Messiah of the Dalits :
Father of Indian Constitution
Dr B R Ambedkar’s 54th death anniversary today:
Upali Rupasinghe
Dr B R Ambedkar
* Born: April 14, 1891
* Died: December 6, 1956 (aged 65)
* Nationality: Indian
* Title: First Law Minister of India, Chairman of the Constitution
Drafting Committee
* Political party: Republican Party of India
* Religion: Buddhism
* Awards: Bharat Ratna (1990)
According to the Constitution of India, Dalit Community with nearly
160 million population is identified as members of the Scheduled Castes.
It was on the October 14, 1956 Dr B R Ambedkar with his wife Srimati
Savitabai Ambedkar along with half a million followers embraced Buddhism
in an impressive and historic ceremony at Nagpur, Maharashtra, India.
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Dr B R Ambedkar |
The leader who brought a promise of new life to the long down-trodden
and oppressed members of the Scheduled Castes died on December 6, two
months after the mass conversion ceremony paralysing the forward march
of his mission and vision.
Dr Ambedkar himself was the father of the Constitution of India
framed and adopted after the Independence. Speaking at the Nagpur on the
eve of his conversion to Buddhism Dr Ambedkar told that he had decided
to embrace Buddhism because of misbehaviour by those so-called upper
class society. “I am decidedly choosing something better” and asked “why
do you want us to remain perpetually untouchable to enjoy those benefits
like reservations under Constitution? Are the Brahmins prepared to
become untouchables to have these privileges?”
Ancient Buddhist shrines
Babasaheb Ambedkar was born in 1891, the year Anagarika Dharmapala
founded the Maha Bodhi Society of India for the purpose of reviving
Buddhism in the land of its birth and for restoring the ancient Buddhist
shrines at Buddha Gaya, Sanath and Kushinara.
The Scheduled Castes members were subjected to inhuman treatment by
the high-caste in the name of religion. According to them, Ambedkar
family, were not only lowest of lowly and devoid of even elementary
human rights but these unfortunate people were also damned as unseesbles,
unapproachable above all untouchables, whose mere touch, and even shadow
would pollute the high-castes. In short they were made to suffer
immeasurable deprivations and humiliations.
According to the life story of Dr Ambedkar himself, at school at
Satra he was made to sit outside the classroom on a piece of gunny bag
which he had to carry to the school everyday.
Many a time he had to go without water, because he was being
untouchable, had no right to drink from the common source. In the same
school some of the teachers would not touch his notebooks for fear being
pollute. Outside school, the position was even worse. “Touch me not” was
the rule for him everywhere.
Inhuman treatment
As a man of learning and high official in the Baroda State in 1917,
he was subjected to inhuman treatment. Drinking water was not available
to him in office.
His subordinates kept distance from him and even the peons fearful of
pollution threw the files and papers on to his desk from a distance.
There he even could not get accommodation and had to resign in disgust
and return to Bombay.
As a professor in Bombay University in 1918-1920, he was treated as a
‘Parish’ by the academic staff belong to high castes and was not allowed
to drink water from the pot kept in the professor’s common room.
When in 1923, he started practice as barrister in the High Court of
Bombay, the solicitors would not condescend to have any business with
him on the ground of untouchability. Even the humble canteen boy would
not serve him tea.
Caste members
This was the case of Dr Ambedkar, a highly educated person made to
think about the future well-being of his caste members numbering
millions living in rural areas all over India.
He fought bravely against the protagonists of inequality and
exploitation and made heroic efforts to inspire the downtrodden classes
to raise the banner of revolt against those strong, rich and powerful
with extraordinary social status.
He started the struggle for the liberation of the downtrodden at
Mahad on March 20, 1927 when untouchables for the first time asserted
their human rights by drinking water from a forbidden tank.
Several times he openly declared his intention to embrace Buddhism
but with pressure mounting from and within the Dalit community he
finally informed Ven Chandamoni Maha Stavira from Kushinara and Devpriya
Valisinghe, then General Secretary of the Maha Bodhi Society of India
about his final decision to embrace Buddhism.
Dalit Community
Accordingly Devpriya Valisinghe along with Ven Galagedara Pannarama
Maha Stavira (present high priest of Luknow Buddha Vihara) visited his
Nagpur residence and accompanied him to the venue.
Today, the Dalit Community has become a powerful political force and
a vote bank of different political parties rather than a religious
group, specially in Maharashtra, North India, Tamil Nadu and Uttara
Pradesh. For instance, Kumari Mayawathi, a member of the Dalit Community
became the Chief Minister in Uttara Pradesh (several times) due to her
affiliations with the Ambedkar Movement.
Ambedkar Mission remains today with different faces but with no
particular leader. |