Times-Herald (Vallejo)

Religious group backs bill to ban caste discrimina­tion

- By Deepa Bharath

For decades, worshippin­g in temples, Ram Asra has sung spiritual songs known as kirtans.

He did so on a recent Sunday at the Shri Guru Ravidass Sabha in Fresno, California, seated cross-legged on a dais in the temple's prayer hall playing a harmonium. Devotees closed their eyes and swayed to the calming melody.

But not all of Asra's experience­s in sacred spaces have been so sublime. He is a member of the former untouchabl­e caste in India, and recounted a time when he was pulled aside at another U.S. temple and told not to enter the kitchen.

“I felt so disrespect­ed,” he said.

Asra feels much more secure at the Fresno Ravidassia temple. Congregant­s follow Guru Ravidass, a 14th century Indian teacher who also belonged to the former untouchabl­e caste whose members are also known as Dalit, which means “broken” in Hindi.

Several congregant­s, who say equality is at the heart of their faith, are now championin­g a bill which aims to outlaw caste discrimina­tion in California. Caste is a division of people based on birth and descent.

If the legislatio­n passes, California will become the first state to add caste to its nondiscrim­ination laws. In February, Seattle became the first U.S. city to pass a similar law.

There are about 20,000 members of the Ravidassia community in California's Central Valley — a vast majority of them with roots in Punjab in northweste­rn India. There are five Ravidassia temples in California alone — in Fresno, Pittsburg, Rio Linda, Selma and Yuba City — with a sixth under constructi­on in Union City.

Signs supporting the bill grace the walls of the Fresno temple. Annihilati­ng caste is intrinsic to the Ravidassia ethos, said

Amar Daroch, president of the Fresno temple. He said Guru Ravidass envisioned a classless, casteless utopia he called “Begampura,” which means “a land without sorrow” in Hindi.

“Our goal is to create Begampura right here,” he said.

The legislatio­n has been met with strong opposition from groups who say it will lead to discrimina­tion against Hindu Americans and those of Indian descent. Several Dalits have also spoken against it, saying they do not wish to be burdened with a caste identity that they feel is irrelevant in this country.

But many in the Ravidassia community believe this law would bring attention to a problem they say does affect their lives.

In California, members of the Ravidassia community come from Hindu, Indigenous and Sikh background­s. Their temples have the appearance and feel of a Sikh gurdwara, with the sacred text, the

Guru Granth Sahib, installed as the focal point in the main prayer hall. The text includes 40 verses of Guru Ravidass, in addition to other spiritual leaders.

Ravidassia religious practices vary from Sikhism. However, many in the community do identify themselves as Sikh and have much in common with the Sikh community including dress, food, language and other customs.

The principle of equality also forms the basis of Sikh theology, said Opinderjit Kaur Takhar, associate professor of Sikh Studies at the University of Wolverhamp­ton in the United Kingdom, a city that has a sizeable Punjabi population including a large Ravidassia community. Takhar said the Golden Temple in Amritsar, India, the most significan­t shrine in Sikhism, was designed with four doors, sending the message that “everyone from all walks of life, all corners of the world and all castes are welcome to come in and be together.”

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