Chapter-II: Dalit Consciousness in Indian Writing in English
Chapter-II: Dalit Consciousness in Indian Writing in English
Chapter-II: Dalit Consciousness in Indian Writing in English
Introduction:
Indian writing in English, still considered as elite and esoteric brand of literature
even after more than two hundred years of its existence, has had its share of emphatic
writings on Dalits, though not in a big way. Dalit aspect has yet to take the shape of
movement in Indian English literature. Moreover, there has been hardly any attempt to
either chronicle the development of Dalit empathy or make critical evaluations of
individual works from Dalit perspective by our scholars.
Indian novel in English became more socially relevant after the advent of
Gandhian mass movements in the 1930s. Nearly all the major novelists of the Post-
Independence era started writing in the 1930s. The publication of Anand’s first novel
Untouchable (1935) is a landmark in the history of Indian novel in English because of
its ideological involvement with the Gandhian movement for the uplift of the so-called
Asprishya or Untouchables designated as Harijans by the Mahatma Gandhi, and their
assimilation in the mainstream of the Indian society. Anand met Mahatma Gandhi in
1932 and spent some days in his Ashram. During his stay in the Ashram, he completed
Untouchable, his maiden novel. The novel already a classic in the Indian English
literature describes one single day in the life of Bakha, an untouchable boy. In the
process, it presents before the reader the vicissitudes in the life of such marginalized
people in the traditional framework of her social hierarchy. Untouchable is perhaps the
major fictional representation of the Dalit/Untouchable issue in Indian literatures. It
may also be acknowledged that, Anand’s Untouchable was the first major Indian work
on Dalits which drew instead attention from heterogeneous constituency of readers.
More importantly, Anand continued his authorial involvement with the issues related to
the marginalized/oppressed in many of his later works, especially in novels like Coolie
(1936) Two Leaves and a Bud (1937), The Old Woman and the Cow (1960) and The
Road (1961)
‘Why we don’t have enough Dalit literature?’ is not a difficult question to
answer. First, a large part of the available literature is still being, written by an
enlightened minority of Dalit origin. Secondly larger portion of Dalit literature has
confined to bhasha literatures. Thirdly, literatures of Dalit awareness/ empathy written
by non-Dalit writers have been unacceptable to people of certain quarters. Agreed, a
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majority of Dalits cannot read Dalit literature. Besides, in most of the literatures of
India including Indian English literature, the pioneering writers of Dalit empathy are
the non-Dalit writers like Premchand, Mulk Raj Anand, Padmini Sengupta, Tare
Sherka, Bandopadhyay, Gopinath Mahanty, Kanhu Charan Mohanty, Babani
Bhatacharya, K. Shivram Karanth, T. Shivshankar Pillai, S. Menon Marath,
Mahashweta Devi, Parashuran Mund, Rajendra Awasthi, Shashi Deshpande, Pratibha
Roy, Arundhati Roy, Shashi Warrier, etc. Creative writers are normally responsive and
rational individuals, free from parochial concerns and prejudices. Let there be no
distinction between Dalits and non-Dalits as far as writing is concerned.
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M. S. Patil: “Being Dalit is significant, because it gives a distinct shape to
consciousness.”(3)
Dalit literature is that literature, which has written by one who is Dalit by birth,
which has filled with rebellion and rejection, and which gives expression to Dalit
consciousness. It is not possible to convey imaginatively the caste-specific experience
of Dalits. Today, non-Dalit critics think along two lines on this issue first line is that a
non-Dalit writer can write Dalit literature with the power of imagination and second
line is that only a Dalit writer can write Dalit literature. Between these two, the later
argument seems more realistic and the first is on imagination.
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declares, “I respect him who respects me. A religion that insults is a false religion.
Everyone united to make me conform to a creed that blinds and cage.” (Chandalika I)
The echoes of anger in the following assertion of Prakriti affirm that the
impression of the malpractices of caste binary became an integral part of human
consciousness and it essentially reflects in the form of ‘anger’ she warns her mother:
“Why are you afraid of, Mother? You are the lips I use, but it is I who chant the spells.
If my longing can draw him here, and if that is a crime, then I will commit the crime. I
care nothing for a code which holds only punishment, and no comfort.” (Chandalika I)
Krishna Kripalani in his criticism enunciated in the preface of the play
Chandalika makes a very emphatic assertion-
It is not the story of a wicked girl roused to lust by the physical beauty of the
monk, but of a very sensitive girl, condemned by her birth to a despised caste,
who is suddenly awakened to a consciousness of her full rights as a woman by
the humanity of a follower of Buddha, who accepts water from her hand and
teaches her to judge herself, not by artificial values that society attaches to the
accidents of birth, but her capacity for love and service. (Chandalika I)
Commenting on this transformation of Prakriti Tapashree Ghosh writes:
The dance drama concludes with Prakriti's journey from self-ignorance to
knowledge. Emancipation and liberation comes from within. Prakriti is able to
attain the same as she can free her mind from narrow confines of caste and
class to an understanding of herself as a woman and as a human being with
human wants, desires, follies but above all humanity. The play may be
subtitled ‘From Chandalika to Prakriti’ as the dance drama maps her personal
graph, her journey from ignorance to enlightenment, from oppression to
liberation. (4)
Tagore attempted to bring a note of Dalit consciousness and explore the black
shadow of Dalit consciousness in the background of his mystical and humanitarian
ideology in his work. He spreads the message of equality as given by the Lord Buddha.
Chandalika, portrays how the anti-castiest pronouncements of a Buddhist monk cast a
magic spell on an untouchable girl Prakriti who suddenly stumbled on a new
connotation of life together. Buddhism remained a vital pointer towards Dalit
consciousness.
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However, Tagore’s presentation of the Dalit world is limited to show sympathy
not different from that of Mahatma Gandhi. As an outcome, Tagore’s Chandalika
cannot present the hard realities of Dalits, which the Dalits were facing every day.
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“…he goes to the town, collects money for relief, and wouldn’t spend a
paisa for the stricken village itself. Look at his house, rising from height
to height. There are twenty villages bound to him in debt forever?”
(Water 107)
The village Charsa represents the same story. In spite of five big wells and three
small ones in the village, inhabitants of a particular class used to struggle a lot even for
getting drinking water. Their hands get wounded in search of water:
“…Look at three leper’s fingers of mine; all firm digging into the sand for
water. I dig a shallow hole in the night, till a little water trickles into the hole,
ah, the gift of Charsa, to be gathered in before down breaks lest the first rays of
the sun soak it up.” (Water 122)
Dalit people could not drink water freely according to their thirst. The height of
misery is that they have to use sand in place of water on the burning pyre to calm it
down. On the other hand, Santosh Pujari, his friends and relatives enjoyed the plenty of
water to wash their cattle, to drink as much as they need, to water their fields and to
cool their Verandas. After requesting by lower caste people to Santosh Pujari, to dig
new well for them but he refuses and tells them that the new well would be dug for
Harchal Thakur as he requested him earlier. It signifies that the well is to be dug not
according to the need of such Dalits but on the basis of the pleasure of those who
already occupy the centre.
Gradually these sparks of revolt begin to spread amongst the other members of
Dalits, specially the members of Maghai’s own family and they begin to raise their
voice against the atrocities of Santosh Pujari. They even mock at the hypocritic attitude
of Santosh who on one hand asks Maghai, to use his Divine power of a Dome pollutes
his pitcher and he throws away water. Reacting to the behavior of Santosh, Dhura, the
son of Maghai asks his father not to use his power, as a water diviner for such a man
but Maghai does not agree with him. He asserts, “The work we were born to may not
provide us with food, but we left to us by our ancestors.” He too calls it, “a job that I
owe to my caste.” (Water 130)
Here the dramatist wishes to show that the people of lower caste are more
humble and humane in comparison to the pseudo Brahmins.
Jiten the school Master appears in the play like a real ‘Torch Bearer’ for those
Dalits who were unable to protest against the exploitation done to them. He tells SDO
that, some people are discriminating amongst villages in Charsa on the base of caste
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and there is crisis of water for a particular class of people. But the SDO answers in a
measured official tone that there is no scarcity of water as there are a number of wells
in the village and also expresses his helplessness in implementing the law, “It’s no use-
laws are made because they have to be made. They are never enforced.”(Water146)
Instead of solving the problem, he advised him to get him transferred “if it hurts you to
see the plight of the lower caste.” (Water 146)
Devi’s prominent play ‘Water’ expose and explode the sham and fraudulence of
not only big landowners but also of the government officers. These officers know the
facts but make perfect fake records of the flourishing prosperity in the village. Dhura,
the central character in the play who is landless water-diviner is not a naxal but he helps
the naxalites from the city as he and others are being, pestered by the head of the
village. Dhura himself says, “They won’t allow us to touch it. Even at the government
wells, we aren’t allowed to draw water. That’s why we have to go and dig at the sands
of Charsa.” (Water 126)
The condition of Dalits since time immemorial has been very pitiable. The
feeling highlights in the play from the line, “When we go distribute the Prasad from the
Dharma puja in the village, they won’t let us stand under the ledges of their huts-we’re
the untouchables.” (Water126) The people in the play feel more offended when they
realize that even the government is adding to their fury. One of the city men whom the
SDO declares as Naxalite says, “The castes, upper and lower, don’t mean a thing. They
are labels designed by men. The constitution clears on that. But who cares to uphold the
constitution.” (Water 126-127)
All the public and private wells are under the control of Santosh Pujari. But
every time villagers asked him for water, a fixed denial was there. The worst thing was
that everything had shown perfect in records but it was away from reality. Maghai
mustered his courage up to some extent and said, “We have been told that there’s no
untouchability in our subdivision, and yet Santosh Babu, you, your caste brothers and
your relations won’t let us draw from any well.” (Water 138)
As Maghai and Dhura belong to untouchable Dome caste, they never allow to
touch the water. Even at the government wells, they never allow to draw water. That’s
why they have to go and dig at the sands of Charsa (river). When the Dalits raise their
voice against injustice, against vicious landowners and moneylenders like the pujari,
they branded as Naxalities and they tortured. As Dhura puts it: “The cry of Naxal
extremism is only to justify the harassment on us” (Water 99)
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Devi’s writings reveal us the treatment of Dalits, which also depends on the
ethics and politics of contemporary society. Water not only sympathizes with those
Dalits exploited lot, but also they try to perceive their desires and develop
consciousness among them to speak out their demands.
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protest…Under the leadership of Dr. B.R. Ambedkar, rights to Dalits became an
issue in Indian politics.”(XVIII)
In Kanyadaan, Nath Devalikar is an MLC with political inclinations. His wife
Seva is a social worker, and their son Jayprakash is an M. Sc. student. Nath regards
himself to be a democrat, reformer and a model for others. He cannot tolerate
negligence of duty. A political and social activist who supports democracy, he is
actively involved in improving the condition of the Dalits and socially neglected
people. At this position, he does not show any discrimination between his ideals and his
practical deeds. He tells his daughter, “We have a democracy in this house and we are
proud of it. Democracy outside and dictatorship in the home, we don’t know these two
timing tricks.” (Kanyadaan 04) He further tells his wife, “The value I uphold in my
public life, I will never use compulsion on anyone who is capable of thinking.”
(Kanyadaan 37)
As the play opens, the middle-class family is discussing on the proposal about
the inter-caste marriage of their daughter Jyoti and the Dalit poet and writer named
Arun. Albeit Nath ecstatically consents to the proposal, Seva and Jayprakash express
their apprehensions. Jyoti introduces Arun to the family. After the initial discussion
with Arun, Nath admits:
Nath: Seva, until today ‘Break the caste system’ was merely a slogan for us.
I’ve attended many inter-caste marriages and made speeches. But today,
I have broken the barrier in the real sense. My home has become Indian
in the real sense of the term. I am happy today, very happy. I have no
need to change my clothes today. Today I have changed. I have become
new. (Kanyadaan 23)
Nath’s mission is to achieve communal harmony. At his personal risk, he makes
a social experiment to mitigate caste differences. He tries to make the marriage a
successful realization of his principles not only because Jyoti is his daughter but also
because his views this marriage as the reconciliation of his social perspectives and his
personal life. He tells his wife:
Nath: Seva, let not this wonderful experiment fail! This dream which is
struggling to turn real let it not crumble into dust before our own eyes!
We will have to do something. We must save marriage. Not necessarily
for our Jyoti’s sake …This is not just a question of our own daughter’s
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life Seva, this has…a far wider significance …this experiment is very
precious experiment. (Kanyadaan 23)
Kanyadaan explores the shadows of discontent and anger of a Dalit youth who
is in spite of his intellectual accomplishment fails to get rid of his anguish of oppression
done to him in the name of caste. Arun appears as a spokesperson of Dalit oppression
whereas Nath Devlikar is the representative of constructive Brahmin ideology. Dalit
consciousness, that manifestation of the stigma of caste binary often constitutes the
psyche of discontent, rebellion and non-conformist attitude. Vijay Tendulkar constructs
Dalit consciousness with the realization of the experiences that can no longer be
defends in the light romantic zeal of social upliftment. Arun admits:
Arun: Generation after generation their stomachs used to stale, stinking bread
they have begged! Our tongues always tasting the flesh of dead animals,
and with relish! How can there be any give and take between our ways
and your fragrant, ghee spread, wheat bread culture?
Will you marry me and eat stinking bread with spoilt dal in my father’s
hut without vomiting? Tell me, Jyoti, can you shit everyday in our
slum’s village toilet like my mother? Can you beg, quaking at every
door, for a little grass for our buffaloes? Come on, tell me!
(Kanyadaan17)
Arun exposes the stark reality of what Arun realizes in big houses of big
people- ‘I feel uncomfortable in big houses’ (Kanyadaan 512) He prefers his ‘father’s
hut’ to Jyoti’s father’s big house:
If you see my father’s hut you will understand. Ten of us, big and small lived in
that eight feet by ten feet. The heat of our bodies to warm us in winter, no
clothes on our back, no food in our stomach but we felt very safe. Here these
damn houses of the city people they are like the bellies of sharks and crocodiles,
each one alone in them! (Kanyadaan 512)
Arun feels secure on the street: ‘As for me I feel safe on the street. The bigger
the crowds, the safer I feel.’ (Kanyadaan 342) He depicts various nuances of his Dalit
community raising venomous attack on the so-called traditional culture of Johaar that
dehumanized his community: “Our fathers and great grand fathers used to roam,
barefoot, miles and miles, in the heat and in the rain, day and night…till the rages on
their butt fell apart…used to wander shouting ‘Johaar Maayi-baap. Sir Madam,
Sweeper! And their calls polluted the Brahmins ears.” (Kanyadaan 513)
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Through these lines, Arun depicts the years of servitude under the miserable
conditions that the Dalits have to expose.
The fact that Arun’s and Jyoti’s marriage is more a challenge than out of love is
revealed. Soon, Nath stumbles on the stark reality that Arun, the Dalit and the lowest
working section of the society is crude and uncivilized. He is quite a different natured
of person, highly criticized of the sophisticated and high caste people “bellies of sharks
and crocodiles”. (Kanyadaan16) He believes that the civilized culture is an
“unwrinkled Timopal world” of the polish and outward appearances. (Kanyadaan17)
Seva, Nath and Jayprakash express their consensus on the issue that Arun’s
ways are different. The irony is explicit that Nath defends the cause of social justice but
is not ready to give equal status and respect to Arun. He remarks, “Not, only is he a
middle class man, he is a Dalit. He has brought up in the midst of poverty and hatred.
These people’s psychological make-up is altogether different.” (Kanyadaan 27)
Nath rejects the autobiography of Arun with the accusation that it is nothing but
only a pulp fiction. He realizes that his consent of marriage of Arun with Jyoti is the
worst error of his life. He confesses, “I had this maniacal urge to uproot casteism and
caste distinction from our society. As a result I pushed my own daughter into the sea of
misery.” (Kanyadaan 61) It shows that Nath even at this stage was not prepared to
change is opinion about Dalits. His idealism of social justice was only an external garb
on his own insecurity.
Jyoti realizes her father’s hypocrisy and breaks her relation with his family. She
claims to be a member of the Dalit community, to be a straight forwards scavenger, an
untouchable than an upper caste hypocrite. She remarks:
“I am not Jyoti Yadunath Devlikar now; I am Jyoti Arun Athavale, a
scavenger. I don’t say harijan. I despite the term, I am an untouchable, a
scavenger. I am one of them. Don’t touch me. Fly from my shadow,
otherwise my fire will scorch your comfortable values.” (Kanyadaan 70)
Jyoti thinks that her father’s ideal notions and reforming principles are unreal.
She has learnt the whole truth only after coming in contact with Arun. Until now, she
has remained a mute spectator to her father’s ideal notions. As K. C. Das claims that
“understanding in dignities and humiliation is only possible once we confront these
experiences frontally.” (Das 43)
Before Jyoti’s realizes her father’s contemptuous attitude towards the
autobiography of Arun she identifies herself with the anguish of Arun. Therefore, she
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denies her identity as the daughter of a Brahmin and accepts her identity as the
daughter of Dalit. She declares, “You know very well to whom I belong. I belong to
someone who makes you clean and pure soul impure by his touch.” (Kanyadaan 66)
Jyoti’s radical acceptance of her unconventional identity is the only remedy to redeem
the community of the untouchables. His generalization on the nature of human will is
the true acknowledgement of Dalit consciousness. She defends:
No man is fundamentally evil, he is good. He has certain propensities towards
evil. They must be transformed. Completely uprooted and destroyed. And then,
the earth will become heaven. It is essential to awaken the God slumbering
within man….putting man’s beastliness to sleep and awakening the God head
within is an absurd notion. You made me waste twenty years of life before I
could discover this. I had to learn it on the strength of my own experience. I had
to meet a man named Arun Athavale. Arun gave what you had withheld from
me. (Kanyadaan 67)
Thus, the play is criticized as “anti-Dalit” and has provoked a great deal of
anger and protest. In this play, Tendulkar presents quite different themes. Here he does
not depict a Dalit character who is exploited by the society or neglects and who wants
equal of right in the society. But Arun Athavale, a young Dalit boy is able to get
married to a Brahmin girl of upper class, and treats her as an object of revenge against
all the persons of higher caste and class. Here, instead of Dalit person, a girl of higher
strata, suffers humiliation, and tortures at the hand of a Dalit boy. So many critics
believe that instead of arousing sympathy for Dalits, this play produces ant-Dalit
feelings. It is concluded that the play has misrepresented the Dalit consciousness.
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Rao accepts that for Dalits even the right of survival seems to be a transgression
of social conventions. They are so deprived of human rights that even to lives and
breath seems to be a burden to them. The suffering of Javani makes a deep impression
on the mind of Ramappa and he becomes impatient to enquire about her personal life.
The revelation that she earns only one rupee in each month, comes as shock to
Ramappa. In spite of his personal disgust, Ramappa looks forward for the destiny of the
community of Dalits. He declares that ‘Whenever there is misery and ignorance, I
come, oh, when will that day comes, and when will the couch of the knowledge
below?’ (Javani 103)
Ramappa being swayed by her misery gives proposal of her adoption. He
proposes the work for her but she trebles with fear, “No learned Ramappa. A Brahmin
is not means to work. You are the “chosen ones.” She further continues, “You are, you
are. The sacred books are yours. You are all you are all. You are the twice born. We are
your servants, Ramappa your slave.” (Javani 105) It signifies that the horrors of Dalit
consciousness can’t be uprooted only on the basis of external efforts. Ultimately, on
order to avoid the company of Ramappa, she leaves the village.
Beena and Neeta assert that:
Rao in ‘Javani’ deals with the problem of Dalits without the crusade of political
and social reform. He presents the reality of human suffering-in its true perspective. His
distinction lies in the fact that he expresses his sympathy and human love for the beauty
and innocence of Dalits who accept the apathy of society with calm stoicism.
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Although untouchability was abolished in 1949, Dalits continued to face
discrimination, economic deprivation, violence and ridicule. Valmiki shows his heroic
struggle to survive a preordained life of perpetual physical and mental persecution and
of his transformation into a speaking subject under the influence of the great political
leader Dr. B. R. Ambedkar. Joothan is a major contribution to the archives of Dalit
history and a manifesto for the revolutionary transformation of society and human
consciousness.
Joothan the autobiography of Om Prakash Valmiki was originally written in
Hindi and later translated into English by Arun Prabhu Mukherjee in 2003. In Hindi,
the word ‘Joothan’ means leftover food, given to the lower class people to eat.
According to the translator, the title reveals the story of pain, humiliation and poverty
of downtrodden classes that have to depend on joothan for their survival. (Joothan
XXXI)
Om Prakash Valmiki writes in Joothan: A Dalit’s Life (2003) that the upper and
other caste people live in one side of the village pond. The churches and the low caste
untouchables live on the other side. The pond stood as partition between the Chuhras
did all sorts of work for the upper castes, including cleaning and agricultural work.
They would often work without pay. Valmiki writes:
Nobody dared to refuse this unpaid work for which we got sworn at and abused.
They did not call us by our names. If a person were older, then he would be
called ‘Oh Chuhre’. If the person was young or of the same age, then ‘Abey
Churhe’ was called.” (Joothan 2)
In Joothan, Valmiki has narrated his life story full of agony and pain caused by
hegemony of the upper class. In the words of Shobha Shinde “Joothan, is one among a
body of Dalit writings that is unified by an ideology, an agenda and a literary aesthetic.
The text becomes a part of a social movement for equality and justice.” (97-98)
In the preface Valmiki has expressed the painful psychological torments, which
he has to undergo while writing his life history:
I had to relieve all those miseries, torments, neglects, admonitions. I suffered a
deep mental anguish while writing this book. How terribly painful was this
unraveling of me, layer upon layer. In the process of writing these words, a lot
has remained unsaid.” (Joothan VII)
The members of his community have called ‘Oe Chuhre’ or ‘Abey Churhe’ by
upper class. They had branded as untouchables and treated inhumanly. They had not
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allowed to touch anything or any person from upper caste people. Their existence was
no more than a commodity “Use them and throw them away.” (Joothan 02)
Many times, Valmiki felt helpless against the social treatment by privileged
class. Once when he was asked by his scout teacher to come in a neat and pressed
uniform, he tried his level best to come up to his expectation but when he went to
Dhobi’s shop to get his cloths ironed, Dhobi’s replies tormented his heart. “We don’t
wash the clothes of the chura - Chamars. Nor do we iron them. If we iron your clothes,
then the Tagas won’t get their clothes washed by us. We will lose our roti.” (Joothan
17)
Valmiki’s consciousness is changed so much by Dr. B.R. Ambedkar and
Marxist literature. He says, “I have no interest in religion.” (Joothan 93) He was
attracted towards Buddha’s philosophy of human freedom, and in his eyes, humanity
was the greatest religion. According to him, “the human being alone matters, it is
karuna and wisdom that takes a person towards transcendence.” (Joothan 100)
During the period of Valmiki’s creativity, his Dalit consciousness further
sharpens by the ongoing Dalit movement, run by Dalit Panthers in almost all areas of
Maharashtra. There are many instances in his life where people questioned his identity.
He narrates one instance where he was invited to give a lecture on ‘Buddhist Literature
and Philosophy’ at a conference. There a member of the audience shouted, “How can a
‘Valmiki’ be allowed to speak on Buddhist literature and philosophy? Aren’t you
ashamed?” (Joothan 131) But Valmiki silenced him with his excellent speech on the
pervasive spread of casteism in the Hindu society.
Surname of Om Prakash, i.e. ‘Valmiki’ often laid hindrances in the smooth
running of his career as well as position in the society and ultimately his persistence
paid off but still the hurt remains and in an interrogative mode, he puts this question
before the reader “Why is my caste my only identity? What historical reasons lie
behind this hatred and malice?” (Joothan 134)
Valmiki had been insulted everywhere because of his ‘Chuhra’ tag. He states,
“The last part of my name which is also called the surname, has landed me in a lot of
dire situations because of its function as a marker of caste.” (Joothan 127) Some of
Valmiki’s friends considered his surname of signifier of a courageous act, “When
untouchable, a person from a caste considered low, uses his caste name as his surname,
with a feeling of self-assertion, he is being very brave.” But one gentleman commented,
“What is so brave about that?...After all he is a Chuhra. His surname spares us the
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hassle of asking what is caste is.” (Joothan 124) He proudly talks about the surname in
these lines:
This surname is now an indispensable part of my name. Omprakash has no
identity without it. ‘Identity’ and ‘recognition’, the two words say a lot by
themselves. Dr. B. R. Ambedkar was born in a Dalit family. But Dr. B. R.
Ambedkar signifies a Brahmin caste name; it was a pseudonym given by a
Brahmin teacher of his. When joined with ‘Bhimrao’ however it becomes his
identity, completely changing its meaning in the process. Today ‘Bhimrao’ has
no meaning without ‘Dr. B. R. Ambedkar. (Joothan 132)
Valmiki reveals the incident of indiscrimination and his experience at Tyagi
Inter College in Muzaffarnagar. There Phool Singh Tyagi was the physical education
teacher. Mr. Tyagi punished the children for silly reasons. Once Ram Singh, a Churha
by caste, was severely punished by Phool Singh, “Abey brother-in-law, progeny of a
Churha, let me know when you die. You think you are a hero. Today I am going to
draw oil from tresses.” (Joothan 47) Though all the other teachers and the Principal
were watching the scene, no one stopped Phool Singh because they could not worry
about the Churha boy.
In 1965, when Valmiki was in class eleven, Naraendra Kumar Tyagi was
appointed as a lecturer of Mathematics. Once Narendra Kumar Tyagi asked Valmiki to
go and bring him a glass of water from the pitcher. Valmiki said to him, “Master Saheb,
I am not permitted even to touch those pitchers. Please send someone else.” As the
master asked for reason, Valmiki replied quietly, “I belong to the Churha caste.” And
he continued, “If you still want me to get you water, I will go.” (Joothan 64-65) The
master said, “No, sit down”, and went himself to get water. Valmiki opines that the
teacher was a coward and did not have courage to drink the water from his hand. At
every step, Valmiki had to face discrimination and discouragement, “Whenever I asked
question to my teachers, I was punished, they beat me up, gave me lower marks in the
examinations.” (Joothan 62)
The Dalit writer like Valmiki has produced Dalit consciousness in his literary
creations. In fact, Joothan is a saga of Dalit consciousness which represents pain,
rebellion and rehabilitation of Dalits in the existing social order. The basic impulse
behind Dalit literature is an awareness of the social injustice and rebellion against it.
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Narendra Jadhav’s Outcaste: A Memoir (2003)
Narendra Jadhav (b. 1953) is a noted Indian bureaucrat, economist, social
scientist, writer and educationist. He has published his autobiography Outcaste: A
Memoir in English in 2003. Jadhav was born in a Dalit family in Mumbai. His books
Monetary Economics for India (1994) and Challenge to Indian Banking: Competition,
Globalization and Financial Markers (1996) are popular works on Economics.
The novel is a dramatic piece of writing that forces us to acknowledge the
inhumanity and injustice of a social order that treats humans worse than animals. It is
an expanded version of Narendra Jadhav’s best-selling Marathi novel Amcha Baap Aan
Amhi, meaning ‘Our Father and Us’ written in 1993.
Outcaste, published in the context of globalization and the internationalization
of the caste question in 1990s. The new visibility of Dalits and the debate on caste in
the global arena created a new interest in Dalits and their literature. Jadhav says:
There is widespread interest in Dalit writing now, all over the world. The
upsurge is not because it is politically correct but because people want to know
more about the lives of these whom they knew so little. I was amazed at the
range of questions about the caste system that were raised during my public
interactions in different parts of France. (Anand 31)
This novel is a journey of finding out remedies to trespass the boundaries of
caste and gender. It is comparable to Malcolm X’s Roots and Maxim Gorky’s Mother
in which history and human relations play vital role to educating oneself. Jadhav’s
Outcaste represents the struggle of the Dalits against caste discrimination, illiteracy and
poverty. Having the weapons of education, empowerment and democracy, Damu, the
protagonist and his wife Sonu fought for self-assertion and self-respect which are
denied to them for hundreds of years. It is not the life story of Damu and Sonu; a story
of all the Dalits in the world.
It is the story of the metamorphosis of Dalits in the context of the social
movement of his father led by Dr. B. R. Ambedkar. It narrates from the perspective of
his father, mother, himself and his teenage daughter. In his author’s note, Jadhav
describes Damu, the central character of his memoir, in these words:
Damu was a leader…but he is refused to define himself by circumstances and
aimed at shaping his own destiny. Damu had no formal education. Yet he
steered his children to educational heights and inculcated in them the spirit of
excellence. Damu was not a guru…but he taught his children to believe in
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themselves and retain human dignity. Damu was often humbled …yet he
maintained, ‘Goats are special offerings, not lions’. Damu was an ordinary man,
they said …yet he did an extraordinary things: he stood up against the tyranny
of the caste system. (Outcaste 11-12)
These lines are self-explanatory. One may describe Damu as one of the few
assertive, independent Dalit characters in Indian writing in English. In the opening
pages of Outcaste, we see Damu doing his Yeskar duties (village duties to Mahars) in
his native village, Ozar. When his causing reminds him that Damu is violating a
tradition of Yeskar duty, Damu speaks out: “…In spite of these inhuman traditions, I
am not going to abide by such traditions. I am a man of dignity and I will not go from
house to house begging for Baluta. What are all of going to do? Kill me?” (Outcaste
10)
Outcaste: A Memoir presents the personal anger and anguish of Jadhav. It is a
saga of the signs of untouchables who are denied from the right of self-survival. The
texture of the text has developed through the consciousness of Damu, who had assigned
the duty of Yeskar. In spite of his sincerity, senior revenue officer humiliates him calls
him ‘son of bitch’. Jadhav asserts that monopoly on economic resources and language
dynamics are often used to impose the caste binarism in society. Damu had given the
duty to guard a dead body floating in the well. Damu used to keep awake and protect
the dead body. He was bearing the pain of his hunger and thirst without expressing it.
Gradually his suppressions transform into his furry and he raises the voice of rebellion.
Namya, his co-partner consoles him, “What did they care if a Mahar lived or starved or
even died? All they were concerned about were the high born.” (Outcaste 06) Damu
denies to tolerating the politics of discrimination because he had already seen the
cosmopolitan culture of Mumbai. The city life of Mumbai has brought ‘touchability’
into his life along with an awareness of his rights as human being. Damu is subjugated
but he is not insensitive. He is capable enough to realize his position. Instead of
yielding to the forces of oppression, he adopts the path of resistance against the
authority and brutality of Fauzdar. Damu denies to bring corpse out of well and
declares, “How can I get the corpse out? The dead belongs to the high castes.”
(Outcaste 07)
Damu rejects the external definitions of his identity as a Mahar, and represent
himself as ‘a man of dignity’. The character of Narendra Jadhav is again that of an
assertive, self-made Dalit in the text. He inherited the philosophy of his father that a
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human being is a master of his own will. He asserts, “If others look down on me in
their belief that my caste is low, it is their problem, not mine. I certainly don’t need to
torment myself over it. I pity them, for they are the victims of their own obsolete
prejudices.” (Outcaste 11)
Damu, Sonu and Narendra belong to the Mahar caste among the untouchable
castes in Maharashtra. They become Dalits in Mumbai with their participation in the
Ambedkar social movement. As Sonu puts it:
Truly, we sensed a change in the way carried ourselves. We proudly proclaimed
ourselves Dalits, with our chip up, and we looked everyone in the eye. We
began to lose our former servility, associated with being born in a low caste.
(Outcaste 178)
Damu dreams of Mumbai as ‘a heaven.’ His journey from his village Ozar to
Mumbai is described a journey ‘towards Freedom.’ Narendra Jadhav walked out of ‘the
morass of untouchability, illiteracy and backwardness.’ Let us have a look at the
identity claims of Narendra Jadhav and his daughter Apoorva:
Yes, I do come from the Mahar caste. Yes my father was an illiterate lowly
employee doing menial jobs to earn a square meal for the family. Yes my
forefathers were required to wear clay pots around their necks to keep their spit
from polluting the ground and the brooms were tied to their rumps to obliterate
their footprints as they walked.
Yes, as village servants, my forefathers were mercilessly forced to run…human
pilots, foaming at the mouth under the scorching sun, to herald the carriages of
government officials.
So what? Have I not reclaimed my dignity through my achievement? Why
should the caste into which I was born count now? (Outcaste 207)
Apoorva, Jadhav’s daughter claims, “Now I think I know who I am. I am just
Apoorva, not tied ‘down by race, religion, or caste’.” (Outcaste 263) This is the term of
Dalit consciousness or emancipation in the context of globalization. The realization of
human dignity grips the consciousness of Damu. He exhorts, “We must have self-
respect. We must have dignity as human beings. How can I take to begging from door
to door? Baluta is my right, they probably claim; my food. Have you seen how they
throw the food? I don’t want rights as dogs, I want my human rights.” (Outcaste 96)
Jadhav explores how social injustice in the name of caste makes permanent
impression on human consciousness. The encounter with Fauzdar was a significant
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event and it distorted the consciousness of Damu. He became almost a rebel. He
identifies himself with the ideologies of Ambedkar’s clarion call to recollect the inner
strength of his will to challenge the oddities of human existence. He recalls the words
of Dr. Ambedkar, “Lost rights are never regained by begging and by appeals to the
conscience of usurpers, but by the relentless struggle. Goats are used for sacrificed
offerings and not lions.” (Keer 82)
In Mumbai Damu refers to one particular incident when in a local train, a
beautiful Anglo-Indian woman offered him to sit. The sahib requested him to sit next to
him. This experience strengthened Damu’s vision about the life style in Mumbai and
helped him to redefine his self and identity. He asserts that to abolish the pain of
untouchability, it is essential to inculcate confidence in them by acknowledging not
only their identity but also their humanity. Damu reveals his inner consciousness:
My lowly place was so deeply etched in my mind that when I was treated well, I
could not believe it. I thought there was something wrong. After much thought,
I reasoned that perhaps Saheb did not allow that I was an untouchable.
(Outcaste 96)
In this novel, Jadhav tells the awe-inspiring story of his family’s struggle for
equality and justice in India. While most Dalits had accepted their lowly position as
fate, Damu rebelled against the oppressive caste system and fought against all odds to
forge for his children a destiny that was never ordained. It is a story of survival, of
oppressive as grievous as slavery or apartheid, and of victory, as the others get an
education and learns to embrace his identity and became a spokesperson for his
community.
Jadhav in his personalized saga of social metamorphosis of Dalits named
Outcaste: A Memoir shows the experience of his illiterate parents Damu and Sonu
who come from Mahar community in Maharashtra. It also exhibits their struggle and
consciousness in such a social condition.
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Adiga’s The White Tiger is the most heart rendering picture of imbalanced
societies in India. The novel specially refers to the cultural and social issues of
marginal groups in the early free Indian villages. They always suffer for their daily
bread and butter. They are usually discriminated ignored and often suppressed on the
base of race, gender, culture, religion, ethnicity, occupation, education and economy by
the mainstream.
Adiga very cleverly presents a brutal view of India’s class struggles. The novel
The White Tiger is the story of a poor boy Munna, who never get even name from his
parents because they had not time to give identification to their children. When a school
Teacher asks the name to him, he was unable to answer to tell his proper name:
“Didn’t your mother name you?”
‘She’s very ill sir. She lies in bed and spews blood. She has go
no time to name.’
‘And your father’
He’s a rickshaw-puller, sir.
He’s got no time to name me.’ (WT 13)
The White Tiger is all about Dalit consciousness in which Balram, the
protagonist, narrates his life story to Mr. Wen Jaiabao, the premier of China, in seven
nights from his desk, which is a revolt of a deprived against the mainstream of society
and social values, made by the power centre. The protagonist, Balram is the rickshaw
puller Vikram Halwai’s son born in dark corner of India, in Laxmangarh, in district of
Gaya. Balram is a name given by his school teacher Krishna, on his first day of
schooling.
Balram is called the White Tiger from his school days for his right answers to
the school inspector’s question, “what is the rarest animals-the creature that comes
along only once in a generation?” (WT 55) In the human jungle of darkness Balram
really appears as White Tiger and tries to fulfil his father’s ambition by learning
reading and writing. He remembers his father who had a desire not to see him as, “a
human beast of burden.” (WT 27) Balram left going to school as the boys teased,
ragged and scared him with a lizard while the teacher snored at his desk. The father
realizes the importance of education, as he must have suffered as an illiterate man. To
settle the matter, the father goes to school and finds the teacher lying in one corner
stinking of booze and snoring loudly. Near him was a pot of toddy he had drunk the last
night. In spite of being praised by the school inspector and given the name White Tiger,
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circumstances drive him to be a coal breaker and he says, “One infallible law of life in
the darkness is that good news becomes bad news - and so on.” (WT 36)
The Dalit people have never been treated as human being since ages in India.
Only because of his low birth, Balram was also treated as animal since his childhood to
his grand success as entrepreneur in Bangalore. Mostly such treatment is given to him
by the landlords such as Mr. Mukesh and Stork. The rich expect their pets to be treated
as humans, they expect their human beings. Repressed are always deviant in front of
their masters and their pets. Balram describes how he takes dogs for walk, “Then I took
then around the compound on chain, while the king of Nepal (Watchman) sat in a
corner and shouted. Don’t pull the chain so hard! They are worth more than you are!”
(WT 78)
Through The White Tiger, Adiga rightly gives a message that the Dalits are still
waiting for their rights and betterment. If the suppression and domination may
continue, they can take turn to become criminals. The aim of the life of these people is
to make “all is well” for their community and entire humanity. Neeta Yadav points out:
The novel is the story of a poor boy who is later changed into a servant class
hero, a murderer and an entrepreneur. The White Tiger, the name of the novel, a
title has given to Balram for his intelligence by a school inspector. The novel
presents the consciousness of Dalits and also many problems facing by Dalits.
Dowry, basic education system in villages, inhumanity of doctors for patients in
the government hospitals, casteism, religionism, terrorism, bribe, prostitution,
are some problems, that are making hollow the root of nation.”(Yadav 269)
Adiga presents in the novel the Indian typical villages having no facilities like
electricity, water tap, telephones or nutritious diet, education, medical for poor people.
As Adiga writes in the novel:
Electricity poles-defunct
Water tap-broken
Children-too learn and short for their age, and with oversize
heads from which vivid eyes shine, like the guilty conscience of
the government of India. (WT 20)
Adiga, like Mulk Raj Anand and Premchand, is passionately concerned with the
hardships of life of villages, their poverty, squalor and backwardness coupled with
gross ignorance and the cruelties of caste. In the novel, he tries to attack upon social
snobberies and caste prejudice, the struggle of poor for a better life. The caste and
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religion prejudice forced people to change their name to get any job as in the novel,
when first driver caught Muslim, being a good driver he has to leave the job as Balram
says,“I thought, what a miserable life he’s had, having to hide his religion, his name,
just to get a job as a diver, and he is a good driver, no question of it.” (WT 110) The
driver knows that the owners do not allow him for further service because he is a
Muslim. Such kind of caste prejudice is always an obstacle in the development of the
good nation.
When Dalits face so much inhumanities and discriminations, there will be
definitely a revolt against the oppressors but the revolt of Balram is not right when he
kills his master for money. He says, “I was a driver to master, but now I am a master of
drivers. I don’t treat like servants. I don’t slap, or bully, or mock any one. I don’t insult
any of them by calling them my ‘family’, either. They are any employees. I’m their
boss, that’s all.” (WT 302) Balram knows very well the Indian legal system in which
criminals walk and talk freely in society and innocent are to keep in jails. So he doesn’t
hesitate to kill his master.
Through the protagonist, Adiga has narrated some fundamental problems of the
Dalit class. The class and caste system is still prominent and a major obstacle in India’s
progress presenting the facts about India. Adiga holds, “a mirror to
realities.”(Deshpande1)
Adiga never mentions Dr. Ambedkar whereas he mentions Mahatma Gandhi in
a disparaging way. The Brahmin of this novel has no clue about Dalits of northern
India and how much the Dalits venerate Dr. Ambedkar who taught the mantra to
Indians ‘educate, organize and agitate.’ But this novel does not contain any elements of
Dalit mantra. The Dalit hero, Balram Halwai is uneducated and there is no effort or
striving among his community towards education. They seem to be happy in their
illiteracy and their impending destiny of lifelong slavery.
Thus, The White Tiger is neither empowering nor can it emancipate Dalits. In
short, it is just a piece of junk written by the non-Dalit writer.
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