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- Badges of Color
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- AN AFRO-DALIT STORY
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- By Professor Vijay Prashad
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- On January 30, 1998, I went on air with
Ron Daniels for his two-hour radio program on the National Urban
Radio Network. The theme for the show was Gandhi and Dr. King,
since it was the 50th anniversary of Gandhis assassination.
After a brief back and forth, we went to the phones. From the
first call onward, folks asked about Gandhis relationship
with the Dalits as well as the condition of Dalits in contemporary
India. One caller referred to the Dalits as Black Untouchables
and asked if I knew a book by V. T. Rajshekar.
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- I was very pleased with the experience,
mainly because it is rare to find a U.S. audience so informed
about things Indian. But I was also curious to know about this
interest amongst African Americans for the social struggles of
Dalits. I knew that in India the progressive community took a
keen interest in the lives of Black Americans, from the time
of the 1931 Scottsboro incident through the persecution of Paul
Robeson and now with the trials of Mumia Abu Jamal.
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- Solidarity with African Americans is second
nature to the Indian Left: when King came to India in 1959, he
was overwhelmed by the reception accorded him.
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- The intimation of solidarity that King
felt in India was an aftermath of the great Afro-Asian Conference
held at Bandung, Indonesia in 1955 (covered by Richard Wright
in a fine book, The Color Curtain). The Bandung Spirit reflects
an anti-racist and anti-imperialist experiment with solidarity,
one that floundered in the vise of the Cold War.
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- The people who asked about the Dalits,
however, did not seem motivated by Bandung. They saw the Dalits
as long-lost Africans, people so identified by the color of their
skin (if not their genetic roots). I found this puzzling.
- I turned to V. T. Rajshekhars Dalit:
The Black Untouchables of India, first published in 1979, but
reprinted in an expanded edition by Clarity Press of Atlanta
in 1987.
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- Rajshekars book began with the premise
that Dalits are part of the African diaspora and that they are
the first settlers in the Indian subcontinent. It is said,
he writes, that India and Africa was one land mass until
separated by the ocean. So both the Africans and the Indian Untouchables
and tribals had common ancestors. Besides, he argues, Dalits
resemble Africans in physical features.
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- This was just what Runoko Rashidi says
he saw during his 1999 tour of India. In Orissa,
he says, I saw and photographed the blackest human beings
Ive ever seen. In fact, it is my impression that the blackest
people were here most highly esteemed and considered better than
the others, who were not so dark. These blackest
human beings Rashidi identified as the Dalits, the Black
Untouchables.
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- In the mid-1980s, as a young student Rashidi
heard Ivan van Sertima speak at UCLA. Van Sertima was already
well known for his attempt to show that Africans came to the
Americas long before the Europeans. What we are doing,
he has since said, is reconstituting the history of African
people around the world. We have come to reclaim the house of
history. Van Sertima encouraged an enthusiastic Rashidi
to pursue his thoughts about the ancestry of ancient Indians.
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- All people came from Africa,
Rashidi argues, but some people more than others.
He adopts the arguments that humanity begins in Africa (whether
in Aramis, Ethiopia, Kanapoi and Allia Bay, Kenya, or the Jukskei
River, South Africa). All people are African, he told me, but
that was millions of years ago. Some people are African more
recently. Dalits fall into that category.
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- In 1999, Human Rights Watch (New York)
published a report on the Dalits (literally broken or oppressed
people) of India, a population that now numbers about 160 million.
Before the growth of a self-conscious Dalit movement a few decades
ago, the terms most commonly used to designate this population
were Untouchable and Harijan (Children
of God, a term used by Gandhi).
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- Human Rights Watch found that the situation
of Dalits was deplorable and called their condition hidden
apartheid. Despite Indias very progressive laws,
HRW found that Dalits do not enjoy the protections to which they
are entitled.
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- If there are any people more oppressed
than Dalits, Rashidi notes, I dont want to
see it. Nothing compares to that. Ken Cooper, who was bureau
chief for the Washington Post in New Delhi, notes that as
an African American I used to think American racism was the most
stifling obsessive system of oppression in the world, with the
exception of what was South African apartheid.
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- After my stay in India, I am sure the
caste system was and continues to be worseit has religious
sanction and has been ingrained for 3000 years. Comparative
oppression is not a useful exercise, since each society seems
to conjure up its own form of barbarity. Nevertheless, both Rashidi
and Cooper make the case quite forcefully that Dalit life is
painfully hard.
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- Little that HRW catalogued is new to either
the Dalits or to the many agencies and political organizations
who have been at work for social justice in India. As with social
justice work elsewhere, there are many factors that prevent the
emancipation of the Dalits. The main causes of atrocities against
Dalits, the Indian government acknowledges, are disputes
and conflicts arising from land, wages, bonded labour and indebtedness.
Without widespread economic change, any movement for social justice
will falter.
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- Many Dalit groups, taking their cue from
civil liberties organizations, ignore much of the economic ground
for untouchability. Communist leader Brinda Karat notes that
only Communist inspired movements, enabled by the active
participation of Dalits, have led to concrete gains against casteism.
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- In West Bengal, she shows, the Communist
government initiated land reform that now forms the backbone
of Dalit self-respect and dignity in the State. If the
Dalits, now one-sixth of the Indian population, did forge a united
bloc, then it might be easy to fight the power of untouch- ability.
However, there are many oppressed communities across the country
who are considered Dalit by the government and by scholars, but
who do not see unity amongst themselves.
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- In a recent book of synthesis, the Belgian
scholar Robert Deliège argues that Dalits do not
constitute a uniform community with its own culture; they are
widely integrated into the local communities and share the basic
values of these communities. If untouchability can be said to
have one primary characteristic, it is this fragmentation, which
binds them inexorably to the very communities that reject them.
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- The Dalit movement, of late, has attempted
to forge this unity, and it has found the going rough. In June
1972, the Dalit Panthers was formed in Bombay (named from and
inspired by the Black Panthers), a group who attempted to be
a main agent of unity. However, it has since degenerated into
bourgeois nationalism.
- Racialist nationalism, of the sort preached
by Rashidi and Rajshekar, is an understandable reaction to racism,
but it is not an effective, nor morally defensible, anti-racist
strategy.
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- We say you dont fight racism
with racism, said the late Black Panther leader Fred Hampton
(in 1969 before his assassination by the U.S. government). Were
gonna fight racism with solidarity. Rashidi, who has been
to India three times, was contrite about the way he represents
Dalits in the U.S. I feel bad about it. I oversimplified
to make it palatable to a Black constituency.
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- Ive given the impression that Dalits
are Black people. Dalits, I now find, are a social and economic
group, more than a racial group. Nevertheless, Rashidi
holds that large sections of the Dalits would be seen as
Black people if they lived anywhere else and that the connections
between Africans and Dalits go beyond phenotype.
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- In the 1920s, several Black American writers
took an interest in the struggles led by M. K. Gandhi. While
writing of the non-violence campaign, they also wrote at length
about the Dalit struggles for emancipation. Sudharshan Kapurs
Raising Up a Prophet:
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- The African American Encounter with Gandhi
(Beacon, 1992) offers a useful catalogue of these writings and
of the deep interest taken by African Americans in Dalit lives.
However, few African Americans felt the need to seek biological
kin with the Dalits, since they argued (like Dr. Howard Thurman)
that the two communities do not differ in principle and
in inner pain.
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- Seventy years later, Ken Cooper, in Delhi,
sought out Dalit intellectuals who soon took refuge in his office.
African Americans and Dalits share a common history of
oppression based on skin color, Cooper says. Skin color,
however, is a very unclear mark for oppression, since in India
skin color does not directly correlate to ones caste.
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- If the basis of oppression is not identical,
at any rate two oppressed communities can certainly share strategies
of struggle with each other. That King drew from Gandhi is one
example of this. Since Dalit rights are enshrined in the Indian
Constitution, Cooper wondered what the implications would have
been had the Civil Rights movement won that position in the U.S.?
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- Troy Duster of the University of California
at Berkeley is currently at work on a comparative project on
caste oppression in the U.S., South Africa, and India. The question
of political linkages is of interest to the Black Radical Congresss
International Commission/Caucus (June 19-21, 2000), which will
meet to discuss, among other things, the Dalit situation.
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- The BRC and Cooper stay along the grain
of W. E. B. Du Bois, rather than Rashidi and Rajshekar. In 1940,
Du Bois reflected on his relationship with Africa. Neither
my father nor my fathers father ever saw Africa or knew
its meaning or cared overmuch for it, he wrote.
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- But the physical bond is least and
the badge of color relatively unimportant save as badge; the
real essence of this kinship is its social heritage of slavery;
the discrimination and insult; and this heritage binds together
not simply the children of Africa, but extends through yellow
Asia and into the South Seas. It is this unity that draws me
to Africa.
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- During his 1999 trip to India, Rashidi
was greeted by a section from the Communist Party at Trivandrum
airport with shouts of Free Mumia Abu-Jamal and the
moderator at his program in Bhubaneswar read extracts from Claude
McKays autobiography.
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- Such emblems of internationalism come
to us frequently from anti-colonial nationalism. It is no secret
that the first Afro-Asian Conference at Bandung (1955) did not
attempt to erase differences, but brought different people together
on a platform to combat racism and imperialism. The Bandung style,
however flawed, provoked people across the world to put their
shoulder to the wheel of other peoples struggles, to give
solidarity.
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- Vijay Prashad is assistant professor of
International Studies at Trinity College, CT. He is the author
of Untouchable Freedom: A Social History of a Dalit Community
(Oxford University Press) and Karma of Brown Folk (University
of Minnesota Press).
- Beyond Words Village
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For more information visit
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- This article was
published courtesy of Professor Vijay Prashad.
- Copyright ©
2000 Professor Vijay Prashad. All rights reserved.
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- A book on the DALIT: The Black
Untouchables of India can be found here.
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- Also more information on the caste
system in india is located here under Indigenous Links.
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