Re-reading
Annihilation of Caste in the Context
of the Caste Paradox
First Edition of Annihilation of Caste, 1936
Dr. B.R. Ambedkar’s Annihilation of Caste (AOC) is a seminal text published in 1936 which can be compared
to the Communist Manifesto in terms
of its philosophical importance. It is an anti-caste manifesto as much as the
latter is an anti-class manifesto. It was written in the form of a speech which
unfortunately was never delivered. Nevertheless, Ambedkar went ahead and
published the book and used the opportunity to summarise his philosophy,
declare his politics and present a programme to his followers.
Dr. Ambedkar’s first illustration takes the help of logic to show how any reform is not possible in the Hindu religion. How to abolish caste? He provides the answer that the only way it can be done is through the destruction of the authority of the shastras and Vedas. And logically this can only be achieved if the religion itself is done away with. The second illustration is by way of providing the crucial difference between principles and rules and the observation that Brahminism is more a set of ritualistic rules demanding blind observation rather than a system of moral principles. The third, and perhaps the most damning one, is the observation that ‘a Hindu is not free to use his reasoning faculty’. Or ‘a Hindu cannot resort to rational thinking’ because he remains a Hindu only to the extent that he continues to follow the rules unquestioningly. The moment he questions – he ceases to be a Hindu.
This seminal text calls out for a close re-reading in the context of the paradox of Indian public life. On the one hand casteism remains entrenched – overtly and covertly - in many public institutions and therefore the constitutional protections provided to the Scheduled Castes, Schedules Tribes and the OBCs needs to be implemented in full letter and spirit. On the other hand every demand, such as that of a caste census, framed in the name of caste takes us away from the annihilation of caste through the destruction of Brahminism. This paradox is a complex one and a solution would probably emerge over an extremely long-term balancing of social and political powers.
-Dr. Kalyan Kumar, Paromita Goswami
0 Comments