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HINDU
COUNCIL REFUTES CASTE DISCRIMINATION IN THE UK
(19 February 2008)
The
Hindu Council UK (HCUK) has today released a revealing report on
'varnashram' or the caste system, a subject HCUK says is much misunderstood
by the British media, politicians and the public. The result of
several months research by Dr Raj Pandit Sharma, a member of the
HCUK's Executive, the report lifts the lid on rarely-heard Hindu
perspectives on a subject assumed by most non-Hindus to be always
a gross form of unjust discrimination - an alleged feature of Hinduism
so maligned it justifies attempts by Christians to convert Hindus
in the UK and India.
"Caste
has been the subject of ill-informed comment for too long,"
says HCUK General Secretary Anil Bhanot. "Today, we are putting
the record straight. We are also naming and shaming those who spread
misinformation about Hinduism and its relationship to caste in an
ill-disguised attempt to vilify the Hindu people and cause division
within our community."
While
the report acknowledges and condemns the fact that abuse of varnashram
continues in India, despite an official ban on caste discrimination
and the introduction of positive discrimination policies to emancipate
lower castes, in particular Dalits, or "untouchables,"
it questions the existence of caste discrimination in the UK, saying
no one should be fooled by groups making allegations of such discrimination
who are seeking Government legislation and Government funds to tackle
this supposed problem.
Mr
Bhanot argues in his Foreword to the report that MPs such as Rob
Marris (Wolverhampton South West) and Jeremy Corbyn (Islington North),
who are lobbying the Department of Communities and Local Government
to legislate against caste discrimination may have been "misled
by Christian groups who want, quite simply, to "save"
people from the "falsehood" of Hinduism and convert people
to Christianity. In other words, groups who are themselves practising
prejudice and discrimination, by condemning the beliefs of those
who do not follow their religion. "
This
view is shared by UK Dalits. In a Statement prepared for inclusion
in HCUK"s report, the Shiri Guru Valmik Sabha in Southall,
London, says: "We resent having the word Dalit ascribed to
us by the British media and Christian missionary organisations."
The Executive adds that organisations professing to tackle caste
discrimination in fact "help create further divisions in our
society." The community admits there are problems with attitudes
in the older generation, but believes inter-caste marriages and
the opportunities Britain affords to all are changing this lingering
prejudice and will finally eradicate it.
In
particular, the detailed HCUK report challenges assumptions about
caste and the claims made by organisations such as CasteWatch UK
and the Dalit Solidarity Network UK, concluding that contrary to
their assertions and popular belief, caste, as described in the
Hindu scriptures, is not determined by birth. Neither, says the
report, is the notion of caste exclusive to the Hindu religion or
to Indian culture.
The
report also traces the spiritual and historical roots of Caste,
concluding they lie ultimately in the Indian people's need for spiritual
and cultural protection in the face of numerous invasions and foreign
rulers, most significantly by the Portuguese and the British Raj,
who then perverted the system to their own ends.
BRITISH
FORMULATED CASTE SCHEDULES
"It
was the British who single-handedly formulated the caste schedules
that remain in place today," writes Dr Raj Pandit Sharma in
his report. "The evils manifest in the current form of the
caste system can not be ascribed to the Hindu faith. The current
adulteration of the Hindu varnashram system is a direct result of
generations of British Colonial bureaucracy."
The
report includes quotations from Hindu scripture in support of the
concept of egalitarianism and cites many sacred texts "respected
and venerated by people of all castes - that were written by "Dalits,"
or "outcastes," proving that in Hinduism, caste was never
intended to be hereditary; that no one is "high" or "low"
by birth.
The
report also highlights the hypocrisy of those who would criticise
caste in India while ignoring Britain"s own social divisions.
"There are now record levels of homeless people in the UK,
who are analogous with the outcastes of Indian society," writes
Dr Sharma. He also questions the labelling of caste as analogous
to apartheid:
"This
comparison is as ridiculous as it is untrue, especially given the
fact these barbaric systems were born under the shadow of slavery
or indentured labour, based on the colour of one's skin, and actually
conceived and perpetrated by Europeans, not Hindus."
"It
is no joke to have to ward off concerted misinformation campaigns
from UK parliamentarians who really ought to know better,"
says Anil Bhanot, in his Foreword to the document, but states he
has gone through the difficult process in the hope it will alert
the wider British public to the underhand and prejudicial tactics
carried out by anti-caste propagandists.
A copy
of the Hindu Council's caste report can be downloaded
here. (490KB, )
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