Dr. Ambedkar, President of Drafting Committee, presented Rajendra Prasad on 25th November, 1949 to the last draft of the Indian Constitution .
Despite the harsh criticism of Gandhi and Congress, Ambedkar's reputation was a unique scholar and lawmaker, due to which , after the independence of India in August 15, 1947 , when a new Congress-led government came into being, he had Ambedkar's first law of the country and Invited to serve as the Minister of Justice , whom he accepted. On August 29, 1947, Ambedkar was appointed as the Chairman of the draft constitution committee for the creation of a new constitution of independent India. In this work, Ambedkar 's study of early Buddhist Sangha rites and other Buddhist texts also came in handy.
Granville Austin described the Indian Constitution prepared by Ambedkar as the 'first and most important social document' . 'Most of the Constitutional provisions of India have come directly in an attempt to promote this revolution by either establishing the purpose of social revolution or establishing the necessary conditions for its achievement.'
In the text of the Constitution prepared by Ambedkar, constitutional guarantee and protection has been provided for a wide range of civil liberties for individual citizens, including the elimination of freedom of religion, elimination of untouchability, and violation of all forms of discrimination. . Ambedkar argued for comprehensive economic and social rights for women, and arrangements for reservation of jobs in the civil services, schools and colleges for the Scheduled Castes (SC) and Scheduled Tribes (STs) and Other Backward Classes (OBCs) To win the assembly won the support, which was a positive action. Indian parliamentarians hope to eliminate the lack of socio-economic inequalities and opportunities for the depressing classes of India through these measures.The constitution was adopted by the Constituent Assembly on November 26, 1949. After completing his work, speaking, Ambedkar said:
I feel that the constitution is achievable, it is flexible, but it is also strong enough to keep the country together at the time of both peace and war. In fact, I can say that if something goes wrong then it will not be because its constitution was bad, but the man who used it was unjust.
Opposing Article 370
Ambedkar opposed Article 370 of the Constitution of India , which gave special status to Jammu and Kashmir state, and which was included in the constitution against his wishes. Balraj Madhok had said that Ambedkar, Kashmiri leader Sheikh Abdullah Was clearly told: "You want India to protect your borders, you must build roads in your area, you should supply grain, and Kashmir should be given the same status as India." The Indian government should have only limited powers and Indian people should not have any right in Kashmir. To agree to this proposal, I will chant the law of India As part of a treacherous point against India's interests, it will never happen. "Then Abdullah approached Nehru, who he guided to Gopala Swamy Ayyangar, who in turn Vallabhbhai Patel And said that Nehru had promised a skate. Abdullah special status Article was passed to Patel, while Nehru was on a foreign tour. On the day the article came to discuss, Ambedkar did not answer the questions but took part in other articles. All the logic was done by Krishna Swami Iyengar.
Uniform civil code
I personally can not understand why religion should be given in this vast, comprehensive jurisdiction so that the whole life can be covered and preventing the legislature from encroaching upon that area. After all, what are we doing for this freedom? To improve our social order, we are getting this freedom, which is full of inequality, discrimination and other things that struggle with our fundamental rights.
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Ambedkar was actually favored by the same civil code and opposed Article 370 in the case of Kashmir. Ambedkar's India would be a country of modern, scientific thinking and rational ideas, in which it does not replace the personal law. During the debate in the Constituent Assembly, Ambedkar expressed his desire to improve the Indian society by recommending adoption of a uniform civil code. Ambedkar resigned from the Cabinet after the draft of his Hindu Code Bill (Hindu Code Bill) in Parliament in 1951 . There was talk of giving Hindu rights to billions of rights to Indian women. In this draft, there was a demand for gender equality in the laws of succession, marriage and economy. Although Prime Minister Nehru, Cabinet and some other Congress leaders supported it, a large number of members including President Rajendra Prasad and Vallabhbhai Patel were against it. Ambedkar contested the election of Lok Sabha in the Bombay (North Central) constituency as an independent candidate in 1952 but he lost. In this election, Ambedkar was voted 123,576 votes and Narayan Sadoba Kajolkar was voted 138,137 votes.In March 1952, he was appointed to the Upper House of Parliament, which means he was a member of the House till his death.
Financial planning
Ambedkar in 1950
Ambedkar was the first Indian to take a doctorate degree in economics from abroad. He argued that industrialization and agricultural development could increase the Indian economy. He emphasized on investment in agriculture as the primary industry in India. According to Sharad Pawar , Ambedkar's philosophy helped the government to achieve its food security goals. Ambedkar advocated national economic and social development, emphasized education, public cleanliness, community health, and housing facilities as basic amenities. They calculated the loss of development due to the British rule.
Reserve Bank of India
Ambedkar was trained as an economist, and by 1921 he had become a professional economist. When he became a political leader, he wrote three scholarly books on economics:
Administration and Finance of the East India Company
The Evaluation of Provident Fund in British India
The Problem of the Rupee: Its Origin And Its Solution
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) was based on Ambedkar's views, which he presented to the Hilton Young Commission.
Second marriage
Bhimrao Ambedkar with wife Savita Ambedkar in 1948
Ambedkar's first wife, Ramabai , died in 1935 after a prolonged illness. After completing the draft of Indian Constitution in the late 1940s, he was suffering from a lack of sleep, had neuropathic pain on his legs, and taking insulin and homeopathic medicines. He went to Bombay (Mumbai) for treatment, and met the doctor Sharda Kabir, with whom he had married at his home in New Delhi on April 15, 1948 . Doctors recommended a life partner who is a good cook and has medical knowledge to take care of them. Dr. Sharada Kabir took the name of Savita Ambedkar after marriage and took care of him in the rest of his life. Savita Ambedkar, who was called 'Mai' or 'Maisaheb' died on May 29, 2003 at the age of 93 in Mehrauli, New Delhi.
Changes in Buddhism
Addressing his followers at the Buddhist Dhamaksha ceremony of Nagpur, Ambedkar, 14 October 1956
Dr. Ambedkar taking initiation by Bhunte Chandramani of Kushinara
Dikshika Bhoomi Stupa , where Bhimrao converted into Buddhism with his millions of followers.
In BR Ambedkar in the 1950s Buddhism attracted to Buddhist monks to take part in a conference of scholars and Sri Lanka were (then Ceylon).While dedicated to a new Buddhist monastery near Pune , Dr. Ambedkar announced that he is writing a book on Buddhism and as soon as it ends it will formally adopt Buddhism. Ambedkar twice visited Myanmar in 1954 ; For the second time, they went to participate in the conference of Third World Buddhist Fellowship in Rangoon .In1955, he established the ' Indian Buddhist Mahasabha ' or 'Buddhist Society of India'. He completed his last famous book, ' The Buddha and His Dhamma ' in 1956. It was published in 1957 after his death in the preface of this book, Ambedkar has written that,
I consider Buddha's Dhamma the best. No religion can be compared to this. If a modern person who believes in science should have a religion, then that religion can only be a Buddhist religion . After twenty years of close study of all religions, this firm belief has increased between me.
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On October 14, 1956 , Dr. Bhimrao Ambedkar organized a formal public conversion ceremony for himself and his supporters in the city of Nagpur . First, Dr. Ambedkar with his wife Savita and some associates, adopted the traditional method of Buddhism by adopting Triratna and Panchsheel by the monk Mahaishavir Chandramani . After this he converted his 5,00,000 followers into the Navayan Buddhism , giving Triratna , Panchsheel and 22 pledges . They were imagining a free man by breaking the network of the gods, who are religious, but do not recognize the unimportant value of life. For the bonds of Hinduism to be completely isolated, Ambedkar himself fixed the Baiyas for his Buddhist followers, which is a summary and philosophy of Buddhism. These promises include disbelief in the trinity of Hinduism, denial of incarnation, abandonment of Shraddha-Parmand, Pindan, belief in the principles and teachings of Buddha, participation in any function performed by Brahmins, participation in faith, equality of humanity, Buddha's spiritual Follow the path, follow the kindness of the creatures, do not steal, do not lie, do not eat alcohol, Hindu caste based on inequality To relinquish and to adopt Buddhism was related. Navyan Ambedkar and his supporters clearly condemned the inequitable Hindu religion and Hindu philosophy and abandoned him. On 2nd October, Ambedkar initiated Buddhist Dham to his two to three lakh followers there on October 15, it was a follower who did not reach the October 14 event or reached late. Ambedkar initiated the Buddhist religion of about 8 lakh people in Nagpur, hence the land became known as Dikshabhoomi. On the third day, on October 16, Ambedkar went to Chandrapur and there he got the initiation of Buddhist Dham to nearly 300,000 supporters. In such a way, Ambedkar himself converted more than 11 lakh people into Buddhism by increasing the number of Buddhists in the world by 11 lakhs and Buddhism in IndiaTo be revived. Many people and Buddhists received congratulations from this incident. After this he went to Kathmandu to participate in the fourth world Buddhist conference in Nepal . There he went to the Dalit settlements of Kathmandu city. The Ambedkar movement of Nepal is run by Dalit leaders, and most of the Dalit leaders of Nepal believe that "Ambedkar's philosophy" is capable of erasing caste discrimination. He completed his last manuscript Buddha or Karl Marx on December 2, 1956 .
death
Mahaparinirvana of Babasaheb Ambedkar
Dr. Ambedkar's funeral went off from Dadar at 1.40 pm and reached at 6 pm in the Hindu Cemetery (now Chaityboom) of Dadar Chowpatty.
Chauthabhoomi , Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar's Samadhi Sthali
Since 1948, Ambedkar was suffering from diabetes . From June to October 1954, he was very ill during this time he was suffering from weak eyesight. Troubled by political issues, Ambedkar's health became worse, and the continuous work done during 1955 had broken him down. After three days of completing his last manuscript Lord Buddha and his Dhamma , Ambedkar's Mahaparinirvana fell into his sleep in Delhi on December 6, 1956. Then he was 64 years and 7 months old. His body was taken from Delhi by a special aircraft to his home Rajghat in Mumbai . December 7th to Mumbai in Dadar Funeral was performed in Buddhist style on the Chowpatty beach, in which millions of his supporters, activists and fans attended. At the time of his cremation, keeping his body witnessed, more than 10,00,000 followers of him took initiation of Buddhism by Bhadanat Anand Kausalayan , because Ambedkar organized a Buddhist conversion program in Mumbai on December 16, 1956. Was there.
After the death, Ambedkar's family had left his second wife Savita Ambedkar , who was the first person to become a Buddhist after Ambedkar (with Ambedkar) becoming a Buddhist in the Dalit Buddhist movement . Before marriage, his wife's name was Dr. Sharda Kabir. Dr. Savita Ambedkar died as a Buddhist on May 29, 2003, at the age of 94 years. and son Yashwant Ambedkar grandson of Ambedkar, Prakash Ambedkar , Bharipa Bahujan federation is headed by the and the Indian Parliament have served as members in both Houses.
A memorial, Ambedkar's house in Delhi, has been established at 26 Alipur Road. Public holiday is being held on Ambedkar Jayanti. In 1990, he was awarded posthumously Bharat Ratna of India's highest civilian honor .
Each year, more than 20 lakh people paid their tributes to his birth anniversary (April 14), Mahaparinirvana i.e. Punyathithi (December 6th) and Dhamachachra Promotion Day (October 14) in Chauthabhumi (Mumbai), Dikshabhbhoomi (Nagpur) and Bhim Janmabhoomi ( Mhow ) To be assembled. Thousands of bookstores have been set here, and books are sold. Ambedkar had a message to his followers - "Be educated, get organized, fight"
Ambedkarism
" Ambedkarism " is the ideology and philosophy of Ambedkar. The subject of freedom, equality, brotherhood, Buddhism, science, humanism, truth, non-violence etc. are the principles of Ambedkarism. Social Impact in Dalits, promotion and propagation of Buddhism in India, protection of fundamental rights in the Indian Constitution, the creation of a moral and ethnic society, and the country's progress is included in this main purpose. Ambedkarism is social, political and religious ideology.
Books and other works
Bhimrao Ambedkar was a genius and a juvenile writer. 32 books and monographs ( 22 completed and 10 parallel books ), 10 memos, evidence and statements, 10 research papers, review of articles and books, and 10 precepts and predictions are so many compositions of their English language. They had knowledge of the languages of Gahlah, which included languages like Marathi (mother tongue), English , Hindi , Pali , Sanskrit , Gujarati , German , Persian , French , Kannada and Bengali . Ambedkar has written most of his contemporaries than all the politicians. He has done most of the writing in English. Along with being active and busy in social struggle, there is a large collection of books, essays, articles and speeches composed by them. They were rich in unusual talent. His literary works are known for his distinctive social attitude, and scholarship, in which his vision and his thinking ahead of time reflects. Ambedkar's books, including India, are widely read in the world. Lord Buddha and his Dhamma are his texts 'scripture of Indian Buddhists' and are important in Buddhist countries. His D.S.C. Managing the Problem of the Rupee: It's Origin And Its Solution With India's Central Bank Reserve Bank of India has been established.
The Department of Education of Maharashtra Government has planned to publish the entire literature of Babasaheb Ambedkar in many sections. Under this, 22 volumes, namely 'Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar: Writings and Species' have been published in English language, and their number is more than 15 thousand. The first section of this great plan was published on April 14, 1979, on Ambedkar's birthday. In view of the importance and popularity of the sections of 'Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar: Writings and Species', Dr. Ambedkar Pratishthan of the Government of India's Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment has planned to publish Hindi translations of these sections and under this scheme So far, 21 stamps, titled "Baba Saheb Dr. Ambedkar: Full Class", have been published in Hindi language. Several versions of these Hindi segments have been published.
Journalism
Letters from Ambedkar
The tagline of the exiled India and the savior
Ambedkar was a successful journalist and effective editor. They will believe in the society through newspapers, they will prosper. He considered the newspaper very important in the movement. He published and edited several letters and five journals to bring awareness among the exploited and dalit society. This helped them to carry forward their Dalit movement. Where are they, "Any movement needs a newspaper to make a success, if there is no newspaper of movement, then the condition of the movement is like wings in the wings." Dr. Ambedkar is the only pillar of Dalit journalism because he is the first editor, founder and publisher of Dalit journalism. Dr. Ambedkar has written all the letters in Marathi language Published only because his work area was Maharashtra and Marathi was the language of the people there. And at that time the oppressed and oppressed people of Maharashtra had not written much, they could only understand Marathi. For several decades, he had edited five Marathi journals, including the dancer (1920), Janata (1930), Excluded India (1927), Samata (1928) and Enlightened India (1956). In these five letters Babasaheb Ambedkar expressed his views on the social, political and economic issues of the country. Literary and thinker Gangadhar Pantawane In 1987, for the first time in India, Ambedkar's journalism included Ph.D. Written for dissertation. In it, Pantawane wrote about Ambedkar, "This Muktyaan brought the people of exiled India to enlightened India." Babasaheb was a great journalist.
Dipper
First digit of 31 January 1920 of Moqueenak
On 31 January 1920, Babasaheb started his first Marathi fortnightly letter called " Moknayak " to reveal atrocities on untouchables . Its editor was Ambedkar and Panduram Nandaram Bhatkar. The top parts of this newspaper were the words of Saint Tukaram . For this financial assistance of Rs 25,000 was received by Chhatrapati Shahu Maharaj of Kolhapur Institute. 'Silent Nayak' was the voice of mute-dalits in all respects, in which his sufferings spoke; a new consciousness was circulated in the Dalits and he encouraged them to be agitated for their rights. Ambedkar migrated for studies and this letter was closed in 1923 due to economic shortcomings, but managed to achieve its aim of driving a wave of consciousness.
Excluded India
Number of excluded India
Excluded India Letter
In the short term, after the closure of the mocknaker, Ambedkar removed the second Marathi fortnightly "Excluded India" on 3 April 1924. It was edited by Dr. Ambedkar himself. This letter was published from Bombay. Through this, he used to unravel the problems and complaints of untouchables, as well as work to answer his critics. In an editorial in this letter, he wrote that if Bal Gangadhar Tilak was born between untouchables, then he would not slogan: "Swaraj is my birthright" but it says that "abolition of untouchability is my birthright." This letter also made important work of dalit awakriti. The top parts of this newspaper were the words of Saint Dnyaneshwar . Total 34 points of this fortune were removed. Financial difficulties were closed because of this in November 1929.
Parity
On 29 June 1928, Ambedkar started the "Samata" (Hindi: Samata) letter. This letter was the mouthpiece of the Society Samata Samity ( Samata Sainik Dal ) established by Dr. Ambedkar for social reform . As its editor, Ambedkar had appointed Devrao Vishnu Naik.
Public
After the Samata papers closed, Ambedkar reprinted it in the name of 'Janta'. On February 24, 1930, the first issue of this fortune was published. It became weekly on October 31, 1930 . In 1944, Babasaheb wrote a famous article titled " We will become a Junket of the state" (Hindi: We will become the ruling nation ). Through this letter, Ambedkar did a very good job of raising the dalit problems. In February 1956, the paper continued for 26 years.
Enlightened India
Ambedkar launched an enlightened India on February 4, 1956 for the fifth time . By changing the name of the 'Janata' letter he had 'enlightened India'. On the front of this letter, the mouthpiece of 'All India Dalit Federation' was printed. After the Mahaparinirvana of Babasaheb, this fortnight was closed. On 11th April, 2017, the birth anniversary of Mahatma Phule , Babasaheb's grandson Prakash Ambedkar announced the start of "Enlightened India" to be renewed and its first issue was published on May 10, 2017 and this fortnight started.
By these newspapers Babasaheb awakened the self and untouchable with his thoughts. This led to the change in thinking and life of the dalits.
Inheritance
Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar of Aurangabad , paying tribute to Ambedkar's statue in the University of Marathwada , his followers,
As Ambedkar's social-political reformer, heritage has had a profound impact on modern India. In India after independence, their socio-political views are honored in the entire political spectrum. Their initiatives have influenced different areas of life and today the way India has shown social-economic policies, education and positive action through social, economic policies and legal incentives has changed it. As a scholar, his reputation appointed him as the first law minister of his independent India and the president of the draft constitution committee. He believed in freedom from personal independence and criticized the casteless society. His allegations of Hinduism being the foundation of caste system made him controversial and unpopular among the conservative Hindus. His conversion of Buddhism led to the resumption of the resurgence of Buddhist philosophy in India and abroad.
First of all, in September-October 1927, by followers of Ambedkar and later by the Indian people, Ambedkar is called 'Babasaheb' ( Marathi : Babasaheb ) in honor and honor , which is a Marathi phrase which means "Father-saab", because millions of Indians Consider them "great liberator"
Many public institutions and twelve universities have been named in their honor. Dr Babasaheb Ambedkar International Airport , Dr. BR Ambedkar National Institute of Technology, Jalandhar , Ambedkar University, Delhi are also in his honor. Many awards are given in his name. A large official oil image of Ambedkar is displayed in the Indian Parliament House.
The University of Columbia, USA, decided to celebrate this day in an effort to set up its university for 200 years, in 2004, he made a list of the top 100 intelligent students who had studied in his university, the Columbian Aids of Their Time , Who have made important contributions to their field in the world When this list was published, the first name was 'Bhimrao Ambedkar', and he was mentioned as "the creator of modern India". Ambedkar was declared "the most intelligent student", the first Colombian Ahead of their time .
Most votes were cast in Ambedkar's History TV18 and CNN IBN in a poll conducted in 2012, " The Greatest Indian " ( Greatest Indian ). Nearly 2 million votes were cast, since the launch of this initiative he was declared the most popular Indian person. Due to his role in economics, a noted Indian economist Narendra Jadhav has said that "Ambedkar was the highest educated Indian economist of all time." Economics in a lecture given in 2007 in the area to accept emphasize the Ambedkar while economics of Nobel prize Missed economist Amartya Sen said, "Ambedkar is my father in terms of economics. He is a true and well known superstar of dalit-exploited people. Any honor given to them so far is more than that. They are highly disputed in India. However there is nothing controversial in his life and personality. Those who are said in their criticism are just beyond reality. Their contribution is extremely popular in the field of economics. " a spiritual guru Osho ( Rajneesh ) remarked," I have the lower range of Hindu law have seen those Sudra born Untouchables, But they are very intelligent: when India became independent, and the constitution of India .He was a Shudra man, Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar. According to the law, there was no equal to his intelligence - he was a world renowned authority. " US President Barack Obama addressing Indian Parliament in 2010 , the Dalit leader Dr. B. B. R. Ambedkar was honored by the great and respected Human Rights Champion And addressed as the Chief Writer of the Constitution of India.The historian Ramchandra Guha calls him "the messiah of the poor."
Ambedkar's political philosophy has given birth to a large number of political parties, publications and labor unions, which are active all over India especially in Maharashtra. His promotion of Buddhism has increased interest in Buddhist philosophy among the larger sections of the Indian population. In modern times, human rights activists, at large scale, celebrate the conversion ceremony of Ambedkar's Nagpur 1956 by organizing Buddhist conversion ceremonies. Most Indian Buddhism, especially Nvyan Anuyayi them Bodhisattvas and Maitreya is considered as though he never claimed to own. Outside India, during the second half of 1990, some Hungarian Romans attracted similarities between their status and the Dalits of India. Inspired by Ambedkar, he has started to change in Buddhism. These people have also started a school called ' Dr. Ambedkar High School' in Hungary , in which a statue of Ambedkar was also established on December 6, 2016, which was presented by the Hungarian "Jai Bhai Network".
In the Chicholi village of Nagpur district of Maharashtra, Dr. Ambedkar object museum - 'Shantivan' has the personal items used for Ambedkar.
Ambedkar is India's most revered leader. His statue has taken huge numbers in every town, village, city, crossroads, railway stations and parks in India. They are usually painted in a pocket and arms in the front pocket with western suit and tie for the book of the Indian Constitution, and glasses planted in the form of a sticky person all over the world.In Great Britain and Japan , their high murtis are established.
In popular culture
Ambedkar's Birthday Ambedkar Jayanti is celebrated every year on 14th April as a big festival. This is the largest festival of Buddhists in Maharashtra. Celebrated by the Maharashtra Government as the Ambedkar Jayanti Gyan Divas . because polymath Dr. Ambedkar's " knowledge are considered necklace" of (Symbol of Knowledge). This day has been declared as a public holiday in the whole of India. New Delhi, every year on the statue of Parliament, honors the honorable tribute by the President of India and Prime Minister (including leaders of other political parties). Buddhists, Dalits and other Ambedkar people put their house in front of their statue or picture and greet them like God. On this day, people keep their statue in front of the parade, they also enjoy the dance and play dholas. Besides India, celebration of Ambedkar Jayanti is celebrated in more than 65 countries of the world. Ambedkar's 125th birth anniversary was celebrated in the United Nations , Where was the United Nations calling him 'the primate of the world'? Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar's first birth anniversary, Sadashiv Ranpise was celebrated on 14 April 1928 in Pune . Ranpis were followers of Ambedkar. He started the practice of Ambedkar Jayanti, and on the occasion of Bhim Jnanti, he had put many rallies on Rathsee, Ut, by placing the statue of Hatha in Ambala of Babasaheb.
Ambedkar's School Admission Day is celebrated on 7th November by the Government of Maharashtra as Student's Day throughout the state . Because being a learned scholar, Ambedkar continued to be a student of his birth.On this day, various programs are organized in all the schools and junior colleges in Maharashtra, including lectures, essays, competitions, quiz competitions, poetry lessons based on the life of Ambedkar.
In honor of Ambedkar, Indian Constitution Day (National Law Day) is celebrated on 26th November . According to the instructions of the Government of India , the first formalized Constitution Day was celebrated as the 125th anniversary of Ambedkar on November 26, 2015. On November 26, the day has been selected to spread the significance of the constitution and to disseminate the ideas and concepts of Dr. Bhimrao Ambedkar.
'Jai Bhima' on the Bhim flag of Indian Buddhist flag
Jai Bhima is a greeting phrase used by Ambedkar people. 'Jai Bhim' means "Bheemrao Ambedkar's victory". Or "Bhimrao Ambedkar Jindabha." This phrase was coined by Babu LN Hardas, a follower of Ambedkar. Babu Hardas encouraged this way of greeting with the help of the workers of Bhima Vijay Sangh.
Blue is a symbol of Ambedkar. Ambedkar was loved by the blue color because he is a " likeness " symbol. And blue, the color of the sky , which reflects its magnitude, Ambedkar also had the same vision and he used it very much in private life too. The statue of Babasaheb always appears in the blue coat. In 1942, he founded the Scheduled Caste Federation of India Party, the party's flag was blue and the center of the Ashok Chakra was located. After this, in 1956 when the Republican Party of India was formed after the old party was formed, the same blue flag was used in it. He color Maharashtra's largest underclass Mahar taken from the flag. Now this blue flag of Ashoka Chakra of Buddhism has become a symbol of Ambedkar. Later, Bharipal Bahujan Mahasangh , all other Ambedkarite organizations and colonizers including the Bahujan Samaj Party also adopted the same color and thus became the symbol of resistance, conflict and assimilation of Ambedkarist Buddhists (Navbodhs) and Dalits. Buddhists and Dalits use blue color and blue flag on every occasion.
Bhimyan: Experience of Unacceptability ( Bhimayana: Untouchable Experience ) This graphic biography of Ambedkar, produced by Pardhan-Gond artist Durgabai Vyam and Subhash Vyam and writers Srivid Natarajan and S. Anand. This book depicts Ambedkar's untimely experience from childhood to adulthood. CNN named it one of the top 5 political comic books.
In the 1920s, the house in which Ambedkar living in London was converted into a museum by the Government of Maharashtra and changed it to "International Ambedkar Memorial". It was inaugurated by Prime Minister of India Narendra Modi on November 14, 2015.
Ambedkar garden park in Lucknow is dedicated to their memory. There are memorials showing their biography in Chaitya
Ambedkar memorial in Lucknow
Google celebrated Ambedkar's 124th birthday on April 14, 2015 through his homepage, doodle. This doodle was shown in India, Argentina , Chile , Ireland , Peru , Poland , Sweden and the United Kingdom .
Movies
There are many movies, plays and other works based on Ambedkar's life and thinking. Jabbar Patel directed the film of Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar in 2000, in which Mammootty was playing the main character. This film was produced by the National Film Development Corporation of India and the Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment of the Government . Due to controversy, the film's performance took a lot of time. Professor David Blundel, a professor of human sciences at UCLA and historical ethnography, a series of films and programs aimed at encouraging social conditions and interest in the life of Ambedkar in India - Ariising LightIs established. Shyam Benegal a TV mini-series on the creation of the Constitution of India directed by constitutional role of Ambedkar in Sachin Khedekar was played went by. Ambedkar and Gandhi are guided by Arvind Gaur and tracked two major personalities of the title of drama written by Rajesh Kumar.
Many films have been created on the life and thoughts of Bhimrao Ambedkar, which is as follows:
Bhima Bhangna - Marathi Film (1990)
Child Ambedkar - Kannada Film (1991)
Yugpurush Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar - Marathi Film ( 1993 )
Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar - English film of 2000
Dr. BR Ambedkar - Kannada Film (2005)
Rising Light - Documentary film made in 2006
Ramabai Bhimrao Ambedkar - Marathi film based on the life of Ambedkar's wife, Ramabai. (2010)
Shudra: The Rising - Hindi film dedicated to Ambedkar (2010)
A Journey of Samyak Buddha - Hindi film (2013), based on Ambedkar's Lord Buddha and his Dhamma Granth.
Ramabai - Kannada Film (2016)
Bole India Jai Bhim - Marathi Film, Dubbed in Hindi (2016)
Bal Bhimrao - Marathi film of 2018
Apart from this, many dramas based on Ambedkar's life have also been made and Hindi serial was telecast on television serial "Dr. Ambedkar" .
Hindu Society in the Mirror of Violence Against Dalits
On 20 March 1927, large number of Dalits led by Bhimrao Ambedkar drank water from Chavadar Tank in Mahad, Maharashtra. The act challenged Brahminical caste domination, but was very much within legal rights of Ambedkar and his followers. The then Bombay Legislative Council had thrown open all public utilities to untouchables in 1923 and in January 1924, Mahad Municipality had declared Chavadar a public tank. Dalits however were not spared for asserting their right. Gangs of caste Hindu men pounced upon returning groups of Dalit men, women and children. Unfazed, Ambedkar organized an even bigger gathering of Dalits in the same town on 25 December that did a symbolic burning of Manusmriti. A gathering of Dalits was attacked again ninety years later in Bhima Koregaon on 1 Jan, 2018. The purpose of gathering this time was not a direct challenge to a caste taboo. Dalits had come to commemorate the 200 year anniversary of a relatively minor battle during the British conquest of India. The British contingent in that battle had a sizeable proportion of Mahar dalit soldiers, a number of whom died fighting the much larger Peshwa army. Dalits of Maharashtra celebrate the day as Shaurya Gatha Divas and gather in large numbers at the site of battle every year in an act of public assertion of their ancestors’ valour against Brahmanical Peshwas. The atmosphere is like a typical rural Indian fair; men, women and children coming from even far away regions for a day long outing. This year the gathering was especially large due to mobilization by Dalit organisations. A number of vehicles that brought them and had explicit Dalit signs like Jai Bheem, or the Buddhist Panchasila insignia were smashed and burnt in the violence.
Even if the context of Dalit gathering at Bheema Koregaon this year was different than at Mahad ninety years ago, the structure of violence against them was same. Whereas Dalits engage in a public event in an open public space, the attack on them is sudden and conspiratorial in nature. Dalits come to a place from far away regions; their attackers are entrenched, both spatially and socially. Ideologically and organizationally Dalits are not prepared even for retaliatory violence. At best they can run away in self defence. The violence and dispersal of Dalits appears to be the sole motive of their attackers. Dalits want to make a public statement, their attackers are organised for hit and run tactic. The attackers do not need to explain themselves, their attack is sufficient in itself because it supposedly carries the writ of a dominant normative order.
Attacks on Dalits are often viewed only from the perspective of violation of their basic rights and dignity. A lot of attention this time has been paid to the political context of Dalit mobilization, and the recent state of their relation with the dominant Maratha caste in the area. Analyses from such perspectives often miss the actual elephant in the room, namely the caste Hindu society to whom their attackers belong, and from whose normative world they derive their justifications. Confronting this elephant is crucial at present. The public sphere in India, in which Dalits have been trying to assert their dignity has lately come under severe strain due to political successes of Hindutva. Ambedkar could look to the limited but legally entitled public sphere of the colonial regime, and the public sphere of India’s independence movement which had at least some currents critical of the Hindu caste society. He had a number of caste Hindu supporters in Mahad, including the chairman of its Municipal Council, who came out in favour of Mahad satyagrah. The Hindu society now shows little signs of internal reform against superstitions, preposterous religious practices and blatant caste oppression. It has become the ground over which Hindutva political successes are being built. The majority of caste Hindus showed little hesitation in voting for the party of the Hindutva, whose cow protecting followers only last year had engaged in the barbaric act of beating Dalits in public at Una, and circulated videos of the beatings as an instance of their Hindu pride. The relationship between Hindutva and the Hindu caste society is perhaps the key determinant of the fate of democracy in India.
Ambedkar’s Total Critique of Hindu Society
Ambedkar understood Hindu society through the lens of caste. He underlined the caste character of its spirituality and social life. Even while he considered the Hindu caste system to be primarily a religiously sanctioned system of graded inequality, he was clear about its secular significances. The five cardinal principles of Brahminism according to him included bans on Shudras and Untouchables to arm and educate themselves, hold positions of authority, and own property, and ‘complete subjugation and suppression of women’. Caste hierarchy is antithetical to any notion of equality. The radical character of Ambedkar’s conception of equality is however little appreciated. With time he moved away from the classical liberal demands of equality within an existing legal system, to a radical politics that aimed to reformulate the social foundations of this very system. This shows also in his appropriation of Buddhism as the most suitable religion for social struggles for equality in the modern era, and a critical engagement with Marxism. His critique of Hindu society unfortunately has been missed by generations of Communists and Socialists, the two strands of radical politics in the country whose programs would have gained immensely from a meaningful engagement with it.
If hierarchy is the organizing principle of caste; caste hierarchy operates through differentiation and division. One consequence of every caste being a unit in a graded hierarchy is that it develops a stake in constituting itself as a separate corporate entity. While the threat to democracy due to caste inequities is immediately obvious, consequences of differentiation and division are little appreciated. Ambedkar was acutely aware of both of these. His address on the Annihilation of Caste, which incidentally was meant for caste Hindus rather than his untouchable followers, is most clear on this point. According to him, ‘(t)he effect of caste on the ethics of Hindus is simply deplorable. Caste has killed public spirit…. Caste has made public opinion impossible. A Hindu’s public is his caste.’ These characters of caste continue even after its secularization, and can be seen most clearly in the role caste has come to play in electoral politics. The caste roots of Hindu society to an extent also explain the fragility of public sphere in India. The professional urban middle classes belonging to savarna castes often claim to be the only public of India (the Common Man of RK Laxman cartoons). In reality this ‘public’ too is like a caste. It is very conscious of its boundaries and has no sense of how those outside can be treated as equal. Further, the social life of these sections too is dominated by informal networks in which violations of public rules is common.
Caste and Hindutva
As is well known Hindutva is a project to develop a political community of Hindus. In a way, Gandhian project also had the same aim. Whereas Gandhi insisted on building this political community on a moral basis of struggle against an unjust colonial rule, and called upon inter community co-existence, Hindutva has no moral claims, and is actually driven by two moral fallacies. One is the severe inferiority complex generated by seeing Hindus as perpetual victims of external aggression, which can be overcome only by retaliation. The second moral fallacy of Hindutva is rabid hatred of Muslims and Christians. This means that it has no place for the value of universal humanism, without which no modern democracy is possible. Imperviousness to the calls of universal humanism is common to both Hindutva and caste. This is related to another common characteristic. Caste and Hindutva both consciously articulate themselves as above, or alien to the law. Hindutva does it openly by its claim that the existing liberal secular order of law is against the demands of Hindus. The idea is clear that to realise Hindu Rashtra, Hindus should be ready for all means, including spectacular public violence. For caste, it is the understanding that as a self governed entity it need not follow external rules. Khap panchayats are a clear illustration. In this sense, Dalit mobilisations, whether political, for legal protection, or for re-articulation of self-identity, are actually anti-caste. The main stream media and academia show their casteist prejudice and blindspot by lumping them under the rubric of caste. The third overlap between caste and Hindutva is religion. Both operate with a sense of obvious naturalness to their demands. To the extent that the idea of the self and community for an average Hindu is still largely religious, it helps both caste and Hindutva become effective in everyday life.
Such overlaps however do not mean that caste can be readily incorporated in the political programme of Hindutva. Caste ridden Hindu society is not easily amenable to community wide calls of political nature. Congress achieved it under a basically liberal project that had place for at least a formal critique of caste as part of the reform of Hindu society which needed to be modernized. Hindutva can not take any anti caste stance due to the centrality of the idea of a Great Hindu civilization/religion in its programme. This explains why for many decades after its initiation it remained confined to savarna castes. The two key events in its growth trajectory were one, when it became the common political sense of savarna castes, and second when it managed to draw in sizeable sections of Shudra and untouchable castes. The first was achieved when the Congress formula of broad coalitions of social groupings unraveled in the absence charismatic leadership, and savarna castes, which as a block continue to enjoy cultural, economic and bureaucratic hegemony, found that it is unable to counter mobilisations by rural dominant castes. Savarna castes now form the core voter base of Hindutva. Psephologists have known this for more than three decades. In fact sections of savarna castes like Punjabi Hindus of Delhi, have consistently voted overwhelmingly for the Hindutva party for over three generations now, however in the media talk of ‘vote banks’ they are not counted as one.
The success with Shudras and untouchables is the real tour de force of Hindutva, which helped it become a mass movement. This was facilitated by the preponderance of religion in the cultural and community life of Hindus. Hindutva exploited this religiosity through two complementary tactics. RSS affiliated organisations facilitated, encouraged and organized events of mass religiosity. The Hindutva touch was given by a certain kind of aggressive occupation of public space with a clear lumpen character, which, as is true with all lumpen mobilisations, could be used for spectacular mass violence under the control of a centralized leadership. These organisations also calibrated their programmes by incorporating specific caste centric gods, temples and religious programmes within a Sanskritising narrative. The success of this strategy was based on the continuing hegemony of Brahminical cultural norms at the molecular level, where the penetration of suitable counter narratives, either anti caste Periyarite or Ambedkarite, or the mores of modernisation, was weak. It succeeded most dramatically in the ‘cow belt’ heartland of Northern India.
The re-establishment of old Brahminical ritual based caste hierarchy is not an aim of Hindutva. It does not mind an OBC Prime Minister, a Dalit President, and can not publicly support untouchability. Hindutva is also comfortable with the role caste has come to play in the electoral politics in India. In fact the inherent divisiveness of caste in politics makes it imminently suitable for social engineering under a hegemonic project. However, it is dead against any anti-caste movement, because that can challenge existing power relations in society, as Bhim Sena is trying to do in Saharanpur. It can incorporate non-Jatav dalit castes in UP, and can hope to manage a Hardik Patel. It can not stand a Rohith Vemula whose anti-caste stand was inspired by a deep and universal conception of human equality, and a Jignesh Mevani who has deftly combined his anti-caste politics with concrete socio-economic demands, through invocation of both asmita and astitava. Their politics is not only anti-Hindutva, but has the potential to knock the bottom out of Hindu caste order. Hindutva provides a safe haven for all hierarchical caste prejudices, of Savarnas against OBCs and Dalits, and of OBCs against Dalits. A radical Dalit who has courage to stand against all, is its public enemy number one. (http://www.raiot.in/hindu-society-in-the-mirror-of-violence-against-dalits/)
Why Baba Saheb did not say Bhim Rao Ambedkar was Gandhi's Mahatma
6 December 2018
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How were the relations of Gandhi and Ambedkar? There has been long debate on this question and a lot of say-has been heard.
Babasaheb Ambedkar himself had put Gandhi in the dockyards so that when you are not 'Bhangi' how can you talk about us?
In response, Gandhi said so much that I have no bus on it, but if the only basis for working for 'brides' is that if someone is a 'bhangi' from birth or I would rather that my next birth will be 'Bhangi' In the house
In 1955, Dr. Ambedkar spoke a long time on his relations and differences with Mahatma Gandhi in an interview to the BBC.
Part of this historical interview presented to the BBC Archive.
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Ambedkar : I met Gandhi for the first time in 1929, through a friend, was a common friend who asked Gandhi to meet me. Gandhi wrote to me that he wants to meet me. That's why I went to him and met him, just before going to participate in the Round Table Conference.
Then he came to the second Round Round Table Conference, did not come for the first round of the conference. During that time he stayed there for five-six months. During that time, I met him and also met him at the Second Round Table Conference. Even after signing the Poona agreement, they asked me to meet me. So I went to meet him.
He was in jail. That was the time when I met Gandhi. But I have always said that then I met Gandhi as a rival. I think I know them better than other people, because they expose their reality to me. I could peep into the heart of that person.
Usually, when they go to them as devotees, nothing is seen, except for the outer shell, which they kept in the form of a Mahatma. But I saw them as a human being, looked at the naked man inside them, so I can say that those who were related to them, I think their comparison is better.
Image caption In thefirst picture, Dr. Ambedkar and his family, at his residence in Rajghat, Mumbai. From the left- his son Yashwant, Ambedkar, wife Ramabai Ambedkar, Bhabhi Lakshmi Bai, Bhatija Mukundrao and his cute dog Toby. In 'Rajghat', Ambedkar had come to live in February, 1934. Photo Saadhar: Dikshitbhoomi, Nagpur and Lokwangmay Publications
Question : What would you say in brief about what you saw?
Ambedkar : Well, in the beginning, I have to say that I am surprised when people in the external world, and especially the Western world, are interested in Gandhi. I can not understand. He was an episode in the history of India, he was never an era maker.
Gandhi has already disappeared from the people of this country. His memory comes due to the fact that Congress Party gives annual leave on his birthday or any other day related to his life. Every year a festival is celebrated for seven days a week. Naturally, people's memory is revived.
But I think that if this artificial respiration was not given, then Gandhi would have forgotten him a long time ago.
Image captionAfter the foundation stone of the college building in Aurangabad, Ambedkar doctors took Rajendra Prasad to showcase the caves of Verul. The picture is one September, 1951. Photo Saadhar: Dikshitbhoomi, Nagpur and Lokwangmay Publications
Question : Do not you think they made basic changes?
Ambedkar: No, never. Rather, they used to play double role all the time. He removed two newspapers in front of young India. The first 'Harijan' in English, and in Gujarat, he brought another newspaper which you call 'Dinbandhu' or something similar.
If you read these two newspapers, then you will find out how Gandhi deceived people. In the English news paper, he described himself as an anti-caste system and anti-untouchability and himself democratic. But if you read Gujarati magazine then you will see him as a more conservative person.
They were supporters of caste system, Varanashram religion or all conservative theories, who put India down in every epoch. Indeed, one should write a biographical description of Gandhi's 'Harijan' and the comparative study of his statements given in the Gujarati newspaper. There are seven sections of Gujarati paper.
The western world reads only the English paper, where Gandhi was advocating democratic ideals to preserve itself in the honor of Westerners who believe in democracy. But you also have to see what they actually talked to people in their local paper.
It seems that no one has taken any reference to it. Any of his biographies written are based on his 'Harijan' and 'Yuva Bharat', and not on Gandhi's Gujarati writing.
Image caption ImageAmbedkar gave his famous speech 'Buddha and Karl Marx' in the presence of Nepal King Mahendra and Mahashwinder Chandramani in the fourth council of 'Buddhist Fraternity Association' held on November 20, 1956 in Kathmandu, Nepal's capital. Photo Saadhar: Dikshitbhoomi, Nagpur and Lokwangmay Publications
Question : What was their real intention behind presenting Harijan as God in the caste structure?
Ambedkar : They just wanted it. There are two things about Scheduled Castes. We want to end untouchability. But at the same time, we also want that we should be given equal opportunities so that we can reach the level of other classes. Washing untouchability is not a concept.
We have been carrying untouchability for the past 2000 years. Nobody has worried about it. Yes, there are some drawbacks that are very harmful. For example, people can not take water, people can not have land to cultivate and earn their livelihood.
But there are other important things, that is, their condition in the country should be equally and they should have opportunities to be highly placed so that they not only increase their dignity, but they can protect their people while living in strategic situations. Gandhi was totally against this idea, absolutely against
Image captionA jolly moment of the Mumbai Region Schedule Castes Federation and his reception program organized by the Samajwadi Party at Bori Bunder railway station. Due to lack of seat of Raibahadur CK Bole, Ambedkar put him in his lap. With them Mai Ambedkar Photo Saadhar: Dikshitbhoomi, Nagpur and Lokwangmay Publications
Question : She (Gandhi) was satisfied with issues like entering the temple.
Ambedkar: He wanted to enter the temple. Now, no one cares about the Hindu temples. Untouchables have understood this very well that there is no result of going to the temple. Those untouchables will remain, whether they go to the temple or not. For example, people do not allow untouchables to travel in the railway.
Now they do not make any difference, because the Railways are not going to make arrangements for them separately. They travel together in the train. Whenever the Hindu and the untouchables travel in the railroad, they are in their old role.
Image captionLaw minister Dr. Ambedkar discussing Hindu code bills in Parliament. Photo Saadhar: Dikshitbhoomi, Nagpur and Lokwangmay Publications
Question: So do you want to say that Gandhi was orthodox Hindu?
Ambedkar: Yes, he was a totally Orthodox Hindu. He was never a reformer. He had no such thinking, he used to talk about untouchability so that the untouchables could be associated with the Congress. This was one thing. Secondly, he wanted that untouchable should not oppose his concept of Swaraj.
I do not think more than that he thought of the upliftment of untouchables.
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Question : Do you think that Gandhi could get political independence?
Ambedkar: Yes, yes. I can say definitely It could have been slowly. But personally, I feel that if Swaraj comes slowly in India then it will be beneficial for the people. Every group of every community or people with distortions would be able to strengthen themselves, if the power transfer from the British government gradually happens.
Today everything has come like a flood. People were not ready for it. I often think that the Labor Party in England is the most organized party.
Image captionAmbedkar's Visit to Kanheri Caves of Mumbai The picture is of 1952-53. Photo Saadhar: Dikshitbhoomi, Nagpur and Lokwangmay Publications
Question : Did not Gandhi have endurance, or in the Congress party?
Ambedkar: I do not know why suddenly the people are ready to give independence. This is a confidential subject, which I think, that will be brought to Italy in some of its biographies someday. How did he reach that suit? Someone did not think of this change suddenly. Nobody expected anything.
This seems to me from my assessment. I think the Labor Party has decided this for two reasons. The first is the National Army of Subhash Chandra Bose. The British who were ruling this country had full faith that whatever the country could do and whatever the politicians would do, but their commitment to this soil would not change.
With this thinking, he was running his administration. The thought was shaken badly when they came to know that soldiers were making a party or battalion, which would overthrow the British. I think that in this way the British arrived at the conclusion that if they were to rule India, then its only basis could be operating from the British army.
Talk about 1857, when Indian soldiers revolted against the East India Company. They found that it would not be possible for the British to continue to provide so much European forces in India, through which to rule.
Secondly, what I find, though I do not have such evidence, but I think the British soldiers wanted to finish the army immediately, so that they could pursue civil profession. Do you know how angry you were to slow down the army?
Because those who were not expelled from the army, they used to think that those people who have been expelled from the army, they are grabbing their civic occupation and how much injustice is happening with them. So it was not possible for them to hold enough British Army to rule India.
Thirdly, I think besides this, he thought that he only wanted commerce from India and not the salary or army income of the civil servant. These were trivial things There was no energy in sacrificing them as a trade and commerce. India should be free or its status is an accepted domain or less.
But business and commerce should remain. I am not sure about this, but I personally feel that the Labor Party's intention is the same.
Image captionAmbedkar in a court of Aurangabad. Aurangabad Bar Association invited them. Photo date July 28, 1950. Photo Saadhar: Dikshitbhoomi, Nagpur and Lokwangmay Publications
Question : Talk about Poona agreements. You were involved in that agreement. Do you remember what happened to Gandhi during that time?
Ambedkar : (in light voice) Yes ... I knew this thing very well. The British government accepted my suggestion in the original proposal of McDonald's. I said that we want an equal elected representative, so that the cracks between the Hindus and the Scheduled Castes continue.
We feel that if you make an equal election representative, we will be absorbed and the named Scheduled Castes will actually become enslaved to the Hindus, they will not be free. Now I told Ramsay MacDonald, that they want to take this issue forward, give us separate election representatives and separate them in the general elections.
So that Gandhi can not say that we are different in terms of election. Earlier, my thinking was that, for the first five years, we should remain separate from the Hindus, in which there is no behavior, no dialogue. It was a social and spiritual step. What can you see in the circle of participation in a common voter?
The separatism you think about to overcome these difficulties has increased over the centuries. It is stupidity to think that if two people will change their hearts by voting at polling stations simultaneously. nothing of the sort. This is Gandhi's insanity. Well, it should be kept aside.
In such a system, voting with untouchables, you allow them to represent their population of the same proportion, so that the voting can be strengthened and not on the representative. So that Gandhi and other people could not complain. Ramsay MacDonald accepted it This was actually my suggestion. I wrote them a letter from Naples.
I wanted to do this, so that there is no problem. They did this, gave us the right to vote in separate constituencies and general elections. But Gandhi did not want us to send our actual representatives. So they did not want to add separate constituencies to the agreement and went on fast. Then it came up to me
The British government said that if you do not want to accept the agreement, then we have no objection. But we wanted to end the agreement itself. We left the agreement We gave up everything that was the best.
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You should read Ramsay McDonald's letter, which clearly states that we have not done anything like promoting separatism. Rather, we want to fill the gap by bringing the two groups on one platform through an equal election. But Gandhi's opposition was on the point that we could not get a representation with independence.
So he openly opposed that we should not get any representation. This was his attitude in the Round Table Conference. They said that they only know Hindu, Muslim and Sikh communities. Only three of these communities should get political representation in the Constitution.
But Christian, Anglo-Indians, there is no place in the constitution for scheduled castes. According to them, these people should be mixed with the common people. I know that all their friends were telling this thought foolishness. His friends protested against this topic.
If Sikh and Muslims are given special representation, who are in a thousand times better than political and financially, then how can Scheduled Castes and Christians be excluded? They had to say that you do not understand our problems. That, that's what they used to say.
On this issue, his deep friend Alexandria had a lot of confrontation with him, as he told me. A French woman, who was her follower, I forgot her name. He also fought fiercely with Gandhi, that we could not understand this thinking. Either you say that we will not give anything to anyone and that should be a normal process.
We can understand that you see the democratic process in it. But to say that representing Muslims and Sikhs and not to Scheduled Castes, it seems awkward. He could not answer anymore. no answer. We suggested these solutions.
Initially, he did not accept it, when he wrote in the letter; Ramsay McDonald said that scheduled castes have nothing, there is no representation. Then their friends said that they are doing more than they need, and no one will support them in it.
Malviya and others came to me and said, can not you help us solve this problem? I said that we did not want to help you by sacrificing the British rule which we have found.
Image caption Inthis regard, Ambedkar delivered a speech in support of the Hindu Code Bill on June 11, 1950 in 'Student Parliament' of Siddharth College, Mumbai, in which the political knowledge of the students of their educational institutions matured; Photo Saadhar: Dikshitbhoomi, Nagpur and Lokwangmay Publications
Question : And you stay on your idea.
Ambedkar : (In light voice) I said that I had suggested the second option. The alternative was that we were not ready to leave different electors. But it was ready for that you can make any changes. Scheduled caste candidates standing in the last election will be selected by the Scheduled Caste members in the first primary election.
They should choose four people. Then those four people should stand in the general election. We should come to the best, so that we can give some confidence that you do not take back your candidate. In such a situation, we will be able to choose those people who can become our voice in Parliament. These proposals were to accept Gandhi, so he did.
We got the benefit of this proposal only in one election, in the elections of 1937. The Federation won the majority in the elections. None of Gandhi's candidates got the victoryImage captio
Question: So did they make huge investments on their behalf?
Ambedkar: He did exactly that. I did not say anything. I am ready to save your life, provided you do not become obstinate. But I am not going to save your life by playing with the lives of my people. You can see how much I worked for it. I know this very well.
I am not going to sacrifice the interests of my people for your craze. It was just their craze. How can it be that the general elections that are being talked about to change conditions have not changed?
Image captionAmbedkar along with Prime Minister Nehru and other members of the Central Council, in a banquet organized by Sardar Patel in June 1948 in the celebration of Chakravarti C. Rajagopalachari's becoming the first Governor General of India. Photo Saadhar: Dikshitbhoomi, Nagpur and Lokwangmay Publications
Question: So what did they say?
Ambedkar: Oh He could not say anything. He had a fear of belonging to Scheduled Caste ... that he would become an independent body like a Sikh and a Muslim and Hindus would have to fight against these three groups. It was in their minds and they did not want to leave the Hindus without friends.
Question: So seldom did he ... He worked as a politician completely.
Ambedkar: Like a politician. He was never a Mahatma. I refuse to call him Mahatma. I have never called him a Mahatma in my life. He was never worthy of this position, even in terms of ethics.
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Some rare pictures of Ambedkar
Sanjeev Chandan for theBBC Hindi.com
April 14, 2015
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Preparations are being prepared to celebrate 125th birth anniversary of Bhimrao Ambedkar, the father of Indian Constitution.
In the political parties of the country about their legacy, a kind of political dikshatani can also be seen.
But the question arises among all that how Ambedkar's period would have been, these pictures present a picture of this.
In the first picture, Dr. Ambedkar and his family, at his residence in Rajghat, Mumbai. From the left- his son Yashwant, Ambedkar, wife Ramabai Ambedkar, Bhabhi Lakshmi Bai, Bhatija Mukundrao and his cute dog Toby. In 'Rajghat', Ambedkar had come to live in February, 1934.
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Ambedkar's Visit to Kanheri Caves of Mumbai The picture is of 1952-53.
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Photo by Ambedkar in the fourth council of 'Buddhist Fraternity Association' organized in Nepal's capital Kathmandu on November 20, 1956, Ambedkar gave his famous speech 'Buddha and Karl Marx' in the presence of King Mahendra and Mahasthivar Chandramani.
The basic theme of his speech was 'Non-violence in Buddhism' but on the request of delegates, he changed the subject.
Image copyrightOTHER
After the foundation stone of the college building in Aurangabad, Ambedkar doctors took Rajendra Prasad to showcase the caves of Verul. The picture is one September, 1951.
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Law Minister Dr. Ambedkar discusses the Hindu Code Bill in Parliament.
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After resigning from the post of minister, Ambedkar returned to Mumbai on November 18, 1951.
A jolly moment of his welcome program at the Bari Bunder railway station from the Mumbai Region Schedule Castes Federation and Samajwadi Party at that time.
Due to lack of seat of Raibahadur CK Bole, Ambedkar put him in his lap. With them Mai Ambedkar
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Ambedkar in a court of Aurangabad. The Bar Association of Aurangabad invited them. Picture date July 28, 1950
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In this regard, Ambedkar delivered a speech in support of Hindu Code Bill on 11th June, 1950 in 'Student Parliament' of Siddharth College, Mumbai, in order to mature his political knowledge of the students of his educational institution.
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Election manifesto of All India Dalit Federation, 1946
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Ambedkar and other members of the Union Cabinet, with Prime Minister Nehru at a banquet organized by Sardar Patel in June 1948 in the celebration of Chakrabarty C. Rajagopalachari's becoming the first Governor General of India.
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On January 30, 1948, Nathuram Godse of Mahatma Gandhi was killed in the Birla House of Delhi and the whole country was shaken.
Ambedkar ran towards Birla House, talking to Congress leader Shankar Rao Dev there.
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Newspaper response on the announcement of conversion
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Ambedkar's ballot paper, contesting from the Central Mumbai constituency, on 17 February, 1937, by the Independent Labor Party. His election symbol was 'man'
On December 9, 1943, as Labor Minister, Ambedkar went to the colony of the mining laborers of Dhanbad.
(All photos have been received from the Deeksha Bhoomi, Nagpur and Lokwangamay Publication.)
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1. Baba Saheb Ambedkar's family used to belong to the Mahar caste, which was considered as untouchable. Ambedkar, who has seen economic and social discrimination since his childhood, started studying in odd circumstances.
2. Child marriage was prevalent, in 1906, he married Ramabai, a nine-year-old girl.
3 . In 1908 he joined Elphinstone College. He was the first Dalit caste to take admission in this college.
4. In 1913 he went to America to do MA Studying in the US was possible due to the monthly stipend from Baroda's Gaekwad ruler Sahayaji Rao III.
5. In 1921 he received a degree from the London School of Economics.
6. In 1925, Baba Saheb was appointed by the Bombay Presidency Committee to work in the Simon Commission. This commission was opposed in whole of India.
7. Ambedkar started extracting 'Excluded India', 'Silent Nayak', Weekly and Weekly Letter of 'Janata' to raise voice against the atrocities on Dalits.
8. After India's independence, he was made Law Minister. On August 29, 1947, the Constitution was drafted as the Chairman of the Constitution Drafting Committee for the constitution of independent India.
9. Ambedkar resigned from the Cabinet after his Hindu Code Bill draft was stopped in Parliament in 1951. In this draft, there was talk of gender equality in the laws of succession, marriage and economy.
10. On October 14, 1956 Ambedkar and his supporters adopted the Panchsheel and adopted Buddhism. Ambedkar believed that Dalits could never get their rights under Hindu religion.Ambedkar died on December 6, 1956.
Introduction
Dalits are India’s earlier “untouchables”, so called because their touch was considered polluting due to the work they did – use dead matter (the hides of animals, tanning, cutting hair or faces. The battle against untouchability is of long standing. The efforts of two great modern Indian leaders, however, had the greatest impact in bringing public awareness of the need for eradicating this acute and particular form of oppression: Mahatma Gandhi – who called them “Harijans” or “children of God”, and B.R. Ambedkar, a brilliant lawyer, himself from an untouchable caste, who led the drafting of India’s constitution. But although the Constitution of independent India outlawed untouchability and its practice in any form, and directed the government to take affirmative action to compensate untouchable castes for these historical wrongs, the stigma against them continues in both subtle and overt forms to this day.
Accordingly, struggles by the oppressed castes have also persisted through both militant movements and advocacy. During the Independence movement Gandhi gave a call to end untouchability by raising the value of all work and removing the indignity attached to “impure” work. Ambedkar is still worshipped across India for his mobilization and leadership of these oppressed peoples against caste discrimination and all its attendant evils and cruelties, including the unique strategy of mass conversion to Buddhism. After India’s independence from British rule, untouchable and other oppressed castes became known as the “Scheduled Castes” (SC) since they were listed in a schedule, or annexure, by the first President of India under Article 341 of the Indian Constitution.
In the late Sixties and Seventies, vibrant mass movements of these oppressed castes adopted the name “Dalit”, which derives from the Sanskrit root verb dal, meaning to crack or split. The term Dalit refers to those who have been broken, ground down by those above them in a deliberate way. The word also inherently denies the notions of pollution and karma that were used to justify caste hierarchy and exclusion, and rejects the paternalistic and charitable connotations of the term Harijan, as well as the caste system as a whole. It is interesting to note that the original conceptualization of the “Dalit” identity included all oppressed groups, particularly women.
The Dalit movement thus considered women of even the highest castes as Dalits, because of their oppression.Dalit assertions emerged at different points in different regions of the country. It was a combination of mass movements, powerful writings about caste oppression, and electoral politics, with many parties vying to woo Dalit voters. Strong Dalit Movements took root in several parts of Southern and Western India.Significantly, the National Federation of Dalit Women (NFDW), formed in 1995, has forced women’s movements in India to address the caste question seriously. Dalit feminists have articulated the three-fold oppression of Dalit women as:
1. Dalits demoralized by upper castes;
2. Agricultural workers subject to class domination, mainly at the hands of upper caste land owners;
3. Women facing patriarchal domination at the hands of all men, including men of their own castes. Dalits today make up 16.2% of the total Indian population , but their control over resources of the country is less than 5%. Close to half of the Dalit population lives under the official Indian Poverty Line and even more (62%) are illiterate. In the agriculture sector, most Dalits are landless or near landless agriculture labor. The total household income for Dalits in 1998 was just 68% of the national average. Less than 10% of Dalit households have access to safe drinking water, electricity and toilets. Worst of all, Dalits are daily victims of the worst crimes and atrocities, far outnumbering other sections of society, despite the fact that many attacks go unreported for fear of further retaliation. Between 1992 and 2000, a total of 334,459 cognizable offences against Dalits were registered nationwide with the police. Despite Constitutional guarantees to provide social and political equality since Independence, the practice of discrimination against lower castes and particularly Dalits - is upheld as part of tradition. A reputed feminist historian, Uma Chakravarti, elaborates on the relationship between caste, gender, feminism and politics in her recent work, Gendering Caste.The forms of discrimination may have changed but the basic essence is explained in Dr. Ambedkar’s formulation. Caste is a system of graded inequality in which castes are arranged according to an ascending scale of reverence and a descending scale of contempt... i.e. as you go up the caste system, the power and status of a caste group increases and as you go down the scale the degree of contempt for the caste increases, as these castes have no power, are of low status, and are regarded as dirty and polluting.
Taking inspiration from phule, Baba Saheb Dr. Ambedkar also talked the importance of education. But education must be rationalists and reasonable. Education agitates our mind. It gives us thought about what is good and what is bad. Hence, Education is root of every movement. Agitation on certain thing is uniting factor. It became the famous word of Ambedkar as Educate, agitate and organisional. Ambedkar was one of the tallest intellectuals of the country, a scholar who understood the crookedness of the Shastras. He was an iconoclast and questioned the very essence of Shastras. Ambedkar fought for the dignity of Dalits. The Hindu Varnavyavastha snatched the dignity from Dalits. It degraded labour. He considered the Hindu law book as the source of caste system and discrimination against Dalits in India that he launched a movement against it.
On December 25th 1927, he launched a Satyagraha in Mahad town of Maharastra for the water rights of Dalits and against the Manu Smriti. He burnt Manu Smriti terming it a document of discrimination with a number of his supporters. It was of great courage to do so in the den of violent Chitpawan Brahmins in Maharastra. He fought for the rights of Dalits and had a broader vision for his community. His main concern was to ensure fare participation of Dalits in political life of the country and he succeeded in getting separate electorate for them, which he had to withdraw to save the life of Gandhi in 1932 known as Poona Pact. Then as constitutionalist when he drafted constitution and later worked very hard to ensure fare deal for women in the Hindu Code Bill. In the last phase of his life when Babe Saheb embraced Buddhism, his main concern was providing a political alternative to Dalits.
It is also interesting to note that B.R.Ambedkar was a humanist to the core of his heart. Even when his so called followers have converted him as a caste man or narrowly interpreted his ideologies and perception, Ambedkar could be termed an international humanist. Poor Dalits who consider him his emancipator. Untouchability and its Abolition: Untouchability, as indicated above, has always been considered as social evil. Since long efforts had been made to eradicate it.
Religious and social, reformers like Buddha, Ramanuja, Ramanand, Chitanya, Kabir, Nank, Tukaram and others, made great efforts to eradicate it as far as possible. The BrahmoSamaj and the Arya Samaj, and other social organizations by propaganda, education, and practical measures, did much to secure the social, religious and cultural equality to them. The establishment and consolidation of the British Raj gradually but radically changed the political, administrative, economic and social fabric of India.
The new set up in theory decried the caste, color and creed prejudices and attempted to re-mould the Indian society on the principles of competition and individualism, liberty and equality. It encouraged the dissemination of the rational, liberal and humane ideas of the West. The new polity, the new administrative framework, the new judicial system, the new forms of land tenure and taxation, the new patterns of trade, the new education system, and the network of communications stressed the spirit of equality. A new environment emerged in the society where the process of westernization and sanskritization got brewed up; the consciousness for positive rights was created, the general awareness took a new turn cultimating in farreaching political and sociological changes. Among the depressed classes also rose intellectuals, distinguished of whom was Dr.Ambedkar, who struggled to secure for them the social recognition and human rights. The all India Depressed Association and the All India Depressed Classes Federation, the principal organizations of these classes, initiated a movement to improve their conditions. They aimed at improving their miserable economic conditions, and to spread education among them. They worked to secure for them the rights to draw water from public wells, admission to the schools, and to the use of roads; and enter the public temples.
The Mahad Satyagrah for the right of water led by Dr. Ambedkar was one of the outstanding movements of the untouchables to win equal social rights. All India Harijans Sevak Sangh founded by Gandhi in 1923 started numerous schools for the Harijan including residential vocational schools. The Congress Government after came in power in various States under the Government of India Act. 1935 did useful work for restoring to the depressed classes their rightful place. The Congress Government in Bombay passed, the Bombay Harijan Temple Worship (Removal of Disabilities) Act enabling the trustees to admit the Harijans to the temples. Free education of the Harijans, from the primary class to the university level was introduced by the C.R and Bihar and Congress Governments in their respective Provinces. The rulers of states like Travancore, Indore, Aundh and Devas, took the initiative in throwing open all state temples by proclamation to the untouchables. Aspects of Dalit Movement: The strategies, ideologies, approaches of Dalit movement varied from leader to leader, place to place and time to time. The ‘Dalit consciousness’ came to the fore in different forms and shades. Thus, some Dalit leaders followed the process of’ Sanskritization’ to elevate themselves to the higher position in caste hierarchy. They adopted Brahman manners, including vegetarianism, putting sandalwood paste on forehead, wearing sacred thread, etc. Thus Dalit leaders like Swami Thykkad (Kerala), Pandi Sunder Lai Sagar (UP), MuldasVaishya (Gujarat), Moon Vithoba Raoji Pande (Maharashtra) and others tried to adopt established cultural norms and practices of the higher castes. Imitation of the high caste manners by Dalits was an assertion of their right to equality. Treating Dalits as outside the fourfold Varna system, and describing them as ‘outcastes’ or ‘Panchama’ gave rise to a movement called Adi-Hindu movement. Thus, certain section of Dalit leadership believed that Dalits were the original inhabitants of India and they were not Hindus. That Aryans or Brahmins who invaded this country forcibly imposed untouchability on the original inhabitants of this land. They believed that if Hinduism was discarded, untouchability would automatically come to an end. That Dalits began to call themselves Adi-Andhras in Andhra, Adi- Karnataka in Karnataka, Adi-Dravidas in Tamil Nadu, Adi-Hindus in Uttar Pradesh and Adi-Dharmis in Punjab. Dalits also followed the route of conversion with a purpose of getting rid of untouchability and to develop their moral and financial conditions. A good number of Dalits were converted to Christianity, especially in Kerala. Some of the Dalits, especially in Punjab were converted to Sikhism. They are known as Mazhabis, Namdharis, KabirPanthis etc. Dalits also got converted to Buddhism. Dr. Ambedkar converted to Buddhism along with his millions of followers at Nagpur in 1956. As a protest against Hinduism some of the Dalit leaders founded their own sects or religions. Guru Ghasi Das (MP) founded Satnami Sect. Gurtichand Thakur (Bengal) founded Matua Sect. Ayyan Kali (kerala) founded SJPY (Sadha Jana ParipalanYogam) and Mangu Ram (Panjab) founded AdiDharam. Attempts were also made to organize Dalits politically in order to fight against socioeconomic problems. Dr. Ambedkar formed the independent Labour Party in 1936. He tried to abolish the exploitative Khoti system prevailing in Kokan part of Maharashtra, and Vetti or Maharaki system a wage free hereditary service to the caste Hindus in the local administration. He tried to convince the Government to recruit the Mahars in Military. Ultimately he became successful in 1941 when the first Mahar Regiment was formed. 7
Dr. B. R. Ambedkar & Dalit Movement Dr. Bhimrao Ramji Ambedkar attained ‘Mahaparinirvan’. Born on 14th April 1891, in the military town Mhow, he was the fourteenth child of his parents. Parents from untouchable community viz. Mahar, his father was a retired army officer and headmaster in a military school, and his mother an illiterate woman. Since he was born in an untouchable caste, he was made to sit separate from other students in a corner of the classroom. Despite all kinds of humiliations, he passed his high school in 1908 with flying colours. This was such an exceptional achievement for an untouchable, that he was felicitated in a public meeting. Four years later he graduated in Political Science and Economics from Bombay University. After his graduation he went to the USA to study economics at the Columbia University with a scholarship form the Maharaja of Baroda. Bhimrao remained abroad from 1913 to 1917 and again from 1920 to 1923. In the meantime he had established himself as an eminent intellect. Columbia University had awarded him the PhD for his thesis, which was later published in a book form under the title “The Evolution of Provincial Finance in British India”. But his first published article was “Castes in India – Their Mechanism, Genesis and Development”. In 1920 he went to London where he got his Bar-at-Law at Gray’s Inn for Law. During his sojourn in London from 1920 to 1923, he also completed his thesis titled “The Problem of the Rupee” for which he was awarded the degree of DSc. During the brief stay in India from 1917 to 1920 he first got a job as Military Secretary in Baroda Raja’s office. Here he was ill treated again by the upper caste employees. Even drinking water was not given to him and files were kept at a distance from him. He couldn’t continue in Baroda and later taught at Sydnom College in Bombay and also brought out Marathi weekly whose title was ‘MookNayak’ (meaning ‘Dumb Hero’). He had to face similar experience of untouchability and dishonour even in Bombay. Ambedkar’s Dalit Movement While coming back to India in 1923, Ambedkar again experienced humiliation. The upper caste lawyers would not even have tea at his desk. But his greatest consolation was his clients, whom he treated with liberal mind. His reputation and fame among the Depressed Classes began to grow. He visualised and struggled for a casteless and equal India. By the time he returned to India, Bhimrao had equipped himself fully to wage war against the practice of untouchability. In 1924 he started the organisation ‘BahiskritHitakariniSabha’ (Outcastes Welfare Association), for the upliftment of the untouchables. Ambedkar adopted a two-pronged strategy. First, the eradication of illiteracy and economic uplift of the downtrodden and second, initiating non-violent struggle against visible symbols of casteism, like denial of entry into temples and drawing water from public wells and tanks. The problems of the downtrodden were centuries old and difficult to overcome. Their entry into temples was forbidden. They could not draw water from public wells and ponds. Their admission in schools was prohibited. Ambedkar won two major victories when the High Court of Bombay gave a verdict in favour of the untouchables. On 25th December 1927, he led the Mahad March at the Chowdar Tank at Colaba, near Bombay, to ensure the untouchables right to draw water from the public tank. The marchers were met with the brutality of caste Hindus. He then burnt copies of the ‘Manusmriti’ publicly terming it a document of discrimination with a number of his supporters. It was an act of great courage to do so in the den of violent Chitpawan Brahmins in Maharastra. The two struggles shook the religious foundation on which the caste system is built. This marked the beginning of the anti-caste and ant-priest movement in Maharastra. The temple entry movement launched by Dr. Ambedkar in 1930 at Kalaram temple, Nasik is another landmark in the struggle for human rights and social justice. He was fully convinced that nothing could emancipate the Dalits except through a complete destruction of the caste system. He continued his movement to attack the base of caste system in every possible way. 9 In the meantime, the Simon Commission visited India and Dr. Ambedkar met the commission in Pune in which Ambedkar presented his position on depressed classes. He then followed it up during the round table conference after which Ramsay McDonald? announced ‘Communal Award’ as a result of which several communities including the ‘depressed classes’ were given the right to have separate electorates. Gandhiji wanted to defeat this design and went on a fast unto death to oppose it.
On 24th September 1932, Ambedkar and Gandhiji reached an understanding, which became the famous Poona Pact.
According to this Pact, in addition to the agreement on electoral constituencies, reservations were provided for untouchables in Government jobs and legislative assemblies. The Pact carved out a clear and definite position for the downtrodden on the political scene of the country. For the first time in Indian history it opened up opportunities of education and government service for them and also gave them a right to vote. Dr. Ambedkar attended all the three Round Table Conferences in London and each time, forcefully projected his views in the interest of the ‘untouchable’. He exhorted the downtrodden sections to raise their living standards and to acquire as much political power as possible. He was of the view that there was no future for untouchables in the Hindu religion and they should change their religion if need be. In 1935, he publicly proclaimed,” I was born a Hindu because I had no control over this but I shall not die a Hindu”. It is also interesting to note and which not many Ambedarkites have ventured, that Dr Ambedkar was a socialist to the core of his heart. The disappointing relation with the communist movement stands as the single most unfortunate paradox of contemporary Indian history. It didn’t come out of much of ideological differences, which certainly existed in the form of certain unclear theoretical constructs in the mind of Ambedkar – as from the attitudes of the communist leaders towards the Dalit movement. These leaders in the Trade Unions of Bombay dogmatically regarded the caste question as an unimportant super-structural issue, which would automatically disappear when the revolution takes place. Their orthodox outlook regarding untouchability, caste disparity, discrimination was the basics on which Ambedkar’s entire thesis on Communism was formed. For historical reasons the leadership of this 10 communist movement however came from the middle class educated youth who had to come from upper castes communities, the majority being the Brahmin itself. Ambedkar’s writing on Marxism is heavily reflects his frustration with the Bombay-Communists. This legacy to identify Marxism with its self-appointed practitioners still appears to be followed by Dalits. They cite examples of the parliamentary communist parties to show the lacuna or inapplicability of Marxism. It is necessary for them to understand that Marxism intrinsically solicits criticism but it presupposes its careful study. As Anand Teltumde puts it, although Ambedkar could not discuss the philosophy of communism in the manner it deserved, he was never antagonistically disposed towards it. Rather, he acknowledged the beauty of communist philosophy and said that it was closer to his own. Preoccupied with the mission of liberating the Dalits, he insisted, quite like Marx, that the test of the philosophy was in practice, and opined that if communists worked from that perspective, to win success in India would be far easier than in Russia (Janata, 15 January, 1938). He always regarded communism as the ultimate benchmark to assess his highest ideal – Buddhism. With unpleasant experience with communist dogma and vulgarity of his times, he did sound polemically against Communism and appeared at times even professing its doom but it all underscored his wrath against the dogma that occupied the communist practice. Despite all these aspects of Ambedkar’s disagreements with Communism it is cannot be ruled out that Ambedkar was not a Socialist. He was a socialist of a different kind. One of his prime conflicts with Marx was ‘dictatorship of the proletariats’, which he condemned saying that dictatorship of any kind is unethical. His stood for greater democracy of, by, for and among the oppressed ones in every field. At one stage he was clearly of the opinion that the historical conflict is between the exploited and exploiters and that all. It is with this idea that Dr. Ambedkar, formed the Independent Labour Party, participated in the provincial elections and was elected to the Bombay Legislative Assembly. During these days he stressed the need for abolition of the ‘Jagirdari’ system, pleaded for workers’ Fight to strike and addressed a large number of meetings and conferences in Bombay Presidency. In 1939, during the Second World War, he 11 called upon Indians to join the Army in large numbers to defeat Nazism, which he said, was another name for Fascism.
He stood for the nationalisation of property like land, banks etc. Ambedkar was also an advocate of women’s rights. He struggled for women’s liberation from the caste-entrenched patriarchal system. At the conference of the Depressed Classes Women in Nagpur in 1942, he stated: ‘let every girl who marries stand by her husband, claim to be her husband’s friend and equal, and refuse to be his slave’. He resigned from the Nehru’s cabinet as Law Minister only when the cabinet refused to pass the Women’s Rights Bill. This strongly proves that his idea of Socialism was embedded in his core agenda of freedom for all from all forms of bondage. Dalit Movement after Ambedkar Dalit movement post Ambedkar had witnessed several ups and downs. On one side a categorical awakening among the Dalits had grown beyond all levels of history and on the other it has somewhere stagnant after Ambedkar mainly due to ideological disposition of stagnation. It would be opportune to look at the post Ambedar Dalit movement and do a stock taking of the changes within the Dalit politics to understand the phenomenon.
SubashGatade says that the ups and downs through which the Dalit politics passed through after the death of Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar can be broadly divided into three phases – Rise and Fall of the Republican Party, emergence of the Dalit Panthers and thirdly the growing assertion of Dalits for political power and their consequent refusal to remain satisfied merely with education and job opportunities arising out of the policy of reservation. There is no need to underline the immense potentialities in the phenomenon of Dalit assertion in today’s caste ridden polity. There is no denying the fact that it is a step ahead in the real democratisation of the Indian society and the polity dominated by Brahminical values and traditions despite nearly six decade experiment in electoral democracy. The impressive intervention of BSP under Kanshiram in the national politics underlines this third stage. It is noteworthy that while in the earlier two stages in the post Ambedkar Dalit movement the unfolding Dalit politics in Maharashtra guided its orientation, its role has been increasingly marginalised in the third stage. The success achieved by BSP has certainly encouraged emergence of similar experiments in different parts of the country. At this stage there is another factor that developed among Dalit castes too. These are organising themselves under the banners of their respective caste and subcaste for achieving their rights. Consequently their guns are trained besides the Varna system also on the so-called rich Dalit castes or the creamy layer in them, which they feel, have monopolised a large part of the reserved posts. The Mahar/neo-Buddhists vs. Matang and Charmakar debate in Maharashtra, Mala vs. Madiga in Andhra Pradesh are symptomatic of this rising trend. This propensity is similar in most states where the marginalized Dalits are organising themselves into a movement for castewisecategorisation of reserved seats in educational institutions and jobs etc, which could not avail of the quota for historical reasons, could avail of it. It is indeed ironical that at a time when the issue of Dalit assertion has got acceptance even in the mainstream polity in the 90s a counter tendency has emerged which seem to fracture the new found identity. One could also perceive the whole process as an explosion of identities hitherto suppressed by the hegemonic caste and class structure. In the beginning of the 70s the term Dalit denoted a broad, homogenous fraternity. This is no more the case. If you just say Dalit you are making an incomplete statement. It would be necessary to also specify whether he is a Mala or a Madiga or a Matang or a Charmakar. This process has thrown up new ‘icons’ from among the different castes and the sub–castes as well. This clearly gives a broader picture of the fact that how much the individual caste identity had become more important than the collective one of the 70s. Another aspect that the Dalit movement in the post-Ambedkar era failed to address is that of the direct challenges of communal fascism. Communal-fascism is exploring its way to elaborate its base, activities and action. It appears that building of philanthropic and religious institutions like Saraswati Sishu Mandir, Vanvasi Kalyan Ashram, Sanghs, Deen Dayal Shodh Sansthan, Sanskriti Bihar, Vikas Bharit, Gayatri Pariwar, Brahmakumari Samaj, etc. are some of the strategies adopted to create inroads among the Dalits & Adivasis. Another strategy applied is the steady and systematic capturing of the community panchayats and organisations. The best 13 example of this is Gujarat where the communal fascists have got their stranglehold and successfully executed the carnage against the Muslims by communalizing Dalits and Adivasis. Resultant is the perpetual assurance of control over these communities plus a bonus of sustaining casteism. Expansion of caste fascism has so far and is disintegrating the Dalit ideology, theology, and identity and intimidated their very existence. Apparently this ruptures the community, deteriorates the noble notions of sharing, caring and co-operation, expansion of patriarchy and battered the inkling of community ownership over resources. Let us not forget Ambedkar was the greatest fighter against religious fascism and historical caste fascism. Thirdly Dalit movement neither understand the politics of imperialist globalization not address it in any form. Rather than entering the debate in a critical way from the subaltern perspective, it remained passive to the process of globalisation, and many times joined the sustaining party. Globalization in India marked through Economic Reforms launched in July 1991 in India were in nature of a crisis management response to the economic and political crises that erupted in early 90s. The blue print for the Reforms was provided by the combination of macroeconomic stabilization and structural adjustment programme of International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank respectively, which had been adopted by many countries before in similar situations. This had quantitative and qualitative adversities on food security, employment, inflation, poverty alleviation schemes as well as social security. For example reservation in the educational institutions and the financial assistance in the form of scholarships and freeships had gone out of context, with the advent of education as an industry. Without education, all constitutional safeguards including the reservation in services would be futile. The Reforms have already resulted in freezing the grants to many institutions and in stagnating, if not lowering, the expenditure on education. The free market ethos has entered the educational sphere in a big way. Commercialization of education is no more a mere rhetoric; it is now the established fact. Commercial institutions offering specialised education signifying the essential input from utilitarian viewpoint have come up in a big way from cities to small towns. 14 It is the same way that the employment sector had its impact due to the thus called ‘economic reforms’. Howsoever, unsatisfactory the results of the implementation of reservation in employment may be, its importance from the Dalit viewpoint cannot be under emphasised. As could be evidenced by the organised private sector, where it would be difficult to find a Dalit employee (save of course in scavenging and lowliest jobs), without reservations Dalits would have been totally doomed.
The importance of reservations thus could only be assessed in relation to situations where they do not exist. Whatever be their defects and deficiencies, they have given certain economic means of livelihood and some social prestige to the sons and daughters of over 1.5 million landless labourers. Whether they get real power or not, over 50,000 Dalits could enter the sphere of bureaucratic authority with the help of reservations. Besides these tangible benefits promised by the policy, it has instilled a hope in Dalit community. This hope predominantly manifests in the form of spread of education among them. Their emotional bond with the nation and its Constitution despite heaps of injustice and ignominy they bear every moment of their life may also be significantly attributable to the Reservation Policy. The selling out the PSU, the disinvestment of PSUs, promotion of privatisation, the letting off of land to the corporates, etc. had crafted formulae of neo-colonisation. This is high time that Dalit leadership across the country enters this debate in a big way, which it had until now failed to do. Coming back to Ambedkar, he was not dogmatic but pragmatic. He had rightly confronted the forces of fascism, communalism and capitalism. He believed that any system that promotes unequal human relationships should not thrive. Unfortunately, his socio-economical writings were kept aside while his writings on religion and caste system of 30s were used more by the representatives of the movement, thus clearly alienating a vast masses of the unorganisedlabour away from the mainstream Ambedkarite movement. That is why today, despite globalisation resulting in wars and multiple conflicts, yet we Dalits simply remain as silent spectators, just waiting for our turn of reservation. Dalits are confined to use the Dalit card for just reservation in education and employment, nothing else. The forth barrier of the post Ambedkar Dalit movement is the emergence of a new sect of Dalit elite. This Dalit elite whom Baba Saheb had opposed tooth and nail in his lifetime had become the SarkariBabuSahab clan, who not only take the benefits of reservations but also conveniently forget the community once they get there. It is also observed that while this sect functions throughout with the brand ‘Dalit’, also engage in all the corrupt practices that was once the cornerstone of Brahministic culture and ethics. It is interesting that Ambedkar fought for the rights of Dalits and had a broader vision, which couldn’t be inculcated by post–AmbedkarAmbedkarites. He wanted to give his people an identity so that they get out of Varna System, but here what we see is the stimulation of the culture of varna and caste within the Dalit communities. Despite the leaps and bounds, the Dalit movement made in Indian context, the failure of Ambedkarite movement to address the questions of fascism, communalism, globalisation, imperialism and the most importantly patriarchy in relation with casteism has altogether dragged the Dalit movement to the crossroad in the present context. And then any pragmatic and progressive movement cannot stand on the selective criticism of a few religious texts or political ideologies and conveniently keeping quiet on other questions. A movement cannot be built on superfluous philosophy of negativism. It has to provide its own alternative to the people. To quote V.B. Rawat, Dalits have their own distinct identity and culture and those claiming to provide them an alternative God really misquote Ambedkar and kill their revolutionary spirit as suggested by many Dalit activists. Ambedkar’s popularity among the Dalits is not due to the corrupt Dalits who use all tactics to grab money and power but the poor Dalits who consider him as the liberator. There are many reasons for the same. Ambedkar is a uniting factor for Dalits. No doubt that he has become an icon of Dalits from North to South from Hindi heartland to the southern Tamilnadu. However he himself was against ‘hero worship’ of any time. He believed in the exploration of knowledge on historical and scientific basis. This has to be a regular, rather ongoing, process which is only possible by addressing the problems of the oppressed and exploited masses. The undeniable fact is the Ambedkar is mainly known among the working class Dalits. The only way to salute Bhimrao is by truly standing against oppressive structure, for equality and justice. Bhimrao Ramji Ambedkar, better known as B. R. Ambedkar, and to the many whom he served throughout his life, as Babasheb, one of the singular figures of the Indian revolution was born on this day in 1891. While an untouchable (the term in general use has shifted to “dalit,” largely led by Ambedkar himself) his father, like his grandfather before, served in the British Army, and because of that he had access to an education. Nonetheless, the indignities he suffered ranging from not being allowed to sit inside the classroom, to having to sit on a gunny sack he brought with him to and from school so as not to contaminate the ground, to only having access to water at school if a paid servant was there to pour the water that the boy would otherwise not be allowed to touch again because his touch would contaminate it for everyone else, marked his understanding of many things. The boy was brilliant. He graduated from Bombay University, and then won a scholarship to Columbia, where he earned his first doctorate. From there he went on to earn a law degree and a second doctorate at the London School of Economics before turning his attention to what would become his life work. In 1924 he established the BahishkritHitkarainiSabha, the Outcastes Welfare Association. Three years later he led a mass march at the Chowder Tank in Colaba, outside Bombay, demanding that untouchables have the right to draw water. As civil rights leaders Dr Ambedkar and Mohandas Gandhi worked in an uneasy alliance. While Ambedkar was committed to independence, he had little trust of the dominant culture, and continued to press hard on behalf of the dalit communities. When Gandhi and others introduced the term “harijans,” meaning “people of God,” for the untouchables, rather than their own preferred term “dalit,” Ambedkar opposed having the term foisted upon them as one more example of being marginalized. He did quip that if his people were the children of God, then the upper casts would all be the children of monsters. When India achieved independence, Dr Ambedkar was appointed India’s first law minister, basically India’s first attorney general. But, facing endless frustrations at his attempts to advance civil rights on behalf of all marginalized people, as a last straw, when his attempt to enshrine gender equality in laws concerning marriage and inheritance were frustrated, he resigned his office.
Chapter 3 Participation of Dalit Women in the Movement
One of the major landmarks of Dalit Movement led by Dr. B.R. Ambedkar had been the huge participation of women and their articulation for political, social and economic rights for women in general and depressed class women in particular. Dr. Ambedkar was always concerned about women empowerment. In a letter to his father’s friend, young Dr. Ambedkar, during his studies at New York, said – We shall see better days soon and our progress will be greatly accelerated if male education is persuaded side by side with female education…” And Dalit women listened to the advice and participated in the Dalit’s struggle for equal rights. Further, Dr. Ambedkar believed said that I am a great believer in women’s organization. I know that what they can do to improve the condition of the society if they are convinced. In the eradication of social evils, they have rendered great services. I will testify to that from my own experience. Ever since I began to work among the depressed classes, I made it a point to carry women along with men. I strongly believe in the movements run by women. If they are truly taken into confidence, they may change the present picture of a society which is very miserable. In past, they have played a significant role in improving the condition of weaker section and classes. Don’t forget some of our great Dalit women leaders. As Babasaheb said, “They cannot make history who forgets History.” It is not true that our women had not taken active part so far in any movement or in our social movement. Dalit Women Leaders participated with BabasahebAmbedkar. RamabaiAmbedkar In January 1928, a women’s association was founded in Bombay with RamabaiAmbedkar, Dr. Ambedkar’s wife, as its president.They have among themMrs. AnjinibaiDeshbhratar who simply for the help of thier girls started and continued at her own cost a free boarding house at Nagpur for the Depressed Classes 19 Girl students. This she did out of the savings from the small pay earned by her husband who is employed as a clerk. Similarly, in the Satyagraha on Kalaram temple and Chavdar tank, Dalit women even from distant parts of Hyderabad volunteered to take part. Dr. Ambedkar believed in the strength of women and their role in the process of social reform. In the Kalram Temple entry Satyagraha at Nasik in 1930, five hundred women participated and many of them were arrested along with men and ill-treated in jails. The historic Mahad Satyagraha witnessed participation of three hundred women along with their male counterparts. Mrs. GitabaiGaikwad The work of Mrs. Gitabai Gaikwad is indescribable. Just as the sky cannot be lighted by one solitary star, so our great movement cannot achieve success by the deed of one Mrs. Gitabai. Her deeds show us the way and guide us in our path towards the right passage and our object.On 20th July 1942, The All India Depressed Classes Women Conference was organized and 25,000 women attended that conference.Let us all unite, march forward in the directions pointed out to us and achieve our rights. In the meanwhile we must continue our fight for the rights of the Depressed Classes unabated and with the help of our sisters, uneducated though they might be who are ever ready to lay down their lives under the leadership of our great leader Dr. Ambedkar, said Mrs. Kirtibai Patil, Chairman of the Reception Committee of the All India Depressed Classes Women Conference in her speech July 20, 1942, Nagpur. Sulochanabai Dongre, SulochanabaiDongre, President of All India Depressed Classes Women Conference. While addressing the participants, SulochanabaiDongre said, “One important question is of birth control. In this respect, educated women can be successful because they can realize the evils of it. It is no use multiplying sickly, illfed and illiterate children at the cost of mother’s health. To stop this evil every woman should consider this question seriously and should act soon. To solve this problem female education on an extensive scale is essential”.
Women Participated in Dalit Movement
In fact, the clear departure of Dalit feminism from the mainstream nationalist women’s movement occurred right at the very beginning. At the AIWC conference held in 1937, Hindu women like Jaibai Choudhuri had insulted the Dalit women by arranging separate seating for them at meals. In retaliation to that “shameful and despicable behaviour” of the caste Hindu women, the Ramabai Ambedkar Women’s Sanghwas formed on January 1, 1938. The vexed relationship between Gandhian nationalism and Ambedkar’s reforms came to the forefront during such critical moments. Ramabai Ambedkar who was hailed for “her goodness of heart, her nobility of mind, and her purity of heart” by no less than Ambedkar himself, RadhabaiKamble whose speeches inspired the labour meets in Vidharba, Sulochanabai Dongre, whose presence at public meetings was awe-inspiring, Tulsabai Bansode, who sang songs and worked at the hand press with her husband, Anjanibai Deshbhratar who organised untouchable girl students in 1936, the three sisters Geetabai, Seetabai and Ramabai who worked tirelessly at home and the movement, Meenambal Shivraj who advocated the role of education powerfully, Mukta Sarvagaud who strongly advocated the role of personal hygiene, Shantabai Dani who travelled as the sole woman along with male activists, Shantabai Sarode who was a wrestler and arbitrated disputes in her area and the many women who converted to Buddhism present us with an amazing range of women who actively engaged themselves in the movement and took themselves seriously.
First Vaidik Marriage of Mahar Caste on 21/06/1929 All India Dalit Women Council 1942 Nagpur ( Dr. BabasahebAmbedkar, RadhabaiKamble, KirtibaiPatil, SulochanaDongare, D. G. Jadhav, etc.)
Dalit Women Welcome Dr. BabasahebAmbedkar after become a Labour Minister, Mumbai in 1942
Delhi BoudhyaMahasabha Rally 1957
Conclusion
One of the main think of Dalit Movement led by Dr. B.R. Ambedkar had been the huge participation of women and their articulation for political, social and economic rights for women in general and depressed class women in particular. Dr. Ambedkar was always concerned about women empowerment. Ambedkar’s social and educational thought remains surprisingly neglected in Indian educational discourse. Education was assigned a revolutionary role in Ambedkar’s conception of social progress and in his vision of a just and equal society. It was identified as a key instrument of liberation from oppressive structures of Hindu castepatriarchy as well as of reconstruction of a new social order. Women were integral to this visionary egalitarianism and were consciously mobilised as political actors in the dalit liberation movement led by Ambedkar in the early decades of the twentieth century. This article explores the interface between Ambedkar’s ideologies of liberation and education, on the one hand, and dalit women’s thoughts and perspectives, on the other hand. It seeks to incorporate gender in the understanding of the historical processes of social change. It argues that an emancipatory discourse on gender was an important component of Ambedkar’s philosophy of social democratic liberalism and permitted women an authentic identification with its underlying principles with a view to achieving a full and enlightened citizenship. The research shows how the imbibing of Ambedkar’s thought and participation in his movement constituted the bedrock of dalit women’s political education. The arena of formal education was a significant focus of women’s political involvement, and they played foundational roles as political educators and educational activists. Dalit women redefined ideals of both womanhood and educational purpose in terms of counterhegemonic reconstructions of nation, society and community, and articulated new subject positions grounded in them.
Reference
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2. Ravsaheb Kasbe, “Dr. Ambedkar Ani Bhartiya Rajyaghatna”, Suman Prakashan, Nagpur 3. Minakshi Moon, “Phule ambedkari Stri Chalval”, Samata Prakashan, Nagpur, 2011
4. Phadke Y. D., “Ambedkari Chalval”, Shri Vidya Prakashan, Pune, 2007
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7. Kamble Zumberlal, “Mahadcha Muktisangram”, Rajnansa Prakashan, Pune, 1977
8. Manisha Patankar, “ Lokrajya” Mahiti nai Jansamparka Mahasanchalnaya, Mumbai, 2006 9. Khairmode Changdev, “Dr. Bhimrao Ramji Ambedkar” Vol-2, Sugava Prakashan, Pune, 1958
10.Khairmode Changdev, “Dr. Bhimrao Ramji Ambedkar” Vol-7, Sugava Prakasahan, Pune, 1985
11.Dr. Gathal S. S., “Ambedkari Chalvalicha Itihas” Kailas Publications, Aurangabad 12.Ravsaheb Kasabe, “Dalit Chalvalichi Watchal”, Keshavgore Smarak Trust Prakashan, Mumbai, 1993
13.Bhole B. L. , “Sandhrabha Dalit Chalvalicha”, Bajaj Publications, Amravati, 2008 14.Bhole B. L. , “Adhunik Bhartatil Rajkiya Vichar”, Pimplapure & Comp Publications, Nagpur, Ed.-2, 2003
15.Pratima Pardesi, Saroj Kamble, “Jativyavstha Ani Strimukti”, Krantisingh Nana Patil Akadmi, Ahamadnagar, Ed-2, 2007
16.Dr. Deepa Sravasti, “Striswatantrya Ani Buddha-Phule, Ambedkar”, NagNalanda Prakashan, Ed-2, 2015
17.Dr. Shobha Naik, “Bhartiya Sandharbhatun Strivad, Streewadi Samiksha ani Upayojan”, Lokwangmaya graham, Mumbai, 2007
18.Jyoti Lanjewar, “Bhartiya Samaj Ani Stree”, Sugava Prakashan, Pune, 2005
19.Kairmode C. B., “Dr. Ambedkar Ani Hindu Codbill”, Sugava Prakashan, Pune, 1987
20. http://velivada.com/2017/06/21/great-dalit-women-leaders-participation-dalitsstruggle/ 21. http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/097318491200900206?journalCo de=ceda
16th June , Dr. Ambedkar Established the ‘Bombay State Inferior Village Watandar
Association’Traditionally, the Mahars (an earstwhile untouchable caste) were servants to all the village, with a number of responsibilities – they brought wood to the burial grounds, carried off dead animals and were expected to eat the flesh of the cattle carcasses, took messages to other villages, cared for the horses of traveling government officials, mended the village wall, acted as village watchmen, and served the village headman as town criers. In this capacity they were watandars (leaseholders) and so held some land, but they were never primarily agriculturists. This was serfdom – forced labor bound to a hereditary plot of land owned by a lord in return for protection and the right to work on fields.
16 June 1956: Dr. Ambedkar established the ‘Bombay State Inferior Village Watandar Association’ under his own chairmanship.
Dr. Ambedkar was the “first legislator in India to introduce a bill for the abolition of the serfdom of agricultural tenants”. He wanted to solve the problem of Mahar Watans by all legislative and constitutional means. He introduced a bill in Poona session of Bombay Legislative Council in 1937 (17 September) to abolish the Mahar Watan for which he had been agitating since 1927. However later he had to withdraw the billas it was tampered beyond recognition.
Clarifying the objectives of the Association that he formed on 16 June 1956, Dr. Ambedkar stated that if the Government did not solve the problem amicably, then expressed his desire to prosecute the Government. When the question of giving land to Watandar came up, the villagers opposed it. They thought the problem of their cattle more important than the problem of Mahar Watandar. Dr. Ambedkar said that Government accepted the principle of “land to tiller” but was not ready to include Government lands under the jurisdiction of the Act. He believed that the Watan Act and the Watan system were contrary to the provision of the constitution of India. He opined that a writ petition should be filed in the High Court in this matter and if it was unsuccessful, it must be taken to the Supreme Court. In a letter to Gaekwad, he wrote clearly that he did not want to turn the agitation against Watan system into Satyagraha due to war emergency. When Dr. Ambedkar became the member of Viceroy’s Executive Council, he promised to withdraw the movement because he thought that he might be able to serve the cause better as a member of Viceroy’s Executive Council than to conduct a struggle.
Subsequently, Mahar Watan was abolished under the Bombay Inferior Village Watan Abolition Act 1959.
Dalit Movement in India
By Puja Mondal
Dalit means all those people of different castes and sub-castes among the depressed classes who were traditionally subjected to invidious discriminations on grounds of untouchability, and categorized as the untouchables, downtrodden, exterior classes, depressed classes or Scheduled Castes.
“The organizational or institutional efforts made by Dalit leaders for the liberation of the downtrodden masses could be termed as Dalit movement. It is a movement of protest against untouchability, casteism and superstitions. It aims at the uplift of the Dalits to the level of non -Dalits.”
“Negatively speaking, it stands for rejection of the old traditional Hindu social order based on untouchability, socioeconomic inequality casteism, unscientific and irrational religious beliefs and customary servitude.
Positively speaking, it stands for acceptance of a new social order based on equality, liberty, and social justice, scientific and rational religious or moral principles; and social, economic, cultural and political development of the Dalit.” It is the movement to regain self-respect and equal human status in the society.
It is the result of the consciousness of Dalits of their own identity as human beings, equally equipped with physical and mental capacities as other human beings, and equally entitled to enjoy all the human rights “without any infringement, abridgement or limitations.”
Untouchability and its Eradication:
Untouchability, as indicated above, has always been considered as social evil. Since long efforts had been made to eradicate it. Religious and social, reformers like Buddha, Ramanuja, Ramanand, Chitanya, Kabir, Nank, Tukaram and others, made great efforts to eradicate it as far as possible.
The Brahmo Samaj and the Arya Samaj, and other social organizations by propaganda, education, and practical measures, did much to secure the social, religious and cultural equality to them.
The establishment and consolidation of the British Raj gradually but radically changed the political, administrative, economic and social fabric of India. The new set up in theory decried the caste, color and creed prejudices and attempted to re-mould the Indian society on the principles of competition and individualism, liberty and equality. It encouraged the dissemination of the rational, liberal and humane ideas of the West.
The new polity, the new administrative framework, the new judicial system, the new forms of land tenure and taxation, the new patterns of trade, the new education system, and the network of communications stressed the spirit of equality. A new environment emerged in the society where the process of westernization and sanskritization got brewed up; the consciousness for positive rights was created, the general awareness took a new turn cultimating in farreaching political and sociological changes.
Among the depressed classes also rose intellectuals, distinguished of whom was Dr.Ambedkar, who struggled to secure for them the social recognition and human rights. The all India Depressed Association and the All India Depressed Classes Federation, the principal organizations of these classes, initiated a movement to improve their conditions.
They aimed at improving their miserable economic conditions, and to spread education among them. They worked to secure for them the rights to draw water from public wells, admission to the schools, and to the use of roads; and enter the public temples. The Mahad Satyagrah for the right of water led by Dr. Ambedkar was one of the outstanding movements of the untouchables to win equal social rights.
All India Harijans Sevak Sangh founded by Gandhi in 1923 started numerous schools for the Harijan including residential vocational schools. The Congress Government after came in power in various States under the Government of India Act. 1935 did useful work for restoring to the depressed classes their rightful place. The Congress Government in Bombay passed, the Bombay Harijan Temple Worship (Removal of Disabilities) Act enabling the trustees to admit the Harijans to the temples.
Free education of the Harijans, from the primary class to the university level was introduced by the C.R and Bihar and Congress Governments in their respective Provinces. The rulers of states like Travancore, Indore, Aundh and Devas, took the initiative in throwing open all state temples by proclamation to the untouchables.
To enforce the provisions of law more strictly, the Untouchability (Offences) Act (1955) was passed to fix penalties for not observing the law. Besides, to enable the Harijans to overcome their backwardness, they were provided with special educational facilities. The Union and the State Governments now spend huge sums of money on their advancement and on projects to remove untouchability. In consequence of these provisions; there has come about a distinct change in the status of Harijans. There are now thousands of Harijans working in the central and State Governments.
They hold high positions in the administration. At selection levels too, special consideration is shown to the Harijan candidates. They now actively take to the profession of Law, Medicine and Engineering.
In politics too they have gained a balancing position. They have the benefit of the reservations of seats in all elected bodies from the village panchayat to Union Parliament. They are now, not only in a position of sway the local balance of power one way or the other but also affect the political developments, at the centre.
Dynamics of Dalit Movement
The strategies, ideologies, approaches of Dalit movement varied from leader to leader, place to place and time to time. The ‘Dalit consciousness’ came to the fore in different forms and shades. Thus, some Dalit leaders followed the process of’ Sanskritization’ to elevate themselves to the higher position in caste hierarchy.
They adopted Brahman manners, including vegetarianism, putting sandalwood paste on forehead, wearing sacred thread, etc. Thus Dalit leaders like Swami Thykkad (Kerala), Pandi Sunder Lai Sagar (UP), Muldas Vaishya (Gujarat), Moon Vithoba Raoji Pande (Maharashtra) and others tried to adopt established cultural norms and practices of the higher castes.
Imitation of the high caste manners by Dalits was an assertion of their right to equality. Treating Dalits as outside the fourfold Varna system, and describing them as ‘outcastes’ or ‘Panchama’ gave rise to a movement called Adi-Hindu movement. Thus, certain section of Dalit leadership believed that Dalits were the original inhabitants of India and they were not Hindus. That Aryans or Brahmins who invaded this country forcibly imposed untouchability on the original inhabitants of this land.
They believed that if Hinduism was discarded, untouchability would automatically come to an end. That Dalits began to call themselves Adi-Andhras in Andhra, Adi- Karnataka in Karnataka, Adi-Dravidas in Tamil Nadu, Adi-Hindus in Uttar Pradesh and Adi-Dharmis in Punjab. Dalits also followed the route of conversion with a purpose of getting rid of untouchability and to develop their moral and financial conditions. A good number of Dalits were converted to Christianity, especially in Kerala. Some of the Dalits, especially in Punjab were converted to Sikhism.
They are known as Mazhabis, Namdharis, Kabir Panthis etc. Dalits also got converted to Buddhism. Dr. Ambedkar converted to Buddhism along with his millions of followers at Nagpur in 1956. As a protest against Hinduism some of the Dalit leaders founded their own sects or religions. Guru Ghasi Das (MP) founded Satnami Sect. Gurtichand Thakur (Bengal) founded Matua Sect. Ayyan Kali (kerala) founded SJPY (Sadha Jana Paripalan Yogam) and Mangu Ram (Panjab) founded Adi Dharam.
Attempts were also made to organize Dalits politically in order to fight against socioeconomic problems. Dr. Ambedkar formed the independent Labour Party in 1936. He tried to abolish the exploitative Khoti system prevailing in Kokan part of Maharashtra, and Vetti or Maharaki system a wage free hereditary service to the caste Hindus in the local administration. He tried to convince the Government to recruit the Mahars in Military. Ultimately he became successful in 1941 when the first Mahar Regiment was formed.
With the growing process of democratization. Dr. Ambedkar demanded adequate representation for Dalits in the legislatures and in the administration. Government of India Act, 1919, provided for one seat to the depressed classes in the central Legislative Assembly. In 1932, British Government headed by Ramsoy Macdonald announced the ‘Communal Award’.
The award envisaged separate electorate for the Depressed Classes. Mahatma Gandhi went on a historic fast in protest against Communal Award especially in respect of depressed classes. The issue was settled by famous Poona Pact, September 1932. It provided for reservation of seats for depressed classes out of general electorates sets. The Constitution of India now provides ‘for reservation of seats for Scheduled Castes in proportion to their population in Rajya Sabha and Lok Sabha under Article 330 and 332.
Dalit Buddhist movement
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Dalit Buddhist movement (also known as Neo-Buddhist movement) is a socio-political movement by Dalits in India started by B. R. Ambedkar. It radically re-interpreted Buddhism and created a new school of Buddhism called Navayana. The movement has sought to be a socially and politically engaged form of Buddhism.
The movement was launched in 1956 by Ambedkar when nearly half a million Dalits – formerly untouchables – joined him and converted to his Navayana Buddhism. It rejected Hinduism, challenged the caste system and promoted the rights of the Dalit community. The movement also rejected the teachings of traditional Theravada, Mahayana and Vajrayana sects of Buddhism, and took an oath to pursue a new form of engaged Buddhism as taught by Ambedkar.
History
Buddhism originated in ancient India and grew after Ashoka adopted it. By the 2nd century CE, Buddhism was widespread in India and had expanded outside of India into Central Asia, East Asia and parts of Southeast Asia. During the Middle Ages, Buddhism slowly declined in India, while it vanished from Persia and Central Asia as Islam became the state religion.
According to Randall Collins, Buddhism was already declining in India by the 12th century, but with the pillage by Muslim invaders it nearly became extinct in India.In the 13th century, states Craig Lockard, Buddhist monks in India escaped to Tibet to escape Islamic persecution; while the monks in western India, states Peter Harvey, escaped persecution by moving to south Indian Hindu kingdoms that were able to resist the Muslim power.
Efforts to revive Buddhism in India began in the 19th-century, such as with the efforts of Sri Lankan Buddhist leader Anagarika Dharmapala who founded the Maha Bodhi Society.The Maha Bodhi Society, according to Bhagwan Das, was not a Dalit movement however, because it mainly attracted upper-caste Hindus to Buddhism.
Northern India
Two early Dalit movements that rejected Hinduism were launched by Swami Achhutanand Harihar in Uttar Pradesh and Babu Mangu Ram in Punjab. These were called Adi Dharma movements.
Achhutanand was born in an untouchable family, joined the Arya Samaj suddhi reform movement, worked there for about eight years (1905-1912), felt untouchability was being practiced in Arya Samaj in subtle ways, left it and launched Bharitiya Achhut Mahasabha as a socio-political movement. Achhutanand began spreading his ideas by publishing the Adi-Hindu magazine, and called Dalits to a return to Adi-Dharma as the original religion of Indians. Achhutanand formulated his philosophy on the basis of a shared cultural and ethnic identity, presenting it to an audience beyond the Dalits and including tribal societies as well. He opposed the non-cooperation movement of Mahatma Gandhi, his fasts and Indian National Congress, stating that the Brahmins were "as foreign to India as were the British", according to Anand Teltumbde.
Babu Mangu Ram was also born in an untouchable family of Punjab with a flourishing leather trade. Mangu Ram arrived in the United States in 1909, at age 23 and worked in California. There he joined the Ghadar Party, smuggling weapons from California to India to oppose the British rule.In 1925, he shifted his focus to Dalit freedom, for which he launched the "Ad Dharm" movement as well as Adi-Danka weekly newspaper to spread his ideas. His religious movement failed to accomplish much, states Teltumbde, and Mangu Ram later joined the Ambedkar movement.
In 1914, Prakash was ordained Bodhanand Mahastavir in Calcutta, and began preaching Buddhism in Lucknow. He founded the Bharatiye Buddh Samiti in 1916, and set up a vihara in 1928.
Southern India
In 1898, Pandit Iyothee Thass founded the Sakya Buddhist Society, also known as Indian Buddhist Association, in Tamil Nadu.He presented Buddhism as a religious alternative for the Dalits. Thass' efforts created a broad movement amongst Tamil Dalits in South India till the 1950s. The first president of the Indian Buddhist Association was Paul Carus.The Indian Buddhist Association, unlike the Dalit movement led by Ambedkar, adopted the Theravada Buddhism tradition found in Sri Lanka, where Thass had received his training and initiation in Buddhism.
B. R. Ambedkar
Ambedkar delivering a speech to a rally at Yeola, Nashik, on 13 October 1935
Ambedkar was an Indian leader, influential during the colonial era and post-independence period of India. He belonged to a Dalit community, traditionally the most oppressed and marginalized group in Indian society. He was the fourteenth child in an impoverished Maharashtra Dalit family, who studied abroad, returned to India in the 1920s and joined the political movement. His focus was social and political rights of the Dalits.
During 1931–32, the Mahatma Gandhi led Indian independence movement held discussions with the British government over the Round Table Conferences. They sought constitutional reforms as a preparation to the end of colonial British rule, and begin the self-rule by Indians. The British side sought reforms that would keep the Indian subcontinent as a colony. The British negotiators proposed constitutional reforms on a British Dominion model that established separate electorates based on religious and social divisions. They invited Indian religious leaders, such as Muslims and Sikhs, to press their demands along religious lines, as well as B. R. Ambedkar as the representative leader of the untouchables. Gandhi vehemently opposed a constitution that enshrined rights or representations based on communal divisions, because he feared that it would not bring people together but divide them, perpetuate their status and divert the attention from India's struggle to end the colonial rule.
After Gandhi returned from Second Round Table conference, he started a new satyagraha. He was immediately arrested and imprisoned at the Yerwada Jail, Pune. While he was in prison, the British government enacted a new law that granted untouchables a separate electorate. It came to be known as the Communal Award.In protest, Gandhi started fast-unto-death, while he was held in prison. The resulting public outcry forced the government, in consultations with Ambedkar, to replace the Communal Award with a compromise Poona Pact.
Ambedkar accepted the Poona Pact under public pressure, but disagreed with Gandhi and his political methods. He dismissed Gandhi's ideas as loved by "blind Hindu devotees", primitive, influenced by spurious brew of Tolstoy and Ruskin, and "there is always some simpleton to preach them".
Ambedkar concluded that Dalits must leave Hinduism and convert to another religion, and announced his intent to leave Hinduism in 1935. He considered Islam, Christianity, Sikhism, Zoroastrianism and Buddhism. Ambedkar was approached by various leaders of different denominations and faiths. On 22 May 1936, an "All Religious Conference" was held at Lucknow. It was attended by prominent Dalit leaders including Jagjivan Ram, though Ambedkar could not attend it. At the conference, Muslim, Christian, Sikh, and Buddhist representatives presented the tenets of their respective religions in an effort to win over Dalits. Ambedkar rejected the other religions and chose Buddhism. However, Ambedkar remained a Hindu for next 20 years, studied then re-interpreted Buddhism, and adopted Neo-Buddhism or Navayana few weeks before his death.
The Italian Buddhist monk Lokanatha visited Ambedkar's residence at Dadar on 10 June 1936. Later in an interview to the press, Lokanatha said that Ambedkar was impressed with Buddhism.
Navayana Buddhism
According to Ambedkar, several of the core beliefs and doctrines of traditional Buddhist traditions such as Four Noble Truths and Anatta were flawed and pessimistic, and may have been inserted into the Buddhist scriptures by wrong headed Buddhist monks of a later era. These should not be considered as Buddha's teachings in Ambedkar's view. Other foundational concepts of Buddhism such as Karma and Rebirth were considered by Ambedkar as superstitions.
Navayana as formulated by Ambedkar and at the root of Dalit Buddhist movement abandons mainstream traditional Buddhist practices and precepts such as the institution of monk after renunciation, ideas such as karma, rebirth in afterlife, samsara, meditation, nirvana and Four Noble Truths.Ambedkar's new sect of Buddhism rejected these ideas and re-interpreted the Buddha's religion in terms of class struggle and social equality.
Ambedkar called his version of Buddhism Navayana or Neo-Buddhism. His book, The Buddha and His Dhamma is the holy book of Navayana and Dalit Buddhists. According to Junghare, for the followers of Navyana, Ambedkar has become a deity and he is worshipped in its practice.
Ambedkar's conversion
Ambedkar delivering speech during conversion, Nagpur, 14 October 1956
After publishing a series of books and articles arguing that Buddhism was the only way for the Untouchables to gain equality, Ambedkar publicly converted on 14 October 1956, at Deekshabhoomi, Nagpur, over 20 years after he declared his intent to convert. He converted approximately half a million Dalit / Bahujan people to his Neo-Buddhism movement.
The conversion ceremony was attended by Medharathi, his main disciple Bhoj Dev Mudit, and Mahastvir Bodhanand's Sri Lankan successor, Bhante Pragyanand. Ambedkar asked Dalits not to get entangled in the existing branches of Buddhism (Theravada, Mahayana and Vajrayana), and called his version Navayana or 'Neo-Buddhism'. Ambedkar would die less than two months later, just after finishing his definitive work on Buddhism.
Many Dalits employ the term "Ambedkar(ite) Buddhism" to designate the Buddhist movement, which started with Ambedkar's conversion. Many converted people call themselves "-Bauddha" i.e. Buddhists.
Twenty-two vows of Ambedkar
Inscription of 22 vows at Deekshabhoomi, Nagpur
After receiving ordination, Ambedkar gave dhamma diksha to his followers. The ceremony included 22 vows given to all new converts after Three Jewels and Five Precepts. On 14 October 1956 at Nagpur, Ambedkar performed another mass religious conversion ceremony at Chandrapur.
He prescribed 22 vows to his followers:
I shall have no faith in Brahma, Vishnu and Maheshwara, nor shall I worship them.
I shall have no faith in Rama and Krishna, who are believed to be incarnation of God, nor shall I worship them.
I shall have no faith in Gauri, Ganapati and other gods and goddesses of Hindus, nor shall I worship them.
I do not believe in the incarnation of God.
I do not and shall not believe that Lord Buddha was the incarnation of Vishnu. I believe this to be sheer madness and false propaganda.
I shall not perform Shraddha nor shall I give pind.
I shall not act in a manner violating the principles and teachings of the Buddha.
I shall not allow any ceremonies to be performed by Brahmins.
I shall believe in the equality of man.
I shall endeavour to establish equality.
I shall follow the Noble Eightfold Path of the Buddha.
I shall follow the ten paramitas prescribed by the Buddha.
I shall have compassion and loving-kindness for all living beings and protect them.
I shall not steal.
I shall not tell lies.
I shall not commit carnal sins.
I shall not take intoxicants like liquor, drugs, etc.
(The previous four proscriptive vows [#14–17] are from the Five Precepts.)
I shall endeavour to follow the Noble Eightfold Path and practice compassion and loving-kindness in everyday life.
I renounce Hinduism, which disfavors humanity and impedes the advancement and development of humanity because it is based on inequality, and adopt Buddhism as my religion.
I firmly believe the Dhamma of the Buddha is the only true religion.
I consider that I have taken a new birth.
I solemnly declare and affirm that I shall hereafter lead my life according to the teachings of Buddha's Dhamma.
After Ambedkar's death
The Buddhist movement was somewhat hindered by Ambedkar's death so shortly after his conversion. It did not receive the immediate mass support from the Untouchable population that Ambedkar had hoped for. Division and lack of direction among the leaders of the Ambedkarite movement have been an additional impediment. According to the 2001 census, there are currently 7.95 million Buddhists in India, at least 5.83 million of whom are Buddhists in Maharashtra.[44] This makes Buddhism the fifth-largest religion in India and 6% of the population of Maharashtra, but less than 1% of the overall population of India.
The Buddhist revival remains concentrated in two states: Ambedkar's native Maharashtra, and Uttar Pradesh — the land of Bodhanand Mahastavir, Acharya Medharthi and their associates.
Developments in Uttar Pradesh
Statue of B.R.Ambedkar inside Ambedkar Park, Lucknow
Acharya Medharthi retired from his Buddhapuri school in 1960, and shifted to an ashram in Haridwar. He turned to the Arya Samaj and conducted Vedic yajnas all over India. After his death, he was cremated according to Arya Samaj rites. His Buddhpuri school became embroiled in property disputes. His follower, Bhoj Dev Mudit, converted to Buddhism in 1968 and set up a school of his own.
Rajendranath Aherwar appeared as an important Dalit leader in Kanpur. He joined the Republican Party of India and converted to Buddhism along with his whole family in 1961. In 1967, he founded the Kanpur branch of "Bharatiya Buddh Mahasabha". He held regular meetings where he preached Buddhism, officiated at Buddhist weddings and life cycle ceremonies, and organised festivals on Ambedkar's Jayanti (birth day), Sambuddhatva jayanthi, Diksha Divas (the day Ambedkar converted), and Ambedkar Paranirvan Divas (the day Ambedkar died).
The Dalit Buddhist movement in Kanpur gained impetus with the arrival of Dipankar, a Chamar bhikkhu, in 1980. Dipankar had come to Kanpur on a Buddhist mission and his first public appearance was scheduled at a mass conversion drive in 1981. The event was organised by Rahulan Ambawadekar, an RPI Dalit leader. In April 1981, Ambawadekar founded the Dalit Panthers (U.P. Branch) inspired by the Maharashtrian Dalit Panthers. The event met with severe criticism and opposition from Vishva Hindu Parishad and was banned.
The number of Buddhists in the Lucknow district increased from 73 in 1951 to 4327 in 2001.According to the 2001 census, almost 70% of the Buddhist population in Uttar Pradesh is from the scheduled castes background.
In 2002, Kanshi Ram, a popular political leader from a Sikh religious background, announced his intention to convert to Buddhism on 14 October 2006, the fiftieth anniversary of Ambedkar's conversion. He intended for 20,000,000 of his supporters to convert at the same time Part of the significance of this plan was that Ram's followers include not only Untouchables, but persons from a variety of castes, who could significantly broaden Buddhism's support. But, he died 9 October 2006 after a lengthy illness; he was cremated as per Buddhist tradition.
Another popular Dalit leader, Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister and Bahujan Samaj Party leader Mayawati, has said that she and her followers will embrace Buddhism after the BSP forms a government at the Centre.
Maharashtra
Flag symbolises Dalit movement in India.
Japanese-born Surai Sasai emerged as an important Buddhist leader in India. Sasai came to India in 1966 and met Nichidatsu Fujii, whom he helped with the Peace Pagoda at Rajgir. He fell out with Fuji, however, and started home, but, by his own account, was stopped by a dream in which a figure resembling Nagarjuna appeared and said, "Go to Nagpur". In Nagpur, he met Wamanrao Godbole, the person who had organised the conversion ceremony for Ambedkar in 1956. Sasai claims that when he saw a photograph of Ambedkar at Godbole's home, he realised that it was Ambedkar who had appeared in his dream. At first, Nagpur folk considered Surai Sasai very strange. Then he began to greet them with "Jai Bhim" (victory to Ambedkar) and to build viharas. In 1987 a court case to deport him on the grounds that he had overstayed his visa was dismissed, and he was granted Indian citizenship. Sasai and Bhante Anand Agra are two of main leaders of the campaign to free the Mahabodhi Temple at Bodh Gaya from Hindu control.
A movement originating in Maharashtra but also active in Uttar Pradesh, and spread out over quite a few other pockets where Neo Buddhists live, is Triratna Bauddha Mahāsaṅgha (formerly called TBMSG for Trailokya Bauddha Mahasangha Sahayaka Gana). It is the Indian wing of the UK-based Triratna Buddhist Community founded by Sangharakshita. Its roots lie in the scattered contacts that Sangharakshita had in the 1950s with Ambedkar. Sangharakshita, then still a bhikshu, participated in the conversion movement from 1956 until his departure to the UK in 1963.
When his new ecumenical movement had gained enough ground in the West, Sangharakshita worked with Ambedkarites in India and the UK to develop Indian Buddhism further. After visits in the late 1970s by Dharmachari Lokamitra from UK, supporters developed a two-pronged approach: social work through the Bahujan Hitaj (also spelled as Bahujan Hitay) trust, mainly sponsored from the general public by the British Buddhist-inspired Karuna Trust (UK), and direct Dharma work. Currently the movement has viharas and groups in at least 20 major areas, a couple of retreat centres, and hundreds of Indian Dharmacharis and Dharmacharinis.
Funding for movement's social and dharma work has come from foreign countries, including the Western countries and Taiwan. Some of the foreign-funded organisations include Trailokya Bauddha Mahasangha Sahayaka Gana and Triratna (Europe and India). Triratna has links with the 'Ambedkarite' Buddhist Romanis in Hungary.
Organized mass conversions
Deekshabhoomi Stupa in Nagpur where Ambedkar converted to Buddhism.
Since Ambedkar's conversion, several thousand people from different castes have converted to Buddhism in ceremonies including the twenty-two vows.
1957
In 1957, Mahastvir Bodhanand's Sri Lankan successor, Bhante Pragyanand, held a mass conversion drive for 15,000 people in Lucknow.
2001
A prominent Indian Navayana Buddhist leader and political activist, Udit Raj, organised a large mass conversion on 4 November 2001, where he gave the 22 vows, but the event met with active opposition from the government.
2006, Hyderabad
A report from the UK daily The Guardian said that some Hindus have converted to Buddhism. Buddhist monks from the UK and the U.S. attended the conversion ceremonies in India. Hindu nationalists asserted that Dalits should concentrate on trying to reduce illiteracy and poverty rather than looking for new religions.
2006, Gulbarga
On 14 October 2006, hundreds of people converted from Hinduism to Buddhism in Gulburga (Karnataka).
2006
At 50th anniversary celebrations in 2006 of Ambedkar's deeksha. Non-partisan sources put the number of attendees (not converts) at 30,000. The move was criticised by Hindu groups as "unhelpful" and has been criticised as a "political stunt."
2007, Mumbai
On 27 May 2007, tens of thousands of Dalits from Maharashtra gathered at the Mahalakshmi racecourse in Mumbai to mark the 50th anniversary of the conversion of Ambedkar. The number of people who converted versus the number of people in attendance was not clear. The event was organised by the Republican Party of India leader Ramdas Athvale.
Criticism of conversions
Critics have argued that efforts to convert Hindus to Ambedkarite Buddhism are political stunts rather than sincere commitments to social reform. On May 2011, Vishwesha Teertha, stated that conversion doesn't add any benefit to status of dalits.
On 17 June 2013, the converted Dalits asked for the Buddhist certificates, that has been delayed.
Distinctive interpretation
According to Gail Omvedt, an American-born and naturalised Indian sociologist and human rights activist :
Ambedkar's Buddhism seemingly differs from that of those who accepted by faith, who 'go for refuge' and accept the canon. This much is clear from its basis: it does not accept in totality the scriptures of the Theravada, the Mahayana, or the Vajrayana. The question that is then clearly put forth: is a fourth yana, a Navayana, a kind of modernistic Enlightenment version of the Dhamma really possible within the framework of Buddhism?
According to Omvedt, Ambedkar and his Buddhist movement deny many of the core doctrines of Buddhism. All the elements of religious modernism, state Christopher Queen and Sallie King, may be found in Ambedkar Buddhism where his The Buddha and His Dhamma abandons the traditional precepts and practices, then adopts science, activism and social reforms as a form of Engaged Buddhism. Ambedkar's formulation of Buddhism is different from Western modernism, states Skaria, given his synthesis of the ideas of modern Karl Marx into the structure of ideas by the ancient Buddha.
लंदन
30 दिसंबर 1930
प्रिय रामू!
तू कैसी है? यशवंत कैसा है? क्या मुझे याद करता है? उसका बहुत ध्यान रख रमा! हमारे चार बच्चे हमें छोड़ गए। अब यशवंत ही तेरे मातृत्व का आधार है। उसका ध्यान हमें रखना ही होगा। पढ़ाना होगा। विकसित करना होगा। खूब बड़ा करना होगा। उसे निमोनिया की बीमारी है।
मेरे सामने बहुत बड़े उलझे गणित हैं। सामाजिक पहेलियॉं हैं। मनुष्य की धार्मिक ग़ुलामी का, आर्थिक और सामाजिक असमानता के कारणों की परख करना है। गोलमेज़ परिषद की अपनी भूमिका पर मैं विचार करता हूँ और मेरी ऑंखों के सामने देश के सारे पीड़ितों का संसार बना रहता है। दुखों के पहाड़ के नीचे इन लोगों को हज़ारों वर्षों से गाड़ा गया है। उनको उस पहाड़ के नीचे से निकालने के मार्ग की तलाश कर रहा हूँ। ऐसे समय में मुझे मेरे लक्ष्य से विचलित करनेवाला कुछ भी होता है तो मेरा मन सुलग जाता है। ऐसी ही सुलगन से भरकर मैंने यशवंत को निर्दयतापूर्वक मारा था।
उसे मारो मत! मासूम है वह! उसे क्या समझता है? व्याकुल होकर तूने ऐसा कहा था। और यशवंत को गोद में भर लिया था। पर रमा मैं निर्दयी नहीं हूँ। मैं क्रांति से बाँधा गया हूँ। आग से लड़ रहा हूँ। अग्नि से लड़ते-लड़ते मैं खुद अग्नि बन गया हूँ। इसी अग्नि की चिंगारियॉं मुझे पता ही नहीं चलता कि कब तुझे और हमारे यशवंत को झुलसाने लगती हैं. रमा! मेरी शुष्कता को ध्यान में रख। यही तेरी चिंता का एकमात्र कारण है।
तू ग़रीब की संतान है। तूने मायके में भी दुख झेला। ग़रीबी से लिथड़ी रही। वहॉं भी तू भर पेट खाना न खा सकी। वहॉं भी तू काम करती रही और मेरे संसार में भी तुझे काम में ही लगना पड़ा, झिजना पड़ा। तू त्यागी है, स्वाभिमानी है। सूबेदार की बहु जैसे ही रही। किसी की भी दया पर जीना तुझे रुचा ही नहीं। रुचता ही नहीं। देना तू अपने मायके से सीखकर आई। लेना तूने सीखा ही नहीं। इसलिए रमा तेरे स्वाभिमान पर मुझे गर्व होता है।
पोयबाबाड़ी के घर में मैं एक बार उदास होकर बैठा हुआ था। घर की समस्या से मैं बदहवास हो गया था। उस वक़्त तूने मुझे धैर्य प्रदान किया। बोली,
‘मैं हूँ न संभालने के लिए। घर की परेशानियों को दूर करूँगी।
घर के दुखों को आपकी राह में अवरोध बनने नहीं दूँगी।
मैं ग़रीब की बेटी हूँ। परेशानियों के साथ जीने आदत है।
आप चिंता न करें, मन को कमजोर न करें।
संसार का काँटों भरा मुकुट जान में जान रहने तक उतारकर नहीं रखना चाहिए।
रामू! कभी-कभी लगता है कि यदि तू मेरे जीवन में नहीं आती तो क्या होता। संसार केवल सुखों के लिए है -ऐसा माननेवाली स्त्री यदि मुझे मिली होती तो वह कब का मुझे छोड़कर जा चुकी होती। मुंबई जैसी जगह में रहकर आधा पेट रहकर उपले बेचने जाना या फिर गोबर बीनकर उपले थापना भला किसे पसंद आता? वकील की पत्नी कपड़े सिलती रही। अपने फटे हुए संसार को थिगड़े लगाना भला किसे पसंद है? पर तूने ये सारी परेशानियॉं उठाई, पति के संसार को पूरे सामर्थ्य के साथ आगे बढ़ाया।
मेरे पति को अच्छे वेतन की नौकरी मिली, अब हमारे सारे दर्द दूर होंगे, इस ख़ुशी में ही मैंने तुझे”ये दो लकड़ियों की पेटी, इतना ही अनाज, इतना ही तेल-नमक और आटा और इन सबके बाद हम सबकी देखभाल करते हुए गुज़ारा करना है-ऐसा बोला था। तूने ज़रा भी ना नुकूर किए सारा कुछ संभाला। रामू! मेरी उपस्थिति में और मेरे पीछे जो तूने किया वह कोई और कर सके, ऐसा सामर्थ्य किसी में नहीं है।
रामू! तेरे जैसी जीवन संगिनी मुझे मिली इसलिए मुझे शक्ति मिलती रही। मेरे सपनों को पंख मिले। मेरी उड़ान निर्भय हुई। मन दृढ़ हुआ। मन बहुत दिनों से भर भर रहा था।
ऐसा कई बार लगा कि तेरे साथ आमने सामने बात करना चाहिए। पर दौड़-भाग, लिखना-पढ़ना, आना-जाना, भेंट-मुलाक़ात में से समय निकाल ही नहीं पाया। मन की बातें मन में ही छुपाकर रखना पड़ा। मन भर-भर आया पर तेरे सामने कुछ कह नहीं सका।
आज शांतिपूर्ण समय मिला और सारे विचार एकमेक हो रहे हैं। मन बेचैन हुआ। इसलिए बुझे हुए मन को मना रहा हूँ। मेरे मन के सारे परिसर में तू ही समाई हुई है। तेरे कष्ट याद आ रहे हैं। तेरी बातें याद आ रही हैं। तेरी बेचैनी याद आ रही है। तेरी सारी घुटन याद आई और जैसे मेरी सांसें ख़त्म होने लगीं, इसलिए क़लम हाथ में लेकर मन को मना रहा हूँ।
रामू! सच्ची कहता हूँ तू मेरी चिंता करना छोड़ दे। तेरे त्याग और तेरी झेली हुई तकलीफ़ों का बल मेरा संबल है। भारत का ही नहीं परंतु इस गोलमेज़ परिषद के कारण सारे विश्व के शोषितों की शक्ति मुझे बल प्रदान कर रही है। तू अब अपनी चिंता कर।
तू बहुत घुटन में रही है रामू! मुझ पर तेरे कभी न मिटनेवाले उपकार हैं। तू झिजती रही, तू कमजोर होती रही, तू गलती रही, जलती रही, तड़पती रही और मुझे खड़ा किया। तू बीमारी से तंग आ चुकी है। स्वयं के स्वास्थ्य का भी ध्यान रखना चाहिए इसकी तूने चिंता ही नहीं की। तुझे अब अपने स्वास्थ्य का ध्यान रखना ही होगा। यशवंत को मॉं की और मुझे तेरे साथ की ज़रूरत है। और क्या बताऊँ?
मेरी चिंता मत कर, यह मैंने कितनी बार कहा तुझसे पर तू सुनती ही नहीं। मैं परिषद के समाप्त होते ही आऊँगा।
सब मंगल हो।
तुम्हारा
भीमराव
(भीमराव अंबेडकर द्वारा पत्नी को लिखा गया पत्र।)
डॉ. भीमराव अम्बेडकर (बाबा साहेब) के 13 अनमोल विचार
* अम्बेडकर के 13 अमूल्य विचार
* मनुष्य नश्वर है, उसी तरह विचार भी नश्वर हैं। एक विचार को प्रचार-प्रसार की जरूरत होती है, जैसे कि एक पौधे को पानी की, नहीं तो दोनों मुरझाकर मर जाते हैं।
* पति-पत्नी के बीच का संबंध घनिष्ठ मित्रों के संबंध के समान होना चाहिए।
* हिन्दू धर्म में विवेक, कारण और स्वतंत्र सोच के विकास के लिए कोई गुंजाइश नहीं है।
* जब तक आप सामाजिक स्वतंत्रता नहीं हासिल कर लेते, कानून आपको जो भी स्वतंत्रता देता है, वो आपके किसी काम की नहीं।
भारत के संविधान निर्माता बाबासाहेब डॉ. अम्बेडकर
* यदि हम एक संयुक्त एकीकृत आधुनिक भारत चाहते हैं तो सभी धर्मों के शास्त्रों की संप्रभुता का अंत होना चाहिए।
* जीवन लंबा होने की बजाए महान होना चाहिए।
* कानून और व्यवस्था राजनीतिक शरीर की दवा है और जब राजनीतिक शरीर बीमार पड़े तो दवा जरूर दी जानी चाहिए।
डॉ. अम्बेडकर ने एक ब्राह्मण महिला डॉक्टर से की थी दूसरी शादी,विवादों का उठा था बवंडर
इस शादी का बहुत विरोध हुआ था। ब्राह्मण समुदाय इस विवाह से नाराज तो हुआ ही दलित समाज भी आपे से बाहर हो गया था। अम्बेडकर पर रास्ता भटकने का आरोप लगाया गया। लेकिन डॉ. अम्बेडकर ने किसी भी विरोध की परवाह नहीं की थी।
15 अप्रैल 1948 को डॉ. भीमराव अम्बेडकर ने डॉ. शारदा कबीर से दूसरी शादी की थी। उस समय डॉ. अम्बेडकर की उमर 57 साल की थी तो डॉ. शारदा की उमर 45 साल थी। यानी डॉ. अम्बेडकर अपनी दूसरी पत्नी से 12 साल बड़े थे। डॉ. शारदा कबीर चिकित्सक थीं। वे महाराष्ट्र के चितपावन ब्राह्मण परिवार से ताल्लुक रखती थीं। डॉ. शारदा कबीर का मुम्बई में क्लीनिक था जहां इलाज के दौरान डॉ. अम्बेडकर से उनका परिचय हुआ था।
1947 में डॉ. अम्बेडकर ब्लड प्रेशर और डायबिटीज से बहुत परेशान थे। पैरों में दर्द की समस्या भी रहती थी। डॉक्टरों ने उनको इलाज के साथ आराम की सलाह दी। इस क्रम में वे इलाज के लिए डॉ. शारदा कबीर के सम्पर्क में आये। डॉ. शारदा इलाज के साथ- साथ उनकी देखभाल भी करने लगीं। उस समय डॉ. अम्बेडकर पर बहुत बड़ी जिम्मवारी थी। वे भारतीय संविधान प्रारूप समिति के अध्यक्ष थे। उन्हें संविधान लिखने और उसे अंतिम रूप देने के लिए अधिक वक्त की जरूरत थी।
डॉ. अम्बेडकर, डॉ. शारदा के इलाज और देखभाल से बहुत प्रभावित हुए। दोनों एक दूसरे के करीब आ गये। आखिरकार 15 अप्रैल 1948 में दोनों ने शादी कर ली। ये शादी डॉ. अम्बेडकर के दिल्ली स्थित आवास पर हुई थी। डॉ. अम्बेडकर की पहली पत्नी रमाबाई का 1930 में ही निधन हो चुका था। डॉ. शारदा कीदेखभाल से अम्बेडकर की सेहत में सुधार हुआ और जिससे वे संविधान लेखन के लिए समय दे सके।
1956 में जब डॉ. अम्बेडकर ने बौद्ध धर्म अपनाया तो डॉ. शारदा कबीर ने भी बौद्ध धर्म अपना लिया। इसके बाद डॉ. शारदा का नाम सविता अम्बेडकर हो गया। सविता अम्बेडकर को इस शादी की बहुत बड़ी कीमत चुकानी पड़ी। ब्राह्मण समुदाय ने उन्हें कुल का विरोधी मान लिया था। शारदा ने एक दलित नेता से शादी कर के बहुत बड़ी सामाजिक क्रांति की थी लेकिन दलित समुदाय और अम्बेदकर के परिवार ने उन्हें कभी स्वीकार नहीं किया। इस शादी के बाद अम्बेडकर की दलित राजनीति और चिंतन पर सवाल उठने लगे थे। दलित इस बात से नाराज थे कि उन्हें शादी करने के लिए क्या एक ब्राह्मण महिला ही मिली थी । दूसरी शादी करनी ही थी तो किसी दलित महिला का उद्धार क्यों नहीं किया ? दलितों ने इसे अम्बेडकर की राजनीति को खत्म करने की साजिश बताया।
6 दिसम्बर 1956 को डॉ. अम्बेडकर की मौत हो गयी। इस घटना के बाद बवाल शुरू हो गया। अम्बेडकर के परिजनों और समर्थकों ने सविता अम्बेडकर पर तरह- तरह के लांछन लगाने शुरू कर दिये। यहां तक आरोप लगाया गया कि सविता अम्बेडकर ने ही उन्हें मार दिया। डॉ. अम्बेडकर और रमाबाई (पहली पत्नी ) के पुत्र यशवंत राव भी सविता अम्बेडकर से खफा रहते थे। उन्होंने दिल्ली पुलिस कमिश्नर को एक आवेदन देकर इस मौत की जांच की मांग कर दी।
इस बीच डॉ. अम्बेडकर के समर्थकों ने 19 सांसदों को इस बात के लिए तैयार कर लिया कि वे इस मौत की जांच के लिए तत्कालीन प्रधानमंत्री जवाहर लाल नेहरू को एक पत्र लिखें। सांसदों ने ये पत्र लिखा। जवाहर लाल नेहरू ने जांच कमेटी बनायी। इस समिति ने जांच में पाया कि डॉ. अम्बेडकर की मौत स्वभाविक रूप से हुई है और सविता अम्बेडकर पर लगाये गये आरोप बेबुनियाद हैं।
लोकसभा में तत्कालीन गृहमंत्री गोविंदबल्ल्भ पंत ने महाराष्ट्र के दलित सांसद वी सी काम्बले के एक सवाल के जवाब में बताया कि डॉ. अम्बेडकर की मौत स्वभाविक रूप से हुई है। जांच समिति ने सविता अम्बेडकर को क्लीन चिट तो दे दी लेकिन अम्बेदकरवादियों ने उन्हें कभी स्वीकार नहीं किया। एक किताब की प्रस्तावना में डॉ. अम्बेडकर ने अपने जीवन में सविता अम्बेडकर के योगदान के बारे में बताया था लेकिन इसे विरोधियों के दवाब में प्रकाशित नहीं होने दिया गया । लेकिन बहुत साल बाद एक लेखक भगवान दास ने प्रस्तावना का मूल दस्तावेज सामने लाकर इस अन्याय को उजागर कर दिया था।
“Plans for dalit welfare have remained static,
mostly believing only in amelioration rather
than in self-assurance....
They have not recognized the strengths,
potentials, excellence and intellectual quality
within the dalit community...
They believe in protectionism and not
pro-activism; Dalits are not being cultivated
to defend themselves, but only to seek
protection in the avowed security of the
governments and in the condescending
tolerance of the exploiting sections of the
society.”
- Christudoss Gandhi IAS
The relationship between husband and wife should be one of closest friends. - B. R. Ambedkar
I like the religion that teaches liberty, equality and fraternity. - B. R. Ambedkar
Cultivation of mind should be the ultimate aim of human existence. - B. R. Ambedkar
Unlike a drop of water which loses its identity when it joins the ocean, man does not lose his being in the society in which he lives. Man's life is independent. He is born not for the development of the society alone, but for the development of his self.
B. R. Ambedkar
Life should be great rather than long. B. R. Ambedkar
The relationship between husband and wife should be one of closest friends. B. R. Ambedkar
Men are mortal. So are ideas. An idea needs propagation as much as a plant needs watering. Otherwise both will wither and die. B. R. Ambedkar
Indians today are governed by two different ideologies. Their political ideal set in the preamble of the Constitution affirms a life of liberty, equality and fraternity. Their social ideal embodied in their religion denies them. B. R. Ambedkar
Political democracy cannot last unless there lies at the base of it social democracy. What does social democracy mean? It means a way of life which recognizes liberty, equality and fraternity as the principles of life. B. R. Ambedkar
Religion and slavery are incompatible. B. R. Ambedkar
A great man is different from an eminent one in that he is ready to be the servant of the society.
B. R. Ambedkar
So long as you do not achieve social liberty, whatever freedom is provided by the law is of no avail to you. B. R. Ambedkar
The sovereignty of scriptures of all religions must come to an end if we want to have a united integrated modern India. B. R. Ambedkar
I measure the progress of a community by the degree of progress which women have achieved.
B. R. Ambedkar
Law and order are the medicine of the body politic and when the body politic gets sick, medicine must be administered. B. R. Ambedkar
One can quite understand vegetarianism. One can quite understand meat-eating. But it is difficult to understand why a person who is a flesh-eater should object to one kind of flesh, namely cow's flesh. This is an anomaly which call for explanation. B. R. Ambedkar
Generally speaking, the Smritikars never care to explain the why and the how of their dogmas.
B. R. Ambedkar
An ideal society should be mobile, should be full of channels for conveying a change taking place in one part to other parts. In an ideal society, there should be many interests consciously communicated and shared. B. R. Ambedkar
Religion must mainly be a matter of principles only. It cannot be a matter of rules. The moment it degenerates into rules, it ceases to be a religion, as it kills responsibility which is an essence of the true religious act. B. R. Ambedkar
Caste is not a physical object like a wall of bricks or a line of barbed wire which prevents the Hindus from co-mingling and which has, therefore, to be pulled down. Caste is a notion; it is a state of the mind. B. R. Ambedkar
A people and their religion must be judged by social standards based on social ethics. No other standard would have any meaning if religion is held to be necessary good for the well-being of the people. B. R. Ambedkar
In Hinduism, conscience, reason and independent thinking have no scope for development.
B. R. Ambedkar
However good a Constitution may be, if those who are implementing it are not good, it will prove to be bad. However bad a Constitution may be, if those implementing it are good, it will prove to be good.
B. R. Ambedkar
Caste may be bad. Caste may lead to conduct so gross as to be called man's inhumanity to man. All the same, it must be recognized that the Hindus observe Caste not because they are inhuman or wrong-headed. They observe Caste because they are deeply religious . B. R. Ambedkar
Some men say that they should be satisfied with the abolition of untouchability only, leaving the caste system alone. The aim of abolition of untouchability alone without trying to abolish the inequalities inherent in the caste system is a rather low aim. B. R. Ambedkar
My social philosophy may be said to be enshrined in three words: liberty, equality and fraternity. Let no one, however, say that I have borrowed by philosophy from the French Revolution. I have not. My philosophy has roots in religion and not in political science. I have derived them from the teachings of my Master, the Buddha. B. R. Ambedkar
The reason why Broken Men only became Untouchables was because in addition to being Buddhists, they retained their habit of beef-eating, which gave additional ground for offence to the Brahmins to carry their new-found love and reverence to the cow to its logical conclusion. B. R. Ambedkar
That the caste system must be abolished if the Hindu society is to be reconstructed on the basis of equality, goes without saying. Untouchability has its roots in the caste system. They cannot expect the Brahmins to rise in revolt against the caste system. Also we cannot rely upon the non-Brahmins and ask them to fight our battle. B. R. Ambedkar
No Hindu community, however low, will touch cow's flesh. On the other hand, there is no community which is really an Untouchable community which has not something to do with the dead cow. Some eat her flesh, some remove the skin, some manufacture articles out of her skin and bones.
B. R. Ambedkar
People are not wrong in observing Caste. In my view, what is wrong is their religion, which has inculcated this notion of Caste. If this is correct, then obviously the enemy, you must grapple with is not the people who observe Caste, but the Shastras which teach them this religion of Caste.
B. R. Ambedkar
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The Romans had their slaves, the Spartans their helots, the Britishers their Villains, the Americans their Negroes, the Germans their Jews; so the Hindus their Untouchables. But none of these can be said to have called upon to face a fate which is worse than the fate which pursues the Untouchables. Slavery, Serfdom, Villeinage, all have vanished, but Untouchability still exists and bids fair to last as long as Hinduism will last.
B. R. Ambedkar
“If you want to destroy a society, destroy its history & the society will get destroyed automatically” B. R. Ambedkar
So long as you do not achieve social liberty, whatever freedom is provided by the law is of no avail to you. B. R. Ambedkar
Men are mortal. So are ideas. An idea needs propagation as much as a plant needs watering. Otherwise both will wither and die.
B. R. Ambedkar
B. R. Ambedkar
“Cultivation of mind should be the ultimate aim of human existence.” B. R. Ambedkar
B. R. Ambedkar
“Religion must mainly be a matter of principles only. It cannot be a matter of rules. The moment it degenerates into rules, it ceases to be a religion, as it kills responsibility which is an essence of the true religious act.”
B. R. Ambedkar
B. R. Ambedkar
“The question is not whether a community lives or dies, the question is on what plane does it live. There are different modes of survival. But all are not equally honorable. For an individual as well as a society, there is a gulf between merely living and living worthily. To fight in a battle and live in a glory is one mode. To beat a retreat to surrender and to live the life of a captive is also a mode of survival.”
B. R. Ambedkar
B. R. Ambedkar
“History bears out the proposition that political revolutions have always been preceded by social and religious revolutions. Social reform in India has few friends and many critics.”
B. R. Ambedkar
B. R. Ambedkar
“Law and order are the medicine of the body politic and when the body politic gets sick, medicine must be administered.”
B. R. Ambedkar
B. R. Ambedkar
“Justice has always evoked ideas of equality, of proportion of compensation. Equity signifies equality. Rules and regulations, right and righteousness are concerned with equality in value. If all men are equal, then all men are of the same essence, and the common essence entitles them of the same fundamental rights and equal liberty... In short justice is another name of liberty, equality and fraternity.”
B. R. Ambedkar
B. R. Ambedkar
“A great man is different from an eminent one in that he is ready to be the servant of the society.”
B. R. Ambedkar
B. R. Ambedkar
“In Hinduism, conscience, reason and independent thinking have no scope for development.”
B. R. Ambedkar
B. R. Ambedkar
“We want our own people, people who will fight tooth and nail for our interest and secure privilege for the under-privileged; people who will undo the wrongs done to our people ;people who will voice our grievances fearlessly; people who can think, lead and act; people with principles and character. Such people should be sent to the legislatures. We must send such people to Legislatures who will be slaves to none but remain free to their conscience and get our grievances redressed.”
B. R. Ambedkar
B. R. Ambedkar
“Every man must have a philosophy of life, for everyone must have a standard by which to measure his conduct. And philosophy is nothing but a standard by which to measure.”
B. R. Ambedkar
B. R. Ambedkar
“If you ask me, my ideal would be the society based on liberty, equality and fraternity. An ideal society should be mobile and full of channels of conveying a change taking place in one part to other parts.”
B. R. Ambedkar
B. R. Ambedkar
“We must begin by acknowledging that there is a complete absence of two things in Indian Society. One of these is equality. On the social plane we have an India based on the principles of graded inequality, which means elevation for some and degradation for others. On the economic plane we have a society in which there are some who have immense wealth as against many who live in abject poverty.”
B. R. Ambedkar
B. R. Ambedkar
“Equality may be a fiction but nonetheless one must accept it as a governing principle.”
B. R. Ambedkar
B. R. Ambedkar
“If I find the constitution being misused, I shall be the first to burn it.”
B. R. Ambedkar
B. R. Ambedkar
“Learn to live in this world with self-respect. You should always cherish some ambition of doing something in this world. But remember that the age of selflessness has ended. A new epoch is set in. All things are now possible because of your being able to participate in the politics and legislature of your country.”
B. R. Ambedkar
B. R. Ambedkar
“The basic idea underlying religion is to create an atmosphere for the spiritual development of the individual. This being the situation, it is clear that you cannot develop your personality at all in Hinduism.”
B. R. Ambedkar
“Our object in framing the Constitution is rally two-fold: (1) To lay down the form of political democracy, and (2) To lay down that our ideal is economic democracy and also to prescribe that every Government whatever is in power shall strive to bring about economic democracy. The directive principles have a great value, for they lay down that our ideal is economic democracy.”
B. R. Ambedkar
“These cond thing we are wanting in is the recognition of the principle of fraternity. What does fraternity mean? Fraternity means a sense of common brotherhood of all Indians, all Indians being one people. It is a principle that gives solidarity to social life. It is difficult thing to achieve. It seems to me that there lies a heavy duty to see that democracy does not vanish from the earth as a governing principle of human relationship. If we believe in it, we must both be true and loyal to it. We must not only be staunch in our faith in democracy but we must resolve to see that whatever we do, we do not help the enemies of democracy to uproot the principles of liberty, equality and fraternity. It follows that we must strive along with other democratic countries to maintain the basis of democratic civilization. If democracy lives we are sure to reap the benefit of it. If democracy dies it will be our doom. On that there can be no doubt.”
B. R. Ambedkar
It is usual to hear all those who feel moved by the deplorable condition of the Untouchables unburden themselves by uttering the cry, ‘We must do something for the Untouchables.’ One seldom hears any of the persons interested in the problem saying, ‘Let us do something to change the Touchable Hindu.’ It is invariably assumed that the object to be reclaimed is the Untouchables. If there is to be a mission, it must be to the Untouchables and if the Untouchables can be cured, untouchability will vanish. Nothing requires to be done to the Touchable. He is sound in mind, manners and morals. He is whole, there is nothing wrong with him. Is this assumption correct? Whether correct or not, the Hindus like to cling to it. The assumption has the supreme merit of satisfying themselves that they are not responsible for the problem of the Untouchables. B. R. Ambedkar
I feel that the constitution is workable, it is flexible and it is strong enough to hold the country together both in peacetime and in wartime. Indeed, if I may say so, if things go wrong under the new Constitution, the reason will not be that we had a bad Constitution. What we will have to say is that Man was vile. B. R. Ambedkar
Life should be great rather than long. B. R. Ambedkar
My definition of democracy is - A form and a method of Government whereby revolutionary changes in the social life are brought about without bloodshed. That is the real test. It is perhaps the severest test. But when you are judging the quality of the material you must put it to the severest test. B. R. Ambedkar
The relationship between husband and wife should be one of closest friends.
B. R. Ambedkar
“History shows that where ethics and economics come in conflict, victory is always with economics. Vested interests have never been known to have willingly divested themselves unless there was sufficient force to compel them.” B. R. Ambedkar
The teachings of Buddha are eternal, but even then Buddha did not proclaim them to be infallible. The religion of Buddha has the capacity to change according to times, a quality which no other religion can claim to have...Now what is the basis of Buddhism? If you study carefully, you will see that Buddhism is based on reason. There is an element of flexibility inherent in it, which is not found in any other religion.” B. R. Ambedkar
A people and their religion must be judged by social standards based on social ethics. No other standard would have any meaning if religion is held to be necessary good for the well-being of the people. B. R. Ambedkar
My final words of advice to you are educate, agitate and organize; have faith in yourself. With justice on our side I do not see how we can lose our battle. The battle to me is a matter of joy. Theattle is in the fullest sense spiritual. There is nothing material or social in it. For ours is a battle not for wealth or for power. It is battle for freedom. It is the battle of reclamation of human personality. B. R. Ambedkar
This is a Fractured Nation – split and scattered as separate, often antagonistic mutually suspicious and intolerant Castes. B. R. Ambedkar
I measure the progress of a community by the degree of progress which women have achieved. B. R. Ambedkar
For a successful revolution it is not enough that there is discontent. What is required is a profound and thorough conviction of the justice, necessity and importance of political and social rights.
B. R. Ambedkar
“For a successful revolution it is not enough that there is discontent. What is required is a profound and thorough conviction of the justice, necessity and importance of political and social rights.” B. R. Ambedkar
“Man is mortal. Everyone has to die some day or the other. But one must resolve to lay down one's life in enriching the noble ideals of self-respect and in bettering one's human life. We are not slaves. Nothing is more disgraceful for a brave man than to live life devoid of self-respect.”
B. R. Ambedkar
Emerson has said that consistency is a virtue of an ass. No thinking human being can be tied down to a view once expressed in the name of consistency. More important than consistency is responsibility. A responsible person must learn to unlearn what he has learned. A responsible person must have the courage to rethink and change his thoughts. Of course there must be good and sufficient reason for unlearning what he has learned and for recasting his thoughts. There can be no finality in rethinking.” B. R. Ambedkar
Political tyranny is nothing compared to the social tyranny and a reformer who defies society is a more courageous man than a politician who defies Government.”
B. R. Ambedkar
Why does a human body become deceased? The reason is that as long as the human body is not free from suffering, mind cannot be happy. If a man lacks enthusiasm, either his body or mind is in a deceased condition.... Now what saps the enthusiasm in man? If there is no enthusiasm, life becomes drudgery - a mere burden to be dragged. Nothing can be achieved if there is no enthusiasm. The main reason for this lack of enthusiasm on the part of a man is that an individual looses the hope of getting an opportunity to elevate himself. Hopelessness leads to lack of enthusiasm. The mind in such cases becomes deceased.... When is enthusiasm created? When one breaths an atmosphere where one is sure of getting the legitimate reward for one's labor, only then one feels enriched by enthusiasm and inspiration.” B. R. Ambedkar
“Every man who repeats the dogma of Mill that one country is no fit to rule another country must admit that one class is not fit to rule another class.” B. R. Ambedkar
What are we having this liberty for? We are having this liberty in order to reform our social system, which is full of inequality, discrimination and other things, which conflict with our fundamental rights.” B. R. Ambedkar
This condition obtains even where there is no slavery in the legal sense. It is found where as in caste system, some persons are forced to carry on the prescribed callings which are not their choice.” B. R. Ambedkar
B. R. Ambedkar
“Positively, my social philosophy may be said to be enshrined in three words: liberty, equality and fraternity. Let no one however say that I have borrowed my philosophy from the French Revolution. I have not. My philosophy has its roots in religion and not in political science. I have derived them from the teachings of my master, the Buddha.”
B. R. Ambedkar
B. R. Ambedkar
“The sovereignty of scriptures of all religions must come to an end if we want to have a united integrated modern India.”
B. R. Ambedkar
B. R. Ambedkar
“Given the time and circumstances, nothing under the sun shall stop this country from becoming a super power.Being grateful has limitations, no man can be grateful at the cost of his dignity, no woman at the cost of her chastity and no country at the cost of its freedom.I hope that Mr. Gandhi will not drive me to the necessity of making a choice between his life and rights of my people, for I shall never consent to deliver my people bound hand and foot to the orthodox for generations to come.”
B. R. Ambedkar
B. R. Ambedkar
“Hero-worship in the sense of expressing our unbound admiration is one thing. To obey the hero is a totally different kind of worship. There is nothing wrong in the former while the latter is no doubt a most pernicious thing. The former is man's respect for which is noble and of which the great men are only an embodiment. The latter is the serf's fealty to his lord. The former is consistent with respect, but the latter is a sign of debasement. The former does not take away one's intelligence to think and independence to act. The latter makes one perfect fool. The former involves no disaster to the state. The latter is a source of positive danger to it.” B. R. Ambedkar
B. R. Ambedkar
“There can be no gain saying that political power in this country has too long been the monopoly of the few, and the many are not beasts of burden but also beasts of prey.”
B. R. Ambedkar
B. R. Ambedkar
“One cannot have any respect or regard for men who take the position of the reformer and then refuse to see the logical consequences of that position, let alone following them out in action.”
B. R. Ambedkar
B. R. Ambedkar
“It is not enough to be electors only. It is necessary to be law-makers; otherwise those who can be law-makers ill be the masters of those who can only be electors.”
B. R. Ambedkar
B. R. Ambedkar
“Law and religion are two forces which govern the conduct of men. At times they act as handmaids to each other. At other times they act as check and counter-check. Of the two forces, Law is personal while religion is impersonal. Law being personal it is capable of being unjust and iniquitous. But religion being impersonal, it can be impartial, it is capable of defeating the inequity committed by law. Religion is believed to ennoble man and not degrade him. Hinduism is an exception.”
B. R. Ambedkar
B. R. Ambedkar
“Indians today are governed by two different ideologies. Their political ideal set in the preamble of the Constitution affirms a life of liberty, equality and fraternity. Their social ideal embodied in their religion denies them.”
B. R. Ambedkar
B. R. Ambedkar
“The basis of my politics lies in the proposition that the Untouchables are not a sub-division or sub-section of Hindus, and that they are a separate and distinct element in the national life of India.”
B. R. Ambedkar
B. R. Ambedkar
“My religious conversion is not inspired by any material motive. This is hardly anything I cannot achieve even while remaining an Untouchable. There is no other feeling than that of a spiritual feeling underlying my religious conversion. Hinduism does not appeal to my conscience. My self-respect cannot assimilate Hinduism. In your case change of religion is imperative for worldly as well as spiritual ends. Do not care for the opinion of those who foolishly ridicule the idea of conversion for material ends. Why should you live under the fold of that religion which has deprived you of honor, money, food and shelter?”
B. R. Ambedkar
“Majorities are of two sorts: (1) communal majority and (2) political majority. A political majority is changeable in its class composition. A political majority grows. A communal majority is born. The admission to a political majority is open. The door to a communal majority is closed. The politics of political majority are free to all to make and unmake. The politics of communal majority are made by its own members born in it.”
B. R. Ambedkar
“To open or not to open the temples is a question for you to consider and not for me to agitate. If u think it is bad manners not to believe in the sanctity of human beings, then throw open the doors and be a gentleman, but if you wish to remain a orthodox Hindu then shut the doors and damn come.” B.R. Ambedkar
If you cross the path of tyranny, or incipient tyranny, I believe there is a duty to Iffight it …. If you achieve a voice that will be heard, you should use it to speak up for the voiceless and oppressed. If you possess any power or authority, you must strive to use it to help and to empower the powerles.
Craig Murray, former British Ambassador to Uzbekistan
A number of public figures and organisations have expressed their opinion on caste discrimination. Please see a few of their quotes/statements below:
UN Secretary General, Ban Ki-moon, 2015
Millions of Dalits, Tribals and others still face discrimination, especially the women and girls. In too many communities, religious minorities also suffer. We must continue Gandhi’s battle for equality.
Saraswathi Menon, UN Women Policy Director
Legislation alone does not address structural discrimination. The UN has an important role to play and must step up to the plate to help stop caste-based violence against women.
Siddharth Kara, Director of the Program on Human Trafficking and Modern Slavery at Harvard University
Every single child labourer that I have documented comes from a highly impoverished family unit and belongs to a low-caste or minority community.
Navi Pillay, former UN High Commissioner for Human Rights
Our outrage is not enough. We must take real and focused action to mend our societies’ dramatic failure to support the rights of people of discriminated castes, particularly women and girls.
UN Women Policy Director, Saraswathi Menon
We want to capture that women are targeted for punitive violence when they transgress caste, by the community, and when seeking to organise and defend their rights and the rights of others.
Special Rapporteur on Violence against Women, Rashida Manjoo
The intergenerational nature of caste discrimination condemns women to a life of exclusion, marginalization and disadvantage in every sphere of life. Many of those women are denied an education and economic opportunities, and perform dangerous and unprotected work, including … modern forms of slavery.
Manisha Devi, a young Dalit activist who has been a leading figure in two month-long marches for Dalit women’s rights.
I will raise my voice against any injustice even at the expense of my own life.
Ramesh Nathan, general convener of the National Coalition for Strengthening of SC/ST PoA Act
If one uses common sense, the current Prevention of Atrocities Act is stringent and misused. But the government statistics and everyday incidents of brutal and subtle violence against Dalits and Adivasis prove that the Act is simply not working. Perpetrators use ambiguities and loopholes in the Act to evade punishment. An insensitive judiciary and police contribute in their own way to work around the Act.
Asha Kowtal, General Secretary of the National Dalit Women’s movement AIDMAM
Systems of justice meant to protect Dalit women at the national level are completely failing us. We are asking for immediate loud and clear global support in our struggle.
Justice K.G. Balakrishnan, Indian National Human Rights Commission, CEDAW 2014 review of India.
There is no dearth of evidence to show that Dalit women elected representatives face severe barriers as they perform the role of leaders in governance … the SC/ST PoA Act is not implemented effectively. Culprits in serious cases like rape and murder are not punished. Caste abuses, stripping and parading of Dalit women in India is not rare.
UN Special Rapporteur on Violence against women, Rashida Manjoo, 2014 report on India.
While legislation has been adopted to eradicate bonded labour and manual scavenging, reports and interlocutors indicate that there is a consistent failure in the implementation of such laws and a tendency to minimize the significance of the problem.
India Exclusion Report 2014
Traditional caste rules mandate forced labour from certain communities. Caste is one of the foundations of the bonded labour system and remains a key feature of bondage even in non-agricultural industries today. The lack of access to their own land, combined with this expectation to perform free labour and the threat of violence and economic boycott against those who challenge their expected social roles, keeps many Dalit families in bondage and a perpetual state of poverty.
India Exclusion Report 2014
Caste remains a key determinant of a person’s future. This is perfectly reflected in India’s labour market, which is more governed by laws of social origin than by statutory legislation. Moreover, violation of caste rules by Dalits seeking to break caste-related employment barriers is prone to severe punishment from dominant castes, including economic boycotts and even physical violence.
The UNDP Nepal Human Development Report 2014
Social sector policies need to recognize the caste and ethnic dimensions of human development. Clear and ongoing caste and ethnic inequalities are revealed in different educational achievements and earnings. This strengthens the argument for deliberate strategies to increase inclusiveness by providing educational and economic opportunities for disadvantaged ethnic and caste groups such as the Dalits and Muslims.
UN Women Representative and acting UN Resident Coordinator, Ziad Sheikh
When, for example, you are a Dalit woman, you face double discrimination leading to social, political and economic exclusion and often worse. As we know, this is a reality in Nepal.
UN minority Forum Statement of Pirbhu Lal Satyani, Pakistan Dalit Solidarity Network (PDSN)
A combined effect of low education levels, exclusion from family decision making processes and a lack of property rights make Dalit women vulnerable to labour exploitation and bondage. Rape of female bonded labourers is widespread and violent, and there is little legal recourse.
2014 Global Slavery Index by the Walk Free Foundation
A weak rule of law, widespread corruption, and poverty reinforce political, social, and economic structures of modern slavery in Pakistan. Underpinning this are culturally accepted practices that are tantamount to modern slavery… This reinforces perceptions that lower caste groups are not equal citizens and subsequently limits policy and service provisions tailored to their needs.
Veeru Kohli, Dalit woman and former bonded labourer, now working to help others escape.
My husband, my children and I were kept separate from each other… My daughter was dying of starvation because the landlord whose field I was working on was not paying me anything. When I confronted them, they beat me up.
Jony Das, resident in a Dalit colony
We do not like this lifestyle, but there is no option. Nobody will rent us houses in other areas.
Aidan McQaude, Director of Anti-Slavery International, speaking at the Annual General Meeting of the Dalit Solidarity Network UK (DSN-UK)
The enforced silence around caste-based apartheid now extends as far as the UK … the trap of caste-based apartheid that has ensnared millions of people across the world still grips, and its grip threatens fundamentally the democracy of those states that tolerate it, not least the world’s largest democracy.
Baroness Northover, Parliamentary Under Secretary of State at the Department for International Development (DFID).
Statistics on caste discrimination show that these groups, particularly Dalit households, continue to perform worse than others. For example, mortality rates for Dalit children are 50% higher than those for children born in other families. Only one out of three Dalit girls completes five years of schooling compared to half in other communities.
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon keynote address to the Indian Council of World Affairs
“I was deeply moved by how they are conserving and teaching Gandhi’s letters and other precious artefacts. And I reflected on our collective responsibility to conserve the spirit of Gandhi’s teachings. He confronted many forms of injustice, including against people who were then called “untouchables”. His struggle led to the historic resolution banning discrimination based on caste. Today India has laws that not only enshrine equality, but also take positive steps to address past discrimination. But millions of Dalits, Tribals and others still face discrimination, especially the women and girls. In too many communities, religious minorities also suffer. We must continue Gandhi’s battle for equality.” UN press release, 12 January 2015
Human Rights Watch
The combination of caste and gender makes millions of Dalit women extremely vulnerable to discrimination and violence, including rape.
World Bank President Jim Yong Kim on a 2015 visit to Gujarat
“Indian society has an enduring exclusion that is based, among other things, on caste identities. This bias can impede shared prosperity, serving as a basis for discrimination in many spheres, including in employment and other markets, as well as in public services.”
The reply of an Indian court judge to a gang-raped Dalit woman, upon seeing a video of the rape filmed and distributed by the dominant caste rapists and presented by the woman in court as evidence of the rape
Great, now you have proof that you enjoyed yourself
Father of a Dalit child in a Government school in India
They don’t learn anything, must sit separately and are served food last when there is often nothing left
Stalin K speaking in Norway
The apartheid regime in South Africa provoked strong reactions from the international community – the struggle against caste discrimination deserves the same level of attention.
American Dalit woman filmmaker, thenmozhi soundararajan, who spoke at the Women in the World summit in new York about violence against Dalit women
Even if no one else recognizes us as human, we will shout it from the rooftops. … The shame is not on the women, the shame is on the world that allows this to happen
Erkki Tuomioja, Minister for Foreign Affairs, Finland
Anti-discrimination and stronger participation are central in the Finnish policy, and most vulnerable groups require special attention. There is every reason to include Dalits as a distinctive group.
Dr. Sono Khangharani, PDSN member
Unfortunately, the rape of a Dalit woman is considered an act “for granted” because of their inferior social status in Pakistani society, so hardly any action is taken against the influential and wealthy landlords. Scheduled castes are living miserable lives with no protection of their honour and property.
Hira Bishwakarma, team leader of a study on Dalit women
Dalit women are at the receiving end of violence, whether domestic or social, for two reasons: they are treated as the second sex and belong to the most oppressed social group.
Editorial, The Himalayan Times
That caste discrimination incidents are regularly reported are evidence that the implementation of the law against it is rather lax, and the perpetrators are not in any way brought to book due to their clout or power. It makes a mockery of our own constitution and the law.
Durga Sob, President, Feminist Dalit Organization (FEDO)
Sadly, I don’t think our society is progressive enough when it comes to Dalits. If the educated masses working for human rights had been progressive, such an event, like what happened in Rautahat, would not have occurred in the first place.
Stalin K, filmmaker and human rights activist
As a society, when we hear about untouchability practices, we should feel outraged, as we would with other criminal acts like murder and rape. It’s time we accepted that the practice of untouchability is not the vestigial remains of some backward, social phenomenon or tradition: it’s a criminal offence. Let’s start calling it what it is.
Kumari Selja, Minister for Social Justice, India
Despite prohibition of manual scavenging, the practice is still prevalent… This dehumanising practice is inconsistent with the right to live with dignity.
Report from the National Tribunal on Dalit women
Various Dalit women campaigns across the country are regularly monitoring the cases of sexual violence against Dalit women, but unfortunately they always hit a dead end; the dominant caste threats, the inadequacy of the law enforcement agencies and the collusion between the two leaves no hope of justice.
Mari Marcel Thekaekara, Columnist, New Internationalist
I have had mail from Dalit and Adivasi friends asking why we, the feminist women and men of India, and our Prime Minister and high profile people… do not weep copiously or hold candlelight vigils when they, India’s Dalits and Adivasi people, are routinely raped, every single day in our country. I have no answer. I can only hang my head in shame.
Desmond Tutu, Archbishop Emeritus and Nobel Prize Laureate
“You are a very stratified society, more so than most others, and the caste system is very entrenched. I do think Indian society needs to be challenged about the Dalits because it ends up affecting your humanity.
Juliette de Rivero, Human Rights Watch, at UN side event on Dalit women
New laws are useless unless implemented, as we have seen with previous efforts to ensure protection of Dalit rights.
Aidan McQuade, Director of Anti-Slavery International
Slavery emerges at the conjunction of individual vulnerability, social exclusion and failure of rule of law. So it should be no surprise that those countries that tolerate systemic and often institutional discrimination against their citizens on spurious grounds such as caste should also be the ones with the most extensive enslavement of their citizens. Slavery is one of the cruelest manifestations of caste discrimination.
Joint statement by seven UN human rights experts
“We will pay specific attention to the particularly vulnerable situation of people affected by caste-based discrimination… No one should be stigmatized; no one should be considered
‘untouchable’.”
Asha Kowtal, General Secretary, AIDMAM
Every time we go into the field, we have to deal with a case of a young 12-15 year-old girl who was raped by seven-eight men, and then you just start wondering: Are they human beings or are they animals? How could they do this to a girl – and a girl who is completely powerless because of her age, her size, her mind and her caste and everything?
Siddharth Kara, Bonded Labor, Columbia University Press 2012, p.6
Almost all bonded labourers in South Asia… belong to a minority ethnic group or caste… It is crucial to understand that there remains a stratum of human beings in South Asia who are deemed exploitable and expendable by society at large.
Mitro Repo, Finnish MEP
I am appalled that Dalits in India have not seen their situation improved. The violent actions recently have shown how little has been done. It is clear that dominant castes are organising violent acts against Dalits. Unfortunately, the Indian authorities do not take their human rights responsibilities seriously.
Peter van Dalen, Dutch MEP
One of the biggest problems is that people who have destroyed the houses of Dalits, treated them as slaves and forced them into prostitution, are not brought to justice. Even worse, every year hundreds, possibly even thousands, of Dalits are tortured by the police. The Dalits in India are virtually outlawed.”
Barbara Lochbihler, Chair of the EP Sub-Committee on Human Rights
India has legislated on certain levels, but with little success… We therefore strongly urge that the Indian government and authorities – from local to the highest state level – protect and defend the rights of Dalits, and where necessary, enact new legislation.
Gulnara Shahinian, UN Special Rapporteur on contemporary forms of slavery.
Caste discrimination is one of the most pernicious forms of discrimination, as it condemns individuals from birth to a life of marginalisation. The links between caste, social hierarchy and slavery are strong.
Mari Marcel Thekaekara, columnist, Hindustan Times
We as a country took a moral stand on Nelson Mandela… for freedom from apartheid. This is why I now back the Dalit struggle for international support, though it irks me that our countrymen have to go to the West to seek justice. If we would get justice on our land, why would we wash our dirty linen in public?
UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Navi Pillay:
“Caste is the very negation of the human rights principles of equality and non-discrimination” Read the full opinion piece on caste discrimination by Navi Pillay here
Dutch Minister of Foreign Affairs, Mr Maxime Verhagen, at the UN Human Rights Council:
“In terms of issues, I think the Council’s agenda does not yet reflect all the substantive issues that need to be addressed. Discrimination on the basis of descent or work, for example, is still missing from the non-discrimination agenda. There are approximately 260 million people in the world that suffer such discrimination. For these men and women, it is impossible to escape grinding poverty because the society
they grew up in does not allow them to take their fate into their own hands and improve themselves,”
Archbishop Desmond Tutu:
“In 2001, I noted that India was at the forefront of the struggle against apartheid and expressed the belief that the Indian people would want to end the scourge of caste discrimination. I still hope that this is so, and I strongly urge the Indian government and my own government to endorse international efforts to end the practice of „untouchability‟, which is a blot on humanity. Such support would be a boost to the struggle for Dalit rights, not only in India, but all over the world.”
Clive Baldwin, senior legal advisor, Human Rights Watch:
“Caste discrimination is a major global human rights issue that needs to be effectively dealt with at the international level.”
Human Rights Watch, Asia director, Brad Adams:
“political will to end the scourge of caste discrimination is needed at all levels of government to alter traditional attitudes and turn well-meaning laws into reality.”
ISO 26000 – standard on social responsibility in the private sector:
“Hundreds of millions of people are discriminated against because of their hereditary status or descent. This form of discrimination is based on a history of rights abuse justified by the wrongful notion that some people are considered unclean or less worthy because of the group into which they are born. An organization should avoid such practices and,
where feasible, seek to contribute to eliminating these prejudices.’’
UN Special Rapporteur on contemporary forms of racism, Mr. Githu Muigai:
“The legal framework on discrimination based on descent is unambiguous. Yet, it remains to be implemented properly. Robust action was required from Governments in order to advance in the fight against discrimination based on descent. The vital first step in addressing this issue was for States to recognize that discrimination on the grounds of descent constituted a form of racial discrimination prohibited by the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination. In the absence of such recognition
it would not be possible to effectively address the serious human rights violations and discrimination suffered by individuals and groups on grounds of caste and other systems of inherited status.”
Special Rapporteur on violence against women, Ms. Yakin Ertürk:
“Dalit women are confronted with discrimination, exclusion and violence to a larger extent than men. Land and property issues in particular, tend to cause or be at the root of conflicts over which Dalit women have faced eviction, harassment, physical abuse and assault. Dalit women are often denied access to or are evicted from their land by dominant castes, especially if it borders land belonging to such castes. They are thus forced to live in the outskirts of villages, often on barren land. Reportedly, on many occasions, cases of violence against Dalit women are not registered, and adequate procedures are not taken by the police.”
Two UN independent experts on water and sanitation and on extreme poverty:
”They [Dalits of Bangladesh] are reportedly denied education because of social stigma, and their jobs are threatened. Although they work in sanitation all day long, they have no or inadequate access to water and sanitation in their own homes. The Government must end all forms of discrimination and adopt immediate measures to guarantee their human rights.”
Special Rapporteur on contemporary forms of slavery, Ms. Gulnara Shahinian:
”ILO research shows a clear link in Asian countries between forced labour and long-standing patterns of discrimination. In India, the overwhelming majority of bonded labour victims in agriculture, brick making,mining and other sectors are from Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes.”
Lack of reservation for Dalits in promotion in jobs is a 'big lacuna' in the legal framework.
-Politburo member Brinda Karat
The feeling of being dehumanized, of having been demeaned is far greater for dalit women. Rajat Mitra
Whenever a dalit woman is raped, it gets connected to all other sufferings and discriminations. Dalits being in a disadvantaged position and there's no resilience, no bouncing back. Rajat Mitra
“It is shocking that the conviction rate for cases of atrocities against SC/STs is less than 30% against the average of 42%.” Manmohan Singh, Prime Minister of India
“We need a concerted effort to bring about a social change which can weaken these divisive forces, strengthen unity and accelerate our march for national progress”
Meira Kumar, the Speaker of India’s Lower House (Lok Sabha):
जिसे अपने दुखों से मुक्ति चाहिए उसे लड़ना होगा और जिसे लड़ना है उसे पहले पढ़ना होगा क्योंकि ज्ञान के बिना लड़ने गए तो हार निश्चित है |
डाॅ. बाबासाहेब आंबेडकर
शिक्षित बनो !, संगठित रहो!, संघर्ष करो!।
डॉ. भीमराव रामजी आम्बेडकर
"हम आदि से अंत तक भारतीय है।" ~ डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
"We are Indians, firstly and lastly." ~ B. R. Ambedkar
"सागर में मिलकर अपनी पहचान खो देने वाली पानी की एक बूँद के विपरीत , इंसान जिस समाज में रहता है वहां अपनी पहचान नहीं खोता । इंसान का जीवन स्वतंत्र है । वो सिर्फ समाज के विकास के लिए नहीं पैदा हुआ है , बल्कि स्वयं के विकास के लिए पैदा हुआ है ।" ~
डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
"Unlike a drop of water which loses its identity when it joins the ocean, man does not lose his being in the society in which he lives. Man’s life is independent. He is born not for the development of the society alone, but for the development of his self." ~ B. R. Ambedkar
"पति- पत्नी के बीच का सम्बन्ध घनिष्ट मित्रों के सम्बन्ध के सामान होना चाहिए ।"~
डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
"The relationship between husband and wife should be one of closest friends." ~ B. R. Ambedkar
"जीवन लम्बा होने की बजाये महान होना चाहिए ।" ~ डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
"Life should be great rather than long. " ~ B. R. Ambedkar
"हिंदू धर्म में, विवेक, कारण, और स्वतंत्र सोच के विकास के लिए कोई गुंजाइश नहीं है।" ~
डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
"In Hinduism, conscience, reason and independent thinking have no scope for development." ~ B. R. Ambedkar
"बुद्धि का विकास मानव के अस्तित्व का अंतिम लक्ष्य होना चाहिए।" ~ डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
Cultivation of mind should be the ultimate aim of human existence." ~
B. R. Ambedkar
"मनुष्य एवम उसके धर्म को समाज के द्वारा नैतिकता के आधार पर चयन करना चाहिये |अगर धर्म को ही मनुष्य के लिए सब कुछ मान लिया जायेगा तो किन्ही और मानको का कोई मूल्य नहीं रह जायेगा |" ~ डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
"People and their religion must be judged by social standards based on social ethics. No other standard would have any meaning if religion is held to be necessary good for the well-being of the people." ~ B. R. Ambedkar
"एक सफल क्रांति के लिए सिर्फ असंतोष का होना ही काफी नहीं है, बल्कि इसके लिए न्याय, राजनीतिक और सामाजिक अधिकारों में गहरी आस्था का होना भी बहुत आवश्यक है।" ~
डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
"For a successful revolution it is not enough that there is discontent. What is required is a profound and thorough conviction of the justice, necessity and importance of political and social rights." ~ B. R. Ambedkar
"इतिहास गवाह हैं कि जहाँ नैतिकता और अर्थशाश्त्र के बीच संघर्ष होता है वहां जीत हमेशा अर्थशाश्त्र की होती है। निहित स्वार्थों को तब तक स्वेच्छा से नहीं छोड़ा गया है जब तक कि मजबूर करने के लिए पर्याप्त बल ना लगाया गया हो।" ~ डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
"History shows that where ethics and economics come in conflict, victory is always with economics. Vested interests have never been known to have willingly divested themselves unless there was sufficient force to compel them." ~
B. R. Ambedkar
"किसी भी कौम का विकास उस कौम की महिलाओं के विकास से मापा जाता हैं |" ~
डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
"I measure the progress of a community by the degree of progress which women have achieved." ~ B. R. Ambedkar
"एक महान व्यक्ति एक प्रख्यात व्यक्ति से एक ही बिंदु पर भिन्न हैं कि महान व्यक्ति समाज का सेवक बनने के लिए तत्पर रहता हैं।" ~ डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
"A great man is different from an eminent one in In that he is ready to be the servant of the society." ~ B. R. Ambedkar
"जो व्यक्ति अपनी मौत को हमेशा याद रखता है वह सदा अच्छे कार्य में लगा रहता है।" ~
डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
"मैं ऐसे धर्म को मानता हूँ जो स्वतंत्रता, समानता, और भाई-चारा सीखाये।" ~
डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
"I like the religion that teaches liberty, equality and fraternity." ~ B. R. Ambedkar
"हर व्यक्ति जो मिल के सिद्धांत कि एक देश दूसरे देश पर शासन नहीं कर सकता को दोहराता है उसे ये भी स्वीकार करना चाहिए कि एक वर्ग दूसरे वर्ग पर शासन नहीं कर सकता।" ~
डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
"Every man who repeats the dogma of Mill that one country is no fit to rule another country must admit that one class is not fit to rule another class." ~
B. R. Ambedkar
"जिस तरह मनुष्य नश्वर है ठीक उसी तरह विचार भी नश्वर हैं। जिस तरह पौधे को पानी की जरूरत पड़ती है उसी तरह एक विचार को प्रचार-प्रसार की जरुरत होती है वरना दोनों मुरझा कर मर जाते है।" ~ डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
"Men are mortal. So are ideas. An idea needs propagation as much as a plant needs watering. Otherwise both will wither and die." ~ B. R. Ambedkar
"जिस तरह हर एक व्यक्ति यह सिधांत दोहराता हैं कि एक देश दुसरे देश पर शासन नहीं कर सकता उसी प्रकार उसे यह भी मानना होगा कि एक वर्ग दुसरे पर शासन नहीं कर सकता |" ~
डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
"आज भारतीय दो अलग-अलग विचारधाराओं द्वारा शासित हो रहे हैं। उनके राजनीतिक आदर्श जो संविधान के प्रस्तावना में इंगित हैं वो स्वतंत्रता, समानता, और भाई -चारे को स्थापित करते हैं और उनके धर्म में समाहित सामाजिक आदर्श इससे इनकार करते हैं।" ~
डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
"Indians today are governed by two different ideologies. Their political ideal set in the preamble of the Constitution affirms a life of liberty, equality and fraternity. Their social ideal embodied in their religion denies them." ~ B. R. Ambedkar
"उदासीनता लोगों को प्रभावित करने वाली सबसे खराब किस्म की बीमारी है।" ~
डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
"Indifferentism is the worst kind of disease that can affect people." ~
B. R. Ambedkar
"एक महान व्यक्ति एक प्रतिष्ठित व्यक्ति से अलग है क्योंकि वह समाज का सेवक बनने के लिए तैयार रहता है।" ~ डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
"A great man is different from an eminent one in In that he is ready to be the servant of the society." ~ B. R. Ambedkar
"एक सुरक्षित सेना एक सुरक्षित सीमा से बेहतर है।" ~ डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
"A safe army is better than a safe border." ~ B. R. Ambedkar
"क़ानून और व्यवस्था राजनीति रूपी शरीर की दवा है और जब राजनीति रूपी शरीर बीमार पड़ जाएँ तो दवा अवश्य दी जानी चाहिए।" ~ डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
"Law and order are the medicine of the body politic and when the body politic gets sick, medicine must be administered." ~ B. R. Ambedkar
"जब तक आप सामाजिक स्वतंत्रता नहीं हांसिल कर लेते, क़ानून आपको जो भी स्वतंत्रता देता है वो आपके किसी काम की नहीं।" ~ डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
"So long as you do not achieve social liberty, whatever freedom is provided by the law is of no avail to you." ~ B. R. Ambedkar
"यदि मुझे लगा कि संविधान का दुरुपयोग किया जा रहा है, तो मैं इसे सबसे पहले जलाऊंगा।"~ डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
"If I find the constitution being misused, I shall be the first to burn it." ~
B. R. Ambedkar
"यदि हम एक संयुक्त एकीकृत आधुनिक भारत चाहते हैं, तो सभी धर्मों के धर्मग्रंथों की संप्रभुता का अंत होना चाहिए।" ~ डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
"The sovereignty of scriptures of all religions must come to an end if we want to have a united integrated modern India." ~ B. R. Ambedkar
"राजनीतिक अत्याचार सामाजिक अत्याचार की तुलना में कुछ भी नहीं है और एक सुधारक जो समाज को खारिज कर देता है वो सरकार को खारिज कर देने वाले राजनीतिज्ञ से ज्यादा साहसी हैं।" ~ डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
"Political tyranny is nothing compared to the social tyranny and a reformer who defies society is a more courageous man than a politician who defies Government." ~ B. R. Ambedkar
"लोग और उनके धर्म, सामाजिक नैतिकता के आधार पर, सामाजिक मानकों द्वारा परखे जाने चाहिए। अगर धर्म को लोगों के भले के लिये आवश्यक वस्तु मान लिया जायेगा तो और किसी मानक का मतलब नहीं होगा।" ~ डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
"समानता एक कल्पना हो सकती है, लेकिन फिर भी इसे एक गवर्निंग सिद्धांत रूप में स्वीकार करना होगा।" ~ डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
"Equality may be a fiction but nonetheless one must accept it as a governing principle." ~ B. R. Ambedkar
"हमारे पास यह स्वतंत्रता किस लिए है? हमारे पास ये स्वत्नत्रता इसलिए है ताकि हम अपने सामाजिक व्यवस्था, जो असमानता, भेद-भाव और अन्य चीजों से भरी है, जो हमारे मौलिक अधिकारों से टकराव में है, को सुधार सकें।" ~ डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
"What are we having this liberty for? We are having this liberty in order to reform our social system, which is full of inequality, discrimination and other things, which conflict with our fundamental rights." ~ B. R. Ambedkar
"मेरे नाम की जय-जयकार करने से अच्छा है, मेरे बताए हुए रास्ते पर चलें।"
~ डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
"रात रातभर मैं इसलिये जागता हूँ क्योंकि मेरा समाज सो रहा है।"
~ डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
"जो कौम अपना इतिहास नहीं जानती, वह कौम कभी भी इतिहास नहीं बना सकती।"
~ डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
"अपने भाग्य के बजाय अपनी मजबूती पर विश्वास करो।"
~ डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
"मैं राजनीति में सुख भोगने नहीं बल्कि अपने सभी दबे-कुचले भाईयों को उनके अधिकार दिलाने आया हूँ।" ~ डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
"मनुवाद को जड़ से समाप्त करना मेरे जीवन का प्रथम लक्ष्य है।"
~ डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
"जो धर्म जन्म से एक को श्रेष्ठ और दूसरे को नीच बनाए रखे, वह धर्म नहीं, गुलाम बनाए रखने का षड़यंत्र है।" ~ डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
"राष्ट्रवाद तभी औचित्य ग्रहण कर सकता है, जब लोगों के बीच जाति, नरल या रंग का अन्तर भुलाकर उसमें सामाजिक भ्रातृत्व को सर्वोच्च स्थान दिया जाये।"
~ डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
"मैं तो जीवन भर कार्य कर चुका हूँ अब इसके लिए नौजवान आगे आए।"
~ डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
"अच्छा दिखने के लिए मत जिओ बल्कि अच्छा बनने के लिए जिओ!
~ डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
"जो झुक सकता है वह सारी दुनिया को झुका भी सकता है!"~ डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
"लोकतंत्र सरकार का महज एक रूप नहीं है।" ~ डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
"एक इतिहासकार, सटीक, ईमानदार और निष्पक्ष होना चाहिए।"
~ डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
"संविधान, यह एक मात्र वकीलों का दस्तावेज नहीं। यह जीवन का एक माध्यम है।"
~ डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
"किसी का भी स्वाद बदला जा सकता है लेकिन जहर को अमृत में परिवर्तित नही किया जा सकता।" ~ डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
"न्याय हमेशा समानता के विचार को पैदा करता है।"
~ डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
"मन की स्वतंत्रता ही वास्तविक स्वतंत्रता है।"
~ डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
"इस दुनिया में महान प्रयासों से प्राप्त किया गया को छोडकर और कुछ भी बहुमूल्य नहीं है।" ~ डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
"ज्ञान व्यक्ति के जीवन का आधार हैं।"
~ डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
"शिक्षा जितनी पुरूषों के लिए आवशयक है उतनी ही महिलाओं के लिए।"
~ डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
"महात्मा आये और चले गये परन्तु अछुत, अछुत ही बने हुए हैं।" ~
डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
"स्वतंत्रता का रहस्य, साहस है और साहस एक पार्टी में व्यक्तियों के संयोजन से पैदा होता है।" ~ डॉ. भीम राव अम्बेडकर
Mahad Satyagraha
Mahad Satyagraha or Chavdar Tale Satyagraha was a satyagraha led by B. R. Ambedkar on 20 March 1927 to allow untouchables to use water in a public tank in Mahad (currently in Raigad district), Maharashtra, India. The day (20 March) is observed as Social Empowerment day in India.
Background
By the Indian caste system, untouchables (Dalits) were segregated from the other Hindu castes. They were banned from using water bodies and roads which were used by other Hindu castes. In August 1923, Bombay Legislative Council passed a resolution that people from the depressed classes should be allowed to use places which were built and maintained by the government.[2] In January 1924, Mahad which was part of the Bombay Province passed the resolution in its municipal council to enforce the act. But it was failed to implement because of the protest from the savarna Hindus.
Satyagraha
In 1927, Ambedkar decided to launch a satyagraha (nonviolent resistance) to assert their rights to use water in the public places.
Mahad, a town in Konkan, was selected for the event because it had a nucleus of support from 'caste hindus'. These included A.V.Chitre, an activist from the Marathi Chandraseniya Kayastha Prabhu (CKP) community; G.N.Sahasrabudhe, a Chitpawan Brahmin of the Social Service League and Surendranath Tipnis, a CKP who was president of the Mahad municipality.
Surendranath Tipnis, the president of the Mahad municipality declared its public spaces open to untouchables and invited Ambedkar to hold a meeting at Mahad in 1927. After the meeting, they proceeded to the 'Chowder tank'. Ambedkar drank water from the tank and thousands of untouchables followed him.
Ambedkar also made a statement addressing the Dalit women during the Satyagraha. He asked them to abandon all old customs that provided recognizable markers of untouchability and asked them to wear saris like high caste women. Before that time, the Dalit women were not allowed to drape saris completely. Immediately after Ambedkar's speech at Mahad, the dalit women readily decided to drape their saris like the higher caste women. Upper caste women namely Lakshmibai Tipnis and Indirabia Chitre helped the Dalit women dress like 'upper caste women' by covering the legs of the dalit women down to their ankles.
Ambedkar decided to hold the second conference in Mahad on 26–27 December 1927. But caste Hindus filed a case against him that tank as a private property. He was not able to continue his satyagraha as the case was sub judice.
On 25 December (Manusmriti Dahan Din), Shastrabuddhe under the guidance of Ambedkar, burnt Manusmriti, a Hindu law book, as a protest. In December 1937, the Bombay High Court ruled that untouchables have the right to use water from the tank.
Struggle to access water by Dalit still continues. Access to water is still denied to Dalits at many places and are beaten or killed many times if they try to drink water from the forbidden places.
On 19 March 1940, Dr. Ambedkar arranged a rally and public conference in Mahad to recollect 14th Mahad Satyagraha Day as "Empowerment Day". On this day, Adv. Vishnu Narhari Khodke, as President of Mahad Municipal Corporation, arranged a function and honoured Dr. Ambedkar with a Letter of Honour (मानपत्र) for his "Chavdar tale Satyagraha" and "Manusmruti Dahan" and other movements in Mahad.
1896 Death of the mother, Mrs. Bhimabai Ambedkar
bhimabai ramji sakpal (murbadkar)
Birthdate: estimated between 1822 and 1854
Death: between January 01, 1854 and circa January 01, 1896
Immediate Family:
Daughter of major murbadkar, subedar major
Wife of ramji maloji sakpal, subedar major
Mother of child 1 sakpal; child 2 sakpal; child3 sakpal; child 4 sakpal; child 5 sakpal and 9 others
November 7, 1900 Ambedkar First joined Primary school at Depoli village in Konkan district Then moved to Pratapsingh High School in the Maharashtra's Satara distric. on November 7, 1900. ... got enrolled in school, the Maharashtra government has directed its schools and junior colleges in ...
1904 Entered the Elphistone High School at Bombay
1906 Married Ramabai, daughter of Mr. Bhiku Walangkar, one of the relations of Gopal Baba Walangkar
1907 Passed Matriculation Examination, secured 382 marks out of 750
1908 Jan Honoured in a meeting presided over by Shri S K Bole, Shri K A (Dada) Keluskar Guruji presented a book on the life of Gautam Buddha written by him
1912 Bhimrao (*an early photo*) passed the B.A. Examination (special subjects: Economics and Politics) from Bombay University, and prepared to take a position in the administration of Baroda State (*Imperial Gazetteer*; *Imperial Gazetteer map*). His oldest son, Yashwant, was born. (*Kadam*, p.71.)
1912 Dec 12 Birth of the son Yeshwant
1913 Jan Passed B A Examination with Persian and English from University of Bombay, secured 449 marks out of 1000
1913 He had barely begun at his new post when he learned by telegram that his father was gravely ill; he rushed home just in time for a last farewell. "It was February 2, 1913, the saddest day in Bhimrao Ambedkar's life." (*Keer*, p. 24.)
1913 Jun 4 Selected as Gaekwad Scholar on agrrement to serve 10 years in Baroda State. Ambedkar was one of the four students selected by Baroda ruler Sayaji Rao Gaekwad.
1913 July He left for USA by sea in third week of July 1913.
1913 The Gaekwar of Baroda announced his decision to offer scholarships to send students for higher education at Columbia University. A scholarship of 11.50 British pounds a month, for three years, was awarded to the young Ambedkar. (*Kadam*, p.72.)
1913 Receives Baroda State Scholarship to join the Political Science Department of the Columbia University as a Post Graduate Student where he worked under Professors Seligman, Clark, Seager, Moore, Mitchell, Chadwick, Simkovitch, Giddings, Dewey and Goldenweiser." (Source: a curriculum vitae from the 1920's, preserved in the Columbia University archives, that was almost certainly prepared by Dr. Ambedkar himself.) NOTE: he was in fact admitted to the Graduate School in general (things were less compartmentalized in those days) and not formally to a "political science department."
1913 Arriving in New York during the third week in July, Bhimrao was housed in Hartley Hall (*site*). But he didn't care for the food, and only stayed for a week. In August he moved from Hartley Hall to "Cosmopolitan Club" (554 West 114th Street) (*photo*; *New York Times article*), a housing club maintained by a group of Indian students. He finally settled in a dormitory, Livingston Hall (since renamed Wallach Hall (*photo*), with his friend Naval Bhathena, a Parsi; the two remained friends for life. (*Keer*, pp. 26-27.)
1914 In later years, he told his biographer about his early months in New York--how he had at first enjoyed the social side of campus life, but then one night made a firm resolve, and started studying in dead earnest....
"'The best friends I have had in life,' Dr. Ambedkar says, 'were some of my classmates at Columbia and my great professors, John Dewey, James Shotwell, Edwin Seligman, and James Harvey Robinson.'" (Source: "'Untouchables' Represented by Ambedkar, '15AM, '28PhD," Columbia Alumni News, Dec. 19, 1930, page 12; from the Columbia University archives.)
At Columbia: Prof. John Dewey: One of the major philosophers of education of the twentieth century, John Dewey (1859-1952) (*site*) became one of the young Ambedkar's heroes. Writing in 1936, Ambedkar referred to the work of "Prof. John Dewey, who was my teacher and to whom I owe so much." (--*Annihilation of Caste, Section 25*). There is much evidence of Dr. Ambedkar's admiration for Dewey, including *the annotated books in his personal library*. Here is one modern scholar's view: *"The like-mindedness of Dewey and Ambedkar"*.
At Columbia: Profs. Shotwell and Robinson: Another of the young Ambedkar's mentors, Prof. James Shotwell (1874-1965) (*site*) was a Barnard historian who specialized in international relations, and a former student of Prof. James Harvey Robinson (1863-1936) (*site*), Barnard's first historian-- who himself was another of the mentors named by Dr. Ambedkar.
At Columbia: Prof. Edwin Seligman: A friend of Lala Lajpat Rai (*site*), the well-known economist Edwin R. A. Seligman (1861-1939) (*site*) became a particularly sympathetic mentor to the young Ambedkar, who continued to correspond with him for years.
At Columbia: coursework: During Ambedkar's time at Columbia he would sit for hours studying in *Low Library*; the rotunda then housed the main reading room. His *coursework* during his three years (including summers) at Columbia consisted of: 29 courses in economics, 11 in history, 6 in sociology, 5 in philosophy, 4 in anthropology, 3 in politics, and 1 each in elementary French and German. (Source: Office of the Registrar, Columbia University.)
"[Parents] can mold the destiny of children, and if we but follow this principle, be sure that we shall soon see better days; and our progress will be greatly accelerated if male education is pursued side by side with female education, the fruits of which you can very well see verified in your own daughter," Ambedkar wrote from New York in a Marathi letter to a friend of his father. "Let your mission therefore be to educate and preach the idea of education to those at least who are near to and in close contact with you." (*Keer*, pp. 26-27.)
1915 The young graduate student passed his M.A. exam in June, majoring in Economics, with Sociology, History, Philosophy, and Anthropology as other subjects of study; he presented a thesis, *"Ancient Indian Commerce"*. For his outstanding achievement, he was honored by students and professors of the Faculty of Arts at a special dinner. In 1916 he offered another M.A. thesis, "National Dividend of India--A Historic and Analytical Study"; it was this one that later became the nucleus of his Ph.D. dissertation. (*Keer*, p. 29.)
1915 May 15. He wrote thesis Entitled "Administration and Finance in Eat India Company" for MA.
1915 June 2 Passed M A Examination majoring in Economics and with Sociology, History, Philosophy, Anthropology and Politics as the other subjects of study
1916 On May 9th, he read his paper *"Castes in India: Their Mechanism, Genesis, and Development"* before a seminar conducted by the anthropologist Prof. Alexander Goldenweiser (1880-1940) (*site*). Dr. Ambedkar was very proud of this paper, and remained so. He promptly got it published in the Indian Antiquary (May 1917). As late as 1936 he wrote that only shortage of time prevented him from reworking Annihilation of Caste so as to include in it this early seminar paper (Preface to the 3rd edition, Annihilation of Caste).
1916 In June he went to London, and in October he was admitted to Gray's Inn (*site*) for Law, and to the London School of Economics and Political Science (*site*) for Economics, where he was allowed to start work on a doctoral thesis. He often worked in the British Library Reading Room (*site*).
1916 May 9 Read a paper on 'The Castes in India' before Prof Goldenweiser's Anthropology Seminar. The paper was later published in The Indian Antiquary in May 1917. it was also republished in the form of a brochure, the first published work of Dr Ambedkar.
1916 June Wrote a Thesis entitled 'The National Dividend of India - A Historical and Analytical Study' for the Ph D Degree
1916 June Left Columbia University after completing work for the Ph D to join the London School of Economics and Political Science London as a graduate student
1916 Oct Admitted to Gray' Inn , London for Law.
1917 The term of his scholarship from Baroda ended, so that he was obliged to go back to India in June with his work unfinished; he was, however, given permission to return and finish within four years. He sent his precious and much-loved collection of books back on a steamer--but it was torpedoed and sunk by a German submarine. (*Keer*, p. 32.)
1917 He was appointed Military Secretary to the Gaikwar of Baroda; he had agreed to join the Baroda service as a condition of his scholarship. But this experience was not a happy one. Even to reach Baroda, he had to pay his own expenses; to meet these expenses he used the damages paid by Thomas Cook and Company for his torpedoed luggage. And when he arrived in Baroda, things went from bad to worse:
"My five years of staying in Europe and America had completely wiped out of my mind any consciousness that I was an untouchable, and that an untouchable wherever he went in India was a problem to himself and to others. But when I came out of the station, my mind was considerably disturbed by a question, 'Where to go? Who will take me?'....[the story is continued in Part Two of Waiting for a Visa)
1917 Meeting in Calcutta with Annie Besant (*site*) as its President (*site*), for the first time in its history the Indian National Congress adopted a resolution endorsing "the justice and righteousness of removing all disabilities imposed by custom upon the Depressed Classes." (*Kadam*, p.74.)
1917 June 8 Columbia university conferred a Degree of Ph D
1917 June Returned to India after spending a year in London working on the Thesis for the M Sc (Econ.) degree. The return, before completion of the work, was necessitated by the termination the Scholarship granted by the Baroda State
1917 July Appointed Military Secretary to the Maharaja of Baroda with a view to being groomed for the post of the State Finance Minister.
1917 Nov But left shortly due to ill treatment meted out to him because of his lowly caste. Published 'Small Holdings in Indian and Their Remedies'
1918 After the Baroda fiasco, he tried to find ways to make a living for his growing family. With the help of Parsi friends, he became a private tutor, and found some work as an accountant. He also started an investment consulting business, but it failed when his clients learned that he was an untouchable. (*Keer*, pp. 37-38.)
1918 Finally he became Professor of Political Economy in the Sydenham College of Commerce and Economics (*site*), in Bombay. (This position came about through the recommendation of his London acquaintance, Lord Sydenham, former Governor of Bombay.) He was mostly successful with his students, but some of the other professors objected to his sharing the same drinking-water jug that they all used. (*Keer*, p. 39.)
1918 In the new Journal of Indian Economics (1,1), he reviewed a book by Bertrand Russell: *"Mr Russell and the Reconstruction of Society"*. And in the new Journal of the Indian Economic Society (1,2-3) he published *"Small Holdings in India and Their Remedies"*.
1918 Gave evidence before the Southborough Commission on Franchise Attended the Conference of the depressed Classes held at Nagpur
1919 He testified both orally and in writing before the Southborough Committee (*site*), which was investigating franchise matters in the light of the planned Montagu-Chelmsford reforms. He demanded separate electorates and reserved seats for the untouchables: "The real social divisions of India then are: (1) Touchable Hindus. (2) Untouchable Hindus. (3) Mohammedans. (4) Christians. (5) Parsees. (6) Jews." (--from the *transcript* of the proceedings, Jan. 27, 1919). Discussion: *Chandrabhan Prasad*; *Syed Amjad Ali*.
1919 Nov (11 Nov 1918-1920) Professor of Political Economy in the Sydenham College of Commerce and Economics, Bombay
1920 Jan 31 Started a Marathi Weekly paper Mooknayak to champion the cause of the depressed classes. Shri Nandram Bhatkar was the editor, later Shri Dyander Gholap was the editor
1920 Mar 21 Attended depressed classes Conference
1920 Mar Resigned professorship at Sydenham College to resume his studies in London
1920 May Memorable speech in Nagpur, criticized Karmaveer Shinde and Depressed Classes Mission
1920 Again left for London to complete his studies.
1920 Sept Rejoined the London School of Economics. Also entered Gray's Inn to read for the Bar
1921 June The thesis 'Provincial Decentralisation of Imperial Finance in British India' was accepted for M Sc (Econ) Degree by the London University
1922 Oct Spent some time in reading economics in the University of Bonn in Germany
1923 Mar The Thesis 'The Problem of the Rupee-Its origin and its solution'
was accepted for the degree of D Sc (Econ) University of London . The thesis was
published in December 1923 by P S King & Company, London.
1923 Called to the Bar
1923 Apr Returned to India
1924 June Started practice in the Bombay high Court
1924 July 20 Founded the 'Bahishkrit Hitkarini Sabha' for the uplift of the depressed classes. The aims of the Sabha were educate, agitate, organize
1925 Published ' The Evolution of Provincial Finance in British India - dissertation on the provincial decentralization of Imperial Finance in India'
1926 Gave evidence before the Royal Commission on Indian Currency (Hilton Young Commission) Nominated Member of the Bombay Legislative Council
1927 Mar 20 Started Satyagraha at Mahad (Dist - Kolaba) to secure to the untouchables the Right of access to the Chavdar Tank
1927 Apr 3 Started a fortnightly Marathi paper Bahiskrit Bharat Dr Ambedkar himself was the editor
1927 Sept Established 'Samaj Samata Sangh'
1927 Dec Second Conference in Mahad
1928 Mar Introduced the "Vatan Bill" in the Bombay Legislative Council
1928 May Gave evidence before the Indian Statutory Committee (Simon Commission)
1928 June Professor, Government Law College Bombay Principal, Government Law College Bombay
1928-9 Member, Bombay Presidency Committee of the Simon Committee
1930 Mar Satyagraha at Kalaram Temple, Nasik to secure for the Untouchables the right of entry into the temple
1930 Aug. 8, Dr. Ambedkar presided over the Depressed Classes Congress at Nagpur, and made a major speech: he endorsed Dominion status, and criticized Gandhi's Salt March and civil disobedience movement as inopportune; but he also criticized British colonial misgovernment, with its famines and immiseration. He argued that the "safety of the Depressed Classes" hinged on their "being independent of the Government and the Congress" both: "We must shape our course ourselves and by ourselves." His conclusion emphasized self-help: "Political power cannot be a panacea for the ills of the Depressed Classes. Their salvation lies in their social elevation. They must cleanse their evil habits. They must improve their bad ways of living.... They must be educated.... There is a great necessity to disturb their pathetic contentment and to instil into them that divine discontent which is the spring of all elevation." (-- *Keer*, pp. 141-143.)
1930 Dr. Ambedkar was invited by the Viceroy to be a delegate to the Round Table Conference, and left for London in October. He participated extensively in the work of the Round Table Conference, often submitting *written statements of his views*. His views at the time were described in an unpublished manuscript later found among his papers: *"The Untouchables and the Pax Britannica"*.
1930 "PRINCE AND OUTCAST AT DINNER IN LONDON END AGE-OLD BARRIER: Gaekwar of Baroda is Host to 'Untouchable' and Knight of High Hindu Caste..." (*...from an article in the New York Times, Nov. 30, 1930*).
"But I tell you that the Congress is not sincere about its professions. Had it been sincere, it would have surely made the removal of untouchability a condition, like the wearing of khaddar, for becoming a member of the Congress." On August 14th, 1931, Dr. Ambedkar met with Gandhi for the first time. From Gandhi's side, *their discussion* was an absent-minded rebuke that seemed to be more in sorrow than in anger; from Ambedkar's side, it was an outburst of passionate reproach.
1932 The All-Indian Depressed Classes Conference, held at Kamtee near Nagpur on May 6th, backed Dr. Ambedkar's demand for separate electorates, rejecting compromises proposed by others.
1932 Gandhi, in Yeravda jail, started a fast to the death against the separate electorates granted to the Depressed Classes by Ramsay MacDonald's Communal Award. By September 23, a very reluctant Dr. Ambedkar was obliged by the pressure of this moral blackmail to accept representation through joint electorates instead. The result was the *Poona Pact*. In 1933, Gandhi replaced his journal "Young India" with a new one called "Harijan," and undertook a 21-day "self-purification fast" against untouchability (*Gandhi timeline*).
1930-32 Delegate, Round Table Conference representing Untouchables of India . These started in November 1930 and ended in December 1932.
1932 Sept Signed with Mr. M.K. Gandhi the Poona Pact giving up, to save Gandhi's life. Separate electorates granted to the Depressed Classes by Ramsay MacDonald's Communal Award, and accepting, instead, representation through joint electorates
1932-4 Member joint Parliamentary Committee on the Indian Constitutional Reform
1933 Dr. Ambedkar participated in the work of the *Joint Committee on Indian Legislative Reform*, examining a number of significant witnesses.
1934 Left Parel, Damodar Hall and came to stay in 'Rajgriha' Dadar (Bombay). This was done in order to get more accommodation for his library which was increasing day by day
1934 "In the year 1934, some of my co-workers in the movement of the depressed classes expressed a desire to go on a sight-seeing tour... [the story is continued in Part Four of Waiting for a Visa).
1935 Dr. Ambedkar was appointed Principal of the Government Law College, and became a professor there as well; he held these positions for two years. (--*Kadam*, p.106)
1935 In May, Dr. Ambedkar's wife Ramabai died after a long illness. Her great wish had been to make a pilgrimage to Pandharpur, but since as an untouchable she would not have been allowed to enter the temple, her husband had never allowed her to go.
1 935 On Oct. 13th, Dr. Ambedkar presided over the Yeola Conversion Conference, held in Yeola, in Nasikh District (*Imperial Gazetteer*; *Imperial Gazetteer map*). He advised the Depressed Classes to abandon all agitation for temple-entry privileges; instead, they should leave Hinduism entirely and embrace another religion. He vowed, "I solemnly assure you that I will not die as a Hindu." (--*Keer*, p. 253.)
1935 The struggle for social justice began to receive increasing attention and support from progressive writers. Mulk Raj Anand's powerful novel "Untouchable" (1935) was followed by "Coolie" (1936), with a foreword by E. M. Forster; both works called international attention to caste and class injustices (*K. Satchidanandan*; *Andrew M. Stracuzzi*). In Hindi, there was the work of Premchand (*Premchand*).
1935 May 26 Death of wife, Mrs. Ramabai Ambedkar
1935 June Dr. Ambedkar was appointed as Principal of Government Law College, Bombay. He was also appointed Perry Professor of Jurisprudence
1935 Oct 13 Historical Yeola Conversion Conference held under the Presidentship of Dr. Ambedkar at yeola Dist., Nasik. He exhorted the Depressed Classes to leave Hinduism embrace another religioin. He declared: 'I was bom as a Hindu but I will not die as Hindi'. He also advised his followers to abandon the Kalaram Mandir entry Satyagraha, Nasik
1935 Dec Dr. Ambedkar was invited by the Jat Pat Todak Mandal of Lahore to preside over the Conference. Dr. Ambedkar prepared his historical speech 'The Annihilation of Caste' the conference was cancelled by the Mandal on the ground that Dr. Ambedkar's thoughts were revolutionary. Finally, Dr. Ambedkar refused to preside and published his speech in book form in 1937
1935. Dr. Ambedkar was elected Member of Bombay Legislative Assembly (Total Seats 175. reserved Seats 15. Dr. Ambedkar's Independent Labour Party won 17 seats)
1935 In December, Dr. Ambedkar was invited by the Jat-Pat-Todak Mandal of Lahore (*Imperial Gazetteer*; *Imperial Gazetteer map,*), a caste-reform organization, to preside over its annual conference in the spring of 1936.
1935/6 He composed (or began to compose?), but did not publish, a brief, moving, and largely autobiographical memoir called *Waiting for a Visa*.
1936 On April 13-14th, he addressed the Sikh Mission Conference in Amritsar (*Imperial Gazetteer*; *Imperial Gazetteer map*), and reiterated his intention of renouncing Hinduism.
1936 In late April, the Jat-Pat-Todak Mandal realized the radical nature of its guest's planned speech, and withdrew its earlier invitation. On May 15th, Dr. Ambedkar published the speech he would have given, with an introductory account of the whole controversy. The result, a slim little book called *The Annihilation of Caste*, became (in)famous at once.
1936 On May 31st, Dr. Ambedkar addressed the Mumbai Elaka Mahar Parishad (Bombay Mahar Society), during a meeting at Naigaum (Dadar), in Bombay. He spoke in Marathi, to his own people, with vividness and poignancy: *"What Path to Salvation?"*. This was the only time he addressed an audience expressly limited to Mahars. [--Eleanor Zelliot, personal communication, Jan. 2005] Meanwhile, Gandhi was formulating his own highly eccentric view of *"The Ideal Bhangi"* [--text courtesy of Joel Lee].
1936 In August, he founded his first political party, the Independent Labour Party, which contested 17 seats in the 1937 General Elections, and won 15. (--*Kadam*, pp.109-10)
1936 Jan 11-2 The Depressed Classes Conference was held at Pune Dr. Ambedkar reiterated his resolve of the Yeola Conference to leave Hinduism. The conference was presided over by Rav Bahadur N. Shina Raj
1936 Feb 29 Dr. Ambedkar's Conversion Resolution was supported by the Chambars (Cobblers) of East Khandesh
1936 May 30 Bombay Presidency Conversion Conference (Mumbai i'. :'< Mahar Parishad) of Mahars was held at Naigaum (Dadar) to sound their opinion on the issue of Conversion. Mr. Subha Rao popularly known as Hyderabad! Ambedkar, presided over the Conference. In the morning the Asietics shaved their beards, moustaches and destroyed their symbols of Hinduism in an Ascetic's Conference
1936 June 15 Conference of Devdasis was held in Bombay to support Dr. Ambedkar's Resolution of Conversion
1936 June 18 Dr. Ambedkar- talks on conversion - Pro Sikkhism
1936 June 23 Matang Parishad in support of Conversion
1936 Aug Dr. Ambedkar founded the Independent Labour Party, a strong opposition party in Bombay's Legislative Council
1936 Sept 18 Dr. Ambedkar sent a delegation of 13 members to the Golden Temple Amritsar to study Sikkhism
1936 Nov 11 Dr. Ambedkar left for Geneva and London
1936 The Maharaja of Travancore (*Imperial Gazetteer*; *Gazetteer map*) issued a proclamation allowing temple entry to the Depressed Classes; this was the first such event in modern India. (--*Kadam*, p.110)
1937 Dr. Ambedkar published the second edition of *"The Annihilation of Caste"*, adding a concluding appendix that featured a debate with Gandhi over the speech. This work remained a bestseller, going through many editions in the coming years--and exciting much controversy. "It was logic on fire, pinching and pungent, piercing and fiery, provocative and explosive." (--*Keer*, p. 269.)
1937 Dr. Ambedkar organized the 'Municipal Workers' Union' in Bombay in 1937
1937 Jan 14 Dr. Ambedkar returned to Bombay
1937 Feb 17 The first General Election were held under the Govt, of India Act of 1935. Elections were held in eleven provinces - Madras, Central Provinces, Bihar, Orissa, United Provinces, Bombay Presidency, Assam, NWFP, Bengal, Punjab and Sindh.
1937 Mar 17 The Mahad Chowdar Tank case was decided m favour of D.C. by which they got a legal right to use the public wells and tanks
1937 July 31 Dr. Ambedkar received a grand reception at Chaligaon Railway station
1937 Sept 17 Dr. Ambedkar introduced his Bill to abolish the Mahar Watan in the Assembly
1937 Dec 31 Reception at Pandhapur on the way to Sholapur, where he was going to preside Sholapur District DC. Conference
1938 Over Dr. Ambedkar's vigorous protests, in January Congress adopted Gandhi's own term "Harijans" ("Children of God") as the official name for the "scheduled castes." In protest against a term that he considered condescending and meaningless, Dr. Ambedkar and his party staged a walkout from the Bombay Legislative Assembly. Dr Ambedkar made a number of significant *speeches to the Assembly, 1938-39*. (--*Kadam*, p.111)
1938 Jan 4 Reception given by the Sholapur Municipal Council
1938 Jan , The Congress Party introduced a Bill making a change in the name of Untouchables i.e. they would be called Harijans meaning sons OT God. Dr. Ambedkar criticized the Bill, as in his opinion the change of name would make no real change in their conditions. Dr. Ambedkar and Bhaurav Gaikwad protested against the use of the term Harijans in legal matters. When the ruling party by sheer force of numbers defeated the I.L.P., the Labour Party group walked out of the Assembly in protest under the leadership of Dr. Ambedkar. He organized a peasants' march on Bombay Assembly. The peasants demanded the passing of Dr. Ambedkar's Bill for abolition of the Khoti system
1938 Jan 23 Dr. Ambedkar addressed a Peasants' Conference at Ahmedabad
1938 Feb 12-13 Dr. Ambedkar addressed a historical Conference of Railway workers at Manmad (Dist. Nasik)
1938 Apr Dr. Ambedkar opposed creation of a separate Kamataka State in
the national interest
1938 May Dr. Ambedkar resigned from the Principal ship of the Government
Law College, Mumbai
1938 May l3-21 Dr. Ambedkar went on tour of Konkan Region. He also went to Nagpur in Connection with a court case
1938 Aug A meeting was held at R.M. Bhat High School, Bombay for exposing Gandhiji's attitude in disallowing a D.C. man being taken into the Central Ministry
1938 Sept Dr. Ambedkar spoke on the Industrial Disputes Bill in the Bombay Assembly. He bitteriy opposed it for its attempt to outlaw the right of workers to strike. He said: 'If Congressmen believe that Swaraj is their birthright, then the right to strike is the birth-right of workers'
1938 Oct 1 Dr. Ambedkar addressed a large gathering at Bawala, near Ahmedabad. On return he addressed another meeting at Premabhai Hall, Ahmedabad
1938 Nov 6 The Industrial Workers' strike. The procession (under the leadership of Dr. Ambedkar, Nimkar, Dange, Pasulkar etc) was organized from Kamgar Maidan to Jambori Maidan , Worli. Dr. Ambedkar toured the workers' areas with Jamvadas Mehta
1938 Nov 10 Dr. Ambedkar moved a resolution for adoption of the methods for
birth-control in the Bombay Assembly
1938 Dec Dr. Ambedkar addressed the first D.C. Conference in Nizam'sdominion at Mahad
1939 In January, he delivered to the Gokhale Institute of Politics and Economics a lecture called *"Federation versus Freedom"*.
1939 During the debate over Congress's plan to leave the government in protest at not having been consulted about the declaration of war on Germany, Dr. Ambedkar made his own loyalties very clear: "Wherever there is any conflict of interests between the country and the Untouchables, so far as I am concerned, the Untouchables' interests will take precedence over the interests of the country. I am not going to support a tyrannising majority simply because it happens to speak in the name of the country.... As between the country and myself, the country will have precedence; as between the country and the Depressed Classes, the Depressed Classes will have precedence." (--*Keer*, p. 329.)
1939 In November, Congress left the government. Jinnah arranged the celebration of a "Day of Deliverance," and Dr. Ambedkar enthusiastically joined him. Dr. Ambedkar was careful to emphasize, however, that this was an anti-Congress rather than an anti-Hindu move; if Congress interpreted it as anti-Hindu, the reason could only be, he said, that Congress was a Hindu body after all. (--*Keer*, p. 330.)
1939 Jan 18 Dr. Ambedkar addressed a large gathering at Rajkot
1939 Jan 19 Ambedkar-Gandhi talks
1939 Jan 29 Kale Memorial Lecture of Gokhale School of Politics and Economics, Poona reviewing critically the All India Federation Scheme set out in the Govt, of India Act of
1939 July Dr. Ambedkar addressed a meeting organized fir Rohidas Vidya Committee
1939 Oct Ambedkar-Nehru first meeting
1939 Dec The Conference at Haregaon was held under the Presidentship of Dr. Ambedkar to voice the grievances of Mahar and Mahar WatandaYs
1940 May Dr. Ambedkar founded the ' Mahar Panchayat'
1940 July 22 Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose met Dr. Ambedkar in Bombay
1940 Dec Dr. Ambedkar published his Thoughts on Pakistan. The Second edition with the title Pakistan or Partition of India was issued in February 1945. A third impression of the book was published in 1946
1940 In December, Dr. Ambedkar published the first edition of his *"Thoughts on Pakistan"*. In this work he argued that though partition would be an unfortunate thing, it wouldn't be the worst possible outcome, and if the Muslims wanted it they had a perfect right to claim it.
1941 May 25 Mahar Dnyati Panchayat Samiti was formed by Dr. Ambedkar
1941 July 22 Dr. Ambedkar was appointed to sit on the Defense Advisory Committee
1941 Aug The Conference was held at Sinnar in protest of tax on Mahar Watans. Dr. Ambedkar launched a no-tax camp. He saw the Governor. Finally, the tax was abolished The Mumbai Elaka Conference of Maharashtra Mangs and Devdasis were organized under the Chairmanship of Dr. Ambedkar
1942 He founded his second political party, the All-India Scheduled Castes Federation, which didn't do so well in the elections of 1946. (--*Kadam*, p.115)
1942 Dr. Ambedkar was inducted into the Viceroy's Executive Council as Labour Member, a position which he held until his resignation in June 1946. His thoughtful comments in that forum cover *various topics* (see #6.). (--*Kadam*, p.115)
1942 Congress started the "Quit India" movement (discussion: *Abul Kalam Azad*; *Gandhi's original draft resolution*; *Sir Stafford Cripps's reply*; *The Hindu, August 1942*; *Manas*). Dr. Ambedkar severely criticized this move. He described it as "both irresponsible and insane, a bankruptcy of statesmanship and a measure to retrieve the Congress prestige that had gone down since the war started. It would be madness, he said, to weaken law and order art a time when the barbarians were at the gates." (--*Keer*, p. 354.)
1942 Apr Dr. Ambedkar founded the All India Scheduled Castes Federation in Nagpur
1942 July 18 Dr. Ambedkar addressed All India D.C. Conference at Nagpur
1942 July 20 Dr. Ambedkar joined the Victory's Executive Council as a Labour Member
1942 Dec Dr. Ambedkar submitted a paper on "The problems of the Untouchables in India" to the Institute of Pacific Relations at its Conference held in Canada. The paper is printed in the proceedings of the Conference. The paper was subsequently published in December 1943 in the boo Inform under the title Mr Gandhi and Emancipation of the Untouchables
1943 On January 19th he delivered the Presidential Address on the occasion of the 101st birth anniversary of Justice Mahadev Govind Ranade. It was published in book form in April, under the title *"Ranade, Gandhi, and Jinnah"*.
1943 In September he also prepared and published the vigorous memorandum, *"Mr. Gandhi and the Emancipation of the Untouchables"*.
1943 Jan 19 Dr. Ambedkar delivered a Presidential address on the occasion of the lOr' Birth Anniversary of Justice Mahadeo Govind Ranade. It is published in book form in April 1943 under the title Ranade, Gandhi andJinnah
1944 On January 29th, he presided over the second meeting of the Scheduled Caste Federation, in Kanpur; here is a report, sixty years later, by *Maren Bellwinkel-Schempp*.
1944 Dr. Ambedkar founded "The Building trust and the Scheduled Caste Improvement Trust"
1944 May 6 Dr. Ambedkar addressee the Annual Conference of the All India S.C. Federation at Parel (Bombay). The speech was later published under the title "The Communal Deadlock and a way to solve it"
1944 June Dr. Ambedkar published his book What Congress and Gandhi have done to the Untouchables a complefe compendium of information regarding the movement of the Untouchables for political safeguards. Dr. Ambedkar attended the Simla Conference
1944 July Dr. Ambedkar founded the "People's Education Society" in Bombay
1945 In February, he published a revised version of "Thoughts on Pakistan"; this second, expanded edition was called *"Pakistan; or Partition of India"*. A third edition of this book was published in 1946.
1945 On May 6th he addressed the Annual Conference of the All India Scheduled Caste Federation, held at Parel, Bombay. This speech was soon published as *"The Communal Deadlock and a Way to Solve It"*.
1945 In June, he published a political manifesto detailing the problems of dealing with Congress, and accusing it of many acts of betrayal: *"What Congress and Gandhi Have Done to the Untouchables"*. The next year, he published a second edition, with *major revisions in one chapter*.
1946 In June, he founded Siddharth College, in Bombay; it was a project of the People's Education Society, which he had founded in 1945. (--*Kadam*, pp. 116-17) Meanwhile, Gandhi made it clear that he did not have any use for such "graduates": *"Left-handed Compliment"* [--text courtesy of Joel Lee].
1946 Dr. Ambedkar gave evidence before the British Parliament delegation
1946 Apr Opening of Siddhartha College of Arts and Science in Bombay
1946 May The Bharat Bhushan Printing Press (founded by Dr Ambedkar) was burnt down in the clashes between D.C. and the Caste-Hindus
1946 June 20 Siddhartha College started
1946 Sept Dr. Ambedkar went to London to urge before the British Government and the Opposition Party the need to provide safeguards for the D.C. on grant of Independence to India.
1946 Oct Dr. Ambedkar published his Book Who were Shudras? An enquiry into how the Shudras came to be the fourth Varna in the Indo-Aryan Society Dr. Ambedkar was elected member of the Constitution Assembly of India
1946 Nov Dr. Ambedkar's first speech in the Constituent Assembly. He called for a 'strong and United India'
1946 In July, he exchanged letters with W. E. B. DuBois, comparing Untouchables with black Americans [site]. In October, he published *"Who Were the Shudras? How They Came to Be the Fourth Varna in the Indo-Aryan Society"*. He dedicated the book to the great early reformer Jotiba Phule (*site*).
1947 Mar Published 'States and Minorities ". A memorandum of Fundamental Rights. Minorities Rights, safeguards for the D.C. and on the problems of Indian States
1947 Apr 29 Article 17 of the Constitution of India for the abolition of Untouchables was moved by Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel in the Constituent Assembly and it was passed
1947 Aug 15 India obtained her Independence.B,R. Ambedkar was elected to the Constituent Assembly by the Bombay Legislature Congress Party. Dr. Ambedkar joined Nehru's Cabinet. He became the first Law Minister of Independence India. The Constituent Assembly appointed him to the drafting Committee which elected him as a Chairman on 29* August 1947
1947 In March he published *"States and Minorities: What Are their Rights and How to Secure them in the Constitution of Free India"*, a memorandum on fundamental rights, minority rights, safeguards for the Depressed Classes, and the problems of Indian states.
1947 INDEPENDENCE and Partitioncame in August; Dr. Ambedkar accepted Nehru's invitation to become Minister of Law in the first Cabinet of independent India. On August 29th he was appointed Chairman of the Drafting Committee for the new Constitution.
1948 Feb Dr. Ambedkar completed the Draft Constitution of Indian Republic
1948 Apr 15 Second marriage - Dr. Ambedkar married Dr. Sharda Kabir in Delhi
1948 Oct Published his book The Untouchables. A thesis on the origin of Untouchablity. Dr. Ambedkar submitted his Memorandum "Maharashtra as a linguistic Province" to the Dhar Commission (The Linguistic Provinces Commission)
1948 Nov 4 Dr. Ambedkar presented Draft Constitution to Constituent Assembly
1948 Nov 20 The Constitution Assembly adopted Article 17 of the Constitution for the abolition of Untouchability
1948 In the last week of February, the Draft Constitution was submitted for public discussion and debate: *Constitutional discussions and debates* (see #7).
1948 On April 15th, Dr. Ambedkar married Dr. Sharda Kabir (a Saraswat Brahmin) in Delhi; she adopted the name Savita. He was now diabetic and increasingly ill, and she took care of him for the rest of his life.
1948 In October, he prepared a memorandum on *"Maharashtra as a Linguistic Province"*, expressing his views for submission to the Linguistic Provinces Commission.
1948 He published *"The Untouchables: a Thesis on the Origin of Untouchability"*(New Delhi: Amrit Book Company), as a sequel to his book on the Shudras. As always on this subject, he wrote with passion. In the Preface he said, "The Hindu Civilisation.... is a diabolical contrivance to suppress and enslave humanity. Its proper name would be infamy. What else can be said of a civilisation which has produced a mass of people... who are treated as an entity beyond human intercourse and whose mere touch is enough to cause pollution?"
1948 In November, the Draft *Constitution* with its 315 articles and 8 schedules was formally introduced to the Constituent Assembly. Dr. Ambedkar concluded his speech: "I feel that the Constitution is workable; it is flexible and it is strong enough to hold the country together both in peace time and in war time. Indeed, if I may say so, if things go wrong under the new Constitution the reason will not be that we had a bad Constitution. What we will have to say is that Man was vile." (--*Keer*, p.410.)
1949 In November, the Constituent Assembly adopted the Constitution, including Article 17, which formally abolished untouchability.
1949 Jan Dr. Ambedkar, Law Minister of India visited Hyderabad (Deccan)
1949 Jan 15 Dr. Ambedkar was presented with a Purse at Manmad by his admires. He addressed a large gathering
1949 Jan 21 He stayed at Aurangabad in connection with his opening proposed College. During the stay he visited Ajanta-Ellora Caves
1949 Mar/May Dr. Ambedkar visited Bombay in connection with College Work and for a medical check-up
1949 Sept Meeting between Dr. Ambedkar and Madhavrao Golvalkar,
1949 Nov Dr. Ambedkar came to Bombay for college work meeting and medical check-up
1949 Nov 25 Dr. Ambedkar addressed the Constituent Assembly
1949 Nov 26 Constituent Assembly adopted the Constitution. Dr. Ambedkar came to Bombay for check-up
1950 Dr. Ambedkar gave several addresses about Buddhism; in May, he flew to Colombo (*site*), in Sri Lanka, to pursue further Buddhist connections. Here is a modern scholar's view: *"Pragmatism, Persuasion, and Force in Bhimrao Ambedkar's Reconstruction of Buddhism"*.
1950 Jan 11 Dr. Ambedkar addressed the Siddharth College Parliament on the Hindu Code Bill. In the evening he was presented with a silver casket containing a copy of the Indian Consitution at NAre Park Maidan, Bombay
1950 May Dr. Ambedkar's article 'The Buddha and the Future His Religion' was published in the journal of Mahabodhi Society, Calcutta. Dr. Ambedkar addressed the Young Men's Buddhist Association on 'The Rise and Fall of Hindu Women'. Dr. Ambedkar spoke on the 'Merits of Buddhism' at the meeting arranged on the occasion of Buddha Jayanti, in Delhi
1950 Sept 1 Dr. Rajendra Prasad, the first President of Indian Republic laid the foundation stone of Milind Maha Vidyalaya, Aurangabad. Dr. Ambedkar delivered a speech on the occasion (The printed speech is available with Mr. Surwade)
1950 Dec Dr. Ambedkar went to Colombo as a Delegate to the World Buddhist Conference
1951 In February, he introduced in Parliament the "Hindu Code Bill" that he had drafted, which included greatly expanded rights for women; it proved very controversial, and consideration of it was postponed: *on the Hindu Code Bill* (see #8). (--*Kadam*, pp. 121-22)
1951 In September, Dr. Ambedkar resigned from the Cabinet, embittered over the failure of Nehru and the Congress to back the Hindu Code Bill as they had earlier pledged to do. He became the *Leader of the Opposition* (see #9.) Discussion: *The Hindu*; *Time Magazine*. (--*Kadam*, pp. 121-22)
1951 Feb 5 Law Ambedkar, Law Minister announced his "Hindu Code Bill" in the Parliament
1951 Apr 15 Dr. Ambedkar laid the foundation stone of "Dr. Ambedkar Bhavan", Delhi
1951 July Dr. Ambedkar founded "The Bharatiya Buddha Jansangh"
1951 Sept Dr. Ambedkar compiled a Buddhist prayer book Buddha Upasana Patha
1951 Sept 9 Dr Ambedkar resigned from the Nehru Cabinet because, among other reasons, the withdrawal of Cabinet support to the declaration in the Parliament by the Prime Minister Pt Jawaharlal Nehru, that his Government would stand or fall with the Hindu Code Bill. Apart from this Neliru announced that he will sink or swfm with Hindu code Bill Dr Ambedkar published his speech in book form under the title The Rise and Fall of Hindu Women
1951 Sept 19 The marriage and divorce Bill was discussed in the Parliament
1951 Oct 11 Dr Ambedkar left the Cabinet
1952 Dr. Ambedkar received an honorary L.L.D. degree from Columbia University as part of its Bicentennial Special Convocation. The President described him as "one of India's leading citizens--a great social reformer and a valiant upholder of human rights."
1952 Jan Dr Ambedkar was defeated in the first Lok Sabha elections held under the Constitution of India Republic. Congress candidate N S Kajrolkar defeated Dr Ambedkar
1952 Mar Dr Ambedkar was introduced into Parliament as a member of the Council (Rajya Sabha) of States, representing Bombay
1952 June 1 Dr Ambedkar left for New York from Bombay
1952 June 14 Ambedkar returned to Bombay from America after receiving Doctor of Law from Columbia University.
1952 June 15 Columbia University (USA) conferred the honorary Degree of LL.D. ihits Bi- Centennial Celebrations Special Convocation held in New York
1952 Dec 16 Dr Ambedkar addressed Annual Social Gathering of Elphinstone College, Bombay
1952 Dec 22 Dr Ambedkar delivered a talk on "Conditions precedent to the Successful working of Democracy" at the Bar Council, Pune
1953 His political thinking included analysis of the issue of linguistic states; he published *"Need for Checks and Balances"* (Times of India, April 23, 1953) on this question. In 1955, he was still working on the subject, as the preface (dated Dec. 23, 1955) to *"Thoughts on Linguistic States"* testified.
1953 Jan 12 The Osmania University conferred the honorary Degree of LL.D. in Dr Ambedkar
1953 Mar The Untouchability (offences) Bill was introduced in the Parliament by the Nehru Government
1953 Apr Dr Ambedkar contested the By-Election for Lok Sabha from Bhandara Constituency of Vidarbha Religion but was defeated by Congress Candidate Mr Borkar
1953 May Opening of Siddhartha College of Commerce and Economics in Bombay
1953 Dec Dr Ambedkar inaugurated the All India Conference of Sai devotees at the St Xavier's Mai dan Parel Bombay (His inaugural speech is available with Mr Surwade)
1954 In the midst of his round of (increasingly embittered) Parliamentary and other activity, his health gave way; he was confined to bed for two months.
1954 While dedicating a new Buddhist vihara near Poona, Dr. Ambedkar announced that he was writing a book on Buddhism, and that as soon as it was finished, he planned to make a formal conversion to Buddhism. He also claimed that the image of Vithoba at Pandharpur (*site*) was in reality an image of the Buddha, and said that he would write a thesis to prove this claim. (--*Keer*, p. 482.)
1954 May Ambedkar visited Rangoon to attend the function arranged on the occasion of Buddha Jayanti
1954 June The Mahraraja of Mysore donated 5 acres of land for Dr Ambedkar proposed Buddhist Seminary to be started at Bangalore
1954 Sept 16 Dr Ambedkar spoke on the Untouchability (Offences) Bill in the Rajya Sabha
1954 Oct 3 Dr Ambedkar broadcast his talk on "My Personal Philosophy"
1954 Oct 29 Shn R D Bhandare, President of Bombay Pradesh S.C.Federation presented a purse of Rs 118,000 on behalf of S.C.F. to Dr Ambedkar at Purandare Stadium, Naigaum (Bombay)
1954 Dec Dr Ambedkar participated as a delegate of the 3"'^ World Buddhist Conference at Rangoon
1954 Dec 25 Dr Ambedkar installed an istatue of Buddha at Dehu Road (near Pune)
1955 Apr 3 Delivered a speech "Why Religion is necessary"
1955 May 4 Dr Ambedkar established Bhartiya Buddha Mahasabha (The Buddhist Society of India)
1955 Aug Founded "Mumbai Rajya Kanishtha Garkamgari Association"
1955 Dec 23 Published his opinions on linguistic states in book form under the title Thoughts on linguistic States
1955 Dec 27 Dr Ambedkar spoke against reservation of seats in the State and Central Legislatures
1956 Dr. Ambedkar brought the manuscript of *"The Buddha and His Dhamma"* to completion. "In February 1956 two new chapters are added to it: 'There is no god'; 'There is no soul'.... On March 15, 1956, Ambedkar wrote the Preface to his book in his own handwriting and dictated it to Rattu [his secretary]." Printing began in May, but was slowed by constant last-minute revisions of the proofs. (--*Keer*, pp. 488-489, 491.)
1956 From June to October, he was bedridden in his Delhi residence. His eyes were failing, he suffered from side effects of the drugs he was given for his diabetes, he felt deeply depressed.
1956 His formal conversion took place on Oct. 14th in Nagpur, a town selected for reasons he explained in his moving speech, *"Why Was Nagpur Chosen?"*. Many thousands of Mahars and other Dalits accepted Buddhism along with him.
1956 In November, he flew to Kathmandu to attend the Fourth World Buddhist Conference.
1956 Dec. 2, he completed the manuscript of *"The Buddha or Karl Marx"*, his last finished work, and gave it for typing.
1956 On the night of Dec. 5 or the early morning of Dec. 6, he died quietly in his sleep; on Dec. 7 there was a huge Buddhist-style funeral procession in Bombay, and he was cremated on the seashore.
1956 Feb Dr Ambedkar completed his The Buddha and His Dhamma, Revolution & Counter-revolution in Ancient India
1956 Mar 15 Dr Ambedkar wrote and dictated the preface of The Buddha and his Dhamma
1956 May 1 Dr Ambedkar spoke on Linguistic states in the Council of States Dr Ambedkar spoke on BBC London on "Why I like Buddhism Also, he spoke for Voice of America on "The Future of Indian Democracy"
1956 May 24 Dr Ambedkar attended a meeting at Nare Park organized on the eve of Buddha Jayanti, Shri B G Kher, Prime Minister of Bombay was Chief Guest. This meeting was the last meeting of Dr Ambedkar in Bombay
1956 June Opening of Siddharth College of Law in Bombay
1956 Oct 14 Dr Ambedkar embraced Buddhism at an historic ceremony at Diksha Bhoomi, Nagpur with his millions of followers. Announced to desolve S.C.F, and established Republican Party
24 Oct 1956 RPI was founded by Ambedkar
1956 Nov 20 Delegate, 4* World Buddhist Conference, Khalinandu, where he delivered his famous speech 'Buddha or Karl Marx'
1956 Dec 6 Maha Nirvana at his residence, 26 Alipore Road, New Delhi
1956 Dec 7 Cremation at Dadar Chowpatti - Now known as Chaitya Bhoomi, Dadar (Bombay)
1957 *"The Buddha and His Dhamma"*, Dr. Ambedkar's own version of a Buddhist scripture for his people, was posthumously published, by Siddharth College Publications, Bombay.
1957 and beyond A number of unfinished typescripts and handwritten drafts were found among his notes and papers and gradually made available. Among these were *"Waiting for a Visa"*, which probably dates from 1935-36, and *"Untouchables, or the Children of India's Ghetto"*, which refers to the census of 1951 and so must be quite late; other unpublished fragments as well will be found on the *ambedkar.org* website.
1991 At Columbia University's Ambedkar Centenary Celebration, Prof. David Lelyveld gives a talk about his achievements: *"Burning up the Dharmasastras: Group Identity and Social Justice in the Thought of B. R. Ambedkar"*. And Prof. Eleanor Zelliot gives a talk called *"Dr. Ambedkar in America"*.
1995 *Mrs. Savita Ambedkar visits Columbia*, on the occasion of the installation of a bust of Dr. Ambedkar.
2004 Columbia University honors Dr. Ambedkar in the course of its *250th birthday celebration*.
2009 Columbia University honors Dr. Ambedkar with a conference on *"Caste, Ambedkar, and Contemporary India"*. Associated with the conference is an online *area studies exhibit* by the Columbia University Libraries.
LIST OF INSTITUTIONS UNDER
PEOPLE'S EDUCATION SOCIETY
University affiliated colleges
1. Siddharth College of Arts and Science, Bombay (Estd, 1946)
2. Siddharth College of Commerce and Economics, Bombay. (Estd. 1953)
3. Siddharth College of Law, Bombay. (Estd. 1956)
4. Milind College of Science , Aurangabad (Estd. 1950)
5. Dr. Ambedkar College of Commerce , Aurangabad (Estd. 1960)
6. Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar College of Arts, Science and Commerce, Mahad,
Dist: Kolaba (Estd. 1961).
7. Dr. Ambedkar College of Law, Aurangabad (Estd. 1968)
8. Milind College of Arts, Aurangabad (Estd. 1962).
9. Dr. Ambedkar's College of Commerce and Economics (Estdl 978)
Diploma Institutes
1. Siddharth Institute of Commerce, Bombay (Estd. 1965)
2. Siddharth College of Mass Communications and Media, Bombay
(Estd. 1965)
3. Siddharth Institute of Industry and Administration, Bombay (Estd. 1967)
High Schools
1. Siddharth Night High School, Bombay (Estd. 1947)
2. Milind Multipurpose High School, Aurangabad (Estd. 1955)
3. Matoshri Ramabai Ambedkar High School, Aurangabad. (Estd. 1965)
4. Gautam Vidyalaya, Pandhai-pur (Estd. 1974)
5. Milind School, Aurangabad(Estd. 1975)
6. P.E.S. Marathi Primaiy School, Bombay (Estd. 1978)
7. Nagsen Vidyalaya Prunaiy School, Nanded (Estd. 1981)
8. People's Education K.G. School,
Bangalore (Estd. 1984)
9. PES English Medium School, Pune (Estd. 1985)
10. MUind Balwadi, Aurangabad (Estd. 1999)
Backward Classes Hostels
1. Shri Gadge Maharaj Vidyarthi Vasatigriha, Pandharpur. (Taken over by the
Society in 1949)
2. Matoshri Ramabai Ambedkar Vidyarthi Ashram, Dapoli. (Taken over by
the Society in 1962)
Centres
1. Buddhist Centre, Aurangabad (Estd, 1964)
2. Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar Memorial Research Centre, "Rajgriha" , Dadar,
Bombay. (Estd. 1967)
Backward Classes Hostels Aided by the Society
1. Dr. Ambedkar Vidyarthi Ashram, Manmad, Dist, Nasik.
2. Shikshan Prasarak Ambedkar Vidyarthi Ashram Nandurbar, Dist: Dhulia.
3. Deenbandhu Ambedkar Vidyarthi Ashram Chalisgaon, Dist: Jalgaon.
4. Vidya Vikas Boarding, Nipani , Dist: Belgaum, Mysore State.
5. Sayajirao Vidyarthi Bhuvan, Patan, Gujarat State.
6. Siddharth Chhatralaya, Dholka, Gujarat State.
7. Backward Class Hostel, Poona.
8. Subhedar Savadkar Vidyarthi Ashram, Mahad, Dist: Kolaba.
9. Kanya Chhatralaya, Challisgaon, Dist: Jalgaon.
EVENTS IN THE LIFE OF
DR. BABASAHEB AMBEDKAR
1891 Apr 14 Bom at Mhow (Madhya Pradesh), the fourteenth child of Subehdar Ramji Sapkal and Mrs Bhimabai Ambedkar.
1896 Death of the mother, Mrs. Bhimabai Ambedkar
bhimabai ramji sakpal (murbadkar)
Birthdate: estimated between 1822 and 1854
Death: between January 01, 1854 and circa January 01, 1896
Immediate Family:
Daughter of major murbadkar, subedar major
Wife of ramji maloji sakpal, subedar major
Mother of child 1 sakpal; child 2 sakpal; child3 sakpal; child 4 sakpal; child 5 sakpal and 9 others
November 7, 1900 Ambedkar First joined Primary school at Depoli village in Konkan district Then moved to Pratapsingh High School in the Maharashtra's Satara distric. on November 7, 1900. ... got enrolled in school, the Maharashtra government has directed its schools and junior colleges in ...
1904 Entered the Elphistone High School at Bombay
1906 Married Ramabai, daughter of Mr. Bhiku Walangkar, one of the relations of Gopal Baba Walangkar
1907 Passed Matriculation Examination, secured 382 marks out of 750
1908 Jan Honoured in a meeting presided over by Shri S K Bole, Shri K A (Dada) Keluskar Guruji presented a book on the life of Gautam Buddha written by him
1912 Bhimrao (*an early photo*) passed the B.A. Examination (special subjects: Economics and Politics) from Bombay University, and prepared to take a position in the administration of Baroda State (*Imperial Gazetteer*; *Imperial Gazetteer map*). His oldest son, Yashwant, was born. (*Kadam*, p.71.)
1912 Dec 12 Birth of the son Yeshwant
1913 Jan Passed B A Examination with Persian and English from University of Bombay, secured 449 marks out of 1000
1913 He had barely begun at his new post when he learned by telegram that his father was gravely ill; he rushed home just in time for a last farewell. "It was February 2, 1913, the saddest day in Bhimrao Ambedkar's life." (*Keer*, p. 24.)
1913 Jun 4 Selected as Gaekwad Scholar on agrrement to serve 10 years in Baroda State. Ambedkar was one of the four students selected by Baroda ruler Sayaji Rao Gaekwad.
1913 July He left for USA by sea in third week of July 1913.
1913 The Gaekwar of Baroda announced his decision to offer scholarships to send students for higher education at Columbia University. A scholarship of 11.50 British pounds a month, for three years, was awarded to the young Ambedkar. (*Kadam*, p.72.)
1913 Receives Baroda State Scholarship to join the Political Science Department of the Columbia University as a Post Graduate Student where he worked under Professors Seligman, Clark, Seager, Moore, Mitchell, Chadwick, Simkovitch, Giddings, Dewey and Goldenweiser." (Source: a curriculum vitae from the 1920's, preserved in the Columbia University archives, that was almost certainly prepared by Dr. Ambedkar himself.) NOTE: he was in fact admitted to the Graduate School in general (things were less compartmentalized in those days) and not formally to a "political science department."
1913 Arriving in New York during the third week in July, Bhimrao was housed in Hartley Hall (*site*). But he didn't care for the food, and only stayed for a week. In August he moved from Hartley Hall to "Cosmopolitan Club" (554 West 114th Street) (*photo*; *New York Times article*), a housing club maintained by a group of Indian students. He finally settled in a dormitory, Livingston Hall (since renamed Wallach Hall (*photo*), with his friend Naval Bhathena, a Parsi; the two remained friends for life. (*Keer*, pp. 26-27.)
1914 In later years, he told his biographer about his early months in New York--how he had at first enjoyed the social side of campus life, but then one night made a firm resolve, and started studying in dead earnest....
"'The best friends I have had in life,' Dr. Ambedkar says, 'were some of my classmates at Columbia and my great professors, John Dewey, James Shotwell, Edwin Seligman, and James Harvey Robinson.'" (Source: "'Untouchables' Represented by Ambedkar, '15AM, '28PhD," Columbia Alumni News, Dec. 19, 1930, page 12; from the Columbia University archives.)
At Columbia: Prof. John Dewey: One of the major philosophers of education of the twentieth century, John Dewey (1859-1952) (*site*) became one of the young Ambedkar's heroes. Writing in 1936, Ambedkar referred to the work of "Prof. John Dewey, who was my teacher and to whom I owe so much." (--*Annihilation of Caste, Section 25*). There is much evidence of Dr. Ambedkar's admiration for Dewey, including *the annotated books in his personal library*. Here is one modern scholar's view: *"The like-mindedness of Dewey and Ambedkar"*.
At Columbia: Profs. Shotwell and Robinson: Another of the young Ambedkar's mentors, Prof. James Shotwell (1874-1965) (*site*) was a Barnard historian who specialized in international relations, and a former student of Prof. James Harvey Robinson (1863-1936) (*site*), Barnard's first historian-- who himself was another of the mentors named by Dr. Ambedkar.
At Columbia: Prof. Edwin Seligman: A friend of Lala Lajpat Rai (*site*), the well-known economist Edwin R. A. Seligman (1861-1939) (*site*) became a particularly sympathetic mentor to the young Ambedkar, who continued to correspond with him for years.
At Columbia: coursework: During Ambedkar's time at Columbia he would sit for hours studying in *Low Library*; the rotunda then housed the main reading room. His *coursework* during his three years (including summers) at Columbia consisted of: 29 courses in economics, 11 in history, 6 in sociology, 5 in philosophy, 4 in anthropology, 3 in politics, and 1 each in elementary French and German. (Source: Office of the Registrar, Columbia University.)
"[Parents] can mold the destiny of children, and if we but follow this principle, be sure that we shall soon see better days; and our progress will be greatly accelerated if male education is pursued side by side with female education, the fruits of which you can very well see verified in your own daughter," Ambedkar wrote from New York in a Marathi letter to a friend of his father. "Let your mission therefore be to educate and preach the idea of education to those at least who are near to and in close contact with you." (*Keer*, pp. 26-27.)
1915 The young graduate student passed his M.A. exam in June, majoring in Economics, with Sociology, History, Philosophy, and Anthropology as other subjects of study; he presented a thesis, *"Ancient Indian Commerce"*. For his outstanding achievement, he was honored by students and professors of the Faculty of Arts at a special dinner. In 1916 he offered another M.A. thesis, "National Dividend of India--A Historic and Analytical Study"; it was this one that later became the nucleus of his Ph.D. dissertation. (*Keer*, p. 29.)
1915 May 15. He wrote thesis Entitled "Administration and Finance in Eat India Company" for MA.
1915 June 2 Passed M A Examination majoring in Economics and with Sociology, History, Philosophy, Anthropology and Politics as the other subjects of study
1916 On May 9th, he read his paper *"Castes in India: Their Mechanism, Genesis, and Development"* before a seminar conducted by the anthropologist Prof. Alexander Goldenweiser (1880-1940) (*site*). Dr. Ambedkar was very proud of this paper, and remained so. He promptly got it published in the Indian Antiquary (May 1917). As late as 1936 he wrote that only shortage of time prevented him from reworking Annihilation of Caste so as to include in it this early seminar paper (Preface to the 3rd edition, Annihilation of Caste).
1916 In June he went to London, and in October he was admitted to Gray's Inn (*site*) for Law, and to the London School of Economics and Political Science (*site*) for Economics, where he was allowed to start work on a doctoral thesis. He often worked in the British Library Reading Room (*site*).
1916 May 9 Read a paper on 'The Castes in India' before Prof Goldenweiser's Anthropology Seminar. The paper was later published in The Indian Antiquary in May 1917. it was also republished in the form of a brochure, the first published work of Dr Ambedkar.
1916 June Wrote a Thesis entitled 'The National Dividend of India - A Historical and Analytical Study' for the Ph D Degree
1916 June Left Columbia University after completing work for the Ph D to join the London School of Economics and Political Science London as a graduate student
1916 Oct Admitted to Gray' Inn , London for Law.
1917 The term of his scholarship from Baroda ended, so that he was obliged to go back to India in June with his work unfinished; he was, however, given permission to return and finish within four years. He sent his precious and much-loved collection of books back on a steamer--but it was torpedoed and sunk by a German submarine. (*Keer*, p. 32.)
1917 He was appointed Military Secretary to the Gaikwar of Baroda; he had agreed to join the Baroda service as a condition of his scholarship. But this experience was not a happy one. Even to reach Baroda, he had to pay his own expenses; to meet these expenses he used the damages paid by Thomas Cook and Company for his torpedoed luggage. And when he arrived in Baroda, things went from bad to worse:
"My five years of staying in Europe and America had completely wiped out of my mind any consciousness that I was an untouchable, and that an untouchable wherever he went in India was a problem to himself and to others. But when I came out of the station, my mind was considerably disturbed by a question, 'Where to go? Who will take me?'....[the story is continued in Part Two of Waiting for a Visa)
1917 Meeting in Calcutta with Annie Besant (*site*) as its President (*site*), for the first time in its history the Indian National Congress adopted a resolution endorsing "the justice and righteousness of removing all disabilities imposed by custom upon the Depressed Classes." (*Kadam*, p.74.)
1917 June 8 Columbia university conferred a Degree of Ph D
1917 June Returned to India after spending a year in London working on the Thesis for the M Sc (Econ.) degree. The return, before completion of the work, was necessitated by the termination the Scholarship granted by the Baroda State
1917 July Appointed Military Secretary to the Maharaja of Baroda with a view to being groomed for the post of the State Finance Minister.
1917 Nov But left shortly due to ill treatment meted out to him because of his lowly caste. Published 'Small Holdings in Indian and Their Remedies'
1918 After the Baroda fiasco, he tried to find ways to make a living for his growing family. With the help of Parsi friends, he became a private tutor, and found some work as an accountant. He also started an investment consulting business, but it failed when his clients learned that he was an untouchable. (*Keer*, pp. 37-38.)
1918 Finally he became Professor of Political Economy in the Sydenham College of Commerce and Economics (*site*), in Bombay. (This position came about through the recommendation of his London acquaintance, Lord Sydenham, former Governor of Bombay.) He was mostly successful with his students, but some of the other professors objected to his sharing the same drinking-water jug that they all used. (*Keer*, p. 39.)
1918 In the new Journal of Indian Economics (1,1), he reviewed a book by Bertrand Russell: *"Mr Russell and the Reconstruction of Society"*. And in the new Journal of the Indian Economic Society (1,2-3) he published *"Small Holdings in India and Their Remedies"*.
1918 Gave evidence before the Southborough Commission on Franchise Attended the Conference of the depressed Classes held at Nagpur
1919 He testified both orally and in writing before the Southborough Committee (*site*), which was investigating franchise matters in the light of the planned Montagu-Chelmsford reforms. He demanded separate electorates and reserved seats for the untouchables: "The real social divisions of India then are: (1) Touchable Hindus. (2) Untouchable Hindus. (3) Mohammedans. (4) Christians. (5) Parsees. (6) Jews." (--from the *transcript* of the proceedings, Jan. 27, 1919). Discussion: *Chandrabhan Prasad*; *Syed Amjad Ali*.
1919 Nov (11 Nov 1918-1920) Professor of Political Economy in the Sydenham College of Commerce and Economics, Bombay
1920 Jan 31 Started a Marathi Weekly paper Mooknayak to champion the cause of the depressed classes. Shri Nandram Bhatkar was the editor, later Shri Dyander Gholap was the editor
1920 Mar 21 Attended depressed classes Conference
1920 Mar Resigned professorship at Sydenham College to resume his studies in London
1920 May Memorable speech in Nagpur, criticized Karmaveer Shinde and Depressed Classes Mission
1920 Again left for London to complete his studies.
1920 Sept Rejoined the London School of Economics. Also entered Gray's Inn to read for the Bar
1921 June The thesis 'Provincial Decentralisation of Imperial Finance in British India' was accepted for M Sc (Econ) Degree by the London University
1922 Oct Spent some time in reading economics in the University of Bonn in Germany
1923 Mar The Thesis 'The Problem of the Rupee-Its origin and its solution'
was accepted for the degree of D Sc (Econ) University of London . The thesis was
published in December 1923 by P S King & Company, London.
1923 Called to the Bar
1923 Apr Returned to India
1924 June Started practice in the Bombay high Court
1924 July 20 Founded the 'Bahishkrit Hitkarini Sabha' for the uplift of the depressed classes. The aims of the Sabha were educate, agitate, organize
1925 Published ' The Evolution of Provincial Finance in British India - dissertation on the provincial decentralization of Imperial Finance in India'
1926 Gave evidence before the Royal Commission on Indian Currency (Hilton Young Commission) Nominated Member of the Bombay Legislative Council
1927 Mar 20 Started Satyagraha at Mahad (Dist - Kolaba) to secure to the untouchables the Right of access to the Chavdar Tank
1927 Apr 3 Started a fortnightly Marathi paper Bahiskrit Bharat Dr Ambedkar himself was the editor
1927 Sept Established 'Samaj Samata Sangh'
1927 Dec Second Conference in Mahad
1928 Mar Introduced the "Vatan Bill" in the Bombay Legislative Council
1928 May Gave evidence before the Indian Statutory Committee (Simon Commission)
1928 June Professor, Government Law College Bombay Principal, Government Law College Bombay
1928-9 Member, Bombay Presidency Committee of the Simon Committee
1930 Mar Satyagraha at Kalaram Temple, Nasik to secure for the Untouchables the right of entry into the temple
1930 Aug. 8, Dr. Ambedkar presided over the Depressed Classes Congress at Nagpur, and made a major speech: he endorsed Dominion status, and criticized Gandhi's Salt March and civil disobedience movement as inopportune; but he also criticized British colonial misgovernment, with its famines and immiseration. He argued that the "safety of the Depressed Classes" hinged on their "being independent of the Government and the Congress" both: "We must shape our course ourselves and by ourselves." His conclusion emphasized self-help: "Political power cannot be a panacea for the ills of the Depressed Classes. Their salvation lies in their social elevation. They must cleanse their evil habits. They must improve their bad ways of living.... They must be educated.... There is a great necessity to disturb their pathetic contentment and to instil into them that divine discontent which is the spring of all elevation." (-- *Keer*, pp. 141-143.)
1930 Dr. Ambedkar was invited by the Viceroy to be a delegate to the Round Table Conference, and left for London in October. He participated extensively in the work of the Round Table Conference, often submitting *written statements of his views*. His views at the time were described in an unpublished manuscript later found among his papers: *"The Untouchables and the Pax Britannica"*.
1930 "PRINCE AND OUTCAST AT DINNER IN LONDON END AGE-OLD BARRIER: Gaekwar of Baroda is Host to 'Untouchable' and Knight of High Hindu Caste..." (*...from an article in the New York Times, Nov. 30, 1930*).
"But I tell you that the Congress is not sincere about its professions. Had it been sincere, it would have surely made the removal of untouchability a condition, like the wearing of khaddar, for becoming a member of the Congress." On August 14th, 1931, Dr. Ambedkar met with Gandhi for the first time. From Gandhi's side, *their discussion* was an absent-minded rebuke that seemed to be more in sorrow than in anger; from Ambedkar's side, it was an outburst of passionate reproach.
1932 The All-Indian Depressed Classes Conference, held at Kamtee near Nagpur on May 6th, backed Dr. Ambedkar's demand for separate electorates, rejecting compromises proposed by others.
1932 Gandhi, in Yeravda jail, started a fast to the death against the separate electorates granted to the Depressed Classes by Ramsay MacDonald's Communal Award. By September 23, a very reluctant Dr. Ambedkar was obliged by the pressure of this moral blackmail to accept representation through joint electorates instead. The result was the *Poona Pact*. In 1933, Gandhi replaced his journal "Young India" with a new one called "Harijan," and undertook a 21-day "self-purification fast" against untouchability (*Gandhi timeline*).
1930-32 Delegate, Round Table Conference representing Untouchables of India . These started in November 1930 and ended in December 1932.
1932 Sept Signed with Mr. M.K. Gandhi the Poona Pact giving up, to save Gandhi's life. Separate electorates granted to the Depressed Classes by Ramsay MacDonald's Communal Award, and accepting, instead, representation through joint electorates
1932-4 Member joint Parliamentary Committee on the Indian Constitutional Reform
1933 Dr. Ambedkar participated in the work of the *Joint Committee on Indian Legislative Reform*, examining a number of significant witnesses.
1934 Left Parel, Damodar Hall and came to stay in 'Rajgriha' Dadar (Bombay). This was done in order to get more accommodation for his library which was increasing day by day
1934 "In the year 1934, some of my co-workers in the movement of the depressed classes expressed a desire to go on a sight-seeing tour... [the story is continued in Part Four of Waiting for a Visa).
1935 Dr. Ambedkar was appointed Principal of the Government Law College, and became a professor there as well; he held these positions for two years. (--*Kadam*, p.106)
1935 In May, Dr. Ambedkar's wife Ramabai died after a long illness. Her great wish had been to make a pilgrimage to Pandharpur, but since as an untouchable she would not have been allowed to enter the temple, her husband had never allowed her to go.
1 935 On Oct. 13th, Dr. Ambedkar presided over the Yeola Conversion Conference, held in Yeola, in Nasikh District (*Imperial Gazetteer*; *Imperial Gazetteer map*). He advised the Depressed Classes to abandon all agitation for temple-entry privileges; instead, they should leave Hinduism entirely and embrace another religion. He vowed, "I solemnly assure you that I will not die as a Hindu." (--*Keer*, p. 253.)
1935 The struggle for social justice began to receive increasing attention and support from progressive writers. Mulk Raj Anand's powerful novel "Untouchable" (1935) was followed by "Coolie" (1936), with a foreword by E. M. Forster; both works called international attention to caste and class injustices (*K. Satchidanandan*; *Andrew M. Stracuzzi*). In Hindi, there was the work of Premchand (*Premchand*).
1935 May 26 Death of wife, Mrs. Ramabai Ambedkar
1935 June Dr. Ambedkar was appointed as Principal of Government Law College, Bombay. He was also appointed Perry Professor of Jurisprudence
1935 Oct 13 Historical Yeola Conversion Conference held under the Presidentship of Dr. Ambedkar at yeola Dist., Nasik. He exhorted the Depressed Classes to leave Hinduism embrace another religioin. He declared: 'I was bom as a Hindu but I will not die as Hindi'. He also advised his followers to abandon the Kalaram Mandir entry Satyagraha, Nasik
1935 Dec Dr. Ambedkar was invited by the Jat Pat Todak Mandal of Lahore to preside over the Conference. Dr. Ambedkar prepared his historical speech 'The Annihilation of Caste' the conference was cancelled by the Mandal on the ground that Dr. Ambedkar's thoughts were revolutionary. Finally, Dr. Ambedkar refused to preside and published his speech in book form in 1937
1935. Dr. Ambedkar was elected Member of Bombay Legislative Assembly (Total Seats 175. reserved Seats 15. Dr. Ambedkar's Independent Labour Party won 17 seats)
1935 In December, Dr. Ambedkar was invited by the Jat-Pat-Todak Mandal of Lahore (*Imperial Gazetteer*; *Imperial Gazetteer map,*), a caste-reform organization, to preside over its annual conference in the spring of 1936.
1935/6 He composed (or began to compose?), but did not publish, a brief, moving, and largely autobiographical memoir called *Waiting for a Visa*.
1936 On April 13-14th, he addressed the Sikh Mission Conference in Amritsar (*Imperial Gazetteer*; *Imperial Gazetteer map*), and reiterated his intention of renouncing Hinduism.
1936 In late April, the Jat-Pat-Todak Mandal realized the radical nature of its guest's planned speech, and withdrew its earlier invitation. On May 15th, Dr. Ambedkar published the speech he would have given, with an introductory account of the whole controversy. The result, a slim little book called *The Annihilation of Caste*, became (in)famous at once.
1936 On May 31st, Dr. Ambedkar addressed the Mumbai Elaka Mahar Parishad (Bombay Mahar Society), during a meeting at Naigaum (Dadar), in Bombay. He spoke in Marathi, to his own people, with vividness and poignancy: *"What Path to Salvation?"*. This was the only time he addressed an audience expressly limited to Mahars. [--Eleanor Zelliot, personal communication, Jan. 2005] Meanwhile, Gandhi was formulating his own highly eccentric view of *"The Ideal Bhangi"* [--text courtesy of Joel Lee].
1936 In August, he founded his first political party, the Independent Labour Party, which contested 17 seats in the 1937 General Elections, and won 15. (--*Kadam*, pp.109-10)
1936 Jan 11-2 The Depressed Classes Conference was held at Pune Dr. Ambedkar reiterated his resolve of the Yeola Conference to leave Hinduism. The conference was presided over by Rav Bahadur N. Shina Raj
1936 Feb 29 Dr. Ambedkar's Conversion Resolution was supported by the Chambars (Cobblers) of East Khandesh
1936 May 30 Bombay Presidency Conversion Conference (Mumbai i'. :'< Mahar Parishad) of Mahars was held at Naigaum (Dadar) to sound their opinion on the issue of Conversion. Mr. Subha Rao popularly known as Hyderabad! Ambedkar, presided over the Conference. In the morning the Asietics shaved their beards, moustaches and destroyed their symbols of Hinduism in an Ascetic's Conference
1936 June 15 Conference of Devdasis was held in Bombay to support Dr. Ambedkar's Resolution of Conversion
1936 June 18 Dr. Ambedkar- talks on conversion - Pro Sikkhism
1936 June 23 Matang Parishad in support of Conversion
1936 Aug Dr. Ambedkar founded the Independent Labour Party, a strong opposition party in Bombay's Legislative Council
1936 Sept 18 Dr. Ambedkar sent a delegation of 13 members to the Golden Temple Amritsar to study Sikkhism
1936 Nov 11 Dr. Ambedkar left for Geneva and London
1936 The Maharaja of Travancore (*Imperial Gazetteer*; *Gazetteer map*) issued a proclamation allowing temple entry to the Depressed Classes; this was the first such event in modern India. (--*Kadam*, p.110)
1937 Dr. Ambedkar published the second edition of *"The Annihilation of Caste"*, adding a concluding appendix that featured a debate with Gandhi over the speech. This work remained a bestseller, going through many editions in the coming years--and exciting much controversy. "It was logic on fire, pinching and pungent, piercing and fiery, provocative and explosive." (--*Keer*, p. 269.)
1937 Dr. Ambedkar organized the 'Municipal Workers' Union' in Bombay in 1937
1937 Jan 14 Dr. Ambedkar returned to Bombay
1937 Feb 17 The first General Election were held under the Govt, of India Act of 1935. Elections were held in eleven provinces - Madras, Central Provinces, Bihar, Orissa, United Provinces, Bombay Presidency, Assam, NWFP, Bengal, Punjab and Sindh.
1937 Mar 17 The Mahad Chowdar Tank case was decided m favour of D.C. by which they got a legal right to use the public wells and tanks
1937 July 31 Dr. Ambedkar received a grand reception at Chaligaon Railway station
1937 Sept 17 Dr. Ambedkar introduced his Bill to abolish the Mahar Watan in the Assembly
1937 Dec 31 Reception at Pandhapur on the way to Sholapur, where he was going to preside Sholapur District DC. Conference
1938 Over Dr. Ambedkar's vigorous protests, in January Congress adopted Gandhi's own term "Harijans" ("Children of God") as the official name for the "scheduled castes." In protest against a term that he considered condescending and meaningless, Dr. Ambedkar and his party staged a walkout from the Bombay Legislative Assembly. Dr Ambedkar made a number of significant *speeches to the Assembly, 1938-39*. (--*Kadam*, p.111)
1938 Jan 4 Reception given by the Sholapur Municipal Council
1938 Jan , The Congress Party introduced a Bill making a change in the name of Untouchables i.e. they would be called Harijans meaning sons OT God. Dr. Ambedkar criticized the Bill, as in his opinion the change of name would make no real change in their conditions. Dr. Ambedkar and Bhaurav Gaikwad protested against the use of the term Harijans in legal matters. When the ruling party by sheer force of numbers defeated the I.L.P., the Labour Party group walked out of the Assembly in protest under the leadership of Dr. Ambedkar. He organized a peasants' march on Bombay Assembly. The peasants demanded the passing of Dr. Ambedkar's Bill for abolition of the Khoti system
1938 Jan 23 Dr. Ambedkar addressed a Peasants' Conference at Ahmedabad
1938 Feb 12-13 Dr. Ambedkar addressed a historical Conference of Railway workers at Manmad (Dist. Nasik)
1938 Apr Dr. Ambedkar opposed creation of a separate Kamataka State in
the national interest
1938 May Dr. Ambedkar resigned from the Principal ship of the Government
Law College, Mumbai
1938 May l3-21 Dr. Ambedkar went on tour of Konkan Region. He also went to Nagpur in Connection with a court case
1938 Aug A meeting was held at R.M. Bhat High School, Bombay for exposing Gandhiji's attitude in disallowing a D.C. man being taken into the Central Ministry
1938 Sept Dr. Ambedkar spoke on the Industrial Disputes Bill in the Bombay Assembly. He bitteriy opposed it for its attempt to outlaw the right of workers to strike. He said: 'If Congressmen believe that Swaraj is their birthright, then the right to strike is the birth-right of workers'
1938 Oct 1 Dr. Ambedkar addressed a large gathering at Bawala, near Ahmedabad. On return he addressed another meeting at Premabhai Hall, Ahmedabad
1938 Nov 6 The Industrial Workers' strike. The procession (under the leadership of Dr. Ambedkar, Nimkar, Dange, Pasulkar etc) was organized from Kamgar Maidan to Jambori Maidan , Worli. Dr. Ambedkar toured the workers' areas with Jamvadas Mehta
1938 Nov 10 Dr. Ambedkar moved a resolution for adoption of the methods for
birth-control in the Bombay Assembly
1938 Dec Dr. Ambedkar addressed the first D.C. Conference in Nizam'sdominion at Mahad
1939 In January, he delivered to the Gokhale Institute of Politics and Economics a lecture called *"Federation versus Freedom"*.
1939 During the debate over Congress's plan to leave the government in protest at not having been consulted about the declaration of war on Germany, Dr. Ambedkar made his own loyalties very clear: "Wherever there is any conflict of interests between the country and the Untouchables, so far as I am concerned, the Untouchables' interests will take precedence over the interests of the country. I am not going to support a tyrannising majority simply because it happens to speak in the name of the country.... As between the country and myself, the country will have precedence; as between the country and the Depressed Classes, the Depressed Classes will have precedence." (--*Keer*, p. 329.)
1939 In November, Congress left the government. Jinnah arranged the celebration of a "Day of Deliverance," and Dr. Ambedkar enthusiastically joined him. Dr. Ambedkar was careful to emphasize, however, that this was an anti-Congress rather than an anti-Hindu move; if Congress interpreted it as anti-Hindu, the reason could only be, he said, that Congress was a Hindu body after all. (--*Keer*, p. 330.)
1939 Jan 18 Dr. Ambedkar addressed a large gathering at Rajkot
1939 Jan 19 Ambedkar-Gandhi talks
1939 Jan 29 Kale Memorial Lecture of Gokhale School of Politics and Economics, Poona reviewing critically the All India Federation Scheme set out in the Govt, of India Act of
1939 July Dr. Ambedkar addressed a meeting organized fir Rohidas Vidya Committee
1939 Oct Ambedkar-Nehru first meeting
1939 Dec The Conference at Haregaon was held under the Presidentship of Dr. Ambedkar to voice the grievances of Mahar and Mahar WatandaYs
1940 May Dr. Ambedkar founded the ' Mahar Panchayat'
1940 July 22 Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose met Dr. Ambedkar in Bombay
1940 Dec Dr. Ambedkar published his Thoughts on Pakistan. The Second edition with the title Pakistan or Partition of India was issued in February 1945. A third impression of the book was published in 1946
1940 In December, Dr. Ambedkar published the first edition of his *"Thoughts on Pakistan"*. In this work he argued that though partition would be an unfortunate thing, it wouldn't be the worst possible outcome, and if the Muslims wanted it they had a perfect right to claim it.
1941 May 25 Mahar Dnyati Panchayat Samiti was formed by Dr. Ambedkar
1941 July 22 Dr. Ambedkar was appointed to sit on the Defense Advisory Committee
1941 Aug The Conference was held at Sinnar in protest of tax on Mahar Watans. Dr. Ambedkar launched a no-tax camp. He saw the Governor. Finally, the tax was abolished The Mumbai Elaka Conference of Maharashtra Mangs and Devdasis were organized under the Chairmanship of Dr. Ambedkar
1942 He founded his second political party, the All-India Scheduled Castes Federation, which didn't do so well in the elections of 1946. (--*Kadam*, p.115)
1942 Dr. Ambedkar was inducted into the Viceroy's Executive Council as Labour Member, a position which he held until his resignation in June 1946. His thoughtful comments in that forum cover *various topics* (see #6.). (--*Kadam*, p.115)
1942 Congress started the "Quit India" movement (discussion: *Abul Kalam Azad*; *Gandhi's original draft resolution*; *Sir Stafford Cripps's reply*; *The Hindu, August 1942*; *Manas*). Dr. Ambedkar severely criticized this move. He described it as "both irresponsible and insane, a bankruptcy of statesmanship and a measure to retrieve the Congress prestige that had gone down since the war started. It would be madness, he said, to weaken law and order art a time when the barbarians were at the gates." (--*Keer*, p. 354.)
1942 Apr Dr. Ambedkar founded the All India Scheduled Castes Federation in Nagpur
1942 July 18 Dr. Ambedkar addressed All India D.C. Conference at Nagpur
1942 July 20 Dr. Ambedkar joined the Victory's Executive Council as a Labour Member
1942 Dec Dr. Ambedkar submitted a paper on "The problems of the Untouchables in India" to the Institute of Pacific Relations at its Conference held in Canada. The paper is printed in the proceedings of the Conference. The paper was subsequently published in December 1943 in the boo Inform under the title Mr Gandhi and Emancipation of the Untouchables
1943 On January 19th he delivered the Presidential Address on the occasion of the 101st birth anniversary of Justice Mahadev Govind Ranade. It was published in book form in April, under the title *"Ranade, Gandhi, and Jinnah"*.
1943 In September he also prepared and published the vigorous memorandum, *"Mr. Gandhi and the Emancipation of the Untouchables"*.
1943 Jan 19 Dr. Ambedkar delivered a Presidential address on the occasion of the lOr' Birth Anniversary of Justice Mahadeo Govind Ranade. It is published in book form in April 1943 under the title Ranade, Gandhi andJinnah
1944 On January 29th, he presided over the second meeting of the Scheduled Caste Federation, in Kanpur; here is a report, sixty years later, by *Maren Bellwinkel-Schempp*.
1944 Dr. Ambedkar founded "The Building trust and the Scheduled Caste Improvement Trust"
1944 May 6 Dr. Ambedkar addressee the Annual Conference of the All India S.C. Federation at Parel (Bombay). The speech was later published under the title "The Communal Deadlock and a way to solve it"
1944 June Dr. Ambedkar published his book What Congress and Gandhi have done to the Untouchables a complefe compendium of information regarding the movement of the Untouchables for political safeguards. Dr. Ambedkar attended the Simla Conference
1944 July Dr. Ambedkar founded the "People's Education Society" in Bombay
1945 In February, he published a revised version of "Thoughts on Pakistan"; this second, expanded edition was called *"Pakistan; or Partition of India"*. A third edition of this book was published in 1946.
1945 On May 6th he addressed the Annual Conference of the All India Scheduled Caste Federation, held at Parel, Bombay. This speech was soon published as *"The Communal Deadlock and a Way to Solve It"*.
1945 In June, he published a political manifesto detailing the problems of dealing with Congress, and accusing it of many acts of betrayal: *"What Congress and Gandhi Have Done to the Untouchables"*. The next year, he published a second edition, with *major revisions in one chapter*.
1946 In June, he founded Siddharth College, in Bombay; it was a project of the People's Education Society, which he had founded in 1945. (--*Kadam*, pp. 116-17) Meanwhile, Gandhi made it clear that he did not have any use for such "graduates": *"Left-handed Compliment"* [--text courtesy of Joel Lee].
1946 Dr. Ambedkar gave evidence before the British Parliament delegation
1946 Apr Opening of Siddhartha College of Arts and Science in Bombay
1946 May The Bharat Bhushan Printing Press (founded by Dr Ambedkar) was burnt down in the clashes between D.C. and the Caste-Hindus
1946 June 20 Siddhartha College started
1946 Sept Dr. Ambedkar went to London to urge before the British Government and the Opposition Party the need to provide safeguards for the D.C. on grant of Independence to India.
1946 Oct Dr. Ambedkar published his Book Who were Shudras? An enquiry into how the Shudras came to be the fourth Varna in the Indo-Aryan Society Dr. Ambedkar was elected member of the Constitution Assembly of India
1946 Nov Dr. Ambedkar's first speech in the Constituent Assembly. He called for a 'strong and United India'
1946 In July, he exchanged letters with W. E. B. DuBois, comparing Untouchables with black Americans [site]. In October, he published *"Who Were the Shudras? How They Came to Be the Fourth Varna in the Indo-Aryan Society"*. He dedicated the book to the great early reformer Jotiba Phule (*site*).
1947 Mar Published 'States and Minorities ". A memorandum of Fundamental Rights. Minorities Rights, safeguards for the D.C. and on the problems of Indian States
1947 Apr 29 Article 17 of the Constitution of India for the abolition of Untouchables was moved by Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel in the Constituent Assembly and it was passed
1947 Aug 15 India obtained her Independence.B,R. Ambedkar was elected to the Constituent Assembly by the Bombay Legislature Congress Party. Dr. Ambedkar joined Nehru's Cabinet. He became the first Law Minister of Independence India. The Constituent Assembly appointed him to the drafting Committee which elected him as a Chairman on 29* August 1947
1947 In March he published *"States and Minorities: What Are their Rights and How to Secure them in the Constitution of Free India"*, a memorandum on fundamental rights, minority rights, safeguards for the Depressed Classes, and the problems of Indian states.
1947 INDEPENDENCE and Partitioncame in August; Dr. Ambedkar accepted Nehru's invitation to become Minister of Law in the first Cabinet of independent India. On August 29th he was appointed Chairman of the Drafting Committee for the new Constitution.
1948 Feb Dr. Ambedkar completed the Draft Constitution of Indian Republic
1948 Apr 15 Second marriage - Dr. Ambedkar married Dr. Sharda Kabir in Delhi
1948 Oct Published his book The Untouchables. A thesis on the origin of Untouchablity. Dr. Ambedkar submitted his Memorandum "Maharashtra as a linguistic Province" to the Dhar Commission (The Linguistic Provinces Commission)
1948 Nov 4 Dr. Ambedkar presented Draft Constitution to Constituent Assembly
1948 Nov 20 The Constitution Assembly adopted Article 17 of the Constitution for the abolition of Untouchability
1948 In the last week of February, the Draft Constitution was submitted for public discussion and debate: *Constitutional discussions and debates* (see #7).
1948 On April 15th, Dr. Ambedkar married Dr. Sharda Kabir (a Saraswat Brahmin) in Delhi; she adopted the name Savita. He was now diabetic and increasingly ill, and she took care of him for the rest of his life.
1948 In October, he prepared a memorandum on *"Maharashtra as a Linguistic Province"*, expressing his views for submission to the Linguistic Provinces Commission.
1948 He published *"The Untouchables: a Thesis on the Origin of Untouchability"*(New Delhi: Amrit Book Company), as a sequel to his book on the Shudras. As always on this subject, he wrote with passion. In the Preface he said, "The Hindu Civilisation.... is a diabolical contrivance to suppress and enslave humanity. Its proper name would be infamy. What else can be said of a civilisation which has produced a mass of people... who are treated as an entity beyond human intercourse and whose mere touch is enough to cause pollution?"
1948 In November, the Draft *Constitution* with its 315 articles and 8 schedules was formally introduced to the Constituent Assembly. Dr. Ambedkar concluded his speech: "I feel that the Constitution is workable; it is flexible and it is strong enough to hold the country together both in peace time and in war time. Indeed, if I may say so, if things go wrong under the new Constitution the reason will not be that we had a bad Constitution. What we will have to say is that Man was vile." (--*Keer*, p.410.)
1949 In November, the Constituent Assembly adopted the Constitution, including Article 17, which formally abolished untouchability.
1949 Jan Dr. Ambedkar, Law Minister of India visited Hyderabad (Deccan)
1949 Jan 15 Dr. Ambedkar was presented with a Purse at Manmad by his admires. He addressed a large gathering
1949 Jan 21 He stayed at Aurangabad in connection with his opening proposed College. During the stay he visited Ajanta-Ellora Caves
1949 Mar/May Dr. Ambedkar visited Bombay in connection with College Work and for a medical check-up
1949 Sept Meeting between Dr. Ambedkar and Madhavrao Golvalkar,
1949 Nov Dr. Ambedkar came to Bombay for college work meeting and medical check-up
1949 Nov 25 Dr. Ambedkar addressed the Constituent Assembly
1949 Nov 26 Constituent Assembly adopted the Constitution. Dr. Ambedkar came to Bombay for check-up
1950 Dr. Ambedkar gave several addresses about Buddhism; in May, he flew to Colombo (*site*), in Sri Lanka, to pursue further Buddhist connections. Here is a modern scholar's view: *"Pragmatism, Persuasion, and Force in Bhimrao Ambedkar's Reconstruction of Buddhism"*.
1950 Jan 11 Dr. Ambedkar addressed the Siddharth College Parliament on the Hindu Code Bill. In the evening he was presented with a silver casket containing a copy of the Indian Consitution at NAre Park Maidan, Bombay
1950 May Dr. Ambedkar's article 'The Buddha and the Future His Religion' was published in the journal of Mahabodhi Society, Calcutta. Dr. Ambedkar addressed the Young Men's Buddhist Association on 'The Rise and Fall of Hindu Women'. Dr. Ambedkar spoke on the 'Merits of Buddhism' at the meeting arranged on the occasion of Buddha Jayanti, in Delhi
1950 Sept 1 Dr. Rajendra Prasad, the first President of Indian Republic laid the foundation stone of Milind Maha Vidyalaya, Aurangabad. Dr. Ambedkar delivered a speech on the occasion (The printed speech is available with Mr. Surwade)
1950 Dec Dr. Ambedkar went to Colombo as a Delegate to the World Buddhist Conference
1951 In February, he introduced in Parliament the "Hindu Code Bill" that he had drafted, which included greatly expanded rights for women; it proved very controversial, and consideration of it was postponed: *on the Hindu Code Bill* (see #8). (--*Kadam*, pp. 121-22)
1951 In September, Dr. Ambedkar resigned from the Cabinet, embittered over the failure of Nehru and the Congress to back the Hindu Code Bill as they had earlier pledged to do. He became the *Leader of the Opposition* (see #9.) Discussion: *The Hindu*; *Time Magazine*. (--*Kadam*, pp. 121-22)
1951 Feb 5 Law Ambedkar, Law Minister announced his "Hindu Code Bill" in the Parliament
1951 Apr 15 Dr. Ambedkar laid the foundation stone of "Dr. Ambedkar Bhavan", Delhi
1951 July Dr. Ambedkar founded "The Bharatiya Buddha Jansangh"
1951 Sept Dr. Ambedkar compiled a Buddhist prayer book Buddha Upasana Patha
1951 Sept 9 Dr Ambedkar resigned from the Nehru Cabinet because, among other reasons, the withdrawal of Cabinet support to the declaration in the Parliament by the Prime Minister Pt Jawaharlal Nehru, that his Government would stand or fall with the Hindu Code Bill. Apart from this Neliru announced that he will sink or swfm with Hindu code Bill Dr Ambedkar published his speech in book form under the title The Rise and Fall of Hindu Women
1951 Sept 19 The marriage and divorce Bill was discussed in the Parliament
1951 Oct 11 Dr Ambedkar left the Cabinet
1952 Dr. Ambedkar received an honorary L.L.D. degree from Columbia University as part of its Bicentennial Special Convocation. The President described him as "one of India's leading citizens--a great social reformer and a valiant upholder of human rights."
1952 Jan Dr Ambedkar was defeated in the first Lok Sabha elections held under the Constitution of India Republic. Congress candidate N S Kajrolkar defeated Dr Ambedkar
1952 Mar Dr Ambedkar was introduced into Parliament as a member of the Council (Rajya Sabha) of States, representing Bombay
1952 June 1 Dr Ambedkar left for New York from Bombay
1952 June 14 Ambedkar returned to Bombay from America after receiving Doctor of Law from Columbia University.
1952 June 15 Columbia University (USA) conferred the honorary Degree of LL.D. ihits Bi- Centennial Celebrations Special Convocation held in New York
1952 Dec 16 Dr Ambedkar addressed Annual Social Gathering of Elphinstone College, Bombay
1952 Dec 22 Dr Ambedkar delivered a talk on "Conditions precedent to the Successful working of Democracy" at the Bar Council, Pune
1953 His political thinking included analysis of the issue of linguistic states; he published *"Need for Checks and Balances"* (Times of India, April 23, 1953) on this question. In 1955, he was still working on the subject, as the preface (dated Dec. 23, 1955) to *"Thoughts on Linguistic States"* testified.
1953 Jan 12 The Osmania University conferred the honorary Degree of LL.D. in Dr Ambedkar
1953 Mar The Untouchability (offences) Bill was introduced in the Parliament by the Nehru Government
1953 Apr Dr Ambedkar contested the By-Election for Lok Sabha from Bhandara Constituency of Vidarbha Religion but was defeated by Congress Candidate Mr Borkar
1953 May Opening of Siddhartha College of Commerce and Economics in Bombay
1953 Dec Dr Ambedkar inaugurated the All India Conference of Sai devotees at the St Xavier's Mai dan Parel Bombay (His inaugural speech is available with Mr Surwade)
1954 In the midst of his round of (increasingly embittered) Parliamentary and other activity, his health gave way; he was confined to bed for two months.
1954 While dedicating a new Buddhist vihara near Poona, Dr. Ambedkar announced that he was writing a book on Buddhism, and that as soon as it was finished, he planned to make a formal conversion to Buddhism. He also claimed that the image of Vithoba at Pandharpur (*site*) was in reality an image of the Buddha, and said that he would write a thesis to prove this claim. (--*Keer*, p. 482.)
1954 May Ambedkar visited Rangoon to attend the function arranged on the occasion of Buddha Jayanti
1954 June The Mahraraja of Mysore donated 5 acres of land for Dr Ambedkar proposed Buddhist Seminary to be started at Bangalore
1954 Sept 16 Dr Ambedkar spoke on the Untouchability (Offences) Bill in the Rajya Sabha
1954 Oct 3 Dr Ambedkar broadcast his talk on "My Personal Philosophy"
1954 Oct 29 Shn R D Bhandare, President of Bombay Pradesh S.C.Federation presented a purse of Rs 118,000 on behalf of S.C.F. to Dr Ambedkar at Purandare Stadium, Naigaum (Bombay)
1954 Dec Dr Ambedkar participated as a delegate of the 3"'^ World Buddhist Conference at Rangoon
1954 Dec 25 Dr Ambedkar installed an istatue of Buddha at Dehu Road (near Pune)
1955 Apr 3 Delivered a speech "Why Religion is necessary"
1955 May 4 Dr Ambedkar established Bhartiya Buddha Mahasabha (The Buddhist Society of India)
1955 Aug Founded "Mumbai Rajya Kanishtha Garkamgari Association"
1955 Dec 23 Published his opinions on linguistic states in book form under the title Thoughts on linguistic States
1955 Dec 27 Dr Ambedkar spoke against reservation of seats in the State and Central Legislatures
1956 Dr. Ambedkar brought the manuscript of *"The Buddha and His Dhamma"* to completion. "In February 1956 two new chapters are added to it: 'There is no god'; 'There is no soul'.... On March 15, 1956, Ambedkar wrote the Preface to his book in his own handwriting and dictated it to Rattu [his secretary]." Printing began in May, but was slowed by constant last-minute revisions of the proofs. (--*Keer*, pp. 488-489, 491.)
1956 From June to October, he was bedridden in his Delhi residence. His eyes were failing, he suffered from side effects of the drugs he was given for his diabetes, he felt deeply depressed.
1956 His formal conversion took place on Oct. 14th in Nagpur, a town selected for reasons he explained in his moving speech, *"Why Was Nagpur Chosen?"*. Many thousands of Mahars and other Dalits accepted Buddhism along with him.
1956 In November, he flew to Kathmandu to attend the Fourth World Buddhist Conference.
1956 Dec. 2, he completed the manuscript of *"The Buddha or Karl Marx"*, his last finished work, and gave it for typing.
1956 On the night of Dec. 5 or the early morning of Dec. 6, he died quietly in his sleep; on Dec. 7 there was a huge Buddhist-style funeral procession in Bombay, and he was cremated on the seashore.
1956 Feb Dr Ambedkar completed his The Buddha and His Dhamma, Revolution & Counter-revolution in Ancient India
1956 Mar 15 Dr Ambedkar wrote and dictated the preface of The Buddha and his Dhamma
1956 May 1 Dr Ambedkar spoke on Linguistic states in the Council of States Dr Ambedkar spoke on BBC London on "Why I like Buddhism Also, he spoke for Voice of America on "The Future of Indian Democracy"
1956 May 24 Dr Ambedkar attended a meeting at Nare Park organized on the eve of Buddha Jayanti, Shri B G Kher, Prime Minister of Bombay was Chief Guest. This meeting was the last meeting of Dr Ambedkar in Bombay
1956 June Opening of Siddharth College of Law in Bombay
1956 Oct 14 Dr Ambedkar embraced Buddhism at an historic ceremony at Diksha Bhoomi, Nagpur with his millions of followers. Announced to desolve S.C.F, and established Republican Party
24 Oct 1956 RPI was founded by Ambedkar
1956 Nov 20 Delegate, 4* World Buddhist Conference, Khalinandu, where he delivered his famous speech 'Buddha or Karl Marx'
1956 Dec 6 Maha Nirvana at his residence, 26 Alipore Road, New Delhi
1956 Dec 7 Cremation at Dadar Chowpatti - Now known as Chaitya Bhoomi, Dadar (Bombay)
1957 *"The Buddha and His Dhamma"*, Dr. Ambedkar's own version of a Buddhist scripture for his people, was posthumously published, by Siddharth College Publications, Bombay.
1957 and beyond A number of unfinished typescripts and handwritten drafts were found among his notes and papers and gradually made available. Among these were *"Waiting for a Visa"*, which probably dates from 1935-36, and *"Untouchables, or the Children of India's Ghetto"*, which refers to the census of 1951 and so must be quite late; other unpublished fragments as well will be found on the *ambedkar.org* website.
1991 At Columbia University's Ambedkar Centenary Celebration, Prof. David Lelyveld gives a talk about his achievements: *"Burning up the Dharmasastras: Group Identity and Social Justice in the Thought of B. R. Ambedkar"*. And Prof. Eleanor Zelliot gives a talk called *"Dr. Ambedkar in America"*.
1995 *Mrs. Savita Ambedkar visits Columbia*, on the occasion of the installation of a bust of Dr. Ambedkar.
2004 Columbia University honors Dr. Ambedkar in the course of its *250th birthday celebration*.
2009 Columbia University honors Dr. Ambedkar with a conference on *"Caste, Ambedkar, and Contemporary India"*. Associated with the conference is an online *area studies exhibit* by the Columbia University Libraries.
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