Explain Ambedkar's reforms
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Answer:
Dr Ambedkar continued to ferociously protest the caste system. In 1935, at a conference at Nasik, he asked Dalits to convert to a religion where there is no hierarchy. In his undelivered speech titled Annihilation of Caste (1936), Dr Ambedkar claimed that political reform without social reform is a farce.
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Explanation:
B.R. Ambedkar, was to abolish caste discrimination and untouchability to bring a socio-economic and a political transformation in India.
Delivering a special lecture on ‘Dr. B.R.Ambedkar and Nationalism’, jointly organised by the Dr. B.R. Ambedkar Study and Research Centre, Gulbarga University and the Centre for Comprehensive Development Studies at Gulbarga University, Dr. Patange, who has written on Dr. Ambedkar in Marathi and Hindi, said that Dr. Ambedkar was devoted to nationalism and equality than any national movements in the country.
Although Dr. Ambedkar was criticised for not participating in the freedom movement led by the Congress, he said that Dr. Ambedkar brought reforms through his own ideologies and programmes.
Dr. Ambedkar played a pivotal role in eradicating the ‘Varnashrama’ practice in the society and proved through his action that any person can perform any duties given to them and the duties performed by a person was not due to his caste.
Dr. Patange added that Dr. Ambedkar did not oppose the freedom struggle movement; he believed that the more significant was the freedom from the internal form of inequality and discrimination among the downtrodden and the neglected in society.
Dr. Ambedkar embraced Buddhism as a last resort since he believed that the empowerment of Dalits and the downtrodden was not possible within the folds of Hinduism, he added.
Marathi writer delivers lecture on Ambedkar and nationalism
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