Equals, Yet Unequals

Dr Suresh Mathew Dr Suresh Mathew
19 Jun 2023
In this background, it is good to recall the Vaikom Satyagraha, the centenary celebrations of which is going on during this year.

It was an unusual letter, a strange one to say the least. A couple of years back, a 22-year-old man reportedly wrote to the President of India seeking his permission to join the Naxalites. He wrote: ‘The law-and-order system has failed me. ….I want to look elsewhere to preserve my dignity.’ He had cited examples of discrimination faced by the Dalit community to buttress his point. Such incidents regularly happen and Constitutional rights of people are thrown to the winds.  

In this background, it is good to recall the Vaikom Satyagraha, the centenary celebrations of which is going on during this year. It was a movement that forced the authorities to give Dalits equal access to public spaces, specifically around the famous Vaikom temple, a hundred years back. However, the demand for Dalits’ entry into the temple found its fruition only 12 years later, in 1936, by a decree of then Travancore king. 

The entrenched caste system continues to be the bane of Dalits even today, though its intensity might have softened. The rigid caste prejudice injects poison in the minds of the people to humiliate, harass and hound those at the bottom of the ladder of the society. Untouchability might be a thing of the past going by the existing laws, but the issue cannot be brushed aside as it raises its ugly head off and on. Some of the bizarre incidents in the recent past make us hang our head in shame. 

A Dalit man’s thumb was chopped off because he dared to pick up a cricket ball while watching a match in Gujarat; in yet another bizarre incident from the same state, from where the Prime Minister and the Union Home Minister come, a Dalit man and his family members were thrashed because he chose to wear modern dresses and sun glasses. 

Another outlandish incident was reported from Uttar Pradesh, governed by saffron icon Yogi Adityanath. A Dalit groom was beaten with rods and sticks and forced to dismount the horse by upper caste people. The latter could not stomach the fact that a Dalit man was going to marry on horseback. 

In U.P. it is not uncommon that the Dalits face the music after they vote according to their conscience disregarding the dictates of the upper caste candidates and their goons. In Madhya Pradesh, a wedding procession of a Dalit BSF jawan was assaulted reportedly by upper caste men. These are tips of the iceberg. One can count a litany of attacks on Dalit men and women for living a life permitted by the Constitution. 

Here comes the relevance of Vaikom Satyagraha. It was more than a demand for entry into one temple. It was a cry for social justice and human dignity. It was a revolutionary movement for equality in society and erasing the stain of untouchability. 

Even as we mark its centenary, it is nothing but a shame that there are temples out of bounds for Dalits; there are things they are forbidden to do; they are tortured for trying to be equal to anyone else in the society. A change in the mindset of the so called upper castes alone would bring about the much-needed revolution. It would remain an uphill task so long as people in authority like a judge in Gujarat High Court, who asked the lawyer of a rape survivor to read Manusmirti to understand how women used to get married early in life, survive in the society.
 

Recent Posts

Once a unifying sport, cricket has been hijacked by politics and power. The BCCI now mirrors the regime's arrogance. Global bullying and stoking jingoism domestically have turned the gentleman's game
apicture Mathew John
03 Nov 2025
ML Satyan, a prophetic voice of conscience, lived and wrote for the poor and the Church's renewal. Fearless yet compassionate, he blended faith with activism, challenging hypocrisy and comfort while i
apicture Jacob Peenikaparambil
03 Nov 2025
The Election Commission's Special Intensive Revision of voter lists reeks of hidden motives. By demanding fresh citizenship proof and ignoring its own past rolls, it is disenfranchising minorities and
apicture Joseph Maliakan
03 Nov 2025
The Election Commission's Special Intensive Revision (SIR) in West Bengal to update the 2026 voters' list has sparked political tension. Evidently, it is a BJP-backed bid to disenfranchise minorities
apicture Isaac Gomes
03 Nov 2025
Migrants form the invisible backbone of India's cities, yet they remain politically voiceless and socially excluded. They are denied fair housing, healthcare, and even voting rights, written out of In
apicture Fr. John Felix Raj & Prabhat Kumar Datta
03 Nov 2025
Once a Modi admirer, Sonam Wangchuk now languishes in jail under the National Security Act. The people of Ladakh, once promised empowerment, are silenced, jobless, and disenfranchised. They were betra
apicture Chhotebhai
03 Nov 2025
The Taj Mahal, a timeless symbol of love, is now a target of hate-fueled revisionism. Despite overwhelming historical evidence, right-wing propaganda persists in recasting it as a Hindu temple.
apicture Ram Puniyani
03 Nov 2025
Trump missed the Nobel Peace Prize, for which he had ardently longed, making no secret of it and loudly claiming he had prevented 7 wars. The fact remains that he has been supporting the inhumanity of
apicture Thomas Menamparampil
03 Nov 2025
I am in for correction. With a word like 'reaction,' we have no power to stop in the middle. We have to see things through to the very end. Moreover, it never works alone but in a chain. Reaction cann
apicture P. Raja
03 Nov 2025
From Harappa's drainage to Hampi's aqueducts, India once built cities in harmony with nature and purpose. Today's chaotic urban sprawl betrays that legacy. A single monsoon is enough today to expose t
apicture Pachu Menon
03 Nov 2025