CASTE SYSTEM – POLITY

News: PM Modi urges people to throw out forces using casteism, regionalism to divide country

 

What's in the news?

       At a Dasara event in Delhi, Modi issues call for the burning of ideologies that detract from India’s development in order to ensure patriotism triumphs over every evil.

 

Caste System:

       The origins of the caste system in India can be traced back 3,000 years as a social hierarchy based on one’s occupation and birth.

       It is a system that has evolved over the centuries under Muslim and British rule.

       The suffering of those who are at the bottom of the caste pyramid - known as Dalits has continued.

       Caste discrimination has been prohibited in India since 1948, a year after the nation’s independence from British rule.

 

Features of Caste System:

1. Segmental Division of Society:

       The society is divided into various small social groups called castes. Each of these castes is a well developed social group, the membership of which is determined by the consideration of birth.

2. Hierarchy:

       According to Louis Dumont, castes teach us a fundamental social principle of hierarchy.

       At the top of this hierarchy is the Brahmin caste and at the bottom is the untouchable caste. In between are the intermediate castes, the relative positions of which are not always clear.

3. Endogamy:

       Endogamy is the chief characteristic of caste, i.e. the members of a caste or sub-caste should marry within their own caste or sub-caste.

       The violation of the rule of endogamy would mean ostracism and loss of caste.

       However, hypergamy (the practice of women marrying someone who is wealthier or of higher caste or social status) and hypogamy (marriage with a person of lower social status) were also prevalent.

       Gotra exogamy is also maintained in each caste. Every caste is subdivided into different small units on the basis of gotra. The members of one gotra are believed to be successors of a common ancestor-hence prohibition of marriage within the same gotra.

4. Hereditary status and occupation:

       Megasthenes, the Greek traveler to India in 300 B.C., mentions hereditary occupation as one of the two features of the caste system, the other being endogamy.

5. Restriction on Food and Drink:

       Usually a caste would not accept cooked food from any other caste that stands lower than itself in the social scale, due to the notion of getting polluted.

       There were also variously associated taboos related to food. The cooking taboo, which defines the persons who may cook the food.  

6. A Particular Name:

       Every caste has a particular name through which we can identify it. Sometimes, an occupation is also associated with a particular caste.

7. Concept of Purity and Pollution:

       The higher castes claimed to have ritual, spiritual and racial purity which they maintained by keeping the lower castes away through the notion of pollution.

       The idea of pollution means a touch of lower caste man would pollute or defile a man of higher caste. Even his shadow is considered enough to pollute a higher caste man.

8. Jati Panchayat:

       The status of each caste is carefully protected, not only by caste laws but also by the conventions. These are openly enforced by the community through a governing body or board called Jati Panchayat.

 

Impacts of Caste System:

1. Economic Impacts:

       Caste through its rigid social control and networks facilitates economic mobility for some and erects barriers for others by mounting disadvantages on them.

       The caste acts as a barrier to overall economic growth and development.

 

Caste impedes economic development of Individuals

Caste impedes economic development of the Society

Deprive land ownerships for low caste individuals.

Lack of success in land reform because caste based networks impedes the agricultural productivity of the nation.

Caste based occupation imposed on individuals irrespective of his/her education for example, manual scavenging, hair dressing.

Monopoly of particular caste networks in business impedes the competition and efficiency in National economic development. Castes that were already in control of trading and industrial spaces resisted the entry of others.

Aversion towards business of low caste people. For example, in rural India the tea shops run by Scheduled Caste won’t be visited by other castes.

Caste based violence in society acts as a threat to future investments in our country.

Elite bias in higher education and historical neglect of mass education

 

Caste based exclusions will impact the talent pool of our nation and economic development.

Caste-based entry barriers and exclusive networks in the modern sector.

 

 

2. Untouchability:

       Many villages are separated by caste and they may not cross the line dividing them from the higher castes. They also may not use the same wells or drink in the same tea stalls as higher castes.

3. Discrimination:

       They often do not have the facility to electricity, sanitation facilities or water pumps in lower caste neighbourhoods. Access to better education, housing and medical facilities than that of the higher castes is denied.

4. Slavery:

       They are subjected to exploitation in the name of debt, tradition, etc., to work as labourers or perform menial tasks for generations together.

5. Vote bank Politics:

       Usually caste is proving a heavy weight on the political system and people under the influence of caste do not even vote for the most suitable person not belonging to their caste.

       There are many instances both at local and national, where caste has influenced the course of elections and also in the selection of candidates.

6. Inferior status of women:

       The worst effects of the caste system were bome by women members of the group.

       They were supposed to adhere to all the social and cultural norms that discriminated against them.

       On one hand, the upper caste women faced child marriage and widowhood at a younger age, the caste women faced physical and sexual harassment by the upper caste men.