Wednesday 16 November 2011

Ankanalli Land Struggle - A Saga of success


The Superintendent of Police calls up Sunder Raj at 11.30 in the evening and warns him that if he dared to go to Ankanalli at that part of night he would arrest him on the way. That brings Ankanalli to the centre state of our action-cum-struggle-cum success.

‘Hey, you fellows come with your drums. We are celebrating our deity today.’ The Lingayats (dominant caste) sent out their usual message to the Dalits.

‘If you are celebrating your deity, you can as well beat your drums. Last time around when we came you insulted us. This time we shall not come.’ The Dalits dared to rebel.

‘These sons of a bitch have to be taught a fitting lesson. Close all public places for them. No shop should sell anything to any Dalit in the village. No drinking water. Any violation will meet with a fine of Rs.500/-‘ The village leader pronounced his judgement without any proceedings. Courts in India were put to shame for the number of years they take for passing judgments. Efficiency of caste courts, eh?

Innumerable complaints to the police met with deafening silence. No action please, we belong to Lingayat caste, the police stations seemed to resound.

Ankanalli! Gundlupet Taluk! Chamrajanagar District in Karnataka. 07-08-2010

It is now becoming a habit also in Karnataka. Dalits gave a copy of their complaint to the Dalit Panchayat, to Susheela and Sunder Raj to be precise.

Phone Calls to the Minister responsible for the District from Sunder Raj. The caste citadels began to shake in the bottom.

‘Set fire to their houses. Bloody bastards! How dare they make a complaint to the police against us? We should teach a lesson to these bloody assholes. Collect all the kerosene in our houses.’ Common dialogue among the Lingayats!

Four houses set on fire. The flames carried SOS to Sunder Raj and Susheela without delay. The heat carried the messages to the MLA, MP, DGP, DIG. Mobile revolution!

Good time to take up the issue of land grant to 43 Dalit families in the year 1960. The forest department took the land away and did not allow the Dalits to cultivate in their own land. Re-captured the land from the Forest Department @ 4 acres of land each family. Wow!

The consequence:

Immediate Relief to 6 Families – Rs. 3000 x 6                        =            18,000
Houses to 6 families  - 70,000 x 6                                           =            420,000
Loans to 99 individual Dalits – 25,000 x 99                           =            2,475,000
Grant to 8 Women SHGs  100,000 x 8                                   =            800,000
Re-capturing of land 300,000 x 4 x 43                                   =            51,600,000
Tube Wells for 43 Families            100,000 x 43                    =            4,300,000
Fresh grant of 4 acres to 32 landless Dalit
Families @ 4 acres each – 300,000 x 4 x 32                          =            38,400,000

Total achievement measured by money                                 =            98,013,000

Plus immeasurable amount of Dignity, self-confidence and courage. The monthly investment of REDS on Chamrajnagar District is only a maximum of Rs. 15,000/- But the dividend for the Dalit people only in this one struggle is over 98 million rupees. Incomparable result, outcome and impact! Kudos Sunder Raj and Susheela! People like are the real heroes.

Sunday 6 November 2011

M C Raj's Latest Novel Released


Blissed Out – A Glistering Novel

Author: M C Raj


Blissed Out by M C Raj is a scintillating novel on complex human relationship and treaty on human sexuality. The philosopher in him comes out repeatedly, even without invitation in the story telling. The story revolves around two human beings. One is Helen, a British, married to a Maori Chieftain in New Zealand. The other is Iniyan, a young lad from India who joins a University of Maori Arts. He is too much of a visionary for his age.  But then, who can determine the age of vision development?

Helen loses her father even before she was born and her mother on the day of her birth. Brought up by her uncle and aunt it becomes a daunting task for her to establish her self-identity. As she grows she travels to the US and encounters Tantrism of the Hindu order in an Ashram. Her sexuality becomes the centre of her focus and she attracts others to her. Complications in relationships push her back to England. But that is not her place.

The British are on an occupational drive and find the ‘white long cloud’ Aotearoa, the original name of New Zealand very attractive. Simple people, easy to occupy! Helen is taken to Aotearoa by her military uncle to tame the most rebellious Maori Chieftain. His ploy misfires. Helen marries the Chieftain. But both of them together could not resist the military skills of the British. The Chieftain is killed and Helen disappears. But she is back in Aotearoa to lead the Maori people in their struggle for self-assertion and land recovery. These were her beloved husband’s dreams. She succeeds. But her individual identity is much more important and she is in search. She lands up in a Buddhist Monastery in Mysore and encounters Vajrayana Buddhism. Praxis of Vajrayana sexuality of the monks, lesbianism of the women monks etc. make Helen’s trajectory of life more complicated.

Helen’s daughter falls in love with Iniyan as they study in the same college in New Zealand. He is too serious about his pursuit of art and is least interested in sex. The intrusion of this budding artist in the life of Helen through her daughter begins to bring in new intricacies in relationships.

What is the role of Iniyan in these complex realities of human relationship? What is the role of Helen in his life? What is the role of Helen’s daughter in Iniyan’s life? How do the parents of Iniyan respond to this new demand in their life? What is the converging answer to all these and many more questions of the readers?

A path-breaking novel that challenges the traditional mindsets! Can you give the answer before you completely finish reading the novel? Try your luck. Get a copy of your novel from
www.frogbooks.net or www.leadstartcop.com  Very soon the book will be available in all leading stores in and outside of India. Needless to say that M C Raj’s style of writing is readers’ delight. Is it an exaggeration to say that Raj creates a cosmic rumbling through his fictions? You can write to him after reading the novel.  Number of pages: 430. Price: Rs. 345/- US$ 15/-

Jyothi and TEAM REDS 

Wednesday 26 October 2011

Interview of M C Raj as an author by Pushpa Achanta


An e-chat with M C Raj

You're a social activist, community leader, author and what else? How and when did you start writing?

I am also a Campaigner. I have started a national campaign for proportionate electoral system in India. I started writing in the year 1984. When my wife and I came to Tumkur to work among the poor in rural areas the first thing I did was to make a study of the District from all government documents and I brought out an unpublished book known as “Tumkur At a Glance”.  Inspired by this the Center for Non-Formal Education in Bangalore brought out similar books on many other districts of Karnataka. After two years of work, I wanted to put down our experience of working with the poor as we enjoyed our work and began to taste success after success. I wanted to highlight the strategies that led to our small successes already at that very early stage of our work. Therefore, I wrote another unpublished bigger work called “The Beginnings”. My wife and I are good trainers. But I am also a training designer in participatory training methodologies. I wrote a book on ‘Participatory Training Methodology’. This was published by the Dialogue Group in Chennai. These were the beginning stages of my writing.


Which was your first published work and when? Can you share how that came about?

But my real first published book was in the year 1997. I am a student of philosophy. I happened to read the book “A Foucault Reader”. It generated a lot of interest in me that I also should write a book in the line of Foucault’s analysis of the dominant society. However, I did not agree with his conclusion that problematizing is enough for society. I believe that a writer has a duty to also write about what he/she thinks as strategic action to address problems. This may have been because I was also working on resolving problems in the lives of the poor and could not take neutral positions. I sat down to write and it became a well acclaimed book, “From Periphery to Center”. The subtitle of the Book was ‘An Analysis of the Paradigms of Globalization, Casteism and Dalitism”. Since this book was acclaimed well I wanted to write more and more. It is in my nature that when I start doing something and I enjoy it then I keep on doing more and more of it. From then on I have made writing as a major habit of mine. This year for example, in 2011 I have written already three published books, two novels and one theory book and am writing intensively my fourth novel of the year.

What was the response to your initial writing(s)? Did any specific recognition/appreciation/criticism affect you or your future work?

A friend of mine spoke to the Sage Books. They talked to me and said that they were starting a series on Dalit Literature and that the above mentioned book would become the first one. However, after sometime they wrote and said that it was an excellent piece of work. However, they were not able to publish it. I was shocked. Therefore, I decided to start a publishing unit in my Organization and that has been publishing most of my books. Some colleges in Bangalore organized seminars based on my first work. I was very happy. One day I took my two children to the Premier Book Shop in Bangalore to buy some books. I asked the owner if he had a good book on Globalization. He went to one shelf and brought just one book and said that he found it to be the best. My daughter shouted , “But uncle, this is his own book. He is the author of the book.’ The owner just stood and looked at me for a few seconds and smiled. I was very happy.

When I wrote my next book Dalitology, which is a book of 820 pages, there was a gathering of 6000 people who assembled for its release in a ground in Bangalore. It was a huge function. There were intellectuals and civil society leaders from all over India. The book also made a sensation in many circles. It sold out 2000 copies in no time. Today in some countries when I am introduced to people with my name M C Raj they immediately recognize me as the author of Dalitology. I am the son of totally illiiterate parents. It gives me extreme happiness when such recognitions are given to me.

My book Cosmosity was officially released by the Association of Dalit IAS, IPS and IFS officers in Karnataka. It is an Association managed by their wives and they took responsibility for the release.

One of my negative experience is that some of my close friends decided to drop relationship with me after I wrote Dalitology. This is very baffling that people can give up friendship because of what I write. I am an atheist and it somehow gets reflected in many of my books of philosophy. When Dalitology became famous one German donor who supported our work till then wrote a letter saying that they were stopping funds for our Organization because of Dalitology. I could not make head and tail out of it , as my book was not a document of my Organization. 

There is a new book by Rajiv Malhotra that is highly critical of Dalitology. I like such critical analysis of my book. I like to know how readers can tear my views into pieces with their own different understanding. 

What makes you write now? Which are your favourite themes?

In the recent past I have also started writing fiction. I have already two published novels. My third novel is ready for release one of these days. I am intensively writing the fourth one. In between I also write theory books. In 2009 another big volume of mine with 1100 pages was published in a huge function. Winnie Mandela had agreed to come to Bangalore to release the book. However, her grand daughter died a day before she could start from South Africa and she had to cancel her trip. It is a book on Dalit Psychology, a ‘never seen before’ type of book. Why do I write now? A very straight reply will be that I enjoy writing. I am a original thinker and so writing comes to me naturally. I am used to work almost through the night. I sleep only a little. I enjoy my nights wrting. During the day I am a campaigner. I also have the agenda of creating a lot of resource for the future generations of Dalit communities and the country. I want my people to live on par with the rest of the society in level playing fields instead of cringing and whining.

My favorite theme is philosophy. But I also write on Psychology and Spirituality. I am a spiritualist because I am an atheist. Of late I am entering into the aspects of love, sexuality and relationship through my fictions. I am not a unifocal writer.

Any advice for new and emerging writers?

I avoid giving advice to any one. When people ask me what I want to become finally in my life I say that I want to be a butterfly. It has many stages of growth and is absolutely free when it matures. Does no harm to anyone but drnks the nectar of nature and dies without anyone noticing it. Each one can be a butterfly maturing in his/her own space and time.


A bit about yourself...

I grew up in a family living below poverty line and my parents were total illiterates. However, I have had extraordinary opportuniteis in life through the missionaries who made me study and helped me grow. From childhood I have been working very hard, as I wanted to prove myself to the entire world as someone. This was because when I entered my village school some of the caste boys came round me clapping their hands and ridiculing me. That day they nicknamed me as ‘Crow’s Shit’. For eight long years I was known only by this name in the school. I did not take up to abnormal ways of proving myself. I worked hard for excellence in studies, sports, in drama, in painting, in music, in public speech etc. Hard work has never stopped. I enjoy working hard and facing new challnges always. So much so that I used to tell my friends that I am a good crisis manager. When there is no crisis I create one so that I may manae it well. I am also an eternal rebel. Once a Duitch friend of mine asked me to what extent my rebellion would go. I told her: ‘When people put me in the coffin and bury me and if you open my coffin after six months you would see that I changed position in the coffin. Even after my death I shall not accept the position that others put me in. Even there I shall take my freedom to place myself in my chosen position. I have done my graduation in Philosophy, another degree in theology, and post graduate studies in Sociology. I like silence and solitude. I like to read and write. I like to listen to music and dance. I do not like partying and dislike gossiping about others. Though I am very comfortable when I am left alone I speak as much as I write. I am an orator and like public speeking. 

Your wife Jyothi Raj was your co-author sometimes. Have your other family members and/or friends contributed to your writing?

Often I discuss my writings with my children. We discuss most things as a family. My chidren are extremely good in reflecting with me and my wife. I cross check with my children about the style of my fiction writing as they are very young and know what suits the taste of modern young people. But when it comes to philosophy they just listen to me and admire me. I like to share my insights with them simply because of the appreication I get from them. No one disturbs me when I am in my computer and that is most of my life at home. A very well supporting wife and children indeed.

Do you enjoy or dislike reading any particular authors/writers and genres?

I generally love reading books of depth philosophy. Habermas, Foucault, Chomsky and Radhakrishnan used to be my favorite authors. But now I know what they write in any new book. I like Faranz Fannon. I do not like light reading. I generally read only resource books. I do not like books that indulge in mere rhetoric. Of late I read a lot on Indian Philosophy.

Would you like to mention anything else about yourself or your writing?

I shall leave this world with sense of fulfilment for having risen from burning ashes. Many of my friends have told me that they have to read my books three or four times to understand. I stuff my words with a lot of meaning and I choose loaded words in my writing. I have tried to write in simple style but somehow have fallen back on my idiosyncrasy. I have a feeling that the world is generally losing interest in serious reading. This is a passing phase in world history. May be after my death a lot of people will read my writing.






Interview of M C Raj as a writer by Pushpa Achanta


An e-chat with M C Raj

You're a social activist, community leader, author and what else? How and when did you start writing?

I am also a Campaigner. I have started a national campaign for proportionate electoral system in India. I started writing in the year 1984. When my wife and I came to Tumkur to work among the poor in rural areas the first thing I did was to make a study of the District from all government documents and I brought out an unpublished book known as “Tumkur At a Glance”.  Inspired by this the Center for Non-Formal Education in Bangalore brought out similar books on many other districts of Karnataka. After two years of work, I wanted to put down our experience of working with the poor as we enjoyed our work and began to taste success after success. I wanted to highlight the strategies that led to our small successes already at that very early stage of our work. Therefore, I wrote another unpublished bigger work called “The Beginnings”. My wife and I are good trainers. But I am also a training designer in participatory training methodologies. I wrote a book on ‘Participatory Training Methodology’. This was published by the Dialogue Group in Chennai. These were the beginning stages of my writing.


Which was your first published work and when? Can you share how that came about?

But my real first published book was in the year 1997. I am a student of philosophy. I happened to read the book “A Foucault Reader”. It generated a lot of interest in me that I also should write a book in the line of Foucault’s analysis of the dominant society. However, I did not agree with his conclusion that problematizing is enough for society. I believe that a writer has a duty to also write about what he/she thinks as strategic action to address problems. This may have been because I was also working on resolving problems in the lives of the poor and could not take neutral positions. I sat down to write and it became a well acclaimed book, “From Periphery to Center”. The subtitle of the Book was ‘An Analysis of the Paradigms of Globalization, Casteism and Dalitism”. Since this book was acclaimed well I wanted to write more and more. It is in my nature that when I start doing something and I enjoy it then I keep on doing more and more of it. From then on I have made writing as a major habit of mine. This year for example, in 2011 I have written already three published books, two novels and one theory book and am writing intensively my fourth novel of the year.

What was the response to your initial writing(s)? Did any specific recognition/appreciation/criticism affect you or your future work?

A friend of mine spoke to the Sage Books. They talked to me and said that they were starting a series on Dalit Literature and that the above mentioned book would become the first one. However, after sometime they wrote and said that it was an excellent piece of work. However, they were not able to publish it. I was shocked. Therefore, I decided to start a publishing unit in my Organization and that has been publishing most of my books. Some colleges in Bangalore organized seminars based on my first work. I was very happy. One day I took my two children to the Premier Book Shop in Bangalore to buy some books. I asked the owner if he had a good book on Globalization. He went to one shelf and brought just one book and said that he found it to be the best. My daughter shouted , “But uncle, this is his own book. He is the author of the book.’ The owner just stood and looked at me for a few seconds and smiled. I was very happy.

When I wrote my next book Dalitology, which is a book of 820 pages, there was a gathering of 6000 people who assembled for its release in a ground in Bangalore. It was a huge function. There were intellectuals and civil society leaders from all over India. The book also made a sensation in many circles. It sold out 2000 copies in no time. Today in some countries when I am introduced to people with my name M C Raj they immediately recognize me as the author of Dalitology. I am the son of totally illiiterate parents. It gives me extreme happiness when such recognitions are given to me.

My book Cosmosity was officially released by the Association of Dalit IAS, IPS and IFS officers in Karnataka. It is an Association managed by their wives and they took responsibility for the release.

One of my negative experience is that some of my close friends decided to drop relationship with me after I wrote Dalitology. This is very baffling that people can give up friendship because of what I write. I am an atheist and it somehow gets reflected in many of my books of philosophy. When Dalitology became famous one German donor who supported our work till then wrote a letter saying that they were stopping funds for our Organization because of Dalitology. I could not make head and tail out of it , as my book was not a document of my Organization. 

There is a new book by Rajiv Malhotra that is highly critical of Dalitology. I like such critical analysis of my book. I like to know how readers can tear my views into pieces with their own different understanding. 

What makes you write now? Which are your favourite themes?

In the recent past I have also started writing fiction. I have already two published novels. My third novel is ready for release one of these days. I am intensively writing the fourth one. In between I also write theory books. In 2009 another big volume of mine with 1100 pages was published in a huge function. Winnie Mandela had agreed to come to Bangalore to release the book. However, her grand daughter died a day before she could start from South Africa and she had to cancel her trip. It is a book on Dalit Psychology, a ‘never seen before’ type of book. Why do I write now? A very straight reply will be that I enjoy writing. I am a original thinker and so writing comes to me naturally. I am used to work almost through the night. I sleep only a little. I enjoy my nights wrting. During the day I am a campaigner. I also have the agenda of creating a lot of resource for the future generations of Dalit communities and the country. I want my people to live on par with the rest of the society in level playing fields instead of cringing and whining.

My favorite theme is philosophy. But I also write on Psychology and Spirituality. I am a spiritualist because I am an atheist. Of late I am entering into the aspects of love, sexuality and relationship through my fictions. I am not a unifocal writer.

Any advice for new and emerging writers?

I avoid giving advice to any one. When people ask me what I want to become finally in my life I say that I want to be a butterfly. It has many stages of growth and is absolutely free when it matures. Does no harm to anyone but drnks the nectar of nature and dies without anyone noticing it. Each one can be a butterfly maturing in his/her own space and time.


A bit about yourself...

I grew up in a family living below poverty line and my parents were total illiterates. However, I have had extraordinary opportuniteis in life through the missionaries who made me study and helped me grow. From childhood I have been working very hard, as I wanted to prove myself to the entire world as someone. This was because when I entered my village school some of the caste boys came round me clapping their hands and ridiculing me. That day they nicknamed me as ‘Crow’s Shit’. For eight long years I was known only by this name in the school. I did not take up to abnormal ways of proving myself. I worked hard for excellence in studies, sports, in drama, in painting, in music, in public speech etc. Hard work has never stopped. I enjoy working hard and facing new challnges always. So much so that I used to tell my friends that I am a good crisis manager. When there is no crisis I create one so that I may manae it well. I am also an eternal rebel. Once a Duitch friend of mine asked me to what extent my rebellion would go. I told her: ‘When people put me in the coffin and bury me and if you open my coffin after six months you would see that I changed position in the coffin. Even after my death I shall not accept the position that others put me in. Even there I shall take my freedom to place myself in my chosen position. I have done my graduation in Philosophy, another degree in theology, and post graduate studies in Sociology. I like silence and solitude. I like to read and write. I like to listen to music and dance. I do not like partying and dislike gossiping about others. Though I am very comfortable when I am left alone I speak as much as I write. I am an orator and like public speeking. 

Your wife Jyothi Raj was your co-author sometimes. Have your other family members and/or friends contributed to your writing?

Often I discuss my writings with my children. We discuss most things as a family. My chidren are extremely good in reflecting with me and my wife. I cross check with my children about the style of my fiction writing as they are very young and know what suits the taste of modern young people. But when it comes to philosophy they just listen to me and admire me. I like to share my insights with them simply because of the appreication I get from them. No one disturbs me when I am in my computer and that is most of my life at home. A very well supporting wife and children indeed.

Do you enjoy or dislike reading any particular authors/writers and genres?

I generally love reading books of depth philosophy. Habermas, Foucault, Chomsky and Radhakrishnan used to be my favorite authors. But now I know what they write in any new book. I like Faranz Fannon. I do not like light reading. I generally read only resource books. I do not like books that indulge in mere rhetoric. Of late I read a lot on Indian Philosophy.

Would you like to mention anything else about yourself or your writing?

I shall leave this world with sense of fulfilment for having risen from burning ashes. Many of my friends have told me that they have to read my books three or four times to understand. I stuff my words with a lot of meaning and I choose loaded words in my writing. I have tried to write in simple style but somehow have fallen back on my idiosyncrasy. I have a feeling that the world is generally losing interest in serious reading. This is a passing phase in world history. May be after my death a lot of people will read my writing.






Saturday 1 October 2011

A witness account on REDS


My roots, My life

A group of three young women visited our organization REDS in 2010. The following is a short witness by one of them. We have many such witnesses. Instead writing a blog on my own, I thought that the readers must be treated with what someone else writes about us. – M C Raj  

Wow oh my Gosh. Ok I don’t even know exactly where to start….. The only thing I can do first is to apologize for my self-centered nature and lack of communication. I have learned an abundance of lessons from the time I spent with you at Booshakthi Kendra as well as REDS and really not a day goes by since being introduced to the Dalit Movement and your struggles have I not used your lessons and knowledge as a constant reminder. I think I approached writing to you with anxiety. To tell you the truth the weeks we spent together and with the community, the elders, children, cultural team and DCDS shook the very foundations of my existence and identity. And it is my existence and identity that is dependent upon my communities, my culture, my people and my ancestry, all this was made more clear to me through you and my first journey to South India as a young woman of the diaspora. Our dialogues, your patience and explanations gave me so much to think about and digest. So, when it came to thanking you, explaining to you what I am now doing… the words did not seem to come so eloquently. I think the meditation of everything that happened for my spirit, politics and life while in Tumkur needed to be translated to you, however at first I myself was not sure how to fully articulate the meaning. Now I am surer than ever that this is part of the journey, and I think by writing more and further reflection that the relevance of our relationship will be revealed. But there are some things in my heart that did immediately compel me and really are quite simple to explain. For my rather egotistical reflection time, I need to say again that I am sorry because the love I felt at your home and with your family is so immense. I should not have taken this long to give you a reminder of how thankful and blessed I feel to have met you at 21 and be introduced to a movement older than I! It’s a blessing to have stayed with your community at such a critical point in my life on the search for my roots, and my complexities as a mixed up Sri Lankan, a Thamil Woman.

The project was just a vessel opening up floodgates of possibilities. I have no doubt in my mind that I want to tangibly support REDS in any way I can directly and through the everyday work I do in my community of Toronto. Rakhi, Gillian and I walk with a different pace, this change in step no doubt is due to the huge footsteps so many Dalits have walked for thousands of years. I can’t help but feel intrinsically inspired and moved, as I see this as a part of me and my understanding of “Indianness”, as well as the Aryan dominated dialogues so prominent in our mothers and fathers from the lies they were told as children. I need this, we need you, you have documented and helped foster stories that need to be told. I cannot find words in my language to tell you how much you have given me, I think my life will be spent in some ways repaying you, the elders, my ancestors, my comrades who have given so much to the Movement and my self-reflection. It sickens me to think of a system of slavery that still exists in the Indian subcontinent, and because it is caste-ism and not seen as necessarily an ethnic, political or racial issue, the mainstream uses religion as some sort of disguise and westernized view of barbaric Indians and their Hindu beliefs. If one cannot see the all so many of the Indian subcontinents keep their own people at the bottom, we lose perspective.  This happens because people do not see the humanity in others, currently there is no perceived relation. In gagging the complexity of caste hierarchy, it becomes simple how people lack compassion for human populations labeled BLACK, UNTOUCHABLE; for some reason dark bodies are worth less mourning than light ones. The silence on the issue and lack of serious research carries such heavy colonial and racist mentalities even those labeled progressive will not clearly state these paradigms, but rather indirectly point and gently nudge at the idea. This is not an option for me! I refuse to gently nudge at anything, it is impossible to do so when people are on the ground fighting and choosing to look at themselves with worth, with love and with respect when everything around them tells them the opposite.

Upon my arrival to Canada, my family and friends noticed the changes. I was able to hold my head a little higher yet humble myself at how much I did not know and see from the villages we went to. I learned to be more patient with my family and start inquiring more about their silences regarding certain issues. Silences so many from my island have learned from not being able to speak and think freely due to the war and colonialism. I think it’s nearly impossible for us as a people to move on with the many scars we bear. Something very pronounced in the work you do is healing aspect. This is complimentary to the struggle, the more we fight the more we need to heal in a meaningful way. This is also a balance that is not so easily attained but must be paid attention to personally and collectively. My feet have not yet touched the ground since last February and probably form the year before that as well. Hahaha there is so much more to tell, but there will be more emails I promise. I would also like to describe more of the tangible ways we have been spreading what you do and the specifics as to the work and dissemination of our experience with REDS that we have been undergoing here in Toronto. As for right now I know you guys are immensely busy but please check out and read our website. 
       Natasha

Wednesday 31 August 2011

Introduction to DYCHE, my book


Introduction
The psychology of truth and political realism

The social  agenda argued in the Dyche treatise reflect the rightful claim of the Dalit people in the whole context of political realism in Indian society. It thus raises many corrective points which shall serve as basis for reconstructing Indian nationalism imbibing the richness and history of Indian culture emerging from two great civilizations, the Adijan and the Adivasi psyche. On other merits why the authors still retrace deeper reasons and causality of the deprivation of the Dalit despite their years in working at the Dalit Panchayat stand mainly on two grounds:
(1) The quest for truth and justice is everybody’s business and they must be consistently projected at all levels of Indian social and political life, that is, from the federation of the states of India down to the smallest political unit, the Gram Panchayat.
(2) For India to regenerate itself from false realities to a higher plane of human development— addressing the issue of social justice as a function of truth in order to attain harmony.

We can find the essence of political realism in the confused psyche of Zarathustra who, in Friedrich Nietzche’s (1844-900) articulation more than two centuries ago, cited the relativity of the values of man. He calls it trans-valuation of values. Peoples of different breed would look at reality differently, where good in one place is considered shameful and ridiculous in another, of evil in one place but adorned in purple honour in another, a world where even wise men fails to discern why wickedness and folly abound when earthly life is too short compared with eternity. This is what may be inferred as incongruity of political realism and thus hides the truth upon us.  

The Dyche treatise therefore brings to light the essence of good and evil held in every Indian psyche , their causes and effects, their real meanings and the appropriate conduct man and institutions should adopt to establish consistency. As Zarathustra contends that all choices of value are for self-preservation and the nutshell  of human existence, Dyche recognizes the iniquitous  relationship between the Hindu and the Dalit and recommends corrective measures against long held misinterpretation of  Indian psyche as purely of Hindu genesis and the rest are mere peripherals and indigenous.

In the evolution of Indian civilization, the Dalit is downgraded from its sublime role to insignificant level but like an ember dimly lit and barely seen in the dark pages of history, the Dalit cause is the unquenchable fire of Indian nationalism and not as a spring for developing inferiority complex. I thus hold that any form of underestimation of the Dalit issue is subjective and unreal. For this cause, ‘prophets’ or any activist must face the common risk of being rejected in his own country since the object of this discourse is laid down at the sole judgment of a people who acted as accessories and accomplices.


The merit of scientific valuation as a measure of truth
Only in scientific valuation of events can we raise the spectre of truth of Dyche. I found in this book that the injury committed against the Dalit psyche is a systemic offence. And therefore, other uncommon sense which could expose the collective guilt may build anxieties and insecurities over time and cause economic and political discomfort over a large portion of the population. It is otherwise called unfounded fears. It is expected that any struggle for liberation is political in nature which inevitably would result in the reconfiguration of values, and redistribution of power and resources of society. Again, it is therefore a demand of conscience to use scientific valuation of the social system for which India operates.

The approach of fellows Raj and Jyothi is most appropriate. The reason is both practical and tactical. Even those who are opposed and less caring to the Dalit cause can now be transformed into a disciple of truth. The clear and logical ordering of scientific proof and reason will present undisputable facts and avoid what may be termed as psychological dislocation, aside from questions of authority, and fallacious stereotyping of personal motives that may be thrown against the authors by the adversaries of truth.

Two sample analogies of political realism 
In the parable found in Plato’s Republic, it cites the peril of one who works for liberation. It tells a story of human beings bound together in shackles in their entire lives inside a dark cave. By nature’s order, one connecting chain was corroded which loosens one prisoner. He escaped from the cave. One day, the freeman returned to the prisoners he left behind to tell the truth there is light at the end of the tunnel and outside is a real world better than dark cave and chains. Hearing the freeman telling strange stories, the prisoners became anxious and restless and they strangulated the freeman to death. They murdered him for subversion and heresy-for propagating the value of freedom!

I again cite an analogy regarding the interplay of the psycho-physiological frame. This is when the ‘gods and goddesses’ enjoy their past time.

Human beings, sans reasons, are like tadpoles in a deep well. Tadpoles know two realities. One reality below is an enclosed dark water-filled earth which is their habitat. The second reality above is a white firmament of light corresponding to the size of the opening of the mouth of the well. The mouth of the well serves as the trap for unthinking insects who usually served as free meals for this colony of amphibians. This is the truth and reality tadpoles live. Any claim contrary to their existential consciousness is therefore ‘nontadpolism’. Certainly, even if tadpoles metamorphosed into the biggest specie of frogs, like the Hawaiian frogs, they would still have little frog brains! This incontrovertible reality is acceptable to the frog kingdom (but not to human beings not unless mankind prefer to think and act like a frog and then sounds like a frog).

Against smaller brains are bigger brains.  The truth is having bigger brains would not necessarily mean wider consciousness. In fact, a whale has a larger brain than humans but nature keeps him as a whale forever. If god is foolish and put a whale brain to a human head, its size won’t fit, and Brahmin, for instance, will forever complain against heaven for physical discomfort having a smaller head and a bigger brain! But the good book says god’s foolishness is wiser than man’s wisdom. To go further and explore reality, a big head does not guarantee it contains a bigger brain or a higher intelligence to discern the truth. Worse, a big head could instead be an illness- a hydrocephalus! What a misfortune! But what if Lord Brahma, Allah or Yahweh, gifted the tadpoles with reason, not on humans, and at same time, all creatures are granted by god the power of choice? All things being equal, I for one would choose to be a tadpole rather than a Brahmin!

What I am driving here is that truth is never determined in quantifiable terms or used as a negotiable instrument by the strong against the weak. To draw a parallel argument ascribing to Indian political reality, its so-called democratic society is not about the rule of majority. It is more real if it is a rule of just, compassionate and reasonable people.

The psychology of truth therefore is not directly proportional to the number of people who believe one thing is real and the other is unreal, making truth relative, dependent on the trappings of power and level of social acceptability. To follow that line of argument would make China more truthful than India because it has a larger population.  Deficiency in facts, information, and intellectual capacity are all averse to the psychology of truth and political reality. These conditions likewise affect governance, the enforcement of law and order as well as in the administration of justice.

Dyche-effect of a felony committed in silence
Dyche, a wounded psyche, is a condition where there remains an opportunity for healing. The treatise raises a new problem in social science what would be the most appropriate technical term to describe a condition where a society is enclosed in a nutshell of concocted belief systems but embraced them as real and the truth? What is the effect? I explore one nearest technical term that would ascribe to the phenomena—artificial institutions. Dyche accounts an Indian society that subsists under the shadows of artificial institutions strongly supported by effective symbols and social instruments to stimulate the five senses. It sets sacred places for pilgrimage, rituals, public holidays and religious festivities, built great edifice for worship, inspired philosophical and literary works, paintings, music and arts, epics, legends, tales and folklores, accepted false testimonies of divinity as real, and within such divinities, established structures of power and authority, bestowed privileges, granted rewards and material benefits, promulgated ordinances for control and regulation and for imposition of punishment.

Then I looked at the principles of jurisprudence and policy making. There is one Latin and one English phrase, respectively,  which says ‘void ab initio’, and  “null and void’ ,  which means non-existent from the very beginning, and ‘voidable’. We use these phrases in statutory construction as a qualifier, a modifying clause or a predicate immediately preceding the subject describing the nature and effects of an act. It rejects acts that impose legal obligations to the parties concerned which are not enforceable or actionable since the basis is non-existent, foolish, illegal, immoral, against reason and human experience, inherently evil, that is , void, none at all, nothing. The logic is derivative of the dogma that ‘a mortal man cannot create something out of nothing’.  If a person insists that such non-existent matter exists and imposes it on others as real objects and actionable for some reason, such wanton imposition is considered a felony. It is considered a felony because it will be injurious against other person’s rights, security and future benefits. Voidable acts are those acts which could be considered legal but to continue holding them would create injury to parties concerned and must be declared dissolved.

I mentioned the above principles as relevant to the psychology of truth and political reality. The strongest argument of the Dyche is that it convicts Indian society to have evolved itself from fiction and felonious past now valued as Indian institutions. What then, by analogy, if at sudden calamity, the water of the well dried up? What would the tadpoles do? Hurried themselves up to become frogs?  It is indeed a felony committed in silence that even from such ‘untruthful reality’, the caste forces discriminated, oppressed and exploited the Dalits to serve its own purposes and exclude them from the benefits thereof. Such past and present iniquitous symbols served the political cause for the separation of East Pakistan and West (Bangladesh) from India, same reason why Kashmir is now being torn apart by the violence of the unreal.

At individual level, the normal psychology of a person is he/she would never choose the untrue and the artificial for the rest of his/her life. At social level, the untrue and the artificial psyche collects unjust behaviours which cause injury to others. The normal reaction is rebellion and separatism. Dyche makes clear to mind it cannot found truth  within piles of lies, fiction and misrepresentation of facts and India must be liberated from the invasive instrumentalist-utilitarian ethos of the modern world.

The unique dimension of the Dalit
The downtrodden way of life of the Dalits shares parallel stories in many parts of the globe. The remnants of Apache, Inca and Aztec civilizations of continental North and South America, the aborigines and pygmies in southeast Asia and Africa, who are now relegated to ‘politically stipulated resettlement areas and smaller territories called ancestral domain’, suffer similar wounds. The re-allocation of spaces for such races were not benevolent acts by established powers but as policy of restitutions to appease their collective guilt knowing fully well that their forefathers acted unjustly against them.
It is in this psychic level that the conscience is most vulnerable. For instance, when  Aetas  (tiny Filipinos with black skin and curly hair, the white colonizers called them Negritos, the aborigines of the Philippines) and Badjaos  (Muslim sea gypsies) from the South,  roam in urban centres during holiday seasons begging for alms, the conscience of Christians helplessly wanders and wonders. The natural habitats of these people are already gone where once they lived in peace. These Filipino Dalita or maralita [1] learned to eat American hamburgers and Italian pasta. They hold thousand reasons to be anywhere in this land. Their ancestors were here long before the brown Indo-Polynesian and Malayan race, and of people from yellow Mongolian race, occupied the fertile plains. In essence, the black Aetas and Muslim gypsies rest in every Filipino soul. Just like the Incas as the real South Americans, the Apaches as the real North Americans, the Aztecs as the real Mexicans, and the Dalits as the real Indians. In sum, the reality we know is not what the Cartesian world alleged (Rene Descartes’ ‘Cogito ergo sum’) which does not necessarily mean that just because ‘it is what we think, it is what we are’.

If Dyche will prick the conscience of India, it is a political reality that cannot be avoided. The Dalit issue strikes the heart of class antagonism which has the power to create conflict or a revolution. Dalit as a social construct provides us a clear distinction between the privileged Indian and the less privileged, the landed and the landless, the affluent Indian family who reside in flush villages and mansions as against those who are homeless, sleeping in sidewalks, occupying public parks and are living in rural and urban ghettos.  I found this study as firmly dialectical.  It also means that the light carrying the Dyche treatise is not passing through a prism that will convert such light into a variant of hues and colours. The Dalit struggle universalises the symbolism of struggle between good and evil. This dialectical thesis can be reinterpreted to take the form of another being. He was called by Adam Smith as the `invisible hand’. But this is the same hand that dominates poor nations under the so-called globalization, the hand that exploit the workers, and the hand that destroys the environment in the pursuit of profit.

Many nation-states believe they exist because of some divine providence. So does the caste based Indian State. Divine providence is a ridiculous political thought if it has driven society to believe that one is born a slave and the other is a master because it is of some divine will or karma. The Judeo-Christian and Islamic traditions tolerated slavery and the divine rights of kings in the middle ages making monarchs corrupt while denying people the idea of their divine rights to revolt. What we see and felt over the years is an India which is yet to come to terms with its past, behaving as if life itself is only reserved to the favourite children of the gods. The contemptuous smirk from the face of an indifferent and passive stare from a stranger thrown to a destitute Dalit slashes a wound that hurt the spirit of whole humanity… forever.  It is samsara, the ripples that create an eternal wave of imbalance in the cosmos.

Dyche is the first step
Dyche presents a worldview of the Dalit cause in its real form and substance. It is not a view that focuses alone on the weaknesses of India but desires strong resolve to rectify said weaknesses, that the Indian nation should not remain standing on faulty premises.
Are there applicable models? What could be the appropriate directions?

I look at the depths of the Tao for any redeeming value to the Dalit struggle but I found the same to be inadequate to undo what has been done, to cure what has been wounded, by doing nothing, and to just let events take their own course. I also cannot take solace with Mahatma Gandhi’s philosophy of passive resistance as contemporary course of action for it will leave us with false hopes, hoping that those who inflict pain and injury will, at one time, finally see and realize the gory portraits of their violence, hoping again it will bother the conscience of the offender.

I tried to revisit one Chinese-sounding word similar to Tao. Its Mao, the great helmsman of China, who inspired many revolutionaries and others to become despicable monsters like Pol Pot of Khmer Rouge who murdered his own people on behalf of his utopian dream.  Completely opposite to the peaceful Taoist, Maoist tactics and strategies were effective in conquering state power, but like his fascist enemies, Mao’s liberating armies (People’s Liberation Army and Red Guards) left the world a trail of graveyards for suspected ‘bourgeoisie, landlords, capitalist-roaders and counter-revolutionaries’. Indeed, absolute liberation happened. The dead victims of communist revolution are now free from any form of oppression.

Again, I tried to re-examine that controversial cat of comrade Deng Shiao Ping. Deng’s revisionism contend that “It doesn’t matter whether the cat is black or white as long as it catches mice”. Deng’s  cat, which in reality is neither coloured black nor white but ‘psychedelic ’, did not attain the communist dream of a worker’s paradise but it did catch a lot of ‘mouse, rodents, and good in intellectual piracy’. Deng’s cat likewise killed hundreds of democracy protesters in Tienannmen Square in 1989, supported one-party dictatorship, curtailed Tibetans of their right to self-determination, and violated human rights.  The Chinese deep state did not whither but instead grew into a humungous leviathan. All of the above Chinese models appeared to be hao shiao and a di shiao shiao (ask a Chinese what these means and he will tell you they are not good words).

India cannot adopt the cat model for the liberation of the Dalit. A peace-loving people can only afford to shout at the top of their voices hoping to reach the dwellings of the man-made gods—‘Brahmin India, heal our wounds and restore our freedom!

The incremental versus the radical approach
The Dyche discourse recommends the incremental approach to achieving the objectives of liberation. This allows empiricism to dictate the contents of issues involved and stakeholders’ participation in negotiations and public debate. Lessons have been learned that moderation gives opportunity for antagonistic forces to rethink and evaluate the course of action when crises arise. As a matter of principle, the objective world must not be replaced by the subjectivity of the human mind, which has the tendency to abuse and to have less regard to excess, to drift towards anarchy and nihilism. Noble intentions could be easily replaced by the instinctive choice between convenience and hardship. This tendency is commonly seen in the capacity of the self, especially if one is motivated by deceit and arrogance and the quantity of material rewards, to invent myths. What more if filial affinity, partisan and religious considerations influence the valuation of choices?

The case of a confused Indian
Here is an allegory of a person indicating three distinct cultures, Hindu, Muslim and Christian representing modern India. He is a patient brought to a diagnostic centre to find out his real illness.

“Swamy Haffizullah Cordero was once a young and healthy Indian Dalit.  His thoughts were pure and he saw the world with innocence. He never knew god. Thereafter, he attended school, finished banking and finance, studied Sanskrit, religion and philosophy, arts and culture, ate junk food at fast food restaurants, learned break dancing and struts, read smut magazines, voted corrupt politicians into office, and enjoyed viewing pornography in the internet. He was then exposed to the invasive nature of modernity and narcissistic culture, craved for the good life, and employed in a Brahmin company, a subsidiary of a foreign multinational firm. In his solitude, he began to wonder what he could be. He decided to practice yoga, then converted to Islam because it allows polygamy. But he abhorred too much of prayers. He shifted to Christianity. One day, he was brought to the clinic feverish and experiencing some hallucinations. He had fasted several days imitating his Lord Jesus Christ who fasted forty days. The physician found no symptoms of any illness in him so he just injected him with water. One noon time, Hafizullah stared sheepishly outside the window of the hospital and saw an image of a person walking at a distance. The parallax or heat wave created optical illusion, distorting the actual image. He thought the person walking was an angel. Haffizullah now has a very lucrative profession—convincing the poor that he received revelations from god. The physician knew fully well his illusions and hallucinations were just effects of starvation”.

The Risks of Psychological Dislocation
Curing wounds requires certain period for recovery but the ‘Indian patient’ need be exposed to the rigorous clash of antagonistic forces within the political realms.   We have read the psychological dislocation of the prisoners in Plato’s Republic. The risk of psychological dislocation is best exemplified by the relationship between Lord Jesus Christ and Judas Iscariot found in the gospel of Matthew. Judas Iscariot represents the confused political activist. His confusion became a frustration, a psychological problem encountered by the apostles of Christ who were mostly unlettered Galilean fisher folk, except for tax collector Matthew. The disciples would normally react in disbelief over certain strange doctrine and parables like the ‘destruction of the temple and be rebuilt after three days’. (Unlike Raj and Jyothi who wanted to reconstruct India within their lifetime). Frustration was followed by contempt, and finally treachery. Judas Iscariot exchanged the life and liberty of his Teacher for thirty pieces of silver paid by the Pharisee (teachers of the Mosaic Law).

The derivation of benefits of liberation is uncertain. Although Jesus Christ was thought of as the most popular political figure who could rally the Israelites against Roman bondage, he was talking liberation and the promise of a new kingship in an absolutely different perspective. It was not liberation from socio-economic and political depravity of a vanquished race but transferring to earth the unfinished business in heaven between good and evil. As the story goes, both characters suffered ignominy till death, Christ was nailed to a wooden cross, and Judas, hanged himself in a tree, all because of fears and uncertainty among believers to the cause of liberation. 

The Adversary
Dyche discourse may incidentally draw us to the left side of the political spectrum by drawing Neo-Marxist alternatives but they could be better choices than concocted belief systems and complements Gandhian socialism invoked in the preamble of Indian constitution. India today, considered as the biggest democracy in the world, has to cut the Gordian knot that firmly holdws the liberties of its citizens. The struggle to be waged by men of goodwill is complex since the adversary is both visible and invisible. Even if the ways of this adversary are known, his true nature is yet to be exposed to the world. We cannot just be stoning him in the pillar like when Muslims perform Haj.  The adversary is a great one who inflicted wounds not only against flesh but against the spirit.

Where Indians are, there we see and feel his presence, the same transcendental and omniscient being. He also manifests himself in many forms and substance. He is not just an artistic concept of a divine being called Satan stumbled under the foot of Archangel Michael, nor of the mythical demon Arihman, subtle and oppressive, and his violence is embedded in human nature. Call him the mark of the beast. Call him the caste. He could be nuclear fission, or enriched uranium whose physical properties contain the capacity to obliterate Pakistan or India in fraction of a second. The adversary represents the negative essence of life, who can be found in a nuclear physicist or in Indian and Pakistani Prime Ministers, in a Shudra or a Brahmin, enslaving the soul, substituting rational spaces of the human brain with irrational impulses and aggressive behaviour.

No social legislations can ever reduce the power of an invisible adversary of the good self. The power of the state has no match over the corrupted power of the collective minds.  The attributes of a corrupted mind could be no other than the dissolution of the boundaries between right and wrong, the separation of the soul and the Brahman. As such, just as  Hindu belief systems is represented by a hierarchy of gods and goddesses, the caste belief system even created conditions for Dalit  to  seek  the lesser  gods to  worship. If philosopher Adi Sankara’s teachings dealt with the concept of unity of the soul and the Brahman, a god without attributes, such earthly manifestations of godliness is full of human shenanigans and discriminatory practices.   But the legends of the gods are coated with ethical purity and humility. For instance, when Lord Vishnu appeared to philosopher Adi Sankara on his way of worship to Viswanath Temple, he manifested himself as an untouchable, not as a noble man. The same with Lord Jesus Christ who was born in a manger, or the process of purification of Siddharta (Gautama Buddha) and Prophet Muhammad over their quest for liberation (jivanmukta). None of them implied affluence as basis for achieving benediction and approval from god. The psycho-social implication of such legend is that even a god chooses the more sublime and profound representation in the lowly temporal creature to manifest his everlasting true self (Atman Hinduism).

Political Exorcism of the Indian Psyche
On what kind of specific rituals to exorcise or liberate the corrupted Indian psyche is the main problem encountered in this study. We cannot even avoid raising the dilemma exhibited by those who have arrived at correct diagnosis but still find difficulty in the choices of instruments for interventions.

Those who took courage to stand before the Dalit cause must maintain the congruence between political prescriptions and the quantum of space the Indian state must allocate for the Dalit cause. Dr. Ambedkar, the exponent of Dalit’s welfare during India’s struggle for independence from British imperial rule,  crafted principles under the Indian Constitution based on his approximation of good (call it justice and equity) located somewhere between the ideal and real. Thus, we read in the basic law with a series of approximation of rights and obligations under a catchall provisions referred thereat as “scheduled  castes”. Dr. Ambedkar is just one of the voices in the wilderness.


The Indian State does not create rights
Constitutions and states do not create rights. They merely recognize those rights, being inherent in every human being, and inalienable. But the Indian state alienated those rights. Human rights become a chattel subjected to the commerce of man. They have to be negotiated in the political realms so that those rights are respected.

Proven enough, any form of enumeration of rights between classes or castes is an implicit recognition of the social divide. The Dalit became creatures of the Indian state who have no right to taste the icing of the cake and the cake itself but only the crumbs that fall from the table of the master race. In short, the Dalit is a human being treated lesser in state from the Brahmin. Between two standards, of superior-inferior dichotomy, the balance of justice will always tilt in favour of the stronger. If you have this condition tolerated over time, the right to life, liberty and property, will be no longer subject to due process or equal protection of the law but subjected to traditional parameters of the caste. As a matter of fact, the Indian state may have declared ‘untouchability’ as illegal, but a law is only a good law when it is faithfully enforced and observed. Acting beyond the intention of the law is lawlessness. Can we say therefore that the Indian caste system is inherently evil and lawless? It is so. Caste dominance therefore is anarchy.

The Dyche contentions reiterate the classic philosophy of Rosseau’s  (1712-1778) Discourse on Inequality and Social Contract. The Dalit travails as a people confirm that power in society is only valid as long as it exists for the good of the community. Any undertakings which bind us to the social body are obligatory because they are mutual. Corollary to that frame, the Dalit certainly does not exist for India neither they owe their existence to India. On the contrary, India exists because the Dalits exist.

The  objective of political exorcism
Therefore, the objective of liberation, which I hereby call political exorcism, should not be construed as subverting the basic law but to use the law to protect the rights of the Dalits and promulgate the obligations of the Indian state. Logically, this struggle cannot be equated to demolishing the constitution so as to come up with a re-allocation of rights. Foremost is the recognition of the federal character of Indian body politic and Dalits as one part of that great body, orderly functioning according to its own natural use and meaning. This federal way of life is expressed by the great Mahatma Gandhi who quipped “I want the winds of all the world’s culture to blow freely through my house, but I don’t want to be blown away by them”.

In this scientific discourse, we demystify all forms of belief systems that tend to create classes of people. We prove that beyond the realms of genetics and physiology, inequality is nothing but subjective interpretation of the world and egotism. The first   obstacle to liberation is to be misunderstood by the powers within state institutions.

Incarceration of the human spirit not only debases the humanity of the oppressed but the oppressor himself. Hindu philosophy incarcerated the mind within the labyrinth of cosmic phenomena and human folly, flavoured with endless rationalisations and epic tales of a plethora of gods and goddesses ascribed with human attributes.  We begin with measuring the quantum of space in the individual consciousness and re-examine how enlightenment and goodwill can be transformed into a culture of oneness. It searches in the Dalit psyche the true Indian spirit, the Adijan psyche, the psyche that is still uncorrupted and pure, we thought of and in the future, will provide the strength against the onslaught of  corrosive thinking in the modern  ages. This is not advocating some sort of going backward and embracing fundamentalism. If Brahmanism and Islamism somehow influenced some Indians to appear suffering from psychosis (like desecrating temples of worship just to manifest their fury against the other), it is more erratic to carry on with a wounded psyche attributed to vengeful gods.

We have to be clear in our motives and interpretation. We must be conscious that it is in numerous theological strands and rituals that entangled the Dalit soul to their present destitute condition, who are even deprived to find solace and contentment in the worship of their gods, in participating in the revelry of religious festivals and in receiving benedictions from the idols of the gods in sacred Hindu temples.

Discarding Superstition
Since not one Indian mortal today can claim he is a re-incarnate of Lord Shiva or sure that he has ascended to heaven and come back with tangible instruments we could use as basis for judging one thing is ‘divine’ and the other is mundane.

The dwelling of the gods I mentioned earlier is a metaphor addressed to the tangible ‘human agents of divine beings’, whoever they are, and whatever self-designations or appointments they held in both heaven and earth. The Dalits would care less on the rambunctious ideological superiority of the Indian political and economic elite.

Dalit’s idea of a country is simply expressed in three general principles: (1) they need a land where they can build their homes, grow their food and raise a family; (2) they want a community provided with basic services; and (3) they deserve to be accorded with equal opportunity in all spheres of human activity.  

Citing scientific evaluation as the guiding light, Dalitism no longer stands as a socio-cultural, economic and political bargain against the State but as an inherent claim against the Indian birthright. The idea of reconstruction is not limited to the demolition of corroded structures of ‘old India’ but includes psychic cleansing (not ethnic cleansing). Effecting change would not be calling all the gods to intervene. All the holy Scriptures sold in the market suggest that the transcendental and omnipotent Brahma, Allah or Yahweh is not a dumb deity but a great rational supreme being. There is nothing objectionable even if more than eight hundred million Hindus would claim that all incidents of fairness and prosperity down here on earth, or in India in particular, were bound in heaven and predestined to happen. But contrary to “what is ought to be”, or social behaviour and effects of behaviours that are inherently wrong (mala in se) is therefore an unacceptable reality.

Besides, freedom includes the right to freely express even the most irritable, ridiculous and stupid idea. In libertarian-democracy, the political system India adopted, does not deny the opportunity for the wretched and the damned to likewise elect their representatives in the parliament

The Purpose of Reconstruction
This treatise aims to completely burn the invisible curtain between two peoples separated by myths, tradition and ignorance. Thus, as a methodology, two trajectories are analysed, that is, one is earthly (rational approach) and the other is heavenly. The epistemology of the word ‘reconstruct’ simply means to rebuild and restore.  We have reason to value restoration because something has been destroyed (the old foundations of the house were infected with termites and foundations need to be refurbished and improved) It carries the notion of optimising the utilitarian value of the Adijan and Adivasi psyche, and consequently expand the space in our human consciousness the rational and transcendental dimensions of social relationship.

For other cultures, material prosperity and modern technology acquired behaviours that are more associated with extreme competition of scarce resources and satisfaction of the ego. [2]  This self-centred focus nurtures unbridled psychological dysfunction like greed and violence, and when it its exhibited by people of influence and power, with an unyielding pride and arrogance, we are sure that the political risk for promoting the interest of the poor simultaneously increases, and the formula for the struggle would shift from peaceful negotiation to violent confrontation. But opting for the violent struggle yielded less desirable political realities in contemporary times when clash of religious values has made life and liberty the sacrificial lamb. When insecurity abounds, government has to invent faces of terror curtailing the same rights. Some will seek refuge in crooked philosophy to justify their crimes and dismiss their victims as lesser beings, infidels, or creatures subject to the karmic cyclical motion of the universe, or the will of Allah.

Our purpose is to safeguard the weak against the strong as a requisite to peace and harmony. Safeguard against whom? Against the instrumentalities of the state, against religion and its institutions. One should not read Karl Marx to understand that government is an agency for oppression and religion is an opium. The government is not a place inhabited by holy men and women but bundles of irrational human beings who usually equate public interests with their personal interests.  Religion likewise created an Indian way of life that sedate the minds into docile submission to fate and created social institutions characterised by dominance of the elitist, oppressive, and exploitative structures and processes.

The role of mediators
Face with this reality, the need for greater amplification of collective efforts by social activists and political philosophers is demanded. Moreover, India has a population reaching more than a billion people and approximately 180 million citizens belonging to the scheduled castes (Dalit). This poses considerable stress on state resources, both at present and in the future. Managing such a huge population under a federated political structure makes the village level or Panchayat Raj a distant satellite community where power configurations rest in the dominant caste rather than the law. Without direct interventions from civil society, people’s organizations, and donor agencies who will provide complementary developmental programs, the poor will remain debased of their existence, an affront to the very conscience of the state. It would not be a justifiable social virtue that the Dalit shall be contend with their profound role as the “the salt of the earth” nor find pride by Mahatma Gandhi’s exaltation of the untouchables as Harijan or children of God.

The ideals  set forth in the Indian constitution which stand as the social  contract between  people and the state, must exhibit the corresponding conversion of such divine ideals into pragmatic application  of  social virtues, ‘that all are created under the law’ , and not to mean ‘there are those who are created more equal than the others’. It is not by hurting others  in order to heal the wounds within the self’ but to strengthen the link between the temporal and cosmic realities.

Concluding Remarks
There are two locations for which the Dyche will achieve its objective. One is winning at the institutional level, influencing public policies and decisions involving proprietary rights, public investments, enjoyment of the national patrimony and utilization of natural resources, access to basic services like education, health, housing, and social security. The other locus of this struggle is in the mind. It is by changing perceptions and discarding deeply-rooted values that are proven to be inimical to the harmonious relationship between neighbours, between human beings and the cosmic reality.

I made reference from the Sermon of the Mount of Lord Jesus Christ, when he brought hope and consolation to a vanquished people occupied and corrupted by imperial Rome and the church (Pharisees and Sadducees).

“Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven” and “Blessed are the meek for they shall inherit the earth” (Matthew 5:3 & 5)

This exaltation of the psychological inferiority and gentleness of a people is a prerequisite to acquiring a place in heaven and on earth. Spiritual deprivation could be the worst  kind of  violence.

 This would require huge amount of efforts and resources but there are many ways in attaining the objectives. This can be explained by going back to the classics. Nietzsche’s (1844-1900) philology tells about the will to power and self-mastery. He laid down some good starting points. Thus,

It is necessary to understand the world as a life formed without a model. It can only be understood by correct methodology. It is a demand of conscience. Therefore, one is to avoid getting entangled with many faulty assumptions and causality. We are to test a single unit until final conclusion (even up to the point of absurdity), taking will as our only hypothesis. Every will effects on other will, and all mechanical happenings as they are activated by some energy, are will power, assuming we are able to trace back all organic functions of this will to power including the solutions to generational problems. The world seen from within and a world defined according to its intelligible character is will to power.
To apply such principle is to empower the Dalit, one must be driven by strong motives. It would require self actualization or the will to truth. Everything will bend and accommodate itself according to that will if one is on the side of truth.

We are to recognize political realism that the order of life is for the weaker to serve the stronger and the weaker to be master over someone still weaker than him[3].  This state of nature is governed by instinct. But man is a rational being and therefore his tempered civility is what differentiates himself from the beasts.  However, we cannot be Taoists, sit idly, and wait for tempered individuals to give us the paradise we want. We have to act decisively and convincingly.

The psychology of truth serves as the conscientious frame of political reality where one individual will draw his/her power to empower the Dalit. The independence movement started by Dr. Ambedkar had sown the seed of emancipation from the bondage of long held social, economic and political discrimination against the Dalit people but the vine and branches are yet to bear the exact fruit of liberation.
There is none nobler than those who toil in the night ensuring that the torch of freedom keeps burning. Icarus was not held back against his will to fly towards the sun even if the fire will melt him to oblivion. The guard of the lighthouse makes sure it is lighted every night to guide the sailors home.

Prof. Nestor  F. Gotis, Philippines
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[1] Dalita is a Tagalog-Pilipino phrase which has its Sanskrit origin Dalit. Dalita means miserable situation, unhappy and maralita means poor and destitute.
[2] The specimen on how far ego can go Is seen for instance in multi-millionaires in Abu Dhabi, (United Arab Emirates), who build air-conditioned carport just for their Rolls Royce, Ferrari and other model sports cars. It is reflective of a civilization where machines are humanised and humans are converted as machines, or dispensable objects.
[3] In business  world, there is a metaphor what we call the “the big fish eating the smaller fish and in chain of sizes”  where in the food chain, the smallest fish  like the krill exist to serve the big appetite of the whale sharks. In business, we call them predators and their marketing tactic is by using predatory prices, which should be regulated by law.