Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Is Bengal Truly Casteless? A Reconsideration through Dalit Testimonies
View through CrossRef
Bengal has historically been considered as an exception to the practice of casteism. While other states of the country experienced caste discrimination as a part of the social fabric, Bengal has been considered as an egalitarian state. The main reason attributed to this phenomenon is the progressiveness culture of Bengal which had the bhadralok at its centre. However, this paper revisits the notion of Bengal’s castelessness. This article also looks at the broader historical context of Bengali Dalit history which closely looks at the plight of Bengal’s Dalits after the Partition of 1947. The Dalits, mostly comprising of the Namasudra community, were forced to leave their land and migrate to West Bengal. Having become refugees overnight they resorted to help from the government but were treated indifferently. However, that was not the case for the upper caste refugees who were allowed rehabilitation facilities. Eventually the government of West Bengal sent away the destitute Dalit refugees under the Dandakaranya Project to remote places away from Bengal. Dandakaranya Project ultimately led to the infamous 1979 genocide at the Marichjhapi island of Sunderban. Dalit autobiographies such as that of Manoranjan Byapari Itibritte Chandal Jiban explicitly talk about these carefully silenced dark chapters of Bengal’s history which clearly show the casteist attitude which existed in the state of Bengal. Byapari's autobiography is not just a personal story of pain and survival. It serves as a historical document that proves Bengal's progressive self-image to be false. Byapari's transformation from a refugee to author and then to legislator, shows a reclaiming of Dalit agency. It is in this context that Dalit autobiographies become important for they act as testimonios which reclaim the lost histories. They demolish the false narratives by re-examining history through Dalit perspective. And proves beyond doubt that Bengal's purported castelessness is not an absence of caste but rather an act of intellectual suppression.
Title: Is Bengal Truly Casteless? A Reconsideration through Dalit Testimonies
Description:
Bengal has historically been considered as an exception to the practice of casteism.
While other states of the country experienced caste discrimination as a part of the social fabric, Bengal has been considered as an egalitarian state.
The main reason attributed to this phenomenon is the progressiveness culture of Bengal which had the bhadralok at its centre.
However, this paper revisits the notion of Bengal’s castelessness.
This article also looks at the broader historical context of Bengali Dalit history which closely looks at the plight of Bengal’s Dalits after the Partition of 1947.
The Dalits, mostly comprising of the Namasudra community, were forced to leave their land and migrate to West Bengal.
Having become refugees overnight they resorted to help from the government but were treated indifferently.
However, that was not the case for the upper caste refugees who were allowed rehabilitation facilities.
Eventually the government of West Bengal sent away the destitute Dalit refugees under the Dandakaranya Project to remote places away from Bengal.
Dandakaranya Project ultimately led to the infamous 1979 genocide at the Marichjhapi island of Sunderban.
Dalit autobiographies such as that of Manoranjan Byapari Itibritte Chandal Jiban explicitly talk about these carefully silenced dark chapters of Bengal’s history which clearly show the casteist attitude which existed in the state of Bengal.
Byapari's autobiography is not just a personal story of pain and survival.
It serves as a historical document that proves Bengal's progressive self-image to be false.
Byapari's transformation from a refugee to author and then to legislator, shows a reclaiming of Dalit agency.
It is in this context that Dalit autobiographies become important for they act as testimonios which reclaim the lost histories.
They demolish the false narratives by re-examining history through Dalit perspective.
And proves beyond doubt that Bengal's purported castelessness is not an absence of caste but rather an act of intellectual suppression.
Related Results
Dalit Aesthetics and Dalit Consciousness in Dalit Literature
Dalit Aesthetics and Dalit Consciousness in Dalit Literature
Abstract
It is very difficult for the writers of upper castes or non-Dalits to express the real life incidences of the marginalized classes that are full of poverty, pain, helples...
Uncomfortable and Devious Paths in Dalit Theology and Ideology
Uncomfortable and Devious Paths in Dalit Theology and Ideology
This paper explores the trajectory of Dalit Theology and Ideology, unraveling both uncomfortable facets and emerging trends within this academic and socio-political discourse. The ...
Early Dalit Literature and Culture in Late Nineteenth- and Early Twentieth-Century Western India
Early Dalit Literature and Culture in Late Nineteenth- and Early Twentieth-Century Western India
The formation of the Dalit Panthers and the flourishing of Dalit literature in the 1970s saw the advent of a new connotation for the Marathi word ‘Dalit’. Chosen by the Mahar commu...
A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF DALIT CONSCIOUSNESS IN VIBHAVARI SHIRURKAR’S NOVEL ‘THE VICTIM’ AND LAXMAN GAIKWAD’S AUTOBIOGRAPHY ‘THE BRANDED’
A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF DALIT CONSCIOUSNESS IN VIBHAVARI SHIRURKAR’S NOVEL ‘THE VICTIM’ AND LAXMAN GAIKWAD’S AUTOBIOGRAPHY ‘THE BRANDED’
Dalit literature is a literature by Dalit writer or any other writer with Dalit consciousness. Most of the Dalit writers and critics are of the opinion that Dalit consciousness is ...
The Journey of the Dalit Refugees in Bengal: A Comparative Study of Allen Ginsberg and Jatin Bala’s Poetry
The Journey of the Dalit Refugees in Bengal: A Comparative Study of Allen Ginsberg and Jatin Bala’s Poetry
Dalit literature seeks to present the struggles and experiences of the oppressed. Bengali Dalit literature has become a powerful tool for social and political action. It provides c...
From Submission to Resistance: The Transformation of Dalit Women Bodies
From Submission to Resistance: The Transformation of Dalit Women Bodies
In his book Discipline and Punish, Michel Foucault has highlighted that the body acts as both the object and the target in a power relationship. The whole purpose of this power is ...
‘Prisoner of Darkness’: A Literary Analysis of Gendered Violence Disguised as Caste Violence
‘Prisoner of Darkness’: A Literary Analysis of Gendered Violence Disguised as Caste Violence
The Dalit feminist standpoint theory asserts that the issues of the Dalit women need to be addressed, as they have been ignored in both the Indian feminist struggle and the Dalit s...
'Dalit Feminist Theory: A Reader'
'Dalit Feminist Theory: A Reader'
This reader is a compilation of eighteen essays written by academics, feminists and scholar-activists from a Dalit Feminist Perspective. The editors Sunaina Arya and Aakash Singh R...

