NEW
DELHI, October 28 (IslamOnline) - Over a hundred Dalits (low-caste
Hindus) converted to Buddhism, Islam and Christianity, Sunday, October
27, in protest against the inequality in Hindu religion, which treats
Dalits as sub-human, even less important than cattle.
The
new converts included families of the five Dalits lynched on October
15 for skinning a dead cow. For hundreds of generations these people
have been skinning dead animals. High-caste Hindus worship the cow as
“ mother,” and are generally anti-cow slaughter. However, they
have traditionally allowed skinning of dead animals, including cows,
and their trade.
On
October 15, a mob of 2000 upper caste Hindus lynched five Dalit young
men for having “ killed” a cow barely 60 kilometres from the
national capital as 50 policemen and senior government officials
watched silently. Families of victims say that their relatives were
actually killed by the police for refusing to pay high bribes. The
latest round of conversions has come in response to that event.
Dalits
are aggrieved not only about the continuing harassment and humiliation
at the hands of high-caste Hindus, but by the justification of such
harassment by religious leaders. Soon after the lynching, a
high-profile Hindu religious leader, Giriraj Kishore, told newspersons
in Delhi that as per Hindu scriptures, “ the life of a cow is more
precious than a man’ s.”
Dalit
leader Udit Raj, himself a convert from Hinduism to Buddhism, said
Sunday, October 27, that Hindu religious and ultra nationalist
organizations like “ the VHP, Bajrang Dal and RSS and their
so-called leaders are forcing the Dalits across the country to convert
to different religions” . He said that the guilty had been allowed
to go scot-free which meant that the government was anti-Dalit.
Dalits
had been oppressed for the last 5,000 years, since Vedic times,
because the Hindu religious scriptures sanctioned such mistreatment.
“ That left Dalits with no other option than abandoning Hinduism for
a dignified life,” Udit Raj added.
Nearly
half a century ago, one of the greatest Dalit leaders and the
architect of the Indian Constitution, Dr BR Ambedkar, renounced
Hinduism along with half a million other Dalits to join Buddhisim.
Ambedekar said, “ I was born a Hindu, but I will not die one” . He
said there would be no emancipation of Dalits unless they left the
religion (Hinduism) which allowed such discriminatory treatment of
Dalits.
The
present leader, Udit Raj, is a follower of Ambedkar. He supports
conversion as “ a healthy process” . “ Conversion from one’ s
existing religion to another leads to a change of thought, ” he
asserts.
The
government, instead of nabbing the guilty, sent the dead cow for
post-mortem examination to determine whether the cow had been killed
or had died of some other cause!. Fortunately for other Dalits, the
post-mortem report said it had died one day before the lynching of the
Dalits.
“
We do not want to be a part of a religion in which there is a premium
on a dead cow,” said Chhattar Singh, relative of two of the lynched
Dalits. Criticizing Hindu religious leader Giriraj Kishore for his
observation that “ a cow’ s life is more precious than a man’
s,” Udit Raj said, “ the system which has the cow and Kishore in
it is not worth much.”
That
the Dalits had changed religion in defiance of Hindu caste oppression
was evident form one Dalit’ s name after converting to Islam. He
chose to rename himself as "Saddam Hussein." A prominent
member of the Dalit community in Gurgaon, his previous name was
"Bhim Shankar Das Khairatia".
The
new Saddam Hussein said, “ I know how the Western world is after
Saddam. He is a hero.” After Meenakshipuram (a place in the south
Indian state of Tamil Nadu) conversions of early 1980s in which 180
Dalit families embraced Islam, this one was the most dramatic protest
against caste oppression which the lynching symbolized.
Last
August, 250 Dalits converted to Christianity in Tamil Nadu to escape
oppression. Last year 1,500 similarly oppressed low-caste Hindus
embraced Christianity.
According
to the BBC, 400 Dalits in Tamil Nadu are planning to convert to Islam
“ because of what they describe as persistent unfair treatment by
their higher-caste Hindu neighbors.”
Dalits
who converted Sunday to Islam said they preferred this religion
because it emphasized equality and brotherhood, which they missed in
their earlier religion. Islam also gave them dignity, which they never
knew as Hindus.
The
conversion yesterday took place during a huge Dalit rally in Gurgaon,
south of Delhi, against the lynching. About 100 Dalits embraced Islam,
while about 15 chose Buddhism and around three preferred Christianity.
The
rally, attended by around 7000 Dalits, decided not to celebrate
Diwali, festival of lights, this year in protest against the lynching.
They also decided to converge on Dulina, where the lynching took
place, on November 4. More conversions will take place on that date.
The
electronic media here chose to ignore this event while today's
newspapers chose to ignore the fact that the majority converted to
Islam which was confirmed to IOL by Dr Muhammad Rafiq Azad who
performed the rites of the Dalits' conversion to Islam yesterday at
Gurgaon