Social Sciences, asked by minuchauhan1982, 20 days ago

How challenging was the life for Dr B.R. Ambedkar during his childhood when he experienced caste prejudice in everyday life? How did he challenge the problems faced by low caste people?​

Answers

Answered by btsfan6346
8

Answer:

Ambedkar was born into a Mahar family. As a child, he experienced what caste prejudice meant in everyday life. In school, he was forced to sit outside the classroom on the ground and was not allowed to drink water from taps that upper caste children used. his family was treated as untouchables and subjected to socio-economic discrimination. Ambedkar's ancestors had long worked for the army of the British East India Company, and his father served in the British Indian Army at the Mhow cantonment. Dr. Ambedkar battled to change the existing social order which stood upon caste and class and tried to plant the seed of social justice by advocating various issues about the plight of the caste system and untouchability, human rights, laborers, women rights, and above all the Indian politics.

Explanation:

Answered by stuid175
1

Answer:

Ambedkar was a Mahar family member from birth.

He learned what caste prejudice meant in real life as a child.

He was prohibited from using the water fountains used by upper caste students and was required to sit on the ground outside of the classroom.The challenge and struggle of Dr. B.R. Ambedkar are:

Babasaheb Ambedkar, who was born on April 14, 1891, in Mhow, in the Central Provinces—currently Madhya Pradesh—into a low-caste family, had a difficult upbringing. His family experienced socioeconomic prejudice and was considered as outcasts.

Ambedkar was a social outcast in his early years since he was a member of the Mahar caste, a "untouchable" group in Maharashtra. He received "untouchable" treatment everywhere, including in his school.

Because he came from a family that the orthodox Hindus regarded as "unclean," his schoolmates refused to eat with him and his teachers would not touch his copies.

Ambedkar later in life became the voice of India's lower castes and classes.

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