dalit conversion | SabrangIndia News Related to Human Rights Thu, 02 Nov 2023 09:01:03 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.2.2 https://sabrangindia.in/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Favicon_0.png dalit conversion | SabrangIndia 32 32 Hindutva’s “rice-bag” controversy https://sabrangindia.in/hindutvas-rice-bag-controversy/ Tue, 31 Oct 2023 08:56:57 +0000 https://sabrangindia.in/?p=30751 Hindutva hardliners have been consistently urging over the years that Dalits who have converted to Christianity did so after being incentivised by monetary gains. Is this really the case?

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Was money – or rice bags, ever an incentive? Let’s find out. 

Claim: Christian Dalits are rice bag converts

Busted!: There has been clearly little to no evidence found of rice bags, or monetary incentives, provided for conversion to Christianity by Dalits. Across India, Dalits have converted their religious faith due to a number of reasons.

Father of the constitution, B R Ambedkar himself changed his religion and converted to Buddhism in a public ceremony on October 14, 1956, expressing his political understanding that caste and caste-based exclusion were indelibly linked to Hinduism and only converting out of the faith would liberate him and other Dalits. About 500,000 of his followers had also gathered there with him to convert to Buddhism. Over the centuries, the most large-scale conversion has been arguably of indigenous Indians with their multiple animist beliefs co-opted and converted into the ‘Sanatan Hindu faith’ followed by  conversions to Abrahanic faiths which took place alternatively through trade, commerce, as a move towards emancipation and equality, and, in some instances by power and coercion. However, for forces of the far Hindutva right, showcasing and stigmatising conversions to Christianity and Islam fits well with their fundamentals of who is the “insider” and who the “outsider.’

As the government slashes export prices for Basmati rice after sales saw a huge downturn, one is reminded that rice remains a controversial topic in India. In recent times, Hindutva sympathisers have been pushing a divisive narrative that simplifies conversions to Christianity under a derogatory term: ‘rice-bag converts.’ The term insinuates that by providing a bag of rice, one can allegedly induce Dalit people, particularly those from lower economic strata, to embrace Christianity. This contentious viewpoint repeatedly rises and ebbs, and was even leveraged at a Supreme Court judge herself when the outgoing Supreme Court judge, Judge R. Banumathi, mentioned the influence of Jesus in her life during her farewell speech.

The following is an excerpt, courtesy the LiveLaw, from Justice Banumathi’s farewell speech, where she also narrates the difficult and harrowing circumstances in her early life, and how she and her family overcame them, “Though I am a Hindu, I believe in the gospel of Jesus. By the Grace of Jesus, I got educated and came up in life. I got into the Tamil Nadu higher judicial services at the age of 33 in 1988 and served the institution for over 3 decades.” 

Soon after her farewell speech, Justice Banumathi’s expression of belief in the gospel of Jesus triggered a slew of derogatory comments on social media, with many labelling her a “rice-bag convert.” This online slur is part of a broader campaign by the Hindu Right to ridicule Christians in India, and it is disheartening to see even a high-ranking Supreme Court Justice becoming a target of this hate campaign.

Some examples of the tweets Justice Banumathi received on Twitter are as follows:

Furthermore, when right-wing media portal, OpIndia, posted an article outlining Justice Banumathi’s statements on the gospel, the comments section was flooded with several users mocking her statement, with one user, Nandaa Kumar, also stating “She said cleverly I could benefit from reservations and monetarily from Jesus…”

Public figures such as Disha Ravi and comedian Kenny Sebastian have also been the target of hate campaigns, calling them rice bag converts. Sebastian was attacked online by a person called Madhur Singh, according to Scroll.in. According to Scroll, Sebastian replied to Singh on Twitter, now X, saying, “It’s not twitter if someone doesn’t call you a rice bag convert 🙂 Actually I learned a lot from ‘the placard guy’ who apparently fights for causes but doesn’t hesitate to be a bigot. I had to google what “rice bag” means. Sorry Madhur that I follow a particular religion.” Ravi too was the target of a disinformation campaign where a false claim proclaiming she was Christian went viral online and propagated a slew of hate towards her. SabrangIndia revisited the post attacking Sebastian linked on Scroll’s website by Madhur Singh, however the post on X seems to be deleted. It must be of note that Madhur Singh has about 135500 followers on the social networking site currently.

Acclaimed doctor and public health practitioner who routinely talks about caste, health and nutrition, Dr Sylvia Karpagam, has also been at the receiving end of casteism in the form of the rice bag convert slur on her X account often, as you can see in the X exchange below.

This suggests a derogatory attitude towards Dalits who it is imputed “can be so easily bought” as also of course towards Christians themselves who are all made to carry the late 17th-18th century “missionary tag”. Conversions as scholars have seen have been driven by multiple impulses, and cannot be all attributed to force and coercion. A large percentage of the conversions to first, Christianity and then Islam were not (only) borne of force but of a perceived sense, among oppressed sections, that faiths that had equality and parity in worship, offered equality and dignity denied to them at birth.

The claim that Dalit Christians are converts solely motivated by material gains also reveal an attitude that is not merely patronising towards Dalits but deny oppressed caste any agency. By imputing such motives and speaking of Dalits in largely insensitive and offensive manner, by virtue of their historically subjugated positions, are not just incapable of exercising agency, but are also incapable of having spiritual aspirations or inclinations. This derogatory right-wing claim would thus envision Dalits as being a group of people that does not have any reasoning capacity, ability of critical thought, sense of judgement, or aspirations beyond relieving themselves (transactionally) of poverty. This entrenched way of thinking does injustice not just to Dalits but the spirit of equality and fraternity as well the cultivation of critical thought as embedded in the Indian constitution.

Furthermore, as explored in another Hate Buster by CJP, it was noted that missionary faiths, including Christianity, have arrived and spread in India via a number of ways, routes, and methods. They cannot be clubbed  together with the Hindutva adage of saying that they were spread by the sword; doing so would not only be a disservice to history but also to living practitioners of these faiths, many of whom belong to marginalised backgrounds. The article argues that Christianity, as opposed to the perception the right-wing wishes to spread, did not arrive in violence. In fact, Christians have had a largely peaceful coexistence, starting from the state of Kerala, with a history that goes back, as local legends would say as far back as to the times of Thomas the Apostle.

These conversions were not just about embracing a new faith but represented a collective effort by Dalits to attain dignity, self-respect, and the ability to shape their own destinies. In an article titled Change and Continuity by S M Michael, he notes that there are records that mass movements to conversion were a historical moment marked the beginning of the modern Dalit movement. In these situations, individuals made a group decision to become part of a new community that not only had a religious tradition comparable to that of the caste Hindus but also promised newfound dignity and esteem. Further this push towards discovering and exploring new faiths was promulgated by a response to a socio-religious system that had failed to address Dalit needs and aspirations. Hence, it is difficult to identify conversion to Christianity as an instance of missionaries luring, coercing or even bribing vulnerable individual Dalits to convert; there is ample evidence of collective, decisive conversions. Ambedkar, when he converted, converted en masse with about 500,000 people converting at the same time, which points to the fact that there is a collective and well thought out  push within Dalits to move to a different faith. Furthermore, this push was not sanctioned by errant gurus but by informed leaders, one of whom exists today to be globally known as the father of the Indian constitution.

One question we must ask leaders, politicians is that if instances of monetary or material incentives are provided to convert, then there must be some evidence of the circulation or reception of this money being transferred. Because, as one can see scholars and activists who have researched and worked on the issues converting Dalit Christians have estimated, according to Scroll.in, that about 50 -75 % of the Christian community in India consists of Dalits. If there was undue funds flowing in this relatively large number of people, as is claimed, it would reflect in the government data which assess economic status of these groups.

Similarly, scholar SM Michael argues that in India’s approximately 20 million Christians, around 14 million belong to Dalit caste groups, and thus would account for 70% of all conversions to Christianity. That the Indian church itself has (practices) its fair share of casteism is testimony to the pernicious pervasiveness of caste as a division. That Dalit Christians are excluded from affirmative rights granted to Dalits (including those who have converted to Buddhism and Sikhism) adds yet another unfortunate and discriminatory dimension.

Wouldn’t this mean, if the conspiracy that material gain was provided by missionaries in exchange for conversion were true, that most of these converted people would be significantly better off than and experience some change in their economic class? What does the data say here? Let’s take a look at government data and see if it can support this right-wing theory.

Whither the proof?

However, the data does not corroborate the theory, of the report by Scroll.in further attests that out 30 % of Dalit Christian live under the poverty line, according to a 2004-’05, by monthly per capita expenditure in rural India conducted by the National Sample Survey Office. Interestingly so according to Dr S. M. Michael, who has worked on the question of Dalit Christians, has written that one of the most significant benefits that the Dalit Christians have derived from their conversions is education. Michael argued that while illiteracy rates continue to remain relatively high among Dalit Christians as compared to other Christians from other caste groups, the impact of missionary education across India has played a crucial role in providing the communities with upliftment. Now, right-wingers would argue that provision of schooling and educational facilities would amount to a monetary incentive, however the claim does not hold ground. Missionary schools have opened their arms to students of all religions, and have provided avenues for studying at these schools for the larger Indian community at large.   If missionary schools have contributed to the upliftment of Dalit Christians, then surely they must have contributed to the upliftment of Indian students across religious denominations. However, this remains a logical assumption and not an expression of facts, but it does serve to provide us with some food for thought.

A neglected history

Over the past couple of years, proponents of the Hindutva movement have crafted a narrative of hostility toward Christians and other religious minorities. This campaign includes downplaying the role of Christian missionaries in India’s socio-economic development and framing conversions as a deceitful scheme aimed at eroding the nation’s cultural heritage. The conspiracy theories surrounding Christian missionaries are numerous, and they go beyond the scope of this article. Article 25 of the Indian constitution clearly affirms the right to freedom of conscience and religion, emphasising that all individuals are equally entitled to profess, practice, and propagate their faith.

Teesta Setalvad, writing for Sabrang India, notes the extremely vulnerable and marginalised positions occupied by Dalits in India, and asserts that one must let go of the refusal to recognise the contribution of Christian institutions in the absence of the pointed welfare initiatives for Dalits. Furthermore, the authors asserts that Christians individuals and institutions have an inbuilt mandate as part of their religious duty to help and alleviate the hardships of the marginalised, “To accept their role is to face our moral and cultural poverty, the rank injustice and marginalisation that we have perpetuated on sections of our people. To accept their role is to nail the grand lie.” The article further notes that it was St Francis Xavier who led a pioneering endeavour to open primary schools in every village. Christians living in India have contributed greatly by setting up libraries, institutions, and engaging, including crucial work of archive generation that has been instrumental in constructing India’s rich history. Furthermore, their efforts were recognised by stalwart leaders Jyotiba Phule and Pandita Ramabai. Jyotiba Phule founded the Satyashodak Samaj (Truth Seeker’s Society) 1983 and has written critically about the extensive work done by missionaries for the backward castes with regards to education.  Pandita Ramabai, a Brahmin widow, converted to Christianity to escape, and testified before the Education Commission in 1882 about women’s right to education, saying “in ninety–nine cases out of a hundred the educated men of the country were opposed to female education and the proper position of women.”

Thus the question readers must ask is, what purpose does the idea of ‘rice bag Christian’ serve, whom does it benefit, what political interests does it serve to those who claim it, and what does it mean when we denigrate a whole population of 14 million Indians as a group?

 

Related:

Hate Buster: Why is the right-wing so scared of Sai Baba of Shirdi

Anti-Christian violence: Opening of a church resisted, police raids aid the rightwing

Alarming rise in violence against Christians in India as G20 Summit takes centre stage

Crying for Justice

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Dalits protest discrimination, over 300 convert to Buddhism in Gujarat https://sabrangindia.in/dalits-protest-discrimination-over-300-convert-buddhism-gujarat/ Wed, 02 May 2018 05:05:21 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2018/05/02/dalits-protest-discrimination-over-300-convert-buddhism-gujarat/ More than 300 Dalits, including four men who were allegedly flogged by cow viilantes in Una in Gujarat’s Gir Somnath district in 2016 and their family members, converted to Buddhism at an event that took place in the state’s Mota Samadhiyala village on Sunday, April 29. More than one thousand Dalits reportedly took part in the event, which was […]

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More than 300 Dalits, including four men who were allegedly flogged by cow viilantes in Una in Gujarat’s Gir Somnath district in 2016 and their family members, converted to Buddhism at an event that took place in the state’s Mota Samadhiyala village on Sunday, April 29. More than one thousand Dalits reportedly took part in the event, which was held on the eve of Buddha Purnima and nearly a third of them went ahead with the religious conversion. 

Dalit converted to buddhism
Image: Indian Express

In July 2016, four Dalit men–Vashram Sarvaiya, his brother Ramesh Sarvaiya and their cousins Ashok and Bechar, were allegedly attacked by cow vigilantes for skinning a cow, with the attackers alleging that the four men had killed the cow. The four men who were attacked resided in Mota Samadhiyala. A video of the incident was posted online, and prompted national outrage. Following the incident, the Gujarat Crime Investigation Department arrested 43 people

However, currently, only six individuals are in custody. According to Govindbhai Parmar, an advocate representing the Sarvaiya family, 35 of 43 accused are out on bail, including the prime accused in the case. In fact, on Wednesday, April 25, two of the men who had originally been attacked in Una in 2016 were allegedly attacked again by one of the accused in the case,  Kiransinh Balubhai Darbar, who is out on bail. An FIR against Darbar and a friend who was with them at the time has been filed at the Una police station. 

Balu Sarvaiya, father of the two of the men who were assaulted, said, “It’s been over two years now that our sons were brutally flogged. However, till date, the state government has not extended any kind of help such as land or government jobs. Moreover, we haven’t got justice still and all the accused are on bail now.” He explained, “We have been forced to convert our religion because we think it would lend a momentum to the Dalit uprising that was witnessed after the flogging incident. Other Dalits too, who are silently suffering tortures, will also have to embrace Buddhism sooner or later”.

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Dalit man converts to Islam: Right-wingers shave off his beard, perform ‘purification’ ceremony and reconvert him https://sabrangindia.in/dalit-man-converts-islam-right-wingers-shave-his-beard-perform-purification-ceremony-and/ Thu, 26 Apr 2018 09:47:20 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2018/04/26/dalit-man-converts-islam-right-wingers-shave-his-beard-perform-purification-ceremony-and/ ImIn yet another brazen attack on the Dalit community, Pawan Kumar, a 34-year-old welder from Shamli in Uttar Pradesh was attacked by member of right-wing groups. The attackers not only threw away his skull cap and shaved off his beard, but also converted him back to Hinduism after performing ‘purification’ rituals. A video of the attack has been […]

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ImIn yet another brazen attack on the Dalit community, Pawan Kumar, a 34-year-old welder from Shamli in Uttar Pradesh was attacked by member of right-wing groups. The attackers not only threw away his skull cap and shaved off his beard, but also converted him back to Hinduism after performing ‘purification’ rituals. A video of the attack has been widely shared online.   

Dalit man
Image: Mumbai Mirror

A few weeks ago Kumar, a Dalit, had converted to Islam. He had grown a beard and begun wearing a skullcap, as per the customs of the religion. It was alleged that Kumar was pressured into converting to Islam by a local madrassa. Kumar denied this, saying, “I read a lot about Islam on the internet and decided to embrace it. No one forced me or lured me into this.” 

However, Vivek Premi, regional head of students of Bajrang Dal, said, “Locals informed our activists in Vishwakarma colony about this sudden change. We arrived at his house and found the allegations were correct. He told us that a few Muslims lured him into embracing Islam in exchange of money to start his own business. They had also promised to find a bride for him. Later, clerics of a local madrassa converted him and even took him to court for registration. However, after counselling he understood that he had made a mistake and agreed to return to Hinduism. We conducted a shuddhikaran ceremony late on Monday night.” 

Parvez Ahmad, a station officer at the Shamli police station said that the police was aware of the incident, but that a complaint had not been filed. 

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How India uses the absurd charge of ‘forced religious conversions’ to target minorities and Dalits https://sabrangindia.in/how-india-uses-absurd-charge-forced-religious-conversions-target-minorities-and-dalits/ Sat, 15 Apr 2017 10:30:12 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2017/04/15/how-india-uses-absurd-charge-forced-religious-conversions-target-minorities-and-dalits/ Draconian anti-conversion laws and majoritarian vigilante groups have all but ended the freedom to choose a new faith in India.   The Universal Declaration of Human Rights, proclaimed by the United Nations in 1948, is a landmark document. It accorded all humans the same rights – the first time in history that this had ever […]

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Draconian anti-conversion laws and majoritarian vigilante groups have all but ended the freedom to choose a new faith in India.

Conversion
 

The Universal Declaration of Human Rights, proclaimed by the United Nations in 1948, is a landmark document. It accorded all humans the same rights – the first time in history that this had ever happened.

Or well, that was the idea at least. In the real world, it’s a bit different. Take Article 18 of the charter that describes the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion. It explicitly states, “this right includes freedom to change his religion or belief” – a tenet India does not subscribe to.

In fact, far from recognising a right to convert, the Indian state and powerful Hindutva groups use the bogey of so-called forced conversions to harass minorities (mainly Christians in this case). On Sunday, for example, the Madhya Pradesh police arrested three Christians for allegedly trying to convert Hindus. Last Friday, the Hindu Yuva Vahini, a vigilante group headed by Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Adityanath, raided a church, accusing members of converting people. Astonishingly, the police promised an investigation not against the Hindu Yuva Vahini, for harassing a church, but against the church itself, reported the Hindustan Times.

Even while Christian congregations are attacked by raising the bogey of conversion, the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh boasts openly about conversion of Christians to Hinduism. In Jharkhand, the RSS aims to make whole blocks “Christianity free” and recently converted 53 families to Hinduism.
 

Legal discrimination

This religious discrimination isn’t a one-off event. It is, in fact, enshrined in law. Five states across the Indian Union ban conversion in all but name. In Orissa, Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Gujarat and Himachal Pradesh the process of conversion is regulated to such a Kafkaesque degree that it is impossible to carry out – which was precisely the motive of the motive of the framers of the law.

In September, 2014, for example, the Madhya Pradesh police had arrested four Dalits for converting to Islam. The four men had decided to change their religion driven by the caste system – a move perfectly in consonance with the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and, indeed, common sense. Yet, they broke the law by not taking the permission of the Madhya Pradesh state government.

As per the Madhya Pradesh Freedom of Religion Act (a suitably Orwellian name for a law that actually curbs religious freedom), for a person to change his faith he needs the permission of the state administration. Even as the BJP-controlled state government booked them, the wider Sangh Parivar sprung into action putting pressure on their community (their crops were burnt and a social boycott instituted) and eventually forcing them to convert back to Hinduism.

In effect, then, apostasy from Hinduism is practically disallowed in Madhya Pradesh. The law as well as majoritarian groups will make sure it never happens.

How did things get so bad in secular India?
 

Secular clamps on freedom of religion

There were no anti-conversion laws in British India. After Independence, the Lok Sabha debated two bills that sought to curb conversions, the Indian Conversion (Regulation and Registration) Bill of 1954, and, six years later, the Backward Communities (Religious Protection) Bill. While both bills had wide support, Nehru, playing his usual role as the one-man vanguard of Indian progressivism, saw that both were eventually binned.

Predicting the repressions such laws could engender, Nehru argued with remarkable prescience that these laws, “will not help very much in suppressing the evil methods [of gaining converts], but might very well be the cause of great harassment to a large number of people. Also, we have to take into consideration that, however carefully you define these matters, you cannot find really proper phraseology for them. The major evils of coercion and deception can be dealt with under the general law. It may be difficult to obtain proof but so is it difficult to obtain proof in the case of many other offences, but to suggest that there should be a licensing system for propagating a faith is not proper. It would lead in its wake to the police having too large a power of interference.”

Foiled at the Union level, anti-conversion laws had greater success in the states. In 1967, Orissa, then ruled by the right-wing Swatantra Party, became the first state to enact a “Freedom of Religion” Law. Madhya Pradesh followed suit the next year, with Gujarat and Himachal Pradesh following with similar legislation. Chhattisgarh inherited Madhya Pradesh’s law when the state was partitioned. Arunachal Pradesh also has an anti-conversion law on its books, but since the rules for the act haven’t been framed, it remains a dead letter. The Rajasthan Assembly has already passed an anti-conversion bill that awaits the President’s assent to be made into law. Interestingly, the laws in Himachal Pradesh and Arunachal Pradesh were promulgated by Congress governments, which shows how similarly the two big parties in India view this matter.

All these state laws are remarkably similar in scope. None of the laws directly ban conversion. Instead they ban conversions by means of “force, allurement, inducement or fraud” – but of course they leave these terms quite undefined, which gives the administration and its agents almost draconian powers.
 

What is a forced conversion?

For example, “force” also includes the “threat of divine displeasure”. So, farcically, if a missionary informs a person that only Christians are allowed entry into heaven – a core part of the faith – that could also be construed as “force”. This interpretation of “force” was upheld by the Orissa High Court in Yulitha Hyde v. State of Orissa. It held that the “threat of divine displeasure numbs the mental faculty; more so of an undeveloped mind and the actions of such a person thereafter, are not free and according to conscience”.

Note how the court infantalises its citizens here, calling their very minds “underdeveloped”.

Again, “inducement” or “allurement” is defined broadly to include “the offer of any gift or gratification, either in cash or in kind and shall also include the grant of any benefit, either pecuniary or otherwise” (Orissa Freedom of Religion Act, 1967). This problematic definition was even noted by the High Court of Orissa in Yulitha Hyde vs State of Orissa and called out for its extremely wide scope. For example, any charitable work carried out by a religious organisation could come under a “grant of benefit”, as would free education or healthcare. Unfortunately, in Stanislaus vs State of Madhya Pradesh (1977), the Supreme Court struck down the Orissa High Court’s ruling and upheld this vague definition.

To really see how absurd these laws are, one needs to come to “fraud”. Since none of these laws care to define what it is, theoretically, almost any religious tenet not matching scientific fact could be fraud. So, a person preaching that “Adam was the first man on earth” could be committing fraud since their is no way to prove that in the material world. On paper, fraud could even be applied to the RSS if they propagate the tenets of Hinduism. But of course, given the majoritarian attitude of the state administration, the law is almost never used in cases of conversion to Hinduism.

Two of these acts – Madhya Pradesh and Gujarat – take the Big Brother state to absurd lengths. Both require the person converting to take the permission of the state government. That Narendra Modi and Shivraj Chauhan think that citizens need the permission of the government in order to think their thoughts and adopt beliefs or ideas is an extremely disturbing development – one that strikes a particularly large nail into the coffin of Indian progressivism.
 

Caste and conversion

When these laws first came out in Orissa and Madhya Pradesh, they were immediately challenged in the courts. Matters eventually reached the Supreme Court in 1977, where in the landmark case, Stanislaus v. State of Madhya Pradesh, the court held that conversion, per se, is not a fundamental right under Article 25 and can be regulated by the state.

Like in the case of the India’s many beef laws, this was a disappointing stand taken by the Supreme Court, ignoring the global consensus as well as the crucial role of conversion in combatting caste in India. Bhimrao Ambedkar had for almost all his life advocated conversion for Dalit emancipation, in the end himself converting to Buddhism in 1956 along with lakhs of others. Ironically, while Ambedkar had the freedom to advocate conversion in colonial India, a free India would probably severely censure or even jail him today.

Courtesy: Scroll.in

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गुजरात में दो हजार दलितों ने बौद्ध धर्म अपनाया https://sabrangindia.in/gaujaraata-maen-dao-hajaara-dalaitaon-nae-baaudadha-dharama-apanaayaa/ Wed, 12 Oct 2016 10:38:16 +0000 http://localhost/sabrangv4/2016/10/12/gaujaraata-maen-dao-hajaara-dalaitaon-nae-baaudadha-dharama-apanaayaa/ आरएसएस के हिंदुत्व की प्रयोगशाला गुजरात में करीब दो हजार दलितों ने एक साथ बौद्ध धर्म स्वीकार करके बता दिया है कि संघ का प्रयोग बुरी तरह से असफल रहा है। मंगलवार को गुजरात के तीन प्रमुख शहरों में इन दलितों ने हिंदू धर्म त्याग कर बौद्ध धर्म अपना लिया। ये समारोह अहमदाबाद, कलोल और […]

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आरएसएस के हिंदुत्व की प्रयोगशाला गुजरात में करीब दो हजार दलितों ने एक साथ बौद्ध धर्म स्वीकार करके बता दिया है कि संघ का प्रयोग बुरी तरह से असफल रहा है। मंगलवार को गुजरात के तीन प्रमुख शहरों में इन दलितों ने हिंदू धर्म त्याग कर बौद्ध धर्म अपना लिया। ये समारोह अहमदाबाद, कलोल और सुरेंद्रनगर में हुए।


Image: Javed Raja

गुजरात में ही गिर सोमनाथ जिले में ऊना कांड हुआ था जिसमें मृत गायों की चमड़ी निकाल रहे दलितों को सरेआम पीटा गया था, और इस घटना की हर तरफ कड़ी निंदा हुई थी। ऊना कांड के बाद ही दलितों ने कई प्रदर्शन किए थे और मरी गायों को न उठाने का संकल्प लिया था। अब एक कदम और आगे बढ़ते हुए करीब दो हजार दलितों ने हिंदू धर्म को जातिवादी बताते हुए बौद्ध बनना स्वीकार किया।

मंगलवार को बौद्ध धर्म की दीक्षा लेने वाले एमबीए के छात्र मौलिक चौहाण ने कहा कि उसके मन में बचपन से ही जातिप्रथा से मुक्ति पाने की इच्छा थी और ऊना कांड के बाद उसने पक्का निश्चय कर लिया था कि हिंदू धर्म त्याग कर बौद्ध धर्म अपनाना है।

तीनों शहरों में गुजरात बौद्ध महासभा और गुजरात बौद्ध अकादमी ने बौद्ध दीक्षा समारोह का आयोजन किया था। कलोल में दीक्षा समारोह का आयोजन करने वाले महेन्द्र उपासक इस बौद्ध दीक्षा कार्यक्रम का संबंध ऊना कांड से नहीं मानते, लेकिन वे यह भी कहते हैं कि सभी दलित अगर बौद्ध होते तो ऊना कांड होता ही नहीं। श्री उपासक कहते हैं कि दीक्षा लेने वालों से उनकी जाति नहीं पूछी जाती लेकिन वे समारोह में शामिल ज्यादातर लोग दलित समुदाय से हैं। गुजरात बौद्ध अकादमी के रमेश बैंकर भी कहते हैं कि बौद्ध बनने वाले लोग जाति प्रथा से छुटकारा चाहते हैं।

बौद्ध धर्म स्वीकार करने वाले टीआर भास्कर कहते हैं कि बौद्ध धर्म में जाति से मुक्ति मिल जाती है और जिस तरह से अंबेडकर ने बौद्ध धर्म स्वीकार किया था, उसी तरह से मैंने भी किया है। इसी तरह से मौलिक चव्हाण ने भी उम्मीद जताई कि हिंदू से बौद्ध बनने के बाद अब जाति प्रथा से मुक्ति मिल सकेगी।

भारतीय जनता पार्टी ने अपनी हिंदुत्व की प्रयोगशाला में हजारों दलितों द्वारा हिंदू धर्म त्यागने पर चिंता जताई है। गुजरात भाजपा के प्रदेश प्रवक्ता भरत पंड्या कहते हैं कि अगर दलित नाराज़ होकर या किसी के कहने पर बौद्ध धर्म में दीक्षित होते हैं तो यह ठीक नहीं है और इस पर सभी को गंभीरता से विचार करना चाहिए।

The post गुजरात में दो हजार दलितों ने बौद्ध धर्म अपनाया appeared first on SabrangIndia.

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