law enforcemen­t agents raided a Hindu temple in New Jersey after hundreds of lowercaste workers accused a Hindu sect with close ties to India’s ruling party of luring them from India and forcing them to do unpaid labour. In August 2022, in a parade to mark the occasion of India’s Independen­ce Day in Edison, New Jersey, the upper-caste Hindu organisers deployed a bulldozer tacked with the picture of Yogi Adityanath, a hardliner of Modi’s party and chief minister of the country’s most populous state, Uttar Pradesh, where a number of Muslim homes have been razed by bulldozers on his orders. That same month, at another parade in

Anaheim, California, Indian Americans charged at protesters who were holding signs that read, “Abolish caste” and “Protect India’s Muslim lives”.

Maya has been involved with the gathering movement to ban caste discrimina­tion in the US. In 2019, Brandeis University in Massachuse­tts added caste to its nondiscrim­ination policy. Since then, the California State University system; the University of California, Davis; Brown University in Rhode Island; and Colby College in Maine have followed suit. In 2021, Harvard’s graduate student union forced the university to add measures to prevent caste discrimina­tion in their contracts.

Beyond the campuses, in February this year, Seattle added caste to the city’s anti-discrimina­tion laws, becoming the first in the US to do so. Kshama Sawant, the Indian American member of the Seattle city council who wrote, presented and fought for the legislatio­n in the council meetings told the press she had received thousands of emails in support of the bill.

Sawant herself grew up in an uppercaste family in western India, “listening to the pejorative things that are said about the lower castes”, she told me. Fighting caste, she said, was not just about correcting individual behaviour. “It is a societal system of oppression, which needs to be taken up at an institutio­nal level,” she said. “Hence the need to make laws about it.”

Her campaign to outlaw caste discrimina­tion in Seattle, Sawant said, faced widespread backlash from Hindu nationalis­t organisati­ons in the US, such as the Hindu American Foundation and the Coalition of Hindus of North America. She credited the victory in the city council to the alliance of lower-caste and Muslim activists that supported her – a socialist. “Without that alliance, it wasn’t going to happen,” she said.

Rasheed Ahmed, the executive director of Indian American Muslim

Council, told me that he sees an alliance of India’s persecuted minorities forming among Indian Americans. “Our Hindu nationalis­t opponents have financial backing and diplomatic support, they are probably larger in number and greater in influence, but we are standing together to counter them,” he told me. “Religious fundamenta­lism in India is something we all have to fight together; it is not the problem of one community.”

“Ambedkarit­e women have been working on this stuff for years,” Maya said, pointing out that Equality Labs, an organisati­on run by Thenmozhi Soundarara­jan, had conducted a quantitati­ve survey in 2017 about caste discrimina­tion in the US, which formed the basis of a 2019 congressio­nal briefing on caste in Washington DC.

In March this year, Aisha Wahab, a member of the California state senate and the first Afghan American woman to be elected to a public office in the US, introduced SB 403, a bill that aims to ban caste-based discrimina­tion in America’s most populous state.

“We will have to make alliances not just with socialists but Democrats and even Republican­s, and we are prepared to do that,” Maya said. “Our goal,” she said, “is to outlaw caste discrimina­tion in the entire United States – then we will be able to use our real names in public.”

 ?? March. Photograph: José Luis Villegas/AP ?? Califiorni­a state senator Aisha Wahab, center, with Thenmozhi Soundarara­jan, right, promote a bill which adds caste as a protected category in the state’s anti-discrimina­tion laws, in Sacramento in
March. Photograph: José Luis Villegas/AP Califiorni­a state senator Aisha Wahab, center, with Thenmozhi Soundarara­jan, right, promote a bill which adds caste as a protected category in the state’s anti-discrimina­tion laws, in Sacramento in
 ?? Photograph: Will Oliver/EPA ?? India’s prime minister, Narendra Modi, speaks in Alexandria, Virginia, on Wednesday. He has stated that ‘Indianness’ is the only caste in India.
Photograph: Will Oliver/EPA India’s prime minister, Narendra Modi, speaks in Alexandria, Virginia, on Wednesday. He has stated that ‘Indianness’ is the only caste in India.

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