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Lynching 5 Dalits in Police Presence Exposes India’s Inhuman Caste System

Poster showing ten Dalits killed during Rambai massacre

By IOL South Asia Correspondent

NEW DELHI, October 17 (IslamOnline)- Five Dalits (low-caste Hindus) were beaten to death and two of them burnt later outside a police post less than two hours drive away from the national capital Wednesday, October 16.

The Dalits, all in their 20s, were skinning a dead cow. For hundreds of generations the Dalits have been skinning dead cattle, and what they Did Wednesday was nothing unusual, except that some Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) volunteers spread the rumor that the Dalits had “killed” a cow.

High caste Hindus treat cows as a sacred animal. They drink their urine in the belief that it cures a large number of diseases and ritually cleanses the human soul. Even cow dung is sacred. Skinning a cow which died naturally has generally been tolerated, but not killing one.

Within a couple of hours of the rumor spreading, 2,000 people descended on the spot shrieking hysterically “Gow mata ki jai” (Hail mother cow). The frightened Dalits ran into a police post at Dulena (in Jhajhar district of Haryana state).

Dalit leader Udit Raj leads a group during conversion to Buddhism as a way to escape the Hindu caste system

The hysterical mob came to the police post, grabbed the Dalits and beat them to death as 50 policemen watched. Besides the policemen who chose to remain passive spectators, there was a city magistrate, the sub-divisional police chief and other government officials watching the show calmly. Two of the dead were later burnt by the mob.

Local temple priest Mahendra Permanand was reported as justifying the lynching. He was reported to have said that lynching of the Dalits was only “natural” as “they have killed our mother [the cow].”

The district magistrate reached the spot late claiming that he was caught in a “traffic jam”. Nobody has been arrested, and the perpetrators led by World Hindu Council (VHP) functionaries are unrepentant. The VHP has, according to a report in Thursday’s Indian Express, dared the police to take action if they can.

If past record is any indication, the perpetrators don’t have much to worry about.

As the “Kumher carnage” of a decade ago shows, the law would look the other way if Dalits are killed or their women raped. In that particular case, 17 Dalits were burnt alive by a mob that included government officials. The carnage occurred in Rajasthan, neighboring Delhi.

In the past three years alone Rajasthan has witnessed 15,072 cases of crimes against Dalits and tribals, including an annual average of 46 killings, 143 rapes and 93 cases of grievous injury.

The iniquitous caste system is strictly enforced despite a law prohibiting it. Discrimination against Dalits is a fact of life for much of India. According to Praful Bidwai, one of the best columnists of India, the discrimination is “systemic, systematic, entrenched.”

In a recent article in the Hindustan Times, Bidwai wrote, “From land maldistribution and denial of basic services—the village barber won’t even shave a Dalit—this extends to inequality in access to water, common pastures and wasteland, employment and drought-relief schemes and unequal wages.”

Dalits at a tea-stall where they are made to use separate tumblers and have to wash them too

In the same vein, Bidwai continues, “A Dalit woman may not wear sandals in the village. Dalit children may only sit at the back of classroom and drink water from a separate pot…. The upper-caste landlord’s right to deflower a Dalit bride-to-be is prevalent.”

The law is on the side of the Dalits, but the law-keepers are not prepared to implement it. As long as the law-keepers “continue to make a travesty of it, the Dalits’ struggle for elementary human dignity will face heavy odds,” says Bidwai. And carnages like those of Kumher and Jhajjar will continue to take place in largest democracy in the world.

 

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