Sculpting the legacy of India's 'Dalit Queen'
Towering statues of the heroes of India's "untouchable" caste,
shrouded in blue tarpaulin, provide a surreal sight for drivers speeding
along a highway near the national capital.
Dalit Queen Mayawati |
The statues are part of a grandiose memorial complex - the pet
project of the chief minister of Uttar Pradesh, Mayawati, and one of
several in the state that are being built on a scale to rival the
monuments of ancient Rome.
Once the site of frenzied construction, the half-finished memorial
park in the New Delhi satellite city of Noida is now silent and
deserted.
Guards brandishing bamboo sticks shoo curious visitors away from the
high gates guarding the entrance to the park, which is dominated by the
outsized statues mounted on huge plinths, sandstone walkways, pillars
and a massive rotunda.
"You can't come in - these are Madam's orders," says guard Jagdish
Kashyap, referring to Mayawati, who is known as the "Dalit Queen" after
building her political base championing those at the bottom of
Hinduism's age-old caste pyramid.
The Supreme Court of India has forced Mayawati to suspend work while
it examines the constitutionality of spending hundreds of millions of
dollars in public funds to build the monuments.
The 53-year-old Mayawati, who likes to drape herself in diamonds and
shiny silk saris on her birthdays in what she calls displays of
"self-respect," says the memorials are intended as an inspirational
"lighthouse" for the Dalits.
India's 160 million Dalits were once known as "untouchables" and
given the most menial jobs. Many still face discrimination, forbidden to
use communal wells and excluded from social events, despite
anti-discrimination laws.
But the estimated 20 billion rupees (420 million dollars) she has
spent on marble, granite and sandstone memorials to the Dalit icons,
according to a Supreme Court suit, has appalled critics. The money could
have been far better spent, they say, to improve life in Uttar Pradesh,
India's most populous state, which is desperately backward and lacking
proper medical facitilies and schools.
A man giving final touches to the statues of “untouchables” |
"The chief minister's aim is to get popularity and immortality not by
doing work for the millions of poor and downtrodden in the state but by
building statues," says the suit, which notes 12 projects on top of
dozens already built.
Mayawati has put up a slew of statues of her mentor, Kanshi Ram, who
brought her into politics and founded the Bahujan Samaj Party which she
now leads, and of B.R. Ambedkar, the Dalit who framed India's
constitution.
The former schoolteacher, who has declared her ambition of being
India's first Dalit Prime Minister, has also immortalized herself -
commissioning one statue that was 50 feet (15 metres) high.
Opponents accuse Mayawati, whose own statues show her toting her
trademark square handbag, of megalomania. She had one edifice of herself
torn down and replaced last year because it was three feet shorter than
an adjacent statue.
S.R. Darapuri, a police officer turned social activist who is a Dalit
himself, accuses the chief minister of wallowing in
"self-glorification."
"It's a shame the chief of a downtrodden party is squandering public
money putting up party icons," he said.
Mayawati says she is the victim of discrimination and hypocrisy,
pointing to monuments the ruling Congress party built to the
Nehru-Gandhi dynasty which has governed India for most of the time since
independence in 1947.
But none of the Congress monuments have been on such a vast scale.
Some 6,000 trees were felled for the Noida memorial which sprawls over
82 acres (33 hectares). AFP |