By Saswat Pattanayak
Fellow reader Open to Discussion asks
me some valid questions following my
earlier
post on the topic . I have decided to publish my
answers here as well for more general readership.
OD asks:
1. why so much of poison my dear friend?
2. no where in india were the rulers were brahmins
entire UP and bihar had been ruled by Yadavs(OBC),
rajasthan by jats (OBC), in tamil nadu all except
Brahmins come under reserved cat, so some body
amongst them must be ruler.
3. algebra questions are never asked in medical
entrance!!
u set any syllabus, it does not matter, toppers
will remain toppers.
for indigenous med, we have separate ayurvedic
collages. there is no need to include it in
allopathy
I respond:
Dear Open to Discussion:
The reason behind my relatively long posts is that I
explore the forest, not stick to trees. If you will
read the entire post, it merely says that it’s a
wrong thing for elite students to protest against
possibility of equal opportunity for students who
have been historically denied the privilege, owing to
their socio-economic class.
To further this humble opinion, I have cited examples
to show how the ruling classes guard their interests
and growth by NOT sacrificing their privilege.
I do not wish to influence you into believing one way
or the other, but I do not wish to find your words in
my mouth either. Hence, my quick responses to your
questions:
1. There is no poison. But yes, lots of anger.
Because I possess a privileged ‘caste’ background
myself, and I would not wish to support such protests
being done by people coming from my social locations.
Therefore I feel something in me is at stake too.
Coming from Orissa, I have witnessed firsthand the
violence against the so-called lower-caste and
untouchable people. By not denying my privilege, I
have understood to what extent I am a part of the
oppressive sphere. And by seeing that the cycle is
not being allowed to change, again by the ruling
classes in Orissa, the Brahmin Bureaucracy and the
Patnaik governance, I would be naïve not to see the
role of my social class in perpetuating the crisis.
For all I know, if I took my resume to a place of
work in Orissa, (or anywhere in India), I will not
have to feel conscious of my surname and no one will
make assumption that by family name, such as, ‘you
are good only to mend shoes’. And you know what, I am
born with this great privilege. Hence it’s not a
poison. Its an understanding of being privileged and
expressing resentments when such privilege is
mis-utilized, as at the current juncture by some
fellow medicos.
2. I do not like to be dragged into this, because I
personally think some of the Indian rulers I will
name now are my favorites too. However, my point was
not to say that Brahmin rulers should not be there,
but to say that we must reserve seats for rulers of
other caste varieties too (and overwhelmingly so,
since they represent a much wider people). However my
friend, to refute your supposition, following are few
exemplars:
Historically, yes Brahmins were never the rulers. In
fact, Hardly ever! But they surely collaborated with
the local kings to help the caste division take place
according to their sacred texts. We are well aware of
the Brahmin sponsored Mauryan coup against the
Nandas. Or several such dynasties. Since my post is
mostly about current India, we will focus on the here
and now (the India which began in 1947).
First, there needs to be a distinction between who
are the actual rulers. As you know, there are
thousands of people in the power structure but only a
few really implement the policies. There are very
many different Nations inside India. Only a few
govern them through federal laws. I will refer to
them here; (note, not all of them are Brahmin
supremacists at all…quite the contrary, many are very
progressive indeed. But this was beyond the
point…since you need the statistics..)
The prime ministers: Nehru, Indira, Rajiv (one family
that actually ruled..!), P.V. Narasimha Rao, Morarji
Desai and Atal Bihar Vajpayee… (did I leave out any
other name…Shastriji?)…Whoa…that’s called real power.
Being the prime minister of India, being able to
change national languages, being able to divide Tamil
Nadu, being able to annex Tripura, being able to
destroy Babri Masjid, being able to cause Bofors ….
Looking at the huge majority of PMs and all the Prime
Minister’s Men (ministers, bureaucrats), India has
been ruled ALWAYS by the Brahmin caste, if that
answers your curiosity. It’s the prime ministers
alone who decide over the fate of this country,
alongwith their clouts of bureaucrats. Unless you
want to include presidents, and we can talk of V.V.
Giri, Shankar Dayal Sharma etc.
You bring up the question of Bihar and UP and cite
OBC rulers. Clearly OBCs may not be equally
disadvantaged. But partly also because they are more
than 60% of population in those states. On a closer
look, even as they are majority in UP, what do we
see? Time after time, “Presidents Rule”. Don’t forget
Romesh Bhandari’s weapon to destabilize UP! Or
creation of Jharkhand and the perpetual poverty that
plagues Bihar, once the most treasured state of
India. To even think that Samajwadi Party, Bahujan
Samaj Party or Rashtriya Janata Dal have ever ruled
the country is a lie. Not even DMK or AIADMK.
Although I will come to Tamil Nadu now.
Her Highness Jayalalitha is also a Brahmin. Not just
that, she is a loyal ally of the BJP! So when you say
“in tamil nadu all except Brahmins come under
reserved cat, so some body amongst them must be
ruler”, you need do more research.
Kushwant Singh had given a statistical interface to
suggest Brahminical hegemony in India long back.
Those were the days when the right wing had not even
seized India. Now situation is far worse. But here is
a pointer to some of his findings:
The Brahmins control over 70% of the top
decision-making posts in the political system,
administration, judiciary, army, police, press, media
and academics (Statistics on composition from 1935
and 1985)
For example, in 1935, during the Anglo-Brahmin
Colonial Era, the 5% Brahmin caste group held most of
the gazetted positions among Indians in the upper
echelons of the administrative machinery. In 1985 one
finds that out of 3,300 Indian Administrative
Officers (IAS), 2,376 are Brahmins; from the rank of
deputy secretaries upwards, out of 500, 310 are
Brahmins; of the 26 state chief secretaries, 19 are
Brahmins; of the 16 Supreme Court judges, 9 are
Brahmins; of 438 district magistrates, 250 are
Brahmins; and so on in other circles of power and
policy in the Indian state. If we also include the
“twice born” Brahmanical castes, mainly comprising
the Banias and Kayasths, the combined state power of
theirs jumps from 70% to almost 95%.
Now that says clearly something! We can look at all
chief secretaries of India and confirm the statistics
even in 2006. Lets not forget Romesh Sharma either!
These are again instances of not Brahminism so much,
as they are instances of an absence of lower castes
and tribes in the actual power structure of India.
And what is the percentage of Brahmin population in
India? Five %
3. As regards, Algebra in entrance tests, again we
miss the point when we look at certain question
papers in some states than looking at the entire
philosophy. First off, only students who have science
backgrounds are usually eligible to sit for these
tests. Which essentially demands knowledge of
mathematics. And yes, when I said Algebra, it also
meant Formulae and Values in Physics, which are
integral to the examinations. The point I was making
is that many complicated concepts make up for the
entrance test, and most are foreign to students of
minority community, ESSENTIALLY because they cannot
afford a two-year coaching preparation education to
know these concepts!
Since a ‘good’ education that can help someone fit
into the system’s demands requires Money with a big
M, its not so simple to say that “Toppers will be
Toppers”. Toppers are those people who have access to
the best of resources in their fields of studies and
have incentives good enough to motivate them to
secure that position. Please take it from me, as I
have topped in many exams (state level, university
level etc) myself, and I have to feel humbled to say
that it was nothing so extraordinary to have achieved
what I did, which others with similar environment
could not have. Its only a systematic deprivation of
sections of society from availing the resources that
undernourishes them. Even to get loans for coaching,
one needs to have a rich men network, to begin with.
Unless we block the desired number of seats for the
backward people and coach them for free (while
continuing to charge the rich for their kids’
education), we will be only part of the same
oppressive ancestors who subjugated the country,
territorially, and now as we realize more and more,
mentally too.
Regarding Ayurveda, the point of reference was that
the respect traditionally attached to Allopathic
medicine science is because of the exclusivity and
professionalism attached with Medical profession
(reason why seats are always limited to begin with).
And what I was offering was basic assertion that all
of the medicinal practices (Allopathy, Ayurvedic and
what we have&hellip

need
not gear towards
becoming ‘elitist’. Since health is the most
common factor for survival, the attitude of
practitioners should be to “massify” their
skills, not “classify”.
I am open to discussion as well. But more open to an
understanding AND empathetic discussion geared
towards social justice for people who are most
marginal in our society; than towards justice for
students who hold banners in their hands to
shamelessly protest against equal opportunity (yes
social equality needs sacrifice of individual liberty
at many junctures). I can understand why the elites
need to guard their class interests, but can never
support their stands.
Greetings,
Saswat
Tags: Saswat, Racism, India, Capitalism, Indigenous, Casteism, History, Academic