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| Conversion is not the solution |
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For decades dalits have been converting to Christianity or Islam in the
vain hope of being liberated from their dalit status. The proselytising
forces of these foreign faiths market their religions as not recognising
the caste system and giving equal status to all. Only after conversion
do the dalits realise the fraud that has been perpetuated on them in the
name of equality when they find discriminatory treatment in Christian
and Muslim societies and even their places of worship.
And this is not a new phenomenon. Many decades ago Dr. Ambedkar had
studied the plight of dalits converted to Christianity and observed,
“Indian Christians like all other Indians are divided by race, by
language, and by caste. Their religion has not been a sufficiently
strong unifying force as to make difference of language, race and caste
as though they were mere distinctions.” The same was the case with the
Muslim converts. He said, “Everybody infers that Islam must be free from
slavery and caste. (While slavery existed), much of its support was
derived from Islam and Islamic countries. While the prescriptions by the
Prophet regarding the just and humane treatment of slaves contained in
the Koran are praiseworthy, there is nothing whatever in Islam that
lends support to the abolition of this curse. But if slavery has gone,
caste among Muslims has remained.”
Dr. Ambedkar’s conversion to Buddhism was his way of revolting against
the caste system in Hinduism. When he announced his intention to convert
to another religion in 1935 many Christian and Muslim leaders and
organisations tried to lure him into their religions. To those people he
said, “We are fully conscious of the fact that go anywhere we will, we
would have to fight for our welfare if we took to Christianity or
Islam.”
For 20 years he studied all the alternative religions for the purpose of
conversion. Christianity did not satisfy the criteria laid down by him
for determining a true religion. About Islam he wrote, “The brotherhood
of Islam is not the universal brotherhood of man. It is brotherhood of
Muslims for Muslims only. There is a fraternity but its benefit is
confined to those within that corporation. For those who are outside the
corporation, there is nothing but contempt and enmity.” He was of the
opinion that “Islam can never allow a true Muslim to adopt India as his
motherland and regard a Hindu as his kith and kin.”
But the most important factor that desisted Dr. Ambedkar from converting
to Christianity or Islam was that both these religions were foreign,
born outside of the Hindu civilization. Adopting these religions would
de-Indianise the dalits, which would be against the national interest.
He wrote, “If the depressed classes join Islam or Christianity, they not
only go out of the Hindu religion, but they also go out of the Hindu
culture. What the consequences of conversion will do to the country as a
whole is well worth bearing in mind.” So after the detailed study and
great introspection, he chose Buddhism, an offshoot of Hinduism. The
Dalai Lama has considered Buddhism a part of Hinduism. He has said:
“When I say that Buddhism is part of Hinduism, certain people criticise
me. But if I were to say that Hinduism and Buddhism are totally
different, it would not be in conformity with truth.”
Dr. Ambedkar himself perceived Buddhism as a part of the larger Hindu
family. When he introduced the Hindu Code Bill in Parliament, he
included the Buddhists, the Jains and the Sikhs in the Hindu fold. On
being questioned for doing so, Dr. Ambedkar replied, “The application of
the Hindu Code to Sikhs, Buddhists and Jains was a historical
development and it would be too late, sociologically, to object to it.
When the Buddha differed from the Vedic Brahmins, he did so only in
matters of creed, but left the Hindu legal framework intact. He did not
propound a separate law for his followers. The same was the case with
Mahavir and the ten Sikh gurus.”
The Christian and Muslim proselytisers have no interest in the welfare
of the dalits or the integrity of the nation. Had their concern been
genuine they wouldn’t have permitted the caste discriminations to be
carried over to the church or mosques. All they are interested into
winning converts and increasing their numbers. The dalits are the soft
targets whose impoverished conditions are exploited to change their
religion. Pope John Paul II had exhorted the bishops to target the
dalits for conversion. He had said, “At all times, you must continue to
make certain that special attention is given to those belonging to the
lowest castes, especially the dalits.” It is common to see the different
Christian and Muslim religious organisations boasting of the number of
converts they had obtained and competing amongst themselves as to which
religion has the largest number of followers. For them, it is just a
number game.
The demand for reservation for dalit Christians or Muslims arises not
out of sympathy for the depressed classes but out of the fact, as
confessed by the president and founder of Gospel for Asia K.P. Yohannan,
that the denial of affirmative-action benefits for dalit Christians and
Muslims is “a huge, huge roadblock for masses of communities to embrace
the Christian faith.” Reservations and privileges for dalit Christians
and Muslims will only strengthen the dubious designs of the
proselytizing forces that are using dalits for furthering their goals.
Dalits converted on the false promise of equal status in a casteless
society, must be reconverted to Hinduism. The dalit icon Babu Jagjivan
Ram had said, “…we oppose the way in which conversions are done.
Therefore, we have to reconvert those who might have been converted by
deceit or under some temptation.”
R. Thirumalvalavan, leader of the Dalit Panthers Party of India, said,
“For emancipation of dalits, conversion is not the solution.” The
solution lies in the comprehension and adoption of the real essence of
Hinduism by all the Hindus, irrespective of their caste.
Hinduism perceives divinity in everything, whether living or non-living.
One of Adi Shankaracharya’s finest poems, Manisha Panchakam, was
inspired by his dialogue with a chandala, a member of the lowest caste.
Once, when Shankara was on his way to the temple after a bath in the
Ganga, he found a chandala with four dogs blocking his path. He got
furious when the chandala refused to step aside, and asked him to do so.
The chandala asked, “If there is only one existence, what is it that you
want to drive away: My body or my soul? If it is my body, both your and
mine are made up of the same physical elements. But if it is my soul, it
is also no different from yours. How can therefore be any distinctions
of caste and creed?” Filled with remorse, Shankara prostrated himself
before the chandala, thinking: “He who has learnt to see one existence
everywhere, he is my master—be he a Brahmin or a chandala.”
The need of the hour is a collective effort of all sections of the Hindu
society to reinstate the true spirit of Hinduism. Dalit activist and
poet Namdeo Dhasal says, “Yes, I do feel that the fight to eradicate
caste has to be fought by dalits and caste Hindus together carrying
forward the tradition of Adi Shankara, which got broken somewhere in
between.”
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