XI
The reasons which have made Shudhi impossible for Hindus are also responsible
for making Sanghatan impossible. The idea underlying
Sanghatan is to remove from the mind of
the Hindu that timidity and cowardice which so painfully make him off from the
Mohammedan and the Sikh and which have led him to adopt the low ways of
treachery and cunning for protecting himself. The question naturally arises:
From where does the Sikh or the Mohammedan derive his strength which makes him
brave and fearless? I am sure it is not due to relative superiority of physical
strength, diet or drill. It is due to the strength arising out of the feeling
that all Sikhs will come to the rescue of a Sikh when he is in danger and that
all Mohammedans will rush to save a Muslim if he is attacked. The Hindu can
derive no such strength. He cannot feel assured that his fellows will come to
his help. Being one and fated to be alone he remains powerless, develops
timidity and cowardice and in a fight surrenders or runs away. The Sikh as well
as the Muslim stands fearless and gives battle because he knows that though one
he will not be alone. The presence of this belief in the one helps him to hold
out and the absence of it in the other makes him to give way. If you pursue
this matter further and ask what is it that enables the Sikh and the Mohammedan
to feel so assured and why is the Hindu filled with such despair in the matter of
help and assistance you will find that the reasons for this difference lie in the
difference in their associated mode of living. The associated mode of life practised
by the Sikhs and the Mohammedans produces fellow-feeling. The associated mode
of life of the Hindus does not. Among Sikhs and Muslims there is a social
cement which makes them Bhais.
Among Hindus there is no such
cement and one Hindu does not regard another Hindu as his Bhai. This explains why a Sikh says
and feels that one Sikh, or one Khalsa is equal to Sava Lakh men. This explains why one
Mohammedan is equal to a crowd of Hindus. This difference is undoubtedly a
difference due to caste. So long as caste remains, there will be no Sanghatan and so long as there is no Sanghatan the Hindu will remain weak and
meek. The Hindus claim to be a very tolerant people. In my opinion this is a
mistake. On many occasions they can be intolerant and if on some occasions they
are tolerant that is because they are too weak to oppose or too indifferent to
oppose. This indifference of the Hindus has become so much a part of their
nature that a Hindu will quite meekly tolerate an insult as well as a wrong.
You see amongst them, to use the words of Morris, “The great reading down the little,
the strong heating down the weak, cruel men fearing not, kind men daring not
and wise men caring not.” With
the Hindu Gods all forbearing, it is not difficult to imagine the pitiable
condition of the wronged and the oppressed among the Hindus. Indifferentism is
the worst kind of disease that can infect a people. Why is the Hindu so
indifferent? In my opinion this indifferentism is the result of Caste System
which has made Sanghatan and co-operation even for a
good cause impossible.
XII
The assertion by the individual
of his own opinions and beliefs, his own independence and interest as over
against group standards, group authority and group interests is the beginning
of all reform. But whether the reform will continue depends upon what scope the
group affords for such individual assertion. If the group is tolerant and
fair-minded in dealing with such individuals they will continue to assert and
in the end succeed in converting their fellows. On the other hand if the group
is intolerant and does not bother about the means it adopts to stifle such
individuals they will perish and the reform will die out. New a caste has an
unquestioned right to excommunicate any man who is guilty of breaking the rules
of the caste and when it is realized that excommunication involves a complete
cesser of social intercourse it will be agreed that as a form of punishment
there is really little to choose between excommunication and death. No wonder individual
Hindus have not had the courage to assert their independence by breaking the
barriers of caste. It is true that man cannot get on with his fellows. But it
is also true that he cannot do without them. He would like to have the society
of his fellows on his terms. If he cannot get it on his terms then he will be
ready to have it on any terms even amounting to complete surrender. This is
because he cannot do without society. A caste is ever ready to take advantage
of the helplessness of a man and insist upon complete conformity to its code in
letter and in spirit. A caste can easily organize itself into a conspiracy to
make the life of a reformer a hell and if a conspiracy is a crime I do not
understand why such a nefarious act as an attempt to excommunicate a person for
daring to act contrary to the rules of caste should not be made an offence
punishable in law. But as it is, even law gives each caste an autonomy to
regulate its membership and punish dissenters with excommunication. Caste in
the hands of the orthodox has been a powerful weapon for persecuting the
reforms and for killing all reform.
ANNIHILATION OF CASTE By Dr. B. R. Ambedkar Part - 8, 9, 10
ANNIHILATION OF CASTE By Dr. B. R. Ambedkar Part - 13, 14
ANNIHILATION OF CASTE By Dr. B. R. Ambedkar Part - 13, 14
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