article on casteism is a blackspot
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''Casteism is a Blackspot''
Date:abc By:xyz
India's caste system is perhaps the world's longest surviving social hierarchy. A defining feature of Hinduism, caste encompasses a complex ordering of social groups on the basis of ritual purity. A person is considered a member of the caste into which he or she is born and remains within that caste until death, although the particular ranking of that caste may vary among regions and over time. Differences in status are traditionally justified by the religious doctrine of karma, a belief that one's place in life is determined by one's deeds in previous lifetimes.
Traditional scholarship has described this more than 2,000-year-old system within the context of the four principal varnas, or large caste categories. In order of precedence these are the Brahmins (priests and teachers), the Ksyatriyas (rulers and soldiers), the Vaisyas (merchants and traders), and the Shudras (laborers and artisans). A fifth category falls outside the varna system and consists of those known as "untouchables" or Dalits; they are often assigned tasks too ritually polluting to merit inclusion within the traditional varna system. Almost identical structures are also visible in Nepal.
Despite its constitutional abolition in 1950, the practice of "untouchability"-the imposition of social disabilities on persons by reason of birth into a particular caste- remains very much a part of rural India. Representing over one-sixth of India's population-or some 160 million people-Dalits endure near complete social ostracization. "Untouchables" may not cross the line dividing their part of the village from that occupied by higher castes. They may not use the same wells, visit the same temples, or drink from the same cups in tea stalls. Dalit children are frequently made to sit at the back of classrooms. In what has been called India's "hidden apartheid," entire villages in many Indian states remain completely segregated by caste.
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''Casteism is a Blackspot''
Date:abc By:xyz
India's caste system is perhaps the world's longest surviving social hierarchy. A defining feature of Hinduism, caste encompasses a complex ordering of social groups on the basis of ritual purity. A person is considered a member of the caste into which he or she is born and remains within that caste until death, although the particular ranking of that caste may vary among regions and over time. Differences in status are traditionally justified by the religious doctrine of karma, a belief that one's place in life is determined by one's deeds in previous lifetimes.
Traditional scholarship has described this more than 2,000-year-old system within the context of the four principal varnas, or large caste categories. In order of precedence these are the Brahmins (priests and teachers), the Ksyatriyas (rulers and soldiers), the Vaisyas (merchants and traders), and the Shudras (laborers and artisans). A fifth category falls outside the varna system and consists of those known as "untouchables" or Dalits; they are often assigned tasks too ritually polluting to merit inclusion within the traditional varna system. Almost identical structures are also visible in Nepal.
Despite its constitutional abolition in 1950, the practice of "untouchability"-the imposition of social disabilities on persons by reason of birth into a particular caste- remains very much a part of rural India. Representing over one-sixth of India's population-or some 160 million people-Dalits endure near complete social ostracization. "Untouchables" may not cross the line dividing their part of the village from that occupied by higher castes. They may not use the same wells, visit the same temples, or drink from the same cups in tea stalls. Dalit children are frequently made to sit at the back of classrooms. In what has been called India's "hidden apartheid," entire villages in many Indian states remain completely segregated by caste.
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Plz Mark it as a Brainliest!!!!!!!!!
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hey frnd...
"The news that a recent survey has established that 27 percent of Indians still practice caste untouchability is not, in many ways, news at all.
Most Indians have grown up in an India where we have seen such behavior, though the kind of people who read English-language op-eds probably think of it as something that happens in rural, backward villages rather than urban India. "
Source: Al Jazeera
His blog goes on to call out how the social evil is still practised through subtleties, instead of straight up ostracising the people from the lower caste.
"Almost every third Hindu (30 percent) admitted to the practice.
That is, they refused to allow Dalits, the former 'untouchables', into their kitchen or to use their utensils.
But bizarrely enough, data from the survey showed that untouchability was also practiced by Sikhs (23 percent), Muslims (18 percent) and Christians (5 percent).
These are faiths that pride themselves on their enshrining of equality and the brotherhood of faith."
Source: Wordpress
He goes on to mention personal nuggets how he came to find out about it, and how being liberal and not talking about it, is not a part of the solution.
"The son of a Keralite newspaper executive who dropped his caste name (Nair) at college in response to Mahatma Gandhi’s exhortations to do so, moved to London and brought his children up in Westernized Bombay, I am a product of a nationalist generation that was consciously raised to be oblivious of caste.
...So I grew up thinking of caste as an irrelevance, married outside my caste, and brought up two children to be utterly indifferent to caste, indeed largely unconscious of it."
Source: JLF
He even discusses how he first heard about caste, and what prompted him to go to his father and ask him about it. Bollywood has something to do with it:
"I still remember my own discovery of caste. I was a ten-year-old representing the 6th Standard in an inter-class theatrical event at which the 8th Standard’s sketch featured “Chintu” (Rishi) Kapoor, younger son of the matinee idol and producer Raj Kapoor, later to become a successful screen heartthrob in his own right. I had acted, elocuted a humorous poem and MCed my class’s efforts to generous applause, and the younger Kapoor was either intrigued or disconcerted, for he sought me out the next morning at school.
“Tharoor,” he asked me at the head of the steps near the toilet, “what caste are you?”
I blinked my nervousness at the Great Man. “I - - I don’t know,” I stammered. My father, who never mentioned anyone’s religion, let alone caste, had not bothered to enlighten me on such matters.
“You don’t know?” the actor’s son demanded in astonishment. “What do you mean, you don’t know? Everybody knows their own caste.”
I shamefacedly confessed I didn’t.
“You mean you’re not a Brahmin or something?”
I couldn’t even avow I was a something. Chintu Kapoor never spoke to me again in school."
Source: IE
He also speaks about how it is the very caste-system which forms the backbone of the UP political landscape. SP appeals to the Yadavs, Mayawati's BSP to the Dalits and how the candidates have segregated the state over the years.
"India is a land of multiple identities, and one of the key identities, inescapably, is caste. To some, it's an instrument of political mobilization. As the 'backward caste' Yadav ascendancy in north Indian politics has repeatedly demonstrated, when many Indians cast their vote, they vote their caste.
...After all, none of us would object if a Dalit leader advertised her pride in being a Dalit or called for Dalit solidarity. "
Source: PointBlank
The caste system like Tharoor mentions in his blog, time and again, is something we're not supposed to admit to. Even though it lurks somewhere beneath the surface. How many times have we asked a friend's surname, deduced his/her caste and then teased them about the stereotypes attached to it.
However ironic, the point of the matter being - caste-bias is something, which might never fade from India. And that's a point Tharoor's piece drives home beautifully.
HOPE THIS HELP YOU ☺☺❤❤❤❤
"The news that a recent survey has established that 27 percent of Indians still practice caste untouchability is not, in many ways, news at all.
Most Indians have grown up in an India where we have seen such behavior, though the kind of people who read English-language op-eds probably think of it as something that happens in rural, backward villages rather than urban India. "
Source: Al Jazeera
His blog goes on to call out how the social evil is still practised through subtleties, instead of straight up ostracising the people from the lower caste.
"Almost every third Hindu (30 percent) admitted to the practice.
That is, they refused to allow Dalits, the former 'untouchables', into their kitchen or to use their utensils.
But bizarrely enough, data from the survey showed that untouchability was also practiced by Sikhs (23 percent), Muslims (18 percent) and Christians (5 percent).
These are faiths that pride themselves on their enshrining of equality and the brotherhood of faith."
Source: Wordpress
He goes on to mention personal nuggets how he came to find out about it, and how being liberal and not talking about it, is not a part of the solution.
"The son of a Keralite newspaper executive who dropped his caste name (Nair) at college in response to Mahatma Gandhi’s exhortations to do so, moved to London and brought his children up in Westernized Bombay, I am a product of a nationalist generation that was consciously raised to be oblivious of caste.
...So I grew up thinking of caste as an irrelevance, married outside my caste, and brought up two children to be utterly indifferent to caste, indeed largely unconscious of it."
Source: JLF
He even discusses how he first heard about caste, and what prompted him to go to his father and ask him about it. Bollywood has something to do with it:
"I still remember my own discovery of caste. I was a ten-year-old representing the 6th Standard in an inter-class theatrical event at which the 8th Standard’s sketch featured “Chintu” (Rishi) Kapoor, younger son of the matinee idol and producer Raj Kapoor, later to become a successful screen heartthrob in his own right. I had acted, elocuted a humorous poem and MCed my class’s efforts to generous applause, and the younger Kapoor was either intrigued or disconcerted, for he sought me out the next morning at school.
“Tharoor,” he asked me at the head of the steps near the toilet, “what caste are you?”
I blinked my nervousness at the Great Man. “I - - I don’t know,” I stammered. My father, who never mentioned anyone’s religion, let alone caste, had not bothered to enlighten me on such matters.
“You don’t know?” the actor’s son demanded in astonishment. “What do you mean, you don’t know? Everybody knows their own caste.”
I shamefacedly confessed I didn’t.
“You mean you’re not a Brahmin or something?”
I couldn’t even avow I was a something. Chintu Kapoor never spoke to me again in school."
Source: IE
He also speaks about how it is the very caste-system which forms the backbone of the UP political landscape. SP appeals to the Yadavs, Mayawati's BSP to the Dalits and how the candidates have segregated the state over the years.
"India is a land of multiple identities, and one of the key identities, inescapably, is caste. To some, it's an instrument of political mobilization. As the 'backward caste' Yadav ascendancy in north Indian politics has repeatedly demonstrated, when many Indians cast their vote, they vote their caste.
...After all, none of us would object if a Dalit leader advertised her pride in being a Dalit or called for Dalit solidarity. "
Source: PointBlank
The caste system like Tharoor mentions in his blog, time and again, is something we're not supposed to admit to. Even though it lurks somewhere beneath the surface. How many times have we asked a friend's surname, deduced his/her caste and then teased them about the stereotypes attached to it.
However ironic, the point of the matter being - caste-bias is something, which might never fade from India. And that's a point Tharoor's piece drives home beautifully.
HOPE THIS HELP YOU ☺☺❤❤❤❤
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