The moment one enquires about the future of the Dalit movement, a
series of pessimistic answers are parroted in response: the Movement is dead,
young Dalits are no more interested/associated with it, Hindutva politics has subsumed
Dalit politics, etc. One also reads
about the ‘NGO-isation’ of the Dalit movement, where the basic needs of the
Dalit masses are fulfilled but at the cost of discarding the need or goal of a
radical overhaul of the caste system.
Seen in this context, professor Suryakant Waghmore’s Civility
against Caste (2013) persuades us to revisit our presumptions about the
Dalit movement. Based on intensive
fieldwork, Waghmore asks his readers to reconsider the dominant understanding
of the Dalit movement in academia. The book deals with both empirical evidence
and theoretical advances made in the fields of Dalit studies, civil society and
social movements.
At the empirical level, Waghmore explains Dalit movement in
terms of two factors: Bahujan Samaj Party (BSP) and Manavi Hakk Abhiyaan (MHA).
MHA is an Ambedkarite NGO which works to uplift the socio-economic conditions of
Dalits of Maharashtra. Demonstrating a solid grasp of ethnography, Waghmore builds upon data collected from the field to revisit the
concept of ‘civil society’. A critical study of BSP and MHA leads him to
rebuild and problematize the notion of Civil Society as usually understood by
liberal, Marxist and postcolonial scholars. Let me start from ethnographic details, before going to the theoretical contributions which the book makes.
The study is based on intensive fieldwork in the Beed district
of Maharashtra. This district is in Marathwada region which happens to be
Maharashtra’s most backward in terms of socio-economic indicators. Nevertheless,
the scope of the book can be extended to entire Maharashtra, if not whole of
Western India. The fieldwork is both long-term and multi-sited, and was
initially meant for a PhD. At the empirical level, the book makes four important
points:
First, public space in the Marathwada region is public, only when it is devoid of Dalits. The
moment a Dalit enters the space, 'upper-castes' (Maratha to be exact) use
violence against the Dalit. Waghmore uses various instances where Dalits tried
to cultivate public land, and violence was used against them. What makes the
matter worse is the tacit support of dominant castes (Vanjari and Kunbi to be
specific; both peasant in origin) in the violence against Dalits. The public
space of Maharashtra in general is dominated by the ‘kingly’ attitude of
dominant castes and Dalits are treated as ‘untouchable citizens’.
Waghmore also studies a network of NGOs all of which work towards
ensuring land rights of Dalits. Named Rural Development Centre (RDC), it is the
non-political face of MHA. While it overtly supports secular issues, it equally
asserts against forced labour (begaar) and undertakes mobilisation of
Dalits for the cultivation of waste lands (gairan) controlled by
dominant castes de facto. Land is not merely a natural resource, but
equally a source of dignity for Dalits. The issue of land was tactically raised by those
struggling for the upliftment of Dalits, to highlight the caste-based
inequality considered as normal (and hence invisible) in India. Waghmore uses
his training as a sociologist, to excavate the historical roots of MHA and notes
that it is an organic part of Dalit movement. MHA uses its global connections
to raise funds, and works on the local issues of Dalits.
Third and, I think the most important contribution of the book,
is the exploration of the social roots of BSP. Waghmore moves beyond the usual
understanding of party politics and lays out the smaller day-to-day happenings
of the social movements which fortify the BSP at the ground level. The book looks at
the cultural troupes that BSP uses for mobilising people. BSP is a classic
mixture of past (Bhakti saints) and present (Constitution of India). BSP cadres
tried to form a Bahujan identity by including all Dalit castes (like Mahars,
Mangs and Chambhars), OBCs and Muslims. Even when it lost elections, the lamp
of social movement was kept alight by its committed cadre. It is here that Waghmore is at his
best. True to his field of sociology, he is undistracted by electoral
calculations and party politics, and observes the everyday ideas and practices
of grassroots workers. I found the same spirit among the BSP workers when I did
my fieldwork for MPhil in late 2014 in eastern UP. This is a remarkable feat as
many social scientists collapse Dalit movement with BSP’s electoral performance
solely.
The fourth important contribution of the book is giving a
detailed picture of the mobilisation happening among the non-Mahar caste(s) in
Maharashtra. Mahar discourse generalises itself to become Dalit discourse.
Waghmore breaks away from this and forays into the politics of another Dalit
caste namely Mangs. Aptly titled ‘making of swabhimani
mangs’, the chapter speaks about various instances where Mangs assert not only
for material resources but also for dignity. One of the important features of this is
redefining Hindu practices as humiliation of Dalits, a trajectory which usually Mahars
follow.
Apart from these, the book adds to the existing
conceptualisation of civil society, apart from various smaller theoretical contributions
on democracy, civility/ politeness and violence. Waghmore critiques both the
liberal and the postcolonial understanding of civil society. While the former assumes civility
bereft of caste-based exclusions, the latter fails to move beyond the critique
of colonial-modern roots of the concept. Partha Chatterjee’s much famous ‘civil
society–
political society’ is critiqued for not only neglecting the intersection
between the two, but also for negating the subaltern’s desire for a civil
society. Waghmore persuades the reader, quite convincingly, to look beyond the
liberal and postcolonial approaches. Waghmore argues for a re-thinking and
reworking of civil society, as is shown by the workings of various facets of
Dalit movement. Dalit movement works with the State and transforms it; both
processes being undertaken simultaneously. By highlighting caste, Dalit
movement places various events inside the broader socio-historical framework.
This gives Dalit epistemology a razor-sharp edge over other epistemologies like
Marxism, liberalism or postcolonialism. Civil society usually entails a kind of
civility, which consists of space for dialogue, and debate. This work brings
forth the dissenting aspect of civility, and locates even politeness within the
caste practices.
I am sure Civility against Caste will cause some consternation among Indian academicians, due to its refreshing insights and piercing
conclusions on the recent aspects of the Dalit movement. Some photographs of
the fieldwork would have been like the proverbial icing on the cake.
Thanks to Professor Waghmore for elaborate writing and posing challenge to existing perspective on caste, civility and politics. Also thanks to his student Zeeshan Husain for classic book review.
ReplyDeleteJhakas observation .such a good observer and handworker .
ReplyDeleteBest wishes zeeshan Bhai
Allah Kare zoor e qalam r ziyada
Intresting review.
ReplyDeleteWill definitely give the book a read.
The recognition of problems affecting a segment of the population is important for finding the solution
Short and succinct. However, one would have expected the reviewer to spend more time on the methodological details of the study.
ReplyDelete