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Dharampal's Writings
#2
http://www.hvk.org/articles/1204/59.html

<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->Dharampal (The Beautiful Tree) has effectively debunked the myth that  Dalits had no place in the indigenous system of education. Sir Thomas Munro,  Governor of Madras, ordered a mammoth survey in June 1822, whereby the district  collectors furnished the caste-wise division of students in four categories, viz., Brahmins, Vysyas (Vaishyas), Shoodras (Shudras) and other castes  (broadly the modern scheduled castes). While the percentages of the different castes  varied in each district, the results were revealing to the extent that they  showed an impressive presence of the so-called lower castes in the school system.

Thus, in Vizagapatam, Brahmins and Vaishyas together accounted for 47%  of the students, Shudras comprised 21% and the other castes (scheduled) were  20%; the remaining 12% were Muslims. In Tinnevelly, Brahmins were 21.8% of the  total number of students, Shudras were 31.2% and other castes 38.4% (by no  means a low figure). In South Arcot, Shudras and other castes together comprised  more than 84% of the students!

In the realm of higher education as well, there were  regional variations. Brahmins appear to have dominated in the Andhra and Tamil  Nadu regions, but in the Malabar area, theology and law were Brahmin  preserves, but astronomy and medicine were dominated by Shudras and other castes. Thus,  of a total of 808 students in astronomy, only 78 were Brahmins, while 195  were Shudras and 510 belonged to the other castes (scheduled). In medicine,  out of a total of 194 students, only 31 were Brahmins, 59 were Shudras and 100  belonged to the other castes. Even subjects like metaphysics and ethics that we generally associate with Brahmin supremacy, were dominated by the other  castes (62) as opposed to merely 56 Brahmin students. It bears mentioning that  this higher education was in the form of private tuition (or education at  home), and to that extent also reflects the near equal economic power of the  concerned groups.

As a concerned reader informed me, the 'Survey of Indigenous Education in the Province of Bombay (1820-1830)' showed that Brahmins  were only 30% of the total students there. What is more, when William Adam  surveyed Bengal and Bihar, he found that Brahmins and Kayasthas together  comprised less than 40% of the total students, and that forty castes like Tanti, Teli,  Napit, Sadgop, Tamli etc. were well represented in the student body. The Adam  report mentions that in Burdwan district, while native schools had 674 students  from the lowest thirty castes, the 13 missionary schools in the district  together had only 86 students from those castes. Coming to teachers, Kayasthas  triumphed with about 50% of the jobs and there were only six Chandal teachers; but Rajputs, Kshatriyas and Chattris (Khatris) together had only five  teachers.

Even Dalit intellectuals have questioned what the British  meant when they spoke of 'education' and 'learning'. Dr. D.R. Nagaraj, a leading  Dalit leader of Karnataka, wrote that it was the British, particularly Lord Wellesley, who declared the Vedantic Hinduism of the Brahmins of Benares  and Navadweep as "the standard Hinduism," because they realized that the  vitality of the Hindu dharma of the lower castes was a threat to the empire. Fort William College, founded by Wellesley in 1800, played a major role in  investing Vedantic learning with a prominence it probably hadn't had for  centuries. In the process, the cultural heritage of the lower castes was successfully marginalized, and this remains an enduring legacy of colonialism.

Examining Dharampal's "Indian science and technology in the eighteenth  century," Nagaraj observed that most of the native skills and technologies that  perished as a result of British policies were those of the Dalit and artisan  castes. This effectively debunks the fiction of Hindu-hating secularists that  the so-called lower castes made no contribution to India's cultural heritage  and needed deliverance from wily Brahmins.

Indeed, given the desperate manner in which the British vilified the  Brahmin, it is worth examining what so annoyed them. As early as 1871-72, Sir John  Campbell objected to Brahmins facilitating upward mobility: ".the Brahmans are  always ready to receive all who will submit to them. The process of  manufacturing Rajputs from ambitious aborigines (tribals) goes on before our eyes."

Sir Alfred Lyall was unhappy that ".more persons in India become every  year Brahmanists than all the converts to all the other religions in India  put together... these teachers address themselves to every one without  distinction of caste or of creed; they preach to low-caste men and to the aboriginal tribes. in fact, they succeed largely in those ranks of the population  which would lean towards Christianity and Mohammedanism if they were not drawn  into Brahmanism." So much for the British public denunciation of the  exclusion practiced by Brahmins!<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
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Dharampal's Writings - by Guest - 11-17-2005, 07:07 AM
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